Tuesday April 1,2003 Vol.113.Issue No.124 WILDCAT today's weather 85° Tonight: 50° KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Kansas baseball defeats Oklahoma State 10-8; earns first conference victory of season p.1B THE FOUNDERS OF MUSIC Andy Samuelson/Kansan Speaker ranks Kansas Heidi Hartmann, director of the Institute for Women's Policy Research, speaks to an audience at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union about economic equality and women's rights. "Kansas has a good history of civic engagement," Hartmann said during her speech yesterday evening, which was part of the 31st-annual February Sisters Forum. By Jessica Hood jhood@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Kansas was not the worst place to live as a woman, but it was not the best, said feminist Heidi Hartmann. Hartmann's speech last night, "Report on the Status of Women in the States," focused on the status of women in Kansas. The lecture was part of the 31st-annual February Sisters Forum, which was rescheduled after the original speaker, Avis Jones-DeWeeer of the Institute for Women's Policy Research, could not make it from Washington, D.C., because of bad weather. The February Sisters Association was named after a group of University of Kansas women who have advocated women's rights on campus since 1972. Hartmann applauded Kansas on its political "It is fairly appalling in a state that it is doing so well in other areas." Heidi Hartmann on reproductive rights participation by women and its health and wellbeing of women, but said the state's downfall was in reproductive rights. The report ranked Kansas at the bottom of the middle third of all states. "It is fairly appalling in a state that it is doing so well in other areas," Hartmann said. The report has covered 42 states so far, and every two years the Institute for Women's Policy Research releases a national report on the status of women with about 10 state reports. Hartmann shared a saying from a friend during the Vietnam War as a thought on the status of women. "She said. 'We'll get the men out of Vietnam before we get the men to wash dishes,'" Hartmann said. "And it is true." Kathryn Peacock, Prairie Village senior, said she was glad she came to hear Hartmann. "It was interesting to see how Kansas relates to other states." Peacock said. Hartmann serves as the director of the Institute for Women's Policy Research. The institute is an independent, non-profit, scientific research organization, that Hartmann founded in 1987 to inform and foster debate on issues of critical importance to women. "The work that the institute does is very much like walking a tight rope between research and advocacy," Hartmann said. "We work to maintain our usefulness without losing our credibility." - Edited by Andrew Ward Friends reminisce about professor By Nicole Roche nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Cats, funny hats and year-round Christmas lights. These are some of the Carolyn Doty staples that students, friends and colleagues said they would always remember at yesterday's memorial service. Doty, novelist and English professor, died of natural causes March 10 at the age of 61. Doty was known for leaving up Christmas lights all year, as well as filling her garden with synthetic plants so she would have vibrant flowers during all four seasons. Students and colleagues said they remembered not only Doty's quirky sense of humor, but also her abundance of advice for upcoming writers. "She was the lady with the hat," said Jim Carothers, who was chairman of the English department hiring committee when Doty came to KU in 1986. "But I always remember her as the lady with the laugh." "She was the lady with the hat,but I always remember her as the lady with the laugh." Jim Carothers Professor Mike Valk, an English lecturer who spoke at the service, said Doty instructed never to write from the point of view of inanimate objects. Mark Scoggins, English graduate teaching assistant, said Doty always had humorous yet practical advice for her students. "She said never to write from the viewpoint of a college student," Scoggins said, "because they never do anything." Chris Blakeslee, Overland Park senior, said the last time he saw Doty was in her office, March 6. She offered him her usual Pepsi ONE and oatmeal cookies while they discussed his work, he said. SEE DOTY ON PAGE 5A Candidates discuss housing ordinance Single-family ordinance restricts unrelated persons living together to three Editor's note: With the general election for City Commission today, Kansan staff writer IJ Hensley provides profiles of the six candidates and their views on the single-family ordinance, which limits the number of unrelated persons living together to three. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. today for voters to elect three of the six candidates. DiVilbiss' position on the single-familv housing ordinance: Background: DiVilbiss has been in sales most of his life and is currently a partner in a local real estate investment firm. He was raised in the Kansas City area and moved to Wichita for four years before relocating to Lawrence with his wife and three children in 2001. "I support the ability for three unrelated individuals to live together and am against discriminatory inspections." Gregory DiVilbiss,42 Background: The former KU student body vice president in 1984-1985 received his degree in electrical engineering in 1985 and graduated from the KU School of Law in 1992. Since 1992, Highberger has worked as an attorney for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. Dennis "Boog" Highberger, 43 Highberger's position on the single-family housing ordinance: "I think the inspection provision of the ordinance is unconstitutional, to the extent that it claims to allow a landlord to authorize the search of a tenant's dwelling by a government official. Even if you are a renter, a government official can only search your home with your permission or with a valid search warrant. Before any inspection program is extended to multifamily-zoned neighborhoods, we should be sure that it is respectful of tenants' civil liberties." Background: Gerhard is currently retiring from the Kansas Geological Survey. He decided to run for commission to Lee Gerhard, 65 SEE CANDIDATES ON PAGE 5A Sunset Soccer ... John Nowak/Kansan Olathe freshmen Andrew Lomeli (left) and Logan Carter cross the Iowa Street bridge yesterday as they return from West Campus. Lomeli said he and Carter decided to take advantage of the nice day and play soccer. Women give campus favorable view Concerns about safety gender equity expressed in female taskforce survey By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer A survey conducted last spring revealed that women have a favorable status at the University of Kansas. The survey's findings were released at a press conference yesterday. The survey The KU Policy Research Institute surveyed 523 female students in the Spring of 2002. was conducted to understand female students' perceptions of their roles at the University. It was also meant to pinpoint areas of concern. The taskforce identified that, overall, women's status is favorable on campus. Two-thirds of the survey respondents responded that they had equal access to an equal number of male and female role models, and 83 percent of those surveyed responded that male and female students received equal attention in the classroom. Reports of discrimination were low. "While there is gender inequality at KU, it doesn't present itself as barriers," said tana Mackey, taskforce member and Hays junior. The taskforce also identified weaknesses on campus. More than half of the women surveyed believed they would leave the University in debt. Of those female students surveyed, 27 percent SEE WOMEN ON PAGE 6A TUESDAY & PRIUL 1 2022 2A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 +3A News briefs CAMPUS Candidates for Senate to debate issues today Student body presidential and vice presidential candidates will formally face off at a debate at 6 p.m. today at 130 Budig Hall. Candidates will answer one question from each of the panelists. The panelists are Paul Turvey, student representative, Mary Lee Hummert, vice provost and interim vice chancellor for Student Affairs and vice president of Student Support, and Ken Stoner, director of student housing. Students may also submit questions for the candidates until 5 p.m. today to the dean of students' office, 133 Strong Hall. Student-submitted questions should be directed to all candidates. Students can also ask the candidates questions at 12:30 p.m. Monday at an informal debate in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. Cate Batchelder LAWRENCE Human remains delay road through wetlands Claims that human remains have been found in the Baker Wetlands could be another setback for the proposed eastern leg of the South Lawrence Trafficway. A former student at Haskell Indian Nations University, David Farve, alleges in a sworn affidavit to have twice found human remains in the Wetlands. The Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation tribunal council included the affidavit in comments it filed last month with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In January, the corps said the trafficway should be built along 32nd Street, cutting through the Baker Wetlands, at an estimated cost of $105 million. The trafficway is intended to speed commutes between Johnson County, Lawrence and Topeka. But the tribal council opposes the 32nd Street route Trafficway opponents say that in Haskell's early days, students who died from disease, injury or abuse were buried in what is now the wetlands. STATE Kansas City accused of 'economic racism' KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Three black contractors have filed a formal complaint with the federal government claiming the city has ignored federal laws requiring minority participation in some redevelopment projects. The businessmen filed a grievance with the Department of Housing and Urban Development against the city and redevelopment contractors, alleging they "pre-empted economic opportunities for low- and very low-income people, which causes perverse economic racism." HUD passes grants and loans through City Hall for qualified redevelopment projects. "It's a total neglect of the law," said Anthony Arnold, president of construction contractor Arnold & Associates. "Our first concern is training and employment that should have been afforded central city residents." Arnold filed a complaint with HUD last month and received a letter from HUD saying a review was under way. Arnold recently amended his complaint to include Kansas City, Kan., he said. 'In Cold Blood' victim Hall of Fame honoree HUTCHINSON—A man whose death was immortalized in Truman Capote's novel "In Cold Blood" now is being remembered for his contribution to the western Kansas farm cooperative movement. Holcomb farmer Herb Clutter, who was murdered 43 years ago in his home along with his wife and two children, will be part of the Kansas Co-op Hall of Fame. "This is quite an honor for Father and his memory," said Eveanna Mosier, Clutter's daughter who lives in Newton. "That is the good part of all the publicity." Mosier and her sister, Beverly English, also of Newton, were scheduled to accept the award yesterday afternoon in Hutchinson on behalf of their father. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV The overpopulation of the Lawrence Humane Society threatens the lives of many animals. KUJH TV's Robyn Floor-shoots reports tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. News: Leslie Torrez and Heather Hooper Weather: Matt McClaskey Sports: Liz Godfrey KUJH-TV News On KJHK,90.7 FM,listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 907 kansan.com Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to Don't have time to read today's paper. Head to kansan.com and listen to KTaik. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Scott Reynolds/Kansan Camera on KU To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. MATTHEW Jason Slote, production manager at KANU, works on the radio program "A Night On the Town." The show, hosted and written by George Harter, airs on National Public Radio Stations and college campuses throughout the United States and Canada. Harter's show airs at 9 p.m. on Saturdays on KANU. 91.5 FM. ON CAMPU$ — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Lisa Bitel of the University of Southern California will give a gender seminar on "Period Trouble: The Impossibility of Feminist History" from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today at the conference room in the Hall Center for the Humanities.Call 864-4798. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will practice from 5:30 to 7 tonight at 207 Robinson Center, Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. The Center for East Asian Studies will screen the film Passage to the Buddha from 7 to 9 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3849. University Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Rick Clock at 841-3148. University Theatre will present The 10-Minute Play Festival at 7:30 tonight at lge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Call 864-3381. Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30tonight at the English Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Tiffany Lopez at 550-8312. The KU Karate Kobudo Club will practice from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight in St. Lawrence Catholic Center. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422. Student Union Activities will present a poetry slam at 8 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. Call 864-7469. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will present "Faith Forum: A Liberal Take On Christianity" from 8:30 to 9:30 tonight in the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. ON THE RECORD A 21-year-old KU student reported to Lawrence police that a Lexington Coach watch, valued at approximately $500, was stolen from her home at the 1000 block of Emery Road. Et Cetera A 21-year-old male was arrested for indecent exposure at Wal-Mart, 3300 Iowa St., Thursday. The man was released on bond of $150 the same day. A KU student reported a damaged rear window in her car to the Lawrence police Saturday at 4:04 a.m. at the 1100 block of Mississippi Street. The estimated damage was $300. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 60045 which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Sunrise Terrace Apartments Available PALI - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ Two Story and Two baths - Balcony / Decks w/ view - Two Story, and Two baths - On Site Laundry - Some with w/d's - Digital Cable Ready The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Call to view student union activities The University of Kansas Level 1 Kansas Union 786 764 SHOW www.su.edu/missions 1st> $75, 2nd> $50, 3rd> $25 voted on by the audience SUA prizes to help support student poets, $150 refreshments to feed their artistic souls, $150 an evening of performance poetry, priceless. Poetry Slam. Tuesday, April 1 8:00PM-10:00PM Hawks Nest, Level 1, Kansas Union There will be door prizes: [2]$20 to the KU Bookstore P . TUESDAY,APRIL1.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Candidate trains future politicians By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Catherine Bell, University of Kansas junior, has no plans to ever leave KU. After she graduates with a double major in political science and communications, Bell said she hoped to land an administrative position at the University. Before she became involved with student government at KU. Bell had her heart set on becoming an attorney and following in her father's footsteps. Because she's running for the office of vice president with KUnited, she has little time on her hands. "I always said that I'd become an attorney, but I was never that excited about it," Bell, of Coffeyville. said. Jegen McDermott/Kansan "My roommate went to Hawaii for spring break, and I stayed here to paint posters for the campaign." Bell said. Bell has been a student senator since her sophomore year, and she helps train incoming senators. Her patience and willingness help her work with younger students. I am a teacher. I teach English and math. I love being with students. I enjoy writing stories for children. I love learning new skills. I love helping others. I love being creative. I love being fun. I love being smart. I love being kind. I love being patient. I love being helpful. I love being supportive. I love being respectful. I love being fair. I love being honest. I love being cheerful. I love being curious. I love being brave. I love being adventurous. I love being fun. I love being smart. I love being creative. I love being written stories for children. I love learning new skills. I love writing stories for children. I love learning new skills. I love writing stories for children. I love learning new skills. I love writing stories for children. "Catherine is the kindest and fairest person I know," Doug Bell, her father, said. "She was the kind of kid that wouldn't even step on a bug." Meet the Candidates Editor's note: To prepare students for Student Senate elections, The University Daily Kansan will profile each coalition's presidential and vice-presidential candidates. We Buy, Sell & Trade USED & NEW Sports Equipment Catherine Bell, Coffeyville junior, is running for student body vice president with the KUUnited coalition. Bell was initially recruited by a Delta Force member to be a part of a student committee. The experience got her hooked on being a part of student government. With the elections being held next Thursday, Bell's days are full with campaigning. While KUnited is having a party at Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. 2nd St., on election night, Bell has other plans in mind. "I might just sleep on election night," she said. Although Student Senate strongly influences Bell's life, she doesn't get too carried away with student government. She finds time to collect antique Coca Cola items. Her entire room in Coffeyville is decked out in Coca Cola memorabilia. "It's really easy to get stressed out, but I try to keep in mind that there are more important things going on in the world," Bell said. "Everything has to be put into perspective." - Edited by Melissa Hernreck NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS KANSAN.COM NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS PLAY IT FIGHT SPORTS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS www.pipelineproductions.com TUESDAY, APRIL 1ST The belles ALL AGES SHOW THE STEREO WITH OLD CANES UMPHREYS MCGEE WITH MICHAEL FURK COUNCIL tuesday, April 15 now at the GRANADA SUNDAY APRIL, 6TH superdrag THURSDAY APRIL 10TH CAVE IN TUESDAY APRIL 15TH TOOTS AND MAYTALS Bettleneck NEW HAMPSHIRE, LAWRENCE, KS COMING SOON TO THE BOTTLENECK 737 NEW HAMPSHIRE, LAWRENCE, KS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2ND DRUMS & TUBA WITH THAT ONE GUY THURSDAY, APRIL 3RD SOUNDTRACK OF OUR LIVES WITH CAESARS AND PALE ALTO FRIDAY, APRIL 4TH BIG SMITH WITH JEFF & VIDA SATURDAY, APRIL 5TH LOVE SQUAD WITH ET TOL, BRUTET AND LEAVE FRIDAY, APRIL 11TH SUPPORT LOCAL MUSIC J BANDS $3 THE PEOPLE WITH THE BILLIONS AND THE AUTumn STATE ALL AGES SHOW Check out the tournament games on the big screen new martini list appetizers new wine list entertainment live The Lounge at Paisano's RISTORANTE open until 2 am • 2112 W 25 St. TANGLEWOOD APARTMENTS 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished Studios, land 2 Bedroom apartment homes. - Laundry facilities on site - Fully equipped kitchens (dishwashers*, disposal, stove, refrigerator, microwave) - stove, refrigerator, microwave Within walking distance to - Within walking distance to KU campus - Telephone and cable outlets in each bedroom - Central Air - Ample off-street parking for tenants - 24 emergency maintenance - On-site manager - 24 emergency maintenance Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Equal Housing Opportunity *Available in select units Red Lyon Tavern Red Lyon Tavern Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 Fed Lyon Cavern The Jayhawk Charm ITALIAN LINK BRACELETS Interchangeable alphabet and charm links let you create your own one-of-a-kind stretch bracelet featuring! The • 18Kt Gold • Stainless Steel Etc. • Semi-Precious Stones • Greek Letters Shop 928 Massachusetts • (785) 843-0611 SUA BOARD SELECTIONS SUA BOARD SELECTIONS Congratulations SUA Board President Lauren Stewart VP of Seismic Events Jacob Albers VP of University Relations Laura Heidbreder VP of membership Development Scott McKenzie Principal Pauline Pechin Public Collections Jason Fraser Senior Erica Harper Rec and Travel Jamie Labrier Facilitator Sean Pauzauskle Special Events Rachel Peart Vice President Isaac Dill Inectrum Films Becca Swick SUA student union activities SUA YOU Career Takes Flight Come to a place where your career can take flight. You'll be surrounded by professionals ready to help you at a moment's notice. You'll develop working relationships that feel like family. At the end of the day, you'll know you've made a difference doing what you love to do. Consider the following: SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHERS – Provide year-round instruction to children with low incidence disabilities, autism, sensory impairment, moderate to severe learning and behavior problems in self-contained classroom of six to eight children. Design and implement instructional programs to meet individual student needs based on a functional curriculum. High staff/student ratio with medical, psychology & therapy support services provided in the classroom. Experienced teacher assigned for training & support Degree in Special Education & certification in MR, SMD will consider certification in BD with experience in multiple disabilities or additional special ed. cert., K-12. Competitive salary based on education & experience. Excellent employee benefits. Contact Julie Noller for information at jnoller@heartspring.org or to submit a resume EEO/M/F HEARTSPRING (8700 East 29th Street North, Wichita KS 67226) 830-105-434 (toll) 1631-6045-555, www.heartspring.com Forms to submit questions are available in 133 Strong Hall You can also email your questions @www.ku.edu/-election. A ballot reader is provided for those with visual impairments in Budig Computer Lab and is accessible at all times during the elections. Contact the Dean of Students Office in room 133 Strong Hall or call 864.4060 DEADLINE FOR QUESTIONS IS APRIL 1 @5 PM. Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill or click and save @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com Over 40 toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 10" Pizzas 2 toppings $10.10 the box RUDY'S PIZZA Home of the Pocket Pizza 749-4055 704 Mass. THE SENATE ELECTIONS ARE COMING UP. YOU HAVE A VOICE. ASK QUESTIONS. "Take 5"...five minutes for 5% off on Fall '03 Books 704 NEWS IRS Preorder and Save an extra 5% Campus Place APARTMENTS 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Walk to Campus Campus Place APARTMENTS Apartments Available for Summer 2003 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft 4 bedroom/2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath - Fully Equipped Kitchens - Furnished & Unfurnished Apt. available - Gas , Heat and Water - Private Balconies & Patios - Off Street Parking - 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance - On-site Manager Call or stop in TODAY for private showing Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm EHO A THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 TALKTO'US Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khendarsan@kansan.com Jenna Goepert and Justin Hening managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepert@kansan.com and thanning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers" representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 884-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 884-7668 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Vote for improving Lawrence Today is voting day for the Lawrence City Commission. Out of six candidates, three will be elected. If you are registered in Douglas County, go vote, especially if Lawrence's growth is important to you. In a way, the city commission is like a group of superheroes. There's a retired director of housing and neighborhood development, Lynn Goodell; an attorney for the Kansas department for Health and the Environment, Dennis "Boog" Highberger; a seasoned commissioner, Mike Rundle; an attorney who represents teachers, David Schauner; a scientist, Lee Gerhard; and a developer of shopping centers, Greg DiVilbiss. The residents of Lawrence can sleep soundly knowing that there's always a city commission watching out for them. They look over the fair citizens of Lawrence, preserving the quaintness and originality, potentially protecting them from the evil corporate retail stores trying to take over the city. In reality, the city commission can only pass resolutions and ordinances establish policies for Lawrence approve the budget and hire the city manager. It is up to the commission to keep Lawrence growing without it turning into an urban sprawl, and plan new and better developments with neighborhoods in mind as one candidate put it, to prevent Lawrence from turning into "Anytown, USA." Educate yourself on the candidates' platforms. You can do that by checking out the Student Legislative Awareness Board's Web site at www.ku.edu/-slab/. If issues like economic growth and tax abatements for new businesses are important to you, the registered voters of Douglas County, voting for the city commission today is a must. Jon Ralston for the editorial board M. JOHNSON The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at reader-srep@kansan.com. Shaun Morrell opinion@kansan.com GUEST COMMENTARY OUR THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS ARE WITH OUR JACKHANKS FACULTY, ALUMNI, STAFF STUDENTS WHO SERVE 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) FAIER'S VIEW PERSPECTIVE SUBMITTOR E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Staufer-Flint Support local-minded candidates Some people in this town are willing to fight for what makes Lawrence great. Finally, they have a chance at succeeding. Think of anything the City and Planning Commissions have approved in recent memory, Wal-Mart. Home Depot. Countless soccer-mom subdivisions. The South Lawrence Trafficway. Corporate handouts. Not exactly the things you love about Lawrence, are they? Whatever happened to building parks, bike lanes, and neighborhoods people cared about? What happened to Downtown as Lawrence's commercial focal point? What about jobs with which a worker can support his family? These things fall by the wayside when citizens lose control of City Hall and big developers take over. Such has been the political climate here in recent memory. Electing realtors, bankers, builders, and other Chamber of Commerce poster children to ensure planned and prudent growth is much like electing foxes to oversee chicken coop construction. But it's hard to fight the money interests. During its reign, the Chamber's regime has been quite successful at bending rules for developers while marginalizing citizen groups from the city planning process. The result is a city built on the whims of a short-sighted, profit-hungry machine — a city that looks more and more like any other sprawling, place less suburb in the country. Believe it or not, it could have been worse. In the late 1980s, a developer attempted to ramrod a proposal through the City Commission allowing for the construction of a gigantic shopping mall at the north end of Massachusetts, Kentucky and New Hampshire Streets. On top of Mount Oread sits a community of thousands of potential voters, and every campaign knows that it can win the election if it wins the students' hearts. If not for people like Mike Rundle, you'd be eating Chick-Fil-A among junior high kids at the Free State Food Court right now. Mike stood up to the developers back then, winning his first election to City Commission and helping defeat this disastrous proposal. He's up for reelection April 1, and this time, he's brought friends with him. Together with Dennis "Boog" Highberger and David Schauner, Rundle dominated the City Commission primaries in February. Ever since, the opposition has been scrambling desperately to find a campaign strategy to deflate the hopes of this citizen-powered campaign. Despite the unfortunate propagation of misinformation on campus, it does highlight one fact of which all six of the candidates are acutely aware: the student vote is critical in this election. Rundle, Highberger and Schauner are running on a platform of the very proposals for which citizens have been calling for years (and to which the developers' regime has consistently said "no"). Protect downtown. Build bike lanes. Grow sensibly. When corporations ask for tax breaks from the city, make them pay a fair wage to their workers.' Listen to neighbors and students first, not developers' hired consultants. Bring a friend and vote on April 1, but be armed with the truth and a clear vision for Lawrence's future. What frightening ideas these must be Greg DiVilbiss, a son of a developer, has been campaigning vigorously on campus with the promise that he will fight to repeal the single-family zoning ordinance that reduced the number of unrelated roommates from four to three. However, he has not acknowledged this pledge in any other publication but the University Daily Kansan. When confronted, he even disavowed the promise at the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association open forum. Additionally, rumors have surfaced that suggest the progressive candidates intend to close down local bars near campus, or to restrict their operating hours. This is also an outright lie circulated by a desperate campaign with the intention of provoking an angry student reaction. to the cadre of opposition candidates whose campaigns were funded almost entirely by home builders, property management firms, and construction outfits. In retaliation for their dismal showing in the primaries, they have turned to blatant misinformation as a last-minute tactic to win votes. Morrell is a Salina graduate student in urban planning. Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com check has gone to support local business. A guy told me last week that when he masturbates, he pictures me. Is that a compliment, or should I be offended? I'm at the University of Colorado at Boulder right now, but after spending spring break with my crazy girls at KU, I'm making my declaration right now. I'm transferring to KU for my sophomore year. check has gone to support local business. Your mother chose life. Key word: chose. I just need to say that my buddies and I were at Rick's Place the other day and Lord Wad and his Duke of Suck blatantly and maliciously stole our quarter. 图 You know you're living in McColum when your khaki shorts turn orange just from sitting in the cupboard over the winter. Michael Moore didn't even graduate from college. President Bush got his degree from Yale. You tell me who should be making the decisions. CITY COMMISSION CANDIDATES Six candidates are competing for three open seats: Greg A. DIVibiss Age: 42 Occupation: Real estate leasing Lee Gerhard Occupation: Real estate lover Lee Gerhard Age: 65 Occupation: Partially retired geologist, Kansas Geological Survey Lynn Goodell Lynn Goodell Age: 66 Occupation: Retired director of Housing and Neighborhood Development Dennis "Boog" Highberger Occupation: Attorney for Kansas National Education Association Age: 43 Occupation: Attorney for Kansas Department of Health and Environment Mike Bundle Mike Rundle Age: 49 Occupation: Shift manager, Community Mercantile Grocery Voting will run from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at 45 polling places in Lawrence. Advance ballots sent in by mail must be received at the courthouse no later than 7 p.m. today. To find out where to vote, call 832-5281. David Schauner PERSPECTIVE Big business yet to damage downtown scene Big Brother is coming to Lawrence. Avert your eyes, hide your children and pray to the god of your choosing. Wal-Mart, Home Depot, Borders they're all part of the global corporate machine that is turning Lawrence residents into credit card-wielding, dollareyed zombies who are drawn irresistibly to their power. George Orwell was right in 1984, and we can see it here in Lawrence. Poppycock. As the city commission elections arrive, I've grown tired of hearing psuedo-Orwellian appeals to the community, warning about the corporate conspiracy. In the book, Orwell depicts shoddy products such as "Victory cigarettes" that fall apart faster than they burn and "Victory alcohol" that would cause even the sots of Lawrence to retch. The poor quality is a result of extreme government control that dominates every aspect of the citizens' lives. Adam Pracht opinion@kansan.com GUEST COMMENTARY I wonder how many of them have actually read 1984. The irony of summoning Orwell's ideas as the defender of Lawrence business is that the local government is stepping in on the side of small business rather than major corporations. If anyone can be accused of calling upon Big Brother, it would be those who look to the protecting wing of government for their businesses. I won't make that accusation because literary allusion breaks down in the face of the economic reality in Lawrence. I love local business, don't misunderstand me. I've been astonished by the vibrant downtown and the variety of shops available. A lot of my paycheck has gone to support local business. I simply refuse to underestimate their power in the economy of Lawrence. While consumers will use national chains, I don't believe they can compete with the solid customer loyalty of local merchants. Lawrence's historic downtown district has the support and the dollars of local consumers, as recent articles in The University Daily Kansan have suggested. For evidence, one doesn't have to look far. Borders stands near the Raven Bookstore and the Dusty Bookshelf each business catering to an economic niche. Starbucks makes up cappuccinos just across the street from La Prima Taza and Java Break. But for a truly dramatic example, I would turn to the example of the Riverfront Plaza. If Wal-Mart will destroy local business, why hasn't the current one already done so? On June 10, 1998, an article in The University Daily Kansan reported that the plaza, which was nationally owned and operated but locally managed, was starting to fold. It eventually closed and the space is now filled with hotel rooms. Several factors were blamed, but I'm inclined to agree with the assessment of Aaron O'Dell, assistant manager of the plaza's now defunct Bugle Boy Outlet store. He said that out-of-town business had remained constant but that local traffic had declined. The mall lacked an atmosphere and history, which is the strength of Lawrence's downtown. Encourage local leaders and shop owners to permit larger corporations. Then go out and support local businesses with your checkbook. Then it will be obvious that Lawrence businesses can stand up to their Big Brothers. Prachit is an Emporia junior in Spanish and journalism. He is a Kansan copy chief. TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Automated phone calls raise concerns, questions By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Several KU offices, including Student Senate and the Center for Community Outreach received automated phone calls from city commission candidate Greg DiVilbiss yesterday. The call, a recorded message urging the phone answerer to vote for DiVilbiss, left employees at the Center for Community Outreach questioning the legality of the solicitation. "I think it's kind of wrong for these calls to be coming to University offices," said Brian Thomas, Plano, Texas junior. "One, it's work and no one wants to be bothered by city commission candidates and secondly, it's the University and it shouldn't be a tool for anyone's election." Thompson answered the call at the Center for Community Outreach yesterday morning. Jeanette Johnson, assistant to the provost, spoke with the University Counsel's office and determined that KU's solicitation policy did not speak specifically to incoming political solicitation. "The University's solicitation policy prohibits political solicita- non from on-campus phones and e-mails, but we cannot control incoming calls," Johnson said. Johnson said that during last November's general election the provost's office received complaints about these types of phone calls. DiVilbiss said that the automated phone system used phone numbers that voters had given on their voter registration card. "I apologize because I didn't want to bother anyone, it was intended to call their homes," he said. "But election records are public records and if someone gave that number as their phone number when they registered to vote, that is the one on record." DiVilbiss received the addresses and phone numbers from the Douglas County election office and consulted that office, as well as state ethics officials prior to the phone calls,he said. The Douglas County election office was unavailable for comment yesterday evening. "If the person receiving the phone call feels it's inappropriate and if an actual person is on the other line, then they should tell them they think it's inappropriate," Johnson said. Edited by Erin Chapman Candidates CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A give something back to the community he has called home with his wife for the last 16 years their longest stay ever. Gerhard's position on the single-family housing ordinance: "I have told the neighborhoods that for the time being, we should keep the ordinance as it is with respect to the number of renters, see how it works, and begin to bring the three stake holder groups together to air their differences, sort out the misinformation from the real issues, and determine if there is a common course of action. Failing that, then choices will have to be made. Students have other choices in multifamily neighborhoods, the present home owners have fewer options." 100 THE CANDIDATES Dennis "Boog" Highberger BROADWAY BASEMENTS Background: Goodell has lived in Lawrence for 32 years. The former director of Housing and Neighborhood Development recently retired from city government but decided he wanted to serve the public again after doing it "behind the scenes" for 24 years. David Schauner FREDERICK SCHNEIDER Lynn Goodell, 66 C. L. PARKER Mike Rundle - **Picture** not available for *Gregory D*\*Wilkins and *Lennard G*\*Herdhard - **Picture** not available for *Gregory D*\*Wilkins and *Lennard G*\*Herdhard Goodell's position on the single-family housing ordinance: "If housing conditions are truly the public concern then it sounds like we should be inspecting all the houses in those neighborhoods, if that is not the public concern then that should be taken out of the ordinance. The other side of this, of course, is what do the neighbors think? The efforts on this ordinance seemed to be to form some sort of a compromise for the parties involved, something that would make both sides happy." Mike Rundle,49 Background: He is the lone incumbent. From his position on the city commission Rundle sees Lawrence as, "vibrant, healthy, growing city," but admits the city has "not been able to come together as a community and work consistently for positive change." Rundle's position on the single-family housing ordinance: "The commission was aware that an inspection department would take some time to build, and we expressed our interest in starting a program with the single-family neighborhoods and expanding it over time. There have been concerns about search warrants. We need to address inappropriate language regarding search warrants." David Schauner, 57 Background: As an attorney with the National Education Association in Topeka for the last Schauner's position on the single-family housing ordinance: 28 years, Schauner fought many court battles on behalf of educators. Schauner vows to work just as hard for the working people of Lawrence and their neighborhoods. Schauner moved to Lawrence from Topeka in the summer of 2000. "The city ordinance restricting the number of unrelated persons living in the same household in an area zoned for single family is an attempt to protect the integrity of single family neighborhoods. I support the attempt. There is a legitimate question about the inspection process. It should be reviewed. I believe that the ordinance should have a better enforcement mechanism." Doty CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A "The thing that sticks out in my mind was when I told her this was the last class I needed to graduate," Blakeslee said. "She let out a cackle, because she knew my fate was in her hands." Blakeslee said he would always remember Doty's sense of humor. "I was the sixth person she let do a directed study with her this semester," Blakeslee said. "She said I would have to shovel her driveway." Chelsea Covington, December 2002 graduate, said Doty's death was hard to take. "She was someone who was so full of life," Covington said. "To me, 60 is still so young." Blakeslee said Doty would have enjoyed the tone of the service, which included a three-piece jazz band performing a bittersweet rendition of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow." Speakers at the service read selections from Doty's novels, including one piece she had "The thing that sticks out in my mind when I told her this was the last class I needed to graduate. She let out a cackle, because she knew my fate was in her hands." Chris Blakeslee, Overland Park senior written for a friend titled "Marty." The story was about Doty's cat that thought its reflection was another cat lurking inside the oven. Valk said students and colleagues would always remember Doty's advice, both professional and personal. He said Doty was always willing to give her time to friends and students. "We will remember her extraordinary generosity," he said, "And we will remember that she loved her cats." —Edited by Leah Shaffer Final Four Headquarters NOW OPEN Items Available Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. • Lawrence, Ks. 66044 Final Four Headquarters NOW OPEN Items Available Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. • Lawrence, Ks. 66044 April 2nd 5:30 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center "Great Expectations" • workshop sessions • workplace realities • financial tips • networking • ethics • munchies April 10th 11:30 am – 1:30 pm Alderson Auditorium KS Union "Grad School – To Go or Not To Go" • a brown bag lunch discussion free registration at: www.ku.edu/~uces A professional development series for 2003 grads A professional development series for 2003 grads BACKPACKS 2 BRIEFCASES Hanover Place Apartments LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749-1912 ADAPTATION. (m) 7:00 9:30 QUIET AMERICAN (m) 4:45 7:10 8:40 THE BREAD, MY SWEET (m) 4:30 only 2 admissions for the price of 1 on Tues Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! - Fully applianced - kitchen w/microwave - Laundry facilities - Private off street parking - Central Heat and Air - Walk-in closets - Garages - Fireplaces - Washer/Dryer hookups - Walk to K.U. - On-site Manager - 24 hour emergency maintenance formal STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE 14th & Mass. (785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO ELECTIONS D D J TUESDAY APRIL 1 6:00PM BUDIG HALL ASK YOUR QUESTIONS. VOICE YOUR OPINIONS. Do you want your questions answered by the coalition? Submit them online @ www.ku.edu/~election BE SURE TO VOTE! - 6A= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 Preview of the parade PARKS Kellev Weiss/Kansan Three of the 30 fiberglass Jayhawks that will be exhibited around Lawrence are displayed at the Jayhawks on Parade reception Thursday night at Star Signs & Graphics Inc., 801 E. 23rd St. From left: "Puttin' on the Glitz," by Kathy Drungilas; "The Kansan," by Vernon Kauffman; and "Uncle Sam Hawk," by Winston Lanta. The "Puttn' on the Glitz" Jayhawk is covered with about 1,600 reflectors, Drungilas said. The Jayhawks will be installed throughout Lawrence this week. Ten of the birds will be displayed around campus. See below for KU locations. CAMPUS LOCATIONS ■ "Bit O' Hawk" artist - Katie Krin Jayhawk Bookstore 1 "Mascot Miro" artist - Susan Younger Jayhawk Bookstore "Whoosh!" artist-Susan Younger Alumni Associati RU ■ "Holy Hawk" artist - Cathy Ledeke location to be announced "Lions and Tigers and Hawks, Oh My!" artist - Doug Barth and Amanda Warren KU Endowment Association - West Campus "Puttin' on the Glitz" artist-Kathy Drungilas Allen Fieldhouse "Mardi Gras or Kaw Hawk" artist - Janet Perkins Lied Center "Mardi Gras on the the "Merhawk on the artist - Sharon Dewey Jayhawk Bookstor e "Classic Jayhawk" artist - Katie Kring Kansan Union "So many faces, but one heart" artist - Joanne Renfro KU Visitors Center Women CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A indicated that they didn't feel safe on campus at night, and 46 percent indicated there isn't adequate lighting on campus. Most women who experienced harassment didn't report it to authorities, but 47 percent reported limiting their evening classes as a safety concern. The majority of the female students in this study — 73 percent — didn't identify themselves as feminists but also didn't believe there was gender or pay equity in society as a whole. Female students also believe that leadership roles come more easily to men. The taskforce formulated a number of recommendations to facilitate changes to these weaknesses. "Our recommendations should serve as a guide to organized change towards this end," said Jessica St. Clair, taskforce member and Valley Center senior. The group would like to address gender equity by promoting programs for female students, organizing brown-bag lunches for female student leaders and focusing on pertinent issues to female students. One of the bigger concerns among the group was the financial concerns of the students surveyed. The taskforce recommended an increase in access to information on scholarships. It also wants to educate students on debt management and support continued efforts to ban credit card solicitation on camus Public Affairs journalists ordered to active duty WICHITA—About 15 members of the 203rd Mobile Public Affairs Detachment in Wichita were ordered to active duty yesterday. The broadcasters and print journalists of the 203rd will provide direct support for command information "I am surprised by the debt that is expected," said Travis Weller, Garden City junior, and taskforce member. "I think debt is a critical issue affecting all students." The taskforce was also concerned with safety. "It's not just walking from building to building," said Kevin Hager, taskforce member and Hays junior. "It's getting to campus and getting around." The taskforce recommended that KU implement a campus walking service, improve lighting and support efforts to open parking lots to students at 5 p.m. It also recommends offering personal safety classes for credit, and shorter classes through The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center or Public Safety Office. The taskforce said it would like to increase awareness of the The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Room 22 in Strong Hall, in addition to sponsoring an open forum to discuss the issues discovered in the survey and new issues not yet addressed. Edited by Melissa Hermreck and Jason Elliott newspapers and produce broadcasts that tell the soldiers' stories The unit has not been mobilized since 1995, when it was deployed to Bosnia. It is part of the Wichita-based 89th Regional Support Command, which has nearly 150 units with 12,000 soldiers in Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, and Nebraska. Se Serving KU KU Contacts Dr. Kevin Dr. Kevin Lenahan, O.D., P.A. Optometrist & Associates Hillcrest 935 Business Park, 935 Iowa (785)838-3200 www.lenahaneyedoc.com - Competitive Prices - Evening Hours - Great Location INTRODUCING The Kansan's New Automotive Guide ROLL OUT... with a new set of April 14,21,28 & May 5 only in your UDK. Wheels The Spectacle *Fashion Eye Wear 832-1238 66 - Competitive Prices - OPENING EVENINGS Hillcrest 935 Suite 3 935 Iowa Let us make a spectacle out of you! Legal Ebay who? support local trade KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS We welcome KU students, faculty & staff TRAFFIC-DUTS-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matters/Residence issues divorce, criminal and civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Downtown OAKLAND Sally G. Kelsey I6 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation We know a lot about locks Call 393-0442 If your business appreciates student business and would like to be included in our next Serving KU, please call The University Daily Kansan at 864-4358 Psychological Clinic 315 Fraser 864-4121 http://www.ku.edu/~psyline/ Counseling Services for Lawrence & KU Psychological Wilson Locksmithing & Security Service Your Security is Our Business KU --- WAXING Facial (brow, lip, chin) Arms, Legs, Back Bikini & Brazilian Wax D5 RIKINI WAXING Salon Di Marco Be Dom Spain JODA& FRIE 5009 W.6TH 841-0337 BRAZILIAN & BIKINI WAXING 782- BRAZILIAN & BIKINI W TRI- DIMENSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS TEXTURIZED HAIRCUTS FULL BODY WAXING (MEN WELCOME) EYEBROW & LASH TINTING 7 8 5 - 8 4 3 - 0 0 4 4 733 MASS LAWRENCE KANSAN.COM LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. NEWS 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. kansan Kansai NOW Jayhawk & Powercat Charms ITALIAN LINK BRACELETS 1 CHEVROLET CUV - IRSK Gold * Stainless Steel * Semi-Freelanced Stones * Greek Letters 23 The Etc. Shop 928 Massachusetts = (785) 843-0611 Summit House Apartments - 1 BR & 1 BR Loft Apartment Available • Water and trash paid • Walking distance to Campus • Laundry facilities on site • Private off street parking • 24 hr. Emergency maintenance Call (785) 841-1429 for details Now taking applications for Fall 2003 Mon-Fri 9 am - 6 pm 1105 Louisiana EHO 会 Summer at KU in KC Undergraduate Program KU Edwards Campus Design by Ellen Lawry Going home to KC this summer? The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. Enroll Today! Call (913) 897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu EAGLE KU Summer Semester begins June. 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 --- - Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2003 'Hawks lasso Cowboys By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter It took the Kansan baseball team six tries to win its first conference game of the season, but the Jayhawks (22-11 overall, 1-5 Big 12) downed the Oklahoma State Cowboys 10-8 yesterday at Hoglund Ballpark. Junior pitcher Ryan Knippschild took the mound for Kansas a day after the team used five pitchers. He pitched eight and one third innings for a total of 146 pitches, earning the victory and improving his record to 6-2 on the season. "He was really special today," Kansas coach Ritch Price said. "I talked to him before the game about concentrating on himself and doing the things he has done so well thus far this season. He has a goal to win 10 games this season, and if he could do it, it would be a great accomplishment for him in his first year in a Kansas uniform." The Jayhawks fell behind 3-1 after two innings, but then they managed to score in four consecutive innings starting with one in the third inning. Trailing 4-2 in the bottom of the fourth, the bottom of the lineup started the scoring for the Jayhawks. Sophomore infielder Travis Metcalf, the number seven hitter for Kansas started the rally with a double, followed by a single from senior catcher Sean Flynn, which drove in Metcalf. Freshman infielder Matt Baty then doubled, his first extra base hit of the season. "After the last yesterday we talked about the fact that we have been getting no contribution from the bottom of our lineup," Price said. "Today, we got some help from our seven through nine batters, and I think that is the reason we got some runs." After being tied at 4 after four innings, senior infielder Kevin Wheeler led off the bottom of the fifth inning with a solo home run to straight away centerfield. his seventh of the season. The Jayhawks built off of that and, once again, the bottom of the lineup came through. After senior infielder Casey Spanish walked, Metcalf singled, which advanced Spanish, then Flynn followed with a double off the centerfield wall. Once again, Baty got in on the action and singled into the outfield, which capped the scoring for the inning. Kansas managed to have four players cross home plate. The Jawhaws continued to build on their lead as freshman infielder Ritchie Price scored twice, once in the sixth inning and again in the eighth inning. Price reached base three times in the game, something he has been doing a lot lately. "The key to our team scoring runs is me and Lance getting on base," Ritchie Price said. "We know that the big guys will get us in. It was a big win for us, and hopefully we can continue to play well this weekend against Nebraska." The Cowboys attempted a comeback in the ninth inning scoring 4 runs, but it KANSAS 10 OKLAHOMA STATE 8 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 - R H E Ok. State 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 - 8 1 2 3 Kansas 1 0 1 2 4 1 0 1 X - 10 13 2 Pitchers: Kansas- Knippschild, Johnson Oklahoma State - Weaver, Rhodes, Hawk, Whitehead, Cowley Win-Knippschild Save - Johnson Loss - Rhodes Homerun: Matulich, Baty, Wheeler was not enough — junior reliever Brandon Johnson came in to record the last two outs of the game and get his third save of the season. With the victory, Kansas matched its win total from last year, as the 2002 Jayhawks finished the season 22-29. The Jayhawks will return to action at 6 p.m. today against Southwest Missouri State at Hoglund Ballpark. Edited by Andrew Ward Linebackers gear up for season By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer During the 2002 season, the Kansas linebacking corps faced a tough task — replacing graduated playmakers Marcus Rogers and sack-master Algie Atkinson. Thanks to performances by Greg Cole and Leo Etienne, the linebackers were effective yet again as Cole was named The Associated Press second team AllBig 12, and Etienne was AP honorable mention. The two combined for 202 tackles including 27 tackles for loss and six sacks last season. Now the 2003 team faces a similar challenge with a few twists. The two standout linebackers are gone, another was switched to safety in spring practice, and a fourth is recovering from a knee injury that sidelined him last season. Mark Mangino, Kansas football coach, said Banks Floodman was working on his knee in practice. "Banks right now is participating in 75 to 80 percent of the drills," Mangino said. "We just keep him out of some drills so that he doesn't get his knee rolled up in a pile-up." Floodman starred for the Jayhawks at the start of the first game against Iowa State. In what became a blowout, Floodman stood apart from the rest. He chased Iowa State star quarterback Seneca Wallace around the field, collecting eight tackles with a sack and a quarterback pressure. Then, on a second quarter punt return, Floodman injured his knee, leaving him out for the rest of the season. Now, through spring practice, the sophomore is attempting to regain his earlier form, and has gained muscle and measures 6-foot-3,230 pounds. Mike Gehrer, Floodman's high school football coach at Wichita Collegiate, said when Floodman was a great talent when he signed at Kansas. "I told Banks that college is not where he stops," Gehrer said. "If he keeps getting bigger and keeps his tenacity, he could be playing football for a very long time." While Floodman works at regaining lost strength. Nick Reid works to learn a new position—safety. After switching from quarterback to linebacker last season, Reid tallied 62 tackles and a team high six sacks. Now he goes from being an undersized linebacker at 6-foot-4 and weighing 220 pounds to a big safety. Reid's departure opens the door for several players to make an impact. Sophomores Kevin Kane and Brandon Perkins were working with Floodman on the first team defense on Friday. Kane, a 6-foot-2, 220-pound middle linebacker saw significant playing time with Floodman's absence last season and finished the season with 27 tackles. Perks added 10 pounds of muscle and is athletic. Darren Rus and Greg Tyree could also see some playing time, while Glenn Robinson has not participated in spring practice because of an injury. Perhaps the greatest help to the line-backers will arrive in the fall. Brandon Baker/Kansan 5 Gabe Toomey was a junior college All-American last year after transferring to Iowa Central Community College from Oklahoma. In high school, he was rated as one of the top-four outside linebackers in the country by USA Today and was a Prep Star All-American. Although a junior college transfer, Toomey will have three years of eligibility at Kansas. Juco transfers John McCoy, a 6-foot-3 250 pound linebacker who had 45 tack- "He is going to be a good player." Mangino said. Mangino said the 255-pound Toomey was a fantastic recruiting catch. Sophomore linebacker Banks Floodman has been working on his knee during practices. Floodman injured his knee during a game against Iowa State on Aug. 31, sidelining him for the rest of the season. tes for loss last season, and athletic Zach at 3:25 p.m. Mims should also bolster the unit. The next open practice is tomorrow — Edited by Erin Chapman Former coach supports from sidelines Bv. Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Sitting atop the bleachers at football practice, it might be a tough adjustment for Don Fambrough to be seen and not heard. But that's exactly the path the former Jayhawk coach has taken. Fambrough has made the transition from player to assistant to coach to fan for the Jayhawks—a role he has taken in stride. "He has never once attempted to lend me advice, even though I may have asked him things from time to time," Kansas coach Mark Mangino said. "He just cares about the football program, and he wants us to be successful right now." The 80-year-old Fambrough has Fambrough began his Jayhawk career in 1946 as an offensive guard and captain of the football team. He earned All-Big Six honors twice and led Kansas to an Orange Bowl victory in 1947 before becoming a 19-year assistant for the Jayhawks. He received an opportunity to be coach in 1971 and led the Jayhawks to two bowl appearances in eight years of coaching. He was named Big 8 Coach of the Year in 1981. "He's a true-blue Jayhawk—let there be no doubt." Mangino said. "He is one of the most loyal people to this University and to our football program that we've ever had." attended all the Kansas practices this year and remained dedicated to the team after 57 years of devotion. Fambrough pointed out many differences between his coaching days and today, such as indoor practice facilities. He said when the weather was not cooperative, his team would practice on the basketball courts after the basketball team was finished. Now, the Jayhawks have the luxury of the Anschutz Sports Pavilion, a full indoor practice field. "This is a great place to do some teaching," Fambrough said. "When the wind blows outside, sometimes it's hard for the players to hear. If you want to devote a practice to teaching, a lot more can be done in here." The former coach also noted that practices were more meaningful now, as the NCAA has limited the number of hours a team can run drills. "We used to have spring practice from the day the snow melted to the day school got out," Fambrough said. "Now the coaches have to take advantage of every minute of practice, because teams are doing it everywhere else." Fambrough said he was supportive of Mangino's efforts in attempting to rebuild the program. "I'm 100 percent behind coach Mangino," Fambrough said. "There's no doubt in my mind he's going to get the job done." After watching practices this year, Fambrough said he was encouraged with the strides the team has made. "They've had so much improvement," Fambrough said. "There's no comparison between where the team is this year compared to last year." Mangino feels fortunate to have Fambrough around his team. "I really like having him here," Mangino said. "He's an inspiration to us all." SPORTS COMMENTARY Edited by Leah Shaffer 2107 Ryan Greene rgreene@kansan.com I still remember the first time I watched them both play. Point guard role model for Hawk on court They had a smooth game without any hesitation. They looked small but could play above the rim or on the perimeter. Most noticeably, they had the swagger that walked the line between confident and cocky, without crossing it. The two players I speak of share a mentor-student relationship. The professor is Michigan legend Jalen Rose, and the student is Kansas sophomore guard Keith Langford. Growing up, Langford loved Jalen Rose. Not only did Langford choose the same jersey number as the former Fab Five standout, he modeled his entire game after Rose. During his nearly two years at Kansas, those who know the two can see the obvious resemblance between them, but in the NCAA Tournament, Langford has shown his most valuable lesson learned from Rose's book — rising to the occasion. Keith Langford has won over fans in many sentimental ways. Whether it's his changing of his shoes at half-time when getting off to a rough start or thrumping his chest and raising his arms after a monster dunk, it's hard not to love the guy as a fan. 1. The most inspiring part of Langford's game is that he has emerged as the emotional leader from the Jayhawks' talented sophomore class. Wayne Simien sat a large and crucial portion of the season. Aaron Miles is not only a streaky performer, but also short-tempered at times. All the while, Keith Langford has shown that he is ready to make this his team once Collison and Hinrich are getting paid to play. I love the guy because we share the same idol in Jalen Rose. Langford is becoming a mature player on college basketball's biggest stage, just like Rose did in 1993. In the 1993 NCAA Tournament, Rose was desperately needed by a Michigan team that had a couple of scares in both the Sweet 16 and the Elite Eight. In the Final Four, Rose averaged 15 points per game, as the perfect complement to fellow sophomore, Chris Webber, who led the Wolverines with 25 points per game. Even though Michigan suffered a heart-breaking 77-71 loss to North Carolina in the championship game thanks to an infamous time-out call, Rose stepped up as the number two guy. No one wants Langford's second Final Four trip doesn't end in heartbreak like Rose's did. If Langford emerges Monday night with a ring, he may live longer in the college basketball lore than his legendary role model. On Thursday, in Kansas' Sweet 16 victory against Duke, senior Nick Collison played the game of his life with 33 points and 18 rebounds. With fellow senior Kirk Hinrich shooting 1-for-9 from the field and scoring just two points, Langford stepped up with 13. He was the only other Jayhawk to score in double figures. Then, when Hinrich redeemed himself on Saturday against Arizona and Collison sat a good portion of the game in foul trouble, Langford was there with a helping hand and 13 points once again. Greene is a Vernon Hills, Ill., junior in journalism } --- "Right now I feel like I'm on cloud nine. If there's a cloud 20, that's where I'd be, too." Kansas forward Jeff Graves after Kansas' victory against Arizona Saturday Inside Sports 2B • THEUNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY Reputation of Jayhawks as 'chokers' uninformed Roy Williams and the Kansas men's basketball team have some critics to silence this weekend. Now headed for their second straight Final Four, the Jayhawks need just two more victories to, as Williams might say, shut up all the idiots out there. The uninformed morons who ignore recent history and, apparently trapped in 1998, believe the Jayhawks are chronic NCAA Tournament chokers. That's right—even if you believe that choking is a "skill" possessed by coaches and players who don't know how to win in the postseason, Williams and his lajfawhaks don't fit the profile. There was a time when they did, but that's in the past. "Choking" is losing when you're supposed to win, right? Between 1995 to 1998, Williams' teams embodied the word. Every year in that span, the Jayhawks earned a No. 1 or 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Each of those years, the Jayhawks were eliminated by a lower seed in their region. But the 'Hawks haven't lost to a lower-ranked team since 98. In fact, Kansas is the only team to play to its seed in the tournament each of the last five years. What does that mean? When the NCAA selection committee gives a team a No.1 seed in a region, it expects the team to win that region. A No.2 seed is expected to reach the regional final before losing. Third and fourth seeds are expected to reach the round before that, and so on. So right now, the Jayhawks are the most consistent "non-chokers" in college basketball. With that, you'd think Kansas would have lost its reputation for choking by now. But once average sports fans form opinions, they're not interested in changing them, even if there's excellent evidence that they're wrong. And in their minds, once a team chokes, they're always going to be chokers — unless they win a championship. If Kansas gets two more victories and finally gives us that Massachusetts Street parade we've been anticipating for 15 years, fans across the country will say, "Wow, they didn't choke. Amazing." But that's perception, not reality. As the record shows, the Hawks have been a consistently good tournament team in recent years. Berlin is a Leawood senior in journalism. JAYHAWKS IN THE PROS By Ryan Greene rgreeeen@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter With the NBA regular season in full swing, each week the Kansan will bring updates on all of your favorite former Jayhawks. If there are any former Jayhawks we haven't included who you would like an update on, e-mail requests to rgreene@kansan.com. Paul Pierce - Boston Celtics While the Celtics ended a six-game losing streak to cap off the week, it came against the NBA's worst team, as Boston downed Cleveland BOSTON CELTICS both Friday and Saturday night. In Saturday's 110-106 victory, Pierce not only scored 34 points but finished one rebound and one assist shy of his second triple-double of the season. Boston's recent woes have led to a plummet in the Eastern Conference standings. With only eight games left in the regular season, the Celtics are currently the sixth- seed but are only a half-game ahead of Orlando. As the Magic climb their way up the Eastern Conference playoff standings, Vaughn has certainly picked up his play in the past week. Jacque Vaughn - Orlando Magic A statistically sound week was capped off with 12 points in Thursday's 110-107 victory against Western power, Minnesota The Mavericks kept themselves atop Raef LaFrentz - Dallas Mavericks The Mavericks to the Western Conference by going 3-1 in four road contests last week. LaFrentz averaged 10 points per game, including 14 points in a victory. against Denver yesterday and 15 in Sunday's victory against Minnesota. The Kings are quickly closing in on Scot Pollard - Sacramento Kings SACRAMENTO KINGS another Pacific Division Championship, and the return of Pollard has been huge for a team that has had to force younger players into the game plan because of injuries. Pollard had another solid effort in Saturday's victory at Chicago with 11 points and 13 rebounds. Greg Ostertag - Utah Jazz On Saturday, in a Ostertag has surprisingly continued to boost production down the season's stretch run. JAZZ 101-81 loss at San Antonio, Ostertag matched a season-high with 16 points and then added 10 rebounds for yet another double-double. Danny Manning - Detroit Pistons - Did Not Play (Coach's Decision) Rookies shine on opening day Drew Gooden - Orlando Magic - Did Not Play (Sprained Big Toe) The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The young Kansas City Royals were hoping for this kind of start. Runelvys Hernandez allowed two hits in six innings and rookie Angel Berroa drove in the go-ahead run as the Royals beat the Chicago White Sox 3-0 yesterday — Kansas City's first opening-day victory in five years. "We have a lot of young guys, no doubt about that." Harvey said. "But us young guys have proven ourselves in the minor leagues. Once we get over being in awe of the major leagues, we'll be fine." Kansas City got key contributions from its rookies: Mike MacDougal pitched a 1-2-3 ninth to complete a three-hitter, designated hitter Ken Harvey doubled twice and Berroa made a fine defensive play at shortstop in the ninth innings. Hernandez, given the opening-day start over Jeremy Affeldt by winning a coin flip, struck out five and walked only one. "I feel so great, so very, very happy about that," said the 24-year-old right-hander, 4-4 last year as a rookie. "Thev have confidence about me and I don't want to lose that." Jason Grimsley gave up one hit in two innings, and the sellout crowd stood for MacDougal, who threw a called third strike past Frank Thomas for! RKC Frank Thomas for the second out Royals "Their young kids pitched well," said Thomas, who was also thrown out at the plate by third baseman Joe Randa in the seventh. "Hernandez hit his spots. We were all shocked he threw four pitches for strikes. He did whatever he wanted, and we started chasing." A sellout crowd of 40,302 was at Kauffman Stadium, and the temperature was 73 at gametime. A stealth bomber flew over the stadium after the national anthem. Mark Buehrle, 19-12 last year, became the first left-hander to make consecutive opening-day starts for the White Sox since Wilbur Wood from 1972-76. Buehrle gave up two runs and six hits in seven innings. "Tip your hat to Hernandez," Buehrle said. "Except for one inning, I settled down." Chicago, expected to contend for the AL Central title, opened on the road for the 13th consecutive season. Kansas City, coming off a 62-100 season, went ahead in the second. Brandon Berger, given the start in right field because half of his eight career homers have come off Buehrle, walked and went to third on Harvey's first double. Berroa singled and Brent Mayne followed with an RBI double—with Berroa out at the plate on a strong relay throw from second baseman D'Angelo limenez. Mike Sweeney doubled in the eighth, went to third on a passed ball and scored on Tom Gordon's wild pitch. Harvey was cut down at the plate in the sixth by third baseman Joe Crede. Notes: The White Sox won last year's series 11-8, outscoring Kansas City 83-19 in their 11 wins. ... Aaron Rowand made a good play in center, diving to snare Randa's drive with two outs in the seventh. ... Sweeney is wearing a "C" on his uniform as the Royals' captain. Broncos quarterback joins team Plummer was among 38 Broncos who took part in the morning workout, which included sessions with a yoga instructor. DENVER — Quarterback Jake Plummer joined his new teammates yesterday, running and lifting weights at the opening of the Denver Broncos' offseason strength and conditioning program. Broncos last month, hoped to make a quick adjustment. ALPINE Plummer, the former Arizona Cardinals quarterback who signed a six-year, $40 million free-agent deal with the "As I was getting ready to leave Arizona, I felt like a kid getting ready to go to junior high or high school," he said. "I was excited, I had a smile on my face. I was ready to come up here and make a fresh start and get things going." "It went well, but it's not done yet," Imer said. "I've still got to go upstairs for a couple of hours and get into the playbook." Plummer was impressed with the number of players at the workout. "To see that many guys out here for the first workout was awesome," he said. "Some of them are in good shape, some of them not, but they're here and they're here to work hard. That's what I'm here to do, too. Everyone was trying to get me scared with the elevation thing, but I think I did all right today running-wise." Plummer had hoped to begin some light throwing to wide receiver Rod Smith, but Smith begged off yesterday. Plummer said he had put on weight and was at about 210 to 215 pounds. Tight end Shannon Harpe, uncertain about returning for another season, was not at the workout, but Harpe usually does his own drills at his home in Georgia during the offseason. The Associated Press POLL kansan.com Where would you rather be for Kansas' Final Four game? At the game in New Orleans - in Lawrence watching in a bar or restaurant I'm not watching the game. With friend at a game-viewing party Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote. Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY Softball at Wichita State, 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Baseball vs Southwest Missouri State, Hoglund Ballpark, 6 p.m. Track at Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, all day FRIDAY Baseball vs. Nebraska, Hoglund Ballpark 7 p.m. rack at TexasRelays, Austin, Texas, all day SATURDAY Basketball vs. Marquette, Louisiana Supperdome, 8 p.m. Baseball vs. Nebraska, Hoglund Ballpark, 2 p.m. Track at Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, all day Softball at Texas Tech, Lubbock, Texas, 2 n SUNDAY Baseball vs. Nebraska, Hoglund Ballpark, 1 o.p. Softball at Texas Tech, Lubbock, Texas, 5, p Tennis vs. Colorado, Robinson Outdoor Tennis Cups, 11 a.m. Free forAll explore north america It's as simple as this: Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich are my heroes. Hey Arizona, do you like apples? Well we beat you and we're going to the Final Four. How do you like them apples? explore north america I was just looking at Mr. Peanut's College Hoops Daily Poll, and it was, "Which Final Four team will win the 2003 NCAA championships?", and I'd just like to let everyone know that KU is in first place with 33 percent of the votes. Go KU! Orchard Corners Apartments Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! We offer: - 2 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - On KU bus route - 4 BR -2 Bath - Furnished & unfurnished apartments - 4 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - Private patio or balcony - Small pets welcome - Friendly on-site manager - Sparkling pool - On-site laundry Models open daily 749-4226 15th & Kasold Mon.- Fri. 9:00 - 5:00 - Dorm units available $462 EQUAL HOMES OPPORTUNITY STUDENT TRAVEL start packing! $249 LONDON For EURAIL PASSES From HIP HOTELS Prom $18 (domestic and international) * $18 europe USA USA CANADA HAWAII backpacking, cruises, tours and more Fate is round trip from Kansas City. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Reservations and blackouts apply don't miss your big Kansas Union, Room 475 (785)864.1271 pick up your complimentary, premiere issue of BREAK magazine at your local sta travel branch. www.statravel.com STA TRAVEL Regents Court Apartments Large 3&4 BR,2 full bath apartments for rent with Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Large fully Applianced Kitchen including Microwave & Dishwasher Gas Heat & Hot Water Central Heat & Air Off street parking On KU bus route Emergency malntenance Large 3&4 BR,2 full bath 24 hr. Emergency maintenance EHO For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 Mon.-Fri. 9-5 . TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Knight shoots for another NITtitle The Associated Press NEW YORK — Asked about his fondest memories of the city, Bob Knight tilted his head back, crossed his arms and told a story about his first visit, when he was 7. "We came over Christmas and New York was snowbound," Knight said. "You could walk down the middle of Fifth Avenue." He went on recalling his four visits to the National Invitation Tournament as the coach at Army. He later took Indiana to three NITs, winning the title in 1979. Knight has a deep respect for the NIT, and he's in the tournament for the first time since 1985, this time in his second year with Texas Tech. The Red Raiders will play St. John's in the semifinals tonight. "This is the third school I've had play in the NIT, and I'd like to think there isn't any coach today who doesn't feel any stronger about the NIT than I do," Knight said. "What the NIT has done to sustain the tournament has been a tremendous help to college basketball." Knight appreciates the NIT because of the way the NCAA selects its tournament field. He believes computers should determine the field, and no team should receive an automatic bid. In four appearances with Army, he reached the semifinals three times. He said the goal every year at West Point was to play in the NIT. Knight won three NCAA titles at Indiana, and the Hoosiers beat Purdue 53-52 to win the 1979 NIT championship. Knight is proud to have Texas Tech (21-12) in the NIT because of the way the team rebounded at the end of the season. After finishing the regular season 16-11, Knight said he didn't want his base salary of $250,000. But the Red Raiders finished strong, and one of their best victories came against Final Four-bound Texas in the Big 12 tournament. Novak threatens Kansas in Final Four MILWAUKEE—The message finally got through to Steve Novak. The Associated Press Marquette's 6-foot-10 freshman drew the ire of his teammates during the regular season by passing up open outside shots. With their prodding fresh in his mind, Novak has gone 14-for-20 from behind the 3-point line during the NCAA Tournament, despite making only 21 of 49 three-pointers in the team's first 20 games. "We would get mad at him," point guard Travis Diener said after a spirited practice yesterday. "We'd be upset with him because he wouldn't shoot. Now he's finally putting up shots and it's paying off." Novak's accuracy from the perimeter is a major reason the Golden Eagles are headed to their first Final Four since 1977, when the Al McGuire-coached squad won the national championship. Since making five 3-pointers at DePaul on Feb. 12, Novak has made 34-of-55 3-pointers in 12 games, an incredible .618 clip. "I don't know what his problem was at the start," Diener said. "When you can shoot like that, I don't know why he was hesitant in the first place. Now, we're just happy that he's firing them up there." Novak won't be a secret in Marquette's semifinal game against Kansas on Saturday night in New Orleans, but he should be a big factor. He made two 3-pointers in Marquette's 72-68 victory over Holy Cross in the first round and added four against Missouri, three of them in overtime as Marquette prevailed 101-92. He added three more in the Golden Eagles' 77-74 victory over second-seeded Pittsburgh and hit five 3-pointers in Marquette's stunning 83-69 rout of top-seeded and top-ranked Kentucky. Novak blames his slow start this season on the tentativeness he felt as a first-year sixth man who played both small and power forward. "As the season went on, I was able to more easily recognize what the team needed from me." Syracuse shows great improvement in 2003 The Associated Press SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Kueth Duany is glad to be around for his senior season at Syracuse, especially after last year's disappointment. The Orangemen didn't make the NCAA Tournament field in 2002, but coach Jim Boeheim's team came back strong this season, advancing to the Final Four with a 63-47 victory against top-seeded Oklahoma in the East Regional final on Sunday. "This is the best feeling I've had since I've been at Syracuse," said Duany, the only senior among Syracuse's starting five. "I just want to keep it rolling." The Orangemen (28-5) will play Texas (26-6) in the national semifinals on Saturday night in New Orleans. While Oklahoma, Indiana, Kansas and eventual champion Maryland were making their way to the Final Four last year, Duany and the Orangemen were back in Syracuse, trying to become the first team to win both the preseason and post-season NIT. They lost to South Carolina in the semifinals. The Orangemen had gone 20-10 during the 2001-02 regular season, but they stumbled to a 4-8 finish. And when Villanova beat the Orangemen in the first round of the Big East tournament, Boeheim knew they wouldn't be going to the NCAA Tournament. "In practice an hour and a half before the selection show, Coach pretty much told us, 'Sorry. Let's get ready for next year,'" sophomore center Craig Forth said. "This year we walked into the room to watch the selection show, and everybody was smiling, happy, ready to go," Forth said. "It makes it a lot more fun to actually be one of the teams playing for a national championship, knowing that we can do something special." Boeheim, who has 651 victories in his 27 years at Syracuse, thought that was possible before this season started. formerly Bada Bing! The wildest party from here to Vegas! ALLSTARS Where everybody’s a player! 913 N. 2nd Street - Lawrence, KS (785)-841-4122 DRINK SPECIALS Monday: $2 Wells Thursday: $4 Red Bull & Jager Night Tuesday: 2 for 1 Cocktails Wednesday: $3 Boulevard & Rolling Rock Friday & Sat: $2 AllStar Shots Sunday: $3 - 22 oz. Bud & Bud Light New April 7th Don't Miss! this Show! with private admission Ultimate Ladies’ Night Out Featuring special guests NOW INTERVIEWING for waitresses and cheerleaders all shifts Paleontologist Paul Sereno has encountered some of the weirdest creatures that ever walked the earth. Yet some of the scariest things he's discovered aren't likely to become extinct anytime soon. Sad to say, mutual fund management fees will probably outlast us all. That's why Dr. Sereno was afraid of getting eaten alive. So he turned to a company famous for keeping the costs down. That meant more money for him and less for the monsters. Log on for ideas, advice, and results. TIAA-CREF.org or call (800) 842-2776 TIAA CREF Managing money for people with other things to think about. RETIREMENT INSURANCE MUTUAL FUNDS COLLEGE SAVINGS TRUSTS INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT Paul Sereno became a participant in 1987, TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc., and Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc., distribute securities products. © 2002 Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association-College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF). New York, NY. For more complete information on TIAA-CREF Mutual Funds, please call (800) 223-1280 for a prospectus. Read it carefully before you invest. A charitable donation was made to Project Exploration (www.projectexploration.org) on behalf of Paul Sereno. ELECTIONS TUESDAY APRIL 1 6:00PM BUDIG HALL ASK YOUR QUESTIONS. VOICE YOUR OPINIONS. state Review April 7th Light Don't Miss This Show! with private tip on I's Ultimate Ladies' Night Out Featuring special guests We Buy, Sell & Trade USED & NEW Sports Equipment 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Paleontologist Paul Sereno has encountered some of the weirdest creatures that ever walked the earth. Yet some of the scariest things he's discovered aren't likely to become extinct anytime soon. Sad to say, mutual fund management fees will probably outlast us all. That's why Dr. Sereno was afraid of getting eaten alive. So he turned to a company famous for keeping the costs down. That meant more money for him and less for the monsters. Log on for ideas, advice, and results. TIAA-CREF.org or call (800) 842-2776 TIAA CREF Managing money for people with other things to think about. RETIREMENT | INSURANCE | MUTUAL FUNDS | COLLEGE SAVINGS | TRUSTS | INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT Paul Sereno became a participant in 1997, TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc., and Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc., distribute securities products © 2002 Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association-College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF), New York, NY. For more complete information on TIAA-CREF Mutual Funds, please call (800) 223-1200 for a prospectus. Read it carefully before you invest. A charitable donation was made to Project Exploration (www.projectexploration.org) on behalf of Paul Sereno. formal STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Do you want your questions answered by the coalition? Submit them online @ www.ku.edu/~election BE SURE TO VOTE! --- 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 WEATHER --- TODAY 85 50 warm and breezy TOMORROW 84 52 mostly sunny THURSDAY 75 47 partly clear and — BRANDI GUNTER, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE THE MASKED AVENGERS by Matt Sevcik & Max Kruetzer, for The University Daily Kansas OH GOD! I HAVE SCRAPED MY KNEE!!! QUIT YOUR WHINING! OH GOD! I HAVE SCRAPED MY KNEE!!! QUIT YOUR WHINING! HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 1). You're a powerful force to be reckoned with, this year more than ever. You're assertive and smart, but you'll encounter resistance. With power comes responsibility and accountability. Become wise and diplomatic. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 10. If you focus your attention, you can take new ground. You're powerful, energetic and lucky. Be smart, too, and you'll get even further. Taurus (April 20-May 20), Today is a 5. It's time to launch a household project you've been considering. Make your wishes clear. Otherwise, if it doesn't turn out the way you want, it'll be your own fault. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is an 8. The action is fast and furious, and you're an important player. You're the one who watches to make sure the others are following the rules. If they don't, holler! Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 9. Keep your head up and do what makes you happy, as soon as possible. This is a good time to eat dinner with a person who has a strong devotion, especially if he or she is part of your future. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 10. You're pretty lucky, but it never hurts to do the homework. The more credentials you have, the more credibility. Add another to credential to your collection. Virgo (Aug, 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 5. It's hard to stay calm when others are impatient, especially if you're working with or for them. Just do the best you can, and don't take it personally if somebody yells. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Today is an 8. If ever there was a time to delegate, this is it. You'll end up with better results than you could ever produce on your own, on a task you don't like anyway. Get rid of it! Scorpio (Oct, 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 6 much better if you utilize each other's talents. you may feel like biting your tongue o keep from snapping at an irritating co-worker. You'll get along Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 10. You're usually a casual, easygoing person. Lately you may have found yourself aroused to new heights of passion. Don't be alarmed. It's just a phase you're going through. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 5. Try not to lose your temper if some of your friends and family get a little rowdy. Instead, see if you can channel that energy into something productive. Aquarius (Jan, 20-Feb. 18). Today is an 8. You're a very intelligent person, but you probably know that already. What you may not know is that you can learn more quickly than usual now. Get busy. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 5. You could do well financially without a great deal more effort. That's good, because you don't have a lot of energy now. You do have luck and love, however, and that'll do. Crossword ACROSS 1 Pol's $ provider 4 Thanks in Quebec 9 Ear and spark endings 14 August sign 15 Oak starter 16 Plane passage 17 Samovar 18 Inherited characteristic 19 View again 20 Tiny amount 22 Without stint 24 Ice masses 27 Wait on 27 Cries of delight 29 High card 30 Norwegian capital 34 Cobbler's tool 36 Sillier 38 Resting atop 39 __-Jaffa, Israel 41 Apprentice 43 Mine products 44 Went on a hunger strike 46 Double curve 47 __ up (refresh) 48 Respiratory malady 49 Lifeless 51 Factory 53 Soprano Beverly 56 Vote on a public measure 61 Grinding device 62 Wear away 63 Ecclesiastical law 65 West of Hollywood 66 Fathers 67 Serengeti carnivore 68 Mischievous child 69 Adolescents 70 Short literary piece 71 Make lace DOWN 1 Perpendicular 2 Eagle's nest 3 Regulating mechanism 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 4 Tatami 5 Cream shade 6 Chestnut-and-white horses 7 __ War (1853-56) 8 Head off 9 Analyze syntactically 10 Stead 11 Cold War letters 12 Merriment 13 Parakeet staple 21 Braggart's problem 23 Affirmed confidently 25 Knife in a prison riot 28 Inhale audibly 30 Umpire's call 31 Maximum mph 32 Ships' diaries 33 Small bills 34 On the peak of 35 Existed 37 Snow slide 40 Request 04/01/03 B E R A T E E A S S A B E L E L I S H A D O E B O R E D I N N E R H O U R A S I A G E E N A T R A N C E S S T A R I N H A N D N H L L L I L A C Y O G I S A R E A R E T H A N A S A R E V W A S I R S S A P L A I R S E E N T O T I P S T O I C L E E A S T R A H V O C A L S S S O H O T R O U G H S E A T I N H A L L E S C A L A T O R S U R G E V V I A M U U M U S E A T Y E T S T P E T E Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 42 Lyric poems 45 Month of ___ 50 Purpose 51 Iron 52 Simple melodies 54 Andes beast 55 Slumbered 56 Take a break 57 Ashtabula's lake 58 Links warning 59 Genesis location 60 Poet Van Duyn 64 Negative vote SUNDANCE 7th & Florida NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Studios, 1BR, 2BR, 3 BR w/2 baths 4 BR w/2 baths 7th & Florida - Furnished Apt. 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Kansan Classified 842-8665 KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept 2858 Four Wheel Dr. I 100s Announcements advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. 120 - Announcements Drummer wanted to play for "Joe and the Casios". Only rockers need apply. Call Joe, Josh or Pat 832-8784 or stop by 501 Nogel Street. H COMMUNITY MERCANTILE CO-OP 24 Carrot Fresh Organic Produce! COMMUNITY MERCANTILE CO., 9148 THE MERC! NATURAL FOOD GROCERY 9TH & IOWA · OPEN 7AM-10PM Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch,& clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swell.net ATTENTION UNDER GRADS Are you feeling overqualified and underpaid? 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Men & Women Earn Money in Digital & Video Modeling as Adult Entertainment 18+Only 785-554-2793 Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentleman's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. Experienced gymnastic instructors needed. Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children offered. Call Ternita at 913-469-5554. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. $800 weekly guaranteed. sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Stuffing envelopes. Send self- addressed, stamped envelope to Caldwell Enterprise, 1151 North State Street, Suite 231, Chicago, IL 60160 Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It's not too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campwinadu.com or complete application in staff area of www.campwinadu.com. The Rock Springs 4-H Center is seeking applicants for 40-50 summer staff positions. Applicants must be graduating high school seniors or college students. Positions are recreation instructors, including teambuilding, horses, environmental education, rifles, traps, archery, canoes, crafts and lifeguards. We also have several positions in foodservice, maintenance and custodial departments. Internships are available for those who quality. Rock Springs offers a monthly salary and room and board. Rock Springs is a nationally recognized camp and conference center serving approximately 27,000 youth and adults each year, most during the summer. Rock Springs is located 14 miles south of Junction City, Kansas on K-157 Highway. For an application or more information you can contact me at: Rock Springs 4-H Center C/O Jamie Farr 5404 West Hwy K-157 Junction City, KS 66441 785-257-3221 jfarm@rocksprings.net 205 - Help Wanted Interested in working with children and have a sense of humor? Raintree Montessori School, 4601 Clinton Parkway, located on 14 acres with pools, a pond and a pig named Wilbur has an opening for a classroom assistant in May (7:15-4:00, $21,000 YR), a full-time instructor for summer camp (degree required) and a late afternoon assistant (3:15-5:30, $8/hr.) now. Montessori certification not required. Experience and a sense of humor, however, are Call 843-6800. LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at Girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature, challenge course, dance and drama). Early June - mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Call 303-778-0109 x281 or email rhondn@gsmhc.org Looking for experienced dancers to teach children in Gardner/Wellsville ages 3- adult 913-844-6505 or 759-594-2150. 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampjobs.com. MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163 ex.1020 Shipping position open immediately. $8$/hr, 20 hrs/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and/or resume with 3 references to EEI, P.O. Box 1304 Lawrence, KS 65004, EOE/AA SUMMER IN CHICAGO! Childcare and light housekeeping for sub- urban Chicago families. Responsible, lo- vage, non-smoker. Call Northfield Nannies. (847) 501-3534 Summer Staff Needed! Camp Wood YMCA Elmldale Kansas, Counselors, Program Directors, Life Lacks, Wranglers, and more. 620-273-8641 or Campwood@bidnetsg.com Youth Director Beth El Synagogue (Minneapolis, MN) is seeking a youth director. Responsible for programming and administration associated with the youth department (5th-12th grades). Bachelors degree and experience working with teenage youth required. Experience in a similar environment a plus. Staff supervisory/training skills, leadership training skills, and strong organizational and programming skills needed. Send resume to Search Committee. Attention: Richard Glassman, 701 Fourth Avenue South, Suite 500, Minneapolis, MN 55415, or rglassmanaw@atbi.com. Kansan Ads Work For You --- TUESDAY,APRIL1,2003 CLASSIFIED 205 - Help Wanted --- Help Wanted - Camp counselors wanted for best summer camp in Midwest. Apply online www.midwestsummercamps.com Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evertimes. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistants! Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon. 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Resp. incl: Assisting patrons, product, multimedia, maint, library records and materials, computer config/troubleshooting and many special projects. Req. quals, excell customer service, computer & A/V equipment experience, excel communication skills. $65/hr, 15-25 hrs/wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For into call 684-4745, Deadline April 11, 2002. Home Helpers Inc. seeks companion for delightful elderly clients. Part time flexible hours, and excellent pay for honest, personable, employee. Call Julie, 331-5850. *Attention Lorna please call* Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554. Kate seeks summer nanny for kids. 8, 12. 13 NS, own car, references, great opportunity. Overland Park, 816-943-2671. X 300s Merchandise S 305 - For Sale Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Hendaa, Chevy's and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext. 4565. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance, $12.98 and up, Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 325 - Stereo Equipment KEF O50 3-way speaker towers 8 OHM. Perfect. Sweetest jazz/classical sound. $500 for pair. Call 749-1018. Car Stereo Equip. for Sale. New Alpine MRD-M500 $300 obo New Alpine-MRV- T420 $300 obo New 2-10 'JL Audio WO w box $150 obo 2-10 'Rockford Fosgate HE2 w box $150 obo Catalog 785-640-924 405 - Apartments for Rent 400s Real Estate 1,2:3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. Available August 1st. 841-6254 405 - Apartments for Rent Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice remodeled 1 BR close to campus, quiet mature building. Gas, water are paid. No pets, no smoking. Starting $400;841-3192. Avail, Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house, 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling tans, window A/C. 10th & NY. No pets. $550. Call 841-1074. High Point 28R, JBA available now, W.D, DW, Fitness Center, on pool. KU bus route. $730/mo. 2001 W. 6th St. 841- 8468 West Hills Apartments 405 - Apartments for Rent PINEVILLE CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas. 843-4090. 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 1317 Vermont 1712 OHIO CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870; 900 Block Michigan. Gallon 843-4090. 1 yr, old large luxury 4 BR 2 bath duplex avail. Aug. 1. Has Everything! FP. WD, etc $1420, NO PETS, 841-5533 - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom Avail. Aug. 1. Large newer 384 BR apt. DW, CA, micro. laundry, on site. 384 B 2 BA $900. 4BR 2 BA $1040. NO PETS. PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt. Inc. 841-535 www.partitionsinlawrence.com 405 - Apartments for Rent Avail June 1 Nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR, 1 1/2 bath, WD, W/D, CA, 9th and 11th. Top floor, balcony, view, no smoking. no pets. $590 + util. 550-8111. 841-3192 OPENHOUSE 1,2,3 Bedrooms 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. Newl. 804/806 New Jersey st. $895/mo. plus deposit. call 550-4148. Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. $0 savings on select units with new 12 month lease. 1.2.3. & 8 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus te, laundry facility. Call 843-0011. Some with fireplaces and Garages Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes - Great Location Near Campus M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com 2 BR, 1 BA at 6th & Iowa. Pool, fitness room, alarm, private parking. Available $1075 total rent/mo 913-685-8756. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Open House Monday - Friday 1:00 - 5:00 every day upon special - Reasonable Rates 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 W/D, all appliances Lorimar & Courtside Townhomes we about our buy beaches! Lorimar Townhomes 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Townhouses * Washer/Dryers * Dishwasher * Microwaves * Patios * Fireplaces * Ceiling Fans 2009 REF #E1 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 - **HUMID LAYER** * **Dishwashers** * **Microwaves** * **Patios** * **Gas Fireplaces** * **Celumins** Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. 405 - Apartments for Rent HOME Available August Small 3 bedroom apartment in older house. Walk to KU, wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C, DW, declawed cats. $699; Call 841-1074. Town home 3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD, Wired, place, kitchen appl, garage/operator, no pets. Sublease 5/1-7311 $700-786-5098 Available Aug. Small 2 bedroom apartment in recently renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, A/C, DW, WD stack unit. No pets. $685. Call 841-1074. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cash Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments AV June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35 month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841-5533 1 bedroom at Tuckaway, Washer/dryer, fitness room, TV, fireplace, hot tub, alarm system, overlocks pool. Ask about apartment N7. Available June 1. Phone 838-3377 CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Fitness Center Model Open Daily! VILLAGE SQUARE apartments 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route 843-8220 A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net Need a place to live next year? village@webserf.net LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath Williams Pointe Townhomes Early Bird Special Going on Nowl For More Info Call 312-7942 - full size washer/dryer - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - 1421 sq feet - SHOW MANAGEMENT SYSTEM Apartment to Town Center - full size washers, dryers - paid cable (ext basic) - Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts - approx. 1600 sq feet - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - car ports - full size washer / dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) - Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 Blue Mesa Management, Inc. ◆Washer & Dryer ◆Fully Equipped Kitchen ◆Serving Bar 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment 405 - Apartments for Rent Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship, Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studios and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidton Place Apts. 2727 Amidton.838-8302 Moving to Wichita? Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NO PETS. 841-5533. Great 3BR's Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances. appliance on-site laundry. Call 843-4090. 1 BR apt for sublease, avail, June 1st, opt. lease for fall. Access from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month, water/ trash paid. No pels. Elizabeth, 843-6944. 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments - Spacious; Luxury Apts * All appls. + W/D * Water paid * 6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. 4600 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com FOX RUN SUNRISE - Garages; w/d Hookups * Microwave Ovens * Some with Fireplaces * On KKU Lirie Route - Luxurious 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Townhomes - Swimming Pool - Tennis Courts OPEN: MON-FRI 10-12 & 1-5 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 4 BDRD $ 400 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 3 BDR $840 NICE, QUET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON-FRI 9-6 SON-POP-94 LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME MASTERCRAFT WALKTO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Campus Place Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 + Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 Sundance + Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Regency Place, 2 BR available now. Walking distance to campus, 1301 Louisiana. Water paid, no pets. $590/mo. 841-8488. Save Your Money! Now signing i9 YL leases starting May June/July/Aug. No smoking pet. Extra nice, well kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low utilities. A/C, bus route, all $405 i9 Spanish Crest Apts. 814-6868. 1 iwall. June or Aug. Studio 1, 2, and 3 BR ipt. In renovated older houses. Walk to U or downstreet, window floors, window A/C, selling fans. De clawed cats welcome with set rent and deposit. $370-1,050 for a a tournai 841-1074. HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 841-8468 - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom * Washer/Dryer * Fireplace * Swimming Pool * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Small Pet Welcom firstmanagementinc.com COLONY WOODS - 3 Hot Tubs ·Exercise Room *Indoor/Outdoor Pool* 1301 W. 24th & Naismitte 842-5111 colony@kkks.com www.colonywoods.com 1&2Bedrooms *Exercise room* *Now Leasing for Summer & Fall* Canyon Court M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 - Washer/Dryer * Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Now Leasing for Spring 2003 Brand New Luxury Apartments - Basketball Court - Carages Available * High Speed Internet Connections * Security Systems Available * Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 THE LEGENDS L Since 2003 BRAND NEW FULLY FURNISHED 2,3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIYATE ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UP, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBELL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPPED FITNESS CENTER OLEY EQUIPPED FITNESS CENT GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM HIGH SPEED INTERNET 4101 WEST 24TH PLACE (Across from the Alvamar Country Club) LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING - 1,2,3 Bedroom * Pool - Washer/Dryer - Fitness Center PARKWAY Luxury Apt.Homes - Pool * Washer/ Dryer - Models Open Daily - Basketball Court Now leasing for fall 2003! - Security Systems - Garages Available - Fitness Center Basketball Court 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway איברים 410 - Condos For Rent Very nice condo. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eh at 841-4470. 415 - Homes For Rent A 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. W/D hookups, FP, vauled ceiling, and garages small per welcome. Call 842-3280. Near KU, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, central air/heat, garage, all appliances, fenced yard. Energid $850.913-707-2296. 430 - Roommate Wanted Roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apt. for fall sublease. Lots of extra amenities. $318/month plus utilities. Call 218-5043. Grade student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet. W/D and garage. No smoking. $300 +1 / util Avail Aug 842-4540 --- 435 Rooms for Rent **Oxford** Ohio, 2-3BR, top of house, Parking, DW, A/C 600 plus. usl 913-845-2058 440 - Sublease 1 BDRM apartment wanted to sublease for the summer. Call Amy at 812-2650. key house 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail, June 1 and/or Aug. 1, Pet friendly. Pooch, Exercise room $795/mo. $200 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. 2 BR's avail, after finals at Jefferson Commons for summer. May rent already paid for. Rent negotiable. Most utilities paid. WD, cable, pool, weight room, furnished. Call Reiner Hayley 874-781-1979. 733 Arkansas, 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 story duplex. Just doors down from Louise's West. Avail June 1. Call Aaron at 312-9915. Amazing Summer Sublessel ibedroom out of 3 total available now or after May 15. Brand new complex with AC, W/D, gated, pool and fitness, and your own bathroom. Regular $350, but leasing for $280 plus utilities. Call 785-786-9151. Brand New Duplex| 3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD; 2 car garage Available May 1st - July 13th. Call 785-842-4279 Jefferson Commons sublease avail. Immediately. Female wanted to share 3 BRA, 3 BA. $375/month. Free August rent. Call Sue at 612-743-3011 or 763-542-9881. Room for rent of 3 BR apt, in Tuck-away avail, for summer, quiet setting, pool. Call Jonathan asap at 218-3549 Sublease avail. now: 3 BR 3 BA at Jefferson Commons. Free month's rent, Cable, internet, W/D. fully furnished. Some util. paid $370/mo. Call Pat:913-526-6005. PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA, 749-6060. Summer sublease.308 W.16th Street. DJ'S STUDIO 500s Services Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 863-693-EDIT 510 - Child Care 100% KindergartenTours Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; bread curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acre 842-2233. 6B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY. APRIL 1.2003 Giants, Phillies among victorious teams on opening day NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants 5, Padres 2 SAN DIEGO - Benito Santiago and J.T. Snow homered in the ninth inning, and the San Francisco Giants opened the season with a 5-2 win over the San Diego Padres on Monday. Until Santiago and Snow connected off rookie Clay Condrey, the Giants had just four hits off two Padres pitchers. They got five hits in the ninth to give Felipe Alou a victory in his first game as San Francisco's manager. Santiago opened the ninth by hitting a 1-0 pitch to left-center, putting the Giants ahead 3-2. Snow hit the next pitch from Candrey over the fence in right-center. San Francisco's Barry Bonds, who won a record fifth MVP last year, was 0-for-3 with two intentional walks and two strikeouts. Felix Rodriguez pitched a perfect eighth for the win while Tim Worrell worked the ninth for the save. four hits and walked two in one inning for the loss. Condev allowed three runs on Phillies 8, Marlins 5 MIAMI - Upgraded in a winter spending spree, the Philadelphia Phillies looked like much better ballclub on opening day. The team they beat looked like the same old Florida Marlins. Philadelphia took advantage of Florida to win 8-5 Monday. Kevin Millwood allowed three runs _ two earned _ and four hits in six-plus innings. Josh Beckett lasted just 2 2-3 innings. Errors by third baseman Mike Lowell and second baseman Luis Castillo led to five unearned runs in the third, and Ivan Rodriguez let in another run on a passed ball. The Marlins trailed by eight runs before Rodriguez hit a two-run homer in the sixth. The Marlins scored in the seventh on a throwing error by David Bell at third, and pinch-hitter Brian Banks tripled and scored on a groundout in the eighth to make it 8-5. Jose Mesa pitched a 1-2-3 ninth for the save. Cardinals11, Brewers9 ST LOUIS - The St. Louis Cardinals are looking forward to a full season with Scott Rolen. Rolen capped a six-run rally in the eighth inning with a three-run homer as the Cardinals overcame an shaky start by Matt Morris, beating the Brewers 11-9 Monday. St. Louis trailed 4-0 and 7-5 before rallying. Kerry Robinson hit a go-ahead single in the eighth on a drag bunt off loser Mike DeJean. Rolen hit a long home run to left for an 11-7 lead. Richie Ssexson made it close with a two-run homer in the ninth against Cal Eldred. Steve Kline got two outs for the save. Milwaukee led 7-5 in the eighth before pinch-hitter Orlando Palmeiro's RBI triple on Luis Vizcaino's first pitch. Fernando Vina then tied it with a run-scoring double on the first pitch from DeLean. Eddie Perez homered in the eighth off winner Russ Springer. Expos 10. Braves 2 ATLANTA - Baseball's road warriors started with a win, appropriately on the road. The Montreal Expos sent Greg Maddux to his first opening-day loss, defeating the Atlanta Braves 10-2 Monday behind Jeff Liefer's four RBIs and Orlando Cabrera's two-run homer. Tony Armas Jr., in his first opening-day start, allowed one run and five hits in six innings to get the win. Maddux gave up four runs in the first inning. He lasted seven innings, giving up five runs four earned and nine hits. Endy Chavez opened with a triple and scored on a sacrifice fly by Jose Vidro. Rookie Ron Calloway doubled for his first major league hit Brad Wilkerson hit an RBI single and Cabrera's homer made it 4-0. Atlanta scored in the sixth on a triple by Rafael Furcal and sacrifice fly by newcomer Robert Ficke Dodgers 8. Diamondbacks 0 PHOENIX - Hideo Nomopitched a four-hitter and the Los Angeles Dodgers handed Randy Johnson his first opening-day loss, beating the Arizona Diamondbacks 8-0 Monday. Brian Jordan had a home run and three RBIs. Paul Lo Duca had a two-out single off Johnson in the seventh, and Shawn Green had a pair of doubles. Nomo struck out seven and walked one. Jordan had a two-out RBI single off Johnson in the first inning, and a two-out, two-run homer on his first pitch from the Big Unit in the sixth. Bret Prinz, who relieved Johnson, collapsed to the ground with a pulled right glove while pitching to Nomo with two outs in the eighth. Johnson allowed five runs, three earned, on nine hits in 62-3 innings. He struck out five, walked two and hit a batter. Orioles 6, Indians 5, 13 innings BALTIMORE - It was a strange AMERICAN LEAGUE opening day at Camden Yards. Friblies Gary Matthews Jr. singled home the winningrun with two outs in the 13th inning, and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Cleveland Indians 6-5 Monday. Prior to the first pitch, a video tribute and a moment of silence were held for former Orioles pitcher Dave McNally, who died over the winter, and Steve Bechler, who died of heatstroke at spring training. Cleveland scored three runs in the third inning with the aid of a routine fly ball that Jay Gibbons lost between huge snowflakes that swirled around the stadium. The umpires then halted play. Ellis Burks was given an RBI single on the play. Then, after a 13-minute delay, Karim Garcia hit a sacrifice fly to make it 3-1. Both teams scored in the 12th. Omar Vizquel hit an RBI single for the Indians, and Baltimore tied it when Matthews singled and scored on a passed ball by Josh Bard. Ford, Texas want to end with more than just Final Four berth -The Associated Press The Associated Press Right? AUSTIN, Texas- At a school with little basketball tradition, the Texas Longhorns should be content just to reach the Final Four. Don't try telling that to T.J. Ford, coach Rick Barnes and the rest of the crew in burnt orange. They've got far loftier goals. When Ford hugged Barnes after the Longhorns' victory over Michigan State in the South Regional final, the coach quickly reminded his star point guard that the team's goal is a national title "We've got more work to do," Barnes told him. semifinal. Texas is the only No.1 seed in the Final Four, and the Longhorns like their chances in New Orleans. The other No.1s, Oklahoma, which reached the Final Four last season, and traditional powers Kentucky and Arizona are gone. The Longhorns (26-6) play Syracuse (28-5) in the national semifinals on Saturday. Kansas faces Marquette in the other Making its first Final Four appearance in 56 years, the Longhorns are generating a buzz in a city where football is king. "We haven't won anything yet," Ford said. "This is a great feeling, but I'd rather cut down a net in New Orleans and put it on a national championship trophy." Barnes has wanted to take a team to the Final Four ever since 1981, when he was an assistant at George Mason and watched the games in Philadelphia. Until this season, he had never been past the round of 16 as a head coach. "I told myself then that when I became a head coach, the one thing I wanted to do for my team was to them to a Final Four so they could experience and feel it," Barnes said. "Once you get there and experience that feeling, they will never question anything you tell them or get them to do in terms of getting there." Texas was last in the Final Four in 1946, when the NCAA Tournament field had just eight teams. The Longhorns reached the regional finals in 1990. Barnes has steadily built expectations for postseason success. Texas won the Big 12 in his first season, and made the tournament in five seasons under Barnes. The Longhorns have been focused on getting to the Final Four since losing to Oregon in the regional semifinals last season Victories over North Carolina Asheville and Purdue in the first two rounds allowed Texas to advance to play in San Antonio, fueling criticism that the NCAA set up the Longhorns to succeed by putting them so close to home. Texas had been ranked in the top 10 all season, but finished second to Kansas in the Big 12 and got bumped early from the conference tournament. The crowds in the Alamodome were a definite advantage — more than 60,000, most of them wearing orange, came to watch and fill the arena with chants of "Texas Fight!" The Longhorns didn't sell out any of their home games during the regular season. THE truth SHALL SET YOU FREE The City Commission CANDIDATE FORUM wednesday noon-2pm union plaza LUNCH PROVIDED sponsored by CLAB student legislative awareness board STUDENT UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE TIRED OF SPENDING AN ETERNITY WALKING ACROSS CAMPUS? Bicycle YELLOW BIKE PROGRAM WHAT IS IT? A COMMUNITY BIKE PROGRAM DESIGNED TO INCREASE ON-CAMPUS TRANSPORTATION ALTERNATIVES FOR KU STUDENTS. HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? ONLY $10 TO PARTICIPATE THIS SEMESTER. HOW DO I JOIN? VISIT THE WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.KU.EDU/~YELLOW, READ AND SIGN THE FORMS, AND TURN THE FORMS INTO THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE. WHERE CAN I RIDE? ON THE KU CAMPUS. A MAP IS PROVIDED ON THE WEBSITE. HOW WILL I ACCESS THE BIKES? TO ACCESS BIKES, ALL PARTICIPANTS WILL RECEIVE A KEY THAT OPENS ALL OF THE LOCKS SECURING THE BIKES. REGISTER NOW, ONLY 90 STUDENT CAN PARTICIPATE! FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT HTTP://WWW.KU.EDU/~YELLOW STUDENT SENATE --- Wednesday April 2, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 125 Today's weather 85° Tonight: 60° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com KANSAN Southwest Missouri State suffers second loss to Kansas p. 1B KA Travis Metcalf Senate hopefuls differ in choice of debate issues By Cate Batcheler cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Dressed in attire from business suits to Camelot-themed regalia, five student body presidential and vice-presidential candidates answered questions from panelists and students in a formal debate last night. About 100 people attended the debates sponsored by the Elections Commission in 130 Budig Hall. The three coalitions, Delta Force, KUnited and Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade, used the time to reinforce their platforms. Most critical issue facing students and plan of action Delta Force presidential candidate Drew Thomas, Hayssen sister, and running mate Fallon Farokhi, Lawrence junior, began the debate. They said tuition was the biggest problem facing University of Kansas students. As a former employee of Sallie Mae, a student loan agency, Thomas said he saw how the debts incurred by attending college. "Student loans will only go so far," he said. Thomas' and Farokhi's plan with Delta Force is to lobby state legislators for a 10 percent cap on the amount that the University can raise tuition each fiscal year. STUDENT SENATE PRESIDENTIAL & VICE-PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES KUnited wants to put money back in students pockets with its slogan. "Have a say before you pay." Any increase of student fees must be voted on using a campuswide online vote. Delta Force YUANDAO Brett "Lord Wads" Wadsworth, Overland Park senior, answered solo on KUnited presidential candidate Andy Knopp, Manhattan junior, and vice-presidential candidate Catherine Bell. Coffeyville junior, said they had a different approach to the tuition increases. Fighting head-to-head with administration wasn't working, Knopp said. Thomas Nicholas Wong Farokhi KUnited A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. Knopp Bell Lord Wads & the 12 Knights M. Foertsch behalf of Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade. His running mate, Andy Foertsch, Lenexa senior, was absent because he had an exam. He sent his regrets. Wadsworth Lord Wads said the most critical issue was distraction in the classroom. Distractions by people leaving class going SEE DEBATE ON PAGE 6A Pierce this! With proper procedures piercing can become a safe form of expression Tongue piercings are safe as long as people keep the piercings clean and watch out for signs of infection. By Nikki Overfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Photo illustration by Eric Braem/Kansan Brandon Cox has 25 body piercings from his ears to his nipples and almost everywhere else. "On a given day, I wear about 20," the Lenexa junior said. "It started out of boredom, and it became some sort of an addiction." Whatever the reason, many KU students choose to pierce some part of their bodies despite the pain and health risks associated with them. Licensed piercists often hear concerns about paralysis that could be caused by hitting nerves in the ears and tongue during a piercing said Stacy Daugherty, licensed piercist and tattoo artist at Big Daddy Cadillac's, 16 E. Eighth St. Daugherty said that these paralysis concerns were unwarranted. "Any well-trained piercer can pierce without any complications," he said. The major risks depend on the behavior of the person getting pierced, not the piercing itself. Daugherty said. "Most of the risk is going to come after it's done," he said. Professionals use completely sterilized instruments and take every precaution to keep their clients safe. Daugherty said. But after they leave,the responsibility falls on the pierced. There is a small risk of dental damage, Daugherty said, if those who get their tongue pierced are not careful. Most of the problems with tongue rings come when people play with them. For example, it is possible for the ball of the tongue ring to come off and be swallowed. Yet the risk is extremely slim, he said. The most common problems with piercings that are seen at Watkins Memorial Health Center are infections, said Myra Strother, associate director and chief of staff of Watkins. The doctors especially see infections in navels and ear cartilage because of multiple piercings. Keeping the piercing clean and seeing a doctor as soon as there are any signs of infection can guard against serious problems, she said. Hepatitis is a major concern when getting piercings, Strother said, so she advises that students make sure they choose to get their piercings done at places that are clean and reputable and not in other countries. Cori Stites, Leawood senior who has five piercings in her ear and an eyebrow ring, has had no major complications with any of her piercings, she said. Although she did get a small infection when she got her ear cartilage pierced. "Nothing terribly bad, it just needed a little Bactine and it was fine," she said. Taking care of and cleaning the piercing is the most important precaution a person can take. Stites said. And before getting the piercing done, a per son should check out the place to make sure it is clean and uses proper sterilization, she said. "You just have to use common sense," she said. Cox, on the other hand, does his own piercings after he had the first few done at piercing places. He also had to have a friend pierce his nipples because he couldn't do those himself, he said. Cox also offers his piercing services to his friends, he said. In the past two years, he has done about 24 piercings for other people. Cox said he wasn't really concerned about the health risks. Before he started using sterilized needles, he used safety pins, which caused his body to reject several of the piercings, he said. But now he makes sure to use sterilized needles and do the piercings in a clean environment. Edited by Leah Shaffer WARSA Minority students collaborate in affirmative action support By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Mark Dupree, Kansas City, Kan., junior, marches in an affirmative action protest held on campus. Yeste:day's march was organized by Zeta Phi Beta sorority and was planned in conjunction with a larger march in Washington, D.C., the same day. "Affirmative action! must not die. Separate but equal is a lie!" chanted a group of students as they marched down Jayhawk Boulevard yesterday. hawk Double yellow Minor students marched in support of affirmative action policies as part of a nationwide civil rights march, including a massive march in Washington, D.C., that ended at the U.S. Supreme Court building. Dan Nelson/Kansan The march was in response to the two cases challenging the admission policies of the undergraduate and law schools at the University of Michigan. The Supreme Court began hearing arguments in the cases yesterday. "I thought it was important to get KU involved," said Jennifer Leong, march organizer and Hazelwood, Mo., senior. organizer and President Leong, member of Zeta Phi Beta, a traditionally African-American sorority. organized the march and invited other members of the University's minority community to participate. Members of different organizations participated in the march. C'nea Hatches, Valparaiso, Ind. sophomore, said she was glad the group was participating because it could not travel to Washington, D.C The group walked with signs from Lindley Hall chanting, passing out infor- SEE MARCH ON PAGE 6A Rundle, Highberger, Goodell come out ahead in election By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer There were no hanging chads, but frayed emotions were abundant by the time last night's city commission election results were counted. After a two-hour delay in counting the ballots because of a computer glitch, two Progressive Lawrence Campaign candidates and one former city worker were elected to Lawrence's city commission. Incumbent Mike Rundle and Dennis "Boog" Highberger represented the Progressive Lawrence Campaign and were the two highest vote-getters. As such, the two men will occupy their city commission seats for the next four years. Third place candidate Lynn Goodell will serve as commissioner for two years. Karl Brooks, Progressive Lawrence Campaign chairman and University of Kansas assistant professor, said one goal of the campaign was to encourage less active voters to participate in the election. "Students are certainly part of that group. I think we helped our three candidates reach more students than they would have otherwise," he said. Candidate Votes % of votes Gregory A. 7,532 13.27 Divilibss Lee Gerhard 8,447 14.88 Lynn Goodell 9,606 16.92 Dennis "Boog" 10,167 17.91 Highberger Mike Rundle 11,606 20.44 David Schauner 9,422 16.59 LAWRENCE CITY COMMISSION ELECTION RESULTS Goodell defeated the third Progressive Lawrence Campaign-backed candidate, David Schauner, by 184 votes. Schauner was at first named an unofficial winner, but a few minutes later, new numbers showed Goodell pulling ahead. Ultimately the margin of victory was narrow enough to leave Progressive Lawrence Campaign supporters wondering whether the difference could be made up in the remaining 2 percent of precincts shown as unreported. Douglas County clerk Patty Jaimes . SEE ELECTION ON PAGE 6A . --- 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front WEDNESDAY, APRIL2, 2003 News briefs CAMPUS Candidate for vice provost to visit campus this week One of the five candidates under consideration for the vice provost of the Office of Student Success at the University of Kansas will be on campus tomorrow and Friday. Dennis R. Black, the vice president for student affairs at the State University of New York at Buffalo, will interview for the position and participate in two open forums. Black is the fourth candidate to visit the University. The final candidate will be in Lawrence April 10 and 11, according to Lindy Eakin, vice provost of administration and finance and member of the search committee. "We are really pleased with the strong pool of candidates we have," Eakin said. "It was difficult to get the candidates down to just five." The search committee will meet after all the candidates have been interviewed and will submit its recommendation to Kathleen McCluskey Fawcett, chairwoman of the search committee. Eakin said he expected a decision to be made by the end of April. The Office of Student Support will be officially renamed in July as the Office of Student Success. It was formerly the Office of Student Affairs. —Kevin Wiggs Sorority collects teddy bears to donate to children's hospita Gamma Phi Beta sorority will be holding a teddy bear collection drive through Monday. All bears collected will be donated to patients at Children's Mercy Hospital in memory of former patient Erin Andra Morgan who passed away in 2002. Members of the sorority formed a relationship with Morgan while volunteering at the hospital and said they wanted the bears to help the hospital's current patients. "I think this is something that can comfort the children, because they are in the hospital and scared," said Cassie Hicks, Lenexa junior and Gamma Phi Beta member. Bears can be dropped off at the Gamma Phi Bata house, 1339 West Campus Road. Students at Southwest Junior High School are also participating in the drive. The group wants to collect 1,000 bears. —Jessica Palimenio STATE Kansas Department of Health reviews guidelines for vaccine TOPEKA — Smallpox vaccination clinics were being rescheduled yesterday as the Kansas Department of Health and Environment reviewed new guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. State epidemiologist Gianfranco Pezzino said the KDHE was updating its screening questionnaires to include patients' underlying heart conditions. The state had vaccinated 435 health care and emergency services workers through Friday. The CDC is not recommending the vaccine to anyone with heart disease or at serious risk for heart disease. Nationally, three people who have received the vaccine have died of heart attacks, and the CDC is investigating the link between heart disease and the vaccination. Nearly a dozen states have suspended their own programs or are considering it while awaiting more information from the CDC. WORLD French man climbs building to protest the war in Iraq PARIS — A French climber who calls himself "Spiderman" scaled the 47-story headquarters of oil giant Total-Fina EIF outside Paris yesterday to protest the war in Iraq. Wearing a shirt with the message "No war," Alain Robert reached the top of the office tower in less than an hour. At the top, he unfurled a flag with the same slogan. Police greeted Robert at the top of the building, located in the La Defense financial district west of Paris and escorted him to the ground floor and led him away. It wasn't clear whether he would be charged criminally. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJHTV KUJH-TV News News: Curtis Dixon and Joy Larson Weather: Tim Bush Sports: Brian Bruce Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00 kansan.com 207 KBH On KJHK,90.7 FM,listen to the news at 7,8 and 9 Then again at 6 p.m Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Lindsey Gold/Kansan Chris Glaros, Overland Park sophomore, sits in the South Park gazebo with members of the fifth and sixth floors of Lewis Hall. The group held a "March to Mass" going to Chipotle Mexican Grill and Jimmy John's on Massachusetts Street and then walking to South Park to picnic. Scott Wilson, Garden City junior, said the activity had a good turnout. "We're going to try something else like this again this semester," Wilson said. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Watkins Health Center will present a Heartsaver CPR class from 8 a.m. to noon today, open to all faculty, staff and students. Call 864-9571. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will hold a University Forum on "Global Water Security," featuring Soraya Cardenas Vallejo of the department of sociology, at noon today in the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. Jadwiga Maurer of the department of slavic languages and literatures will give a lecture on "An Emigre Writer Returns Home" at 4 p.m. today at 4051 Wescoe. Call 864-3313. David Stone of Kansas State Uni versity will give a lecture on "900 Days: The Siege of Leningrad" at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-4236. The department of Spanish and Portuguese will sponsor a conference on Latin American theatre featuring playwright and novelist Luis Rafael Sanchez at 7 tonight at SpringHill Suites, 1 Riverfront Plaza. Call 864-3851 Student Union Activities will screen the film What a Girl Wants from 7 to 9 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Vouchers will be available in the SUA office from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and at the door. Call 864-7469. Student Union Activities will sponsor an Open Mic Night for musicians from 7 to 9 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. Call 864-7469. University Theatre will present The 10-Minute Play Festival at 7:30 tonight at Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Call 864-3381. The school of fine arts will hold an Undergraduate Honors Recital at 7:30 tonight at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall, Call 864-3436. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a Buddhist Relic Tour from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight at the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Hadley Ruggles at 842-3118. ON THE RECORD A 22-year-old KU student told the Lawrence police that someone took his laptop between 5:30 p.m. Saturday and 2 a.m. Sunday from the 1200 block of Ohio Street. The laptop was valued at $2,030. A 21-year-old KU student told the Lawrence police that someone damaged his 1987 Dodge Aries parked in Sunday and 7 a.m. Monday.The loss was estimated at $300. the 1400 block of Ohio Street. The damage occurred between 10 p.m. Saturday and 6:30 p.m. Sunday. The damage was estimated at $100. A 21-year-old KU student told the Lawrence police that someone stole a portable stereo from her 1999 Chevy Cavalier, also damaging the vehicle. The incident occurred between 11 p.m. A 19-year-old KU student told the KU Public Safety Office that someone damaged the windshield on his 2002 Nissan XTerra between 3 a.m. March 26 and 9 p.m. Friday. The damage was estimated at $200. Et Cetera 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stuuffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS60445. The University Daily Kanan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 75038 The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. TH THINK BEER BONG, BUT WITH FOOD. Chipotle TASTES GREAT. MORE FILLING. 9TH & MASS Chipotle $50 cash prize for winner Open Mic Night April 2, May 7 people with any type of musical talent or performing ability 04.02.03/ 05.07.03 first Wednesday of each month Free. 7:00 pm-9:00 pm Hawks Nest Level 1; Kansas Union SCA WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Senate approves resolution for online course evaluations By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The University Council passed a resolution Thursday supporting an initiative to make teacher evaluations available online. The proposed evaluations would be an additional evaluation students could fill out online. Andy Knopp, vice president of the University Council and student senator, said he disagreed with a previous Student Senate argument to make the current course evaluations, which students fill out in the last class of the semester, a public record. The council denied a proposal made by Student Senate in 1997 to make data compiled from course evaluations open to students. These evaluations are used for faculty promotion and tenure decisions. "That's where students and faculty were butting heads," Knopp said. "I thought we could create a separate evaluation using our online capabilities. It's not saying a course is good or bad, it's just giving students information." The new proposal for online teacher evaluations would rate specific courses, not teachers. Students would be able to answer questions such as, "How useful is the textbook?" in a two-week period at the end of each semester through a link on the Kyou student portal. Eventually, the course evaluations would be accessible through a link by each course name in the schedule of classes. The council must approve the proposal to make it possible to link the evaluation forms to the student portal and send e-mails to "Some students are just going to sign up for classes that fit their schedules, but I think there are a lot of students who really want to find the best professors and good, challenging classes in their majors." Andy Knopp Vice President of the University Council and student senator the student body. "Some students are just going to sign up for classes that fit their schedules, but I think there are a lot of students who really want to find the best professors and good, challenging classes in their majors," Knopp said. "This benefits students who really care about the quality of instruction and the type of classes they're taking." Although both Delta Force and KUnited Student Senate coalitions list online teacherevaluations as important platform issues, not all faculty members see merit in the proposal. Questionnaires that provide the desired information are difficult to produce, said Steve Shawl, physics professor and member of University Council. Shawl said it would be possible to create an appropriate questionnaire with a great deal of effort after discussion at last week's council meeting. "I think a number of statements that Andy made were naive in not understanding the real world," Shawl said. "I expect that a few students would use it, but I would question whether it would be used by a sufficient number of students to make it worth the amount of time and effort that student senate is putting into it." Knopp used similar programs at schools such as the University of Texas at Austin as the basis for the evaluation questions and implementation plan proposed to the SenEx committee in February. Knopp has been preparing the proposal since January and since February he has been gathering input from students and faculty members in various departments. "We'd like to get a set of questions that everyone agrees on, or at least everyone can agree that experts came up with and are effective in passing information on to students," Knopp said. The online evaluations could be an accepted part of the University of Kansas if enough students take the initiative to answer the questionnaire, said Ray Davis, public administration professor and University Council member. "The proposal strikes me as a reasonable idea, one that ought to include the opinions and reactions of faculty to make it as legitimate as it needs to be," Davis said. Knopp said he wanted to present an updated questionnaire to the council by late April so the course evaluations could be launched on the Kyou portal in time for the end of this spring semester. If the proposal isn't ready by the April 24 meeting, Knopp said, the online teacher evaluations would be ready no later than next fall. — Edited by Julie Jantzer Sharing a sip Stu Strecker, Lawrence resident, shares a drink from Jice Stop, 812 Massachusetts St., with his daughter, Jai. 4. Many people visited Massachusetts Street to enjoy yesterday's weather, which reached a high of 81 degrees. Scott Reynolds/Kansan Students with disabilities can vote for Senate online By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer With Student Senate elections less than a week away, candidates have diligently manned their couches on Wescoe Beach trying to win votes and attention. Their strategy didn't work for Chikako Mochizuki, graduate student from Japan. She was late for class and didn't have time to listen to the platforms. "I'm always on the go," she said. When not in class, she's in her residence hall room studying. Her guide dog, Comet, leads her to and fro because she is blind. This is the first year the elections Even though she doesn't know the candidates' issues yet, she said she planned to find out. "If I have a chance, I'd love to vote," she said. code is in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. And because elections are online, Mochizuki will have the opportunity to vote independently. Last time she voted, a poll worker helped her cast her vote. She said she felt uncomfortable because voting was a private matter. A computer at the Budig Hall computer lab polling site is voice activated and can greatly enlarged text on computer screens. Between 600 and 700 students are registered with the Students for Disabilities office. This is a substantial number that could make a significant influence in the elections, said Melissa Manning, associate director for Students with Disabilities. Manning said she welcomed the change to vote online. "All in all, to have students voting via computer is a real blessing for students with disabilities," she said. Students told Manning how discouraged they were with the voting process. Besides having problems reading the ballot, students with disabilities said getting to polling sites was problem enough. Often, the students don't vote because they can't and, therefore, they won't, she said. Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner, wants to make voting easier for everyone. The elections code says students who need special accommodations to vote should make a request 10 days before the election. Even though that window has passed, students can call her at 864-4060 to make requests. "I'm sure we'll do everything we can to help them." Wachal said. - Edited by Julie Jantzer THE PACE TO BE IS... Watching the Hawks at the Stadium! South gates open 4 p.m. Saturday Game starts 5:07 p.m. - Big Screen - KU Dance Team - Baby Jay - Pep Band - Mardi Gras Beads - Concessions - Pregame Family Funzone - Post-game DJ & Music by KLZR The Lazer - And More! The University of Kansas Memorial Stadium KU vs Marquette Go Jayhawks! The University of Kansas Memorial Stadium KU vs Marquette KU NO Alcohol There will be no vehicle access to central campus Stadium celebration sponsored by the University of Kansas WEDNESDAY APRIL 2, 2003 OPINION 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, APRIL2, 2003 TAKTOUS Kristi Henderson 884-4854 or khandaran@kansasan.com Jenna Goeffert and Justin Henning managing authors 884-4854 or jgoeffert@kansasan.com and jgoeffert@kansasan.com Craan Sniffer readers; representative 864-4810 or ishafer@kansan.org Amangia Sears and Lindsay Hanson Amanda Seers and Emily Hannon 864-9244 or opinion@tknsan.com Eric Kettling business manager 904.4358 or advates@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7867 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or misher@kansan.com CLARIFICATION A column in yesterday's University Daily Kansan needs clarification. The column, "Support local-minded candidates," stated City Commission candidate Greg Dillibbs "disavowed" his promise to the student body to fight the single-family zoning ordinance in front of the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association. Dillibbs said he opposed unenforceable ordinances. RERUNS OF OUR LIVES You Know its going to happen someday... Imported from HOllywood THE ONE AND ONLY www.NOFATTYS.COM DIET ALL THE FUN NONE of the GUT BEER Emily Nov 13 2013 Neil Mulka and Emily Elmore for The University Daily Kansen LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Dailey's material necessary To Sen. Susan Wagle: I am a graduate of the University of Kansas, Class of '93, now living in Athnata. I read an Associated Press story on the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Website about the bill directed at banning obscene material used in undergraduate classes. I took Dennis Dailey's class on human sexuality, and I am very disappointed in your decision to promote this bill. Dailey's class is one of the most thought-provoking classes on campus. I do not understand how you can support such a bill when your information is based completely on hearsay. Have you ever visited Dailey's classroom? Have you seen the materials in question in his classroom setting? For you to support such a bill without performing the tiniest amount of fact gathering is irresponsible and poor legislating. Politicians are not elected to make knee-jerk reactions to secondhand information. I have seen the pictures Dailey uses, and they are completely appropriate for the curriculum. Dailey also makes it very clear what the class is about and what you will see. Everyone knows what they are getting into. Universities are supposed to be environments that allow the free exchange of ideas. This is even more important for the more controversial subjects, such as sex and sexuality, which often are given no mention in other settings — the home, public and private schools and churches. I'm sure that, on the Kansas Senate floor, senators are allowed to voice their opinions without being censored, after all, that is what democracy is all about. Why, then, do you think it is OK to censor opinions in schools of higher learning?'s Dailey's class is not about puerile interests. It is not about shock value. It is not about obscenity. I'm curious — how do you expect students in Kansas to graduate with bachelor's degrees in sexual psychology if they cannot use visual materials about sex? Robert Allen, Atlanta, Ga. SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com.If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. Maximum Length: 853 word limit Include: Author's name: Class: hometown (student) Position (faculty number) Also: The Kansas will not print guest columns that attack another column! LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 200 word limit HOMESTI Include Author's name Author's telephone number Class, home town (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMIT TO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansas newsperm 111 Stuuffer-Flint Sex class doesn't harbor secrets PERSPECTIVE The actions of our Legislature in regard to Dennis Dailey's "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life" class amount to knee-jerk babysitting that panders to a constituency hundreds of miles from us. According to the bill, no program that facilitates material deemed obscene by an "average person" who considers the material out of sync with "community standards" will be allocated state funding. I am a 50-year-old senior at the University who comes from a conservative military background. My father, sister and I have all served this country in times of conflict and both my father and I were nearly killed in the defense of American ideals. As a member of the course, I would love to respond to the latest criticism of Dailey's teachings. Those screaming the loudest have stumbled into the middle of a conversation and have purported to understand what has transpired. The Legislature's knowledge of Dailey's course is grapevine at best and is one that lacks contextual comprehension. Our brave senators, sitting in their armchairs celebrating themselves, have said they "investigated" this class. But they make no mention that most students, including myself, have found it to be the most applicable and beneficial course of their college careers. Senators Susan Wagle and Nancy Harrington, authors of the bill, have coddled a slim minority. Witnessing the events that have driven their reaction, I think the complaints waged come from miscommunication. Had Wagle thoroughly investigated the allegations, she would have heard a different version from a majority of students. Now we must endure a law in which our government dictates the supposed free flow of thought among adults. It has not made the connection that this class, GUEST COMMENTARY in reality, studies universal human behavior and relationships. Richard Sullivan op:nion@kansan.com While we sit in the comfort of our living rooms, watching our country wage war with all awaure and no shock, the Legislature would have us ignore our human behaviors. Behind every yellow ribbon, every American flag and every military interest piece on television, there is a soldier far away shunning Kansas' standards of community. While members of our Legislature whistle "God Bless America" and proclaim their support for the troops, they forget that the media are brushing past some of the sights and language. If Dailey's class makes our senatorial population so "sick to their stomachs," it should quit celebrating its Johnnycome-lately who is over seas right now. We won't see soldiers who are so stressed that they masturbate three or four times a day or on guard duty just to stay awake. We won't hear all the politically incorrect language and humor that is mercifully diffusing inner unit tension. The television won't show the prostitutes the soldiers visit or the veneer diseases they contract, and television won't explain why these things happen. It won't show the soldier who will come home, read about our Legislature's actions and remember the far more explicit and animalistic behavior he engaged in. The Legislature won't care that such taws make him feel like an outcast when he returns. It will never know that such a culture will drive him back to the battlefield simply because he doesn't fit in with "Kansas values" anymore. The Legislature won't sit down with the soldier and candidly explain why he may have adopted certain sexually predatorial practices. Neither the Legislature nor the embedded media will address the marital, sexual and relationship problems that soldiers face now or that will manifest when they return home. The state of Kansas apparently has no cognizance that these are some of the same problems that Dailey's class has helped me, a once "average" soldier and present "average" Kansas citizen, to overcome. Are we to conclude from this act of gross micro-management that an "average" person is a Kansas senator? Should we believe that adult American citizens, who hail from many different communities around the world and the country, are not mature enough to decide their own level of class participation? Our Legislature has responded reflexively and emotionally to fewer than a handful of misinterpreted complaints and passed a law that affects every Kansas student. Its members don't consider the immediate consequences of their actions or the precedent that has been set. Senators should spend more time keeping promises than conjuring up new ones to break, such as the shift of casino revenue away from educational allocation in a system that now teeters on bankrunner. What would happen to our state of community if the average Kansas resident mimicked the communal standard set by our Legislature? Sullivan is a Lawrence senior in English Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 10 Campus-wide Hide-and-Seek, Wescoe Beach at 9 p.m. on Wednesday night. See you there. I am in a sorority and I have to say that as much as I want to support our greek newspaper, it's the most pathetic display of journalism I have ever seen, and I'm embarrassed to be associated with it. 10 Norm Chomsky is the leftist Rush Limbaugh. To the girl who thinks that Mr. Channel 6 is hot, this is Mrs. Channel 6. Back off. The Gravity Train is gonna lead us to the promised land. life working against sexual harassment and sexual abuse. It is the attitude behind close-minded and ignorant accusations such as these that prevent our culture from moving forward on these issues. 图 I'd just like to give a shoutout to the hot girls on Wescoe Beach today with the KUnited campaign, and yea for the fliers, and Muck Farquette. You know, there's nothing to ruin a nice day on Wescoe Beach like Student Senate elections. P.S. Delta Force, I can smell you from where I'm sitting. To the person who said that Michael Moore didn't graduate from college and Bush graduated from Yale, Bush was admitted to and graduated from Yale largely due to his father's influence and graduated with, at best, a C average. Bill Gates didn't graduate from college, and neither did Gandhi. Who should be making the decisions? You tell me. life working against sexual harassment and sexual abuse. It is the attitude behind close-minded and ignorant accusations such as these that prevent our culture from moving forward on these issues. To the person who said law students aren't smart enough to find the crosswalk, I have two things to say. First of all, we're smart enough to know that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line, and second of all, we're smart enough to know that, if you hit us, we'll sue you. Thanks. --life working against sexual harassment and sexual abuse. It is the attitude behind close-minded and ignorant accusations such as these that prevent our culture from moving forward on these issues. [ ] If you think Bush is smarter than Michael Moore, then you're even stupidier than Bush is. If that's possible. 图 Fighting for peace is like screwing for chastity. Delta Force uses the Greek symbol for change. KUnited uses Greek symbols that say, "We're pretty and throw Frisbees on Wescos Beach, so vote for us so that we can become the future of the Kansas Republican party." PERSPECTIVE Dailey counteracts unhealthy sexual practices The Womyn's Empowerment Action Coalition, a group of feminist activists on campus, would like to express its complete support and admiration for Dennis Dailey. Many members of the organization have taken his classes on sexuality and learned a great deal about themselves, human sexuality and healthy, respectful relationships. His teaching and commitment to ending sexual violence is greatly appreciated, and we consider him a vital part of this University and an ally for positive social change. We are shocked and dismayed at the recent allegations against him and the state's recent amendment to cut funding for programs deemed objectionable. Who is the almighty person is who can determine what is objectionable? The law uses words such as "reasonable" and "average" when discussing censorship of sexuality in our country. Religious fanatics don't consider feminists or queers reasonable, but we don't consider religious fanatics reasonable, either. It is dangerous for the state to have the power to censor sexuality. Dailey is a die-hard supporter of women's rights and has spent his entire It is ironic that a day this student seemed to find most objectionable was the day homosexuality was discussed in class. This seems to be more of an issue of bigotry on her part. If a person has a prejudice against homosexuals, of course he or she will find discussion of homosexual sexual behavior vulgar. Should bigots dictate the acceptability of discussions of homosexuality? We certainly hope not. As far as showing pornographic materials, Dailey is honest about the nature of audio and visual materials used in his class. He also is using these materials for educational purposes to promote healthy and respectful sexuality and sexual behavior. Masturbation is normal, natural and healthy — as is sex. The Victorian era was over more than 200 years ago. Perhaps it is time to move past Victorian ideas about human sexuality. Dailey promotes healthy relationships and healthy expression of sexuality. The people in his class are adults and should be mature enough to behave like adults and to discuss adult topics. The human body is nothing to be ashamed of. Perhaps, if we were all a little more educated about it, there would be less sexual misuse and abuse of the human body. As for the allegation that he uses child pornography, since when is human biology pornographic? Knowledge of the human body and human sexuality includes knowledge of our sexual organs. Dailey uses educational, not pornographic, photographs of children's genitalia to show human sexual development. Are all human biology books now to be censored? Can biologists and medical students no longer learn what the human body looks like or learn about the stages of human sexual development? Human growth and development are natural processes and should not be treated as taboo. We all have sexual organs and should all be educated about them so we can make informed decisions about our own sexuality and sexual behavior. If students are too embarrassed to look at the human body, perhaps they should do more growing up before taking Dailey's class. It is ignorance, silence and fear of sexuality that helps to create the climate of sexual misuse that our society lives in. That causes so many people - women and men - to suffer. Dailey works to educate people about sexuality so they can use sexuality in a healthy and responsible manner and treat others' sexuality with respect. Last fall, Dailey took part in the Womyn's Empowerment Action Coalition's panel discussion on rape and spoke out about treating people with respect, having a healthy sexuality and respecting people's sexual and emotional boundaries. He also has been the facilitator of the men's circle at the Womyn Take Back the Night March. We are grateful that men like Dailey exist and are actively educating people about healthy sexuality. We cannot allow narrow minds and homophobia. We cannot allow the state to dictate what can and cannot be taught. Our outrage at this knows no bounds, nor does our support of Dailey and of academic freedom. Beth Peterson for the Wonnyn's Empowerment Action Coalition. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Veterans share views on Iraqi war Soldiers of Vietnam Persian Gulf Wars speak out on conflict The Patriot Act HONEST PATRIOTIC Ketley Weiss/Kansan Chris White, Lawrence graduate student, rallies anti-war protesters in South Park after hundreds of demonstrators marched down Massachusetts Street in this photo from Feb. 15. After serving as a marine, White became a Veteran for Peace. By Kelley Weiss kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writer War veterans at the University of Kansas offer a unique perspective about the conflict in Iraq. From veterans who served in the Vietnam War to those in the Persian Gulf War, they've all brought something back from their time spent overseas, which has influenced how they look at the war in Iraq. After serving his country in Vietnam, Andy Burton said he had an acute understanding of what war meant. Burton, Leavenworth graduate student, who is working toward his doctorate in developmental and child psychology, served in the Vietnam War for 26 months. Burton developed a disability called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder from his service in the war. PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that can occur after experiencing or witnessing life-threatening events such as military combat, natural disasters, terrorist incidents, serious accidents or violent personal assaults such as rape, according to the National Center for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder. Anyone who is involved in a violent situation is susceptible to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Burton said. Some of the soldiers serving in Iraq will come home with PTSD because the tragedies of war can leave a lasting impact, he said. "I have a lot of anxiety," Burton said. "I fear for the young because they don't know what lies ahead, and I fear for the older people who think they know." The hastiness of the United States to start the war in Iraq was cause for concern, Burton said. "War is the last resort and I don't think we've exhausted all of our resources." Burton said. "I think it's necessary, but very hard, to justify to the mothers and fathers of service members." Chris White, a graduate student in history from Fresno, Calif., served from 1994 to 1998 as a sergeant in the Marine Corps infantry. After the attacks on the World Trade Center, White said he became a veteran for peace. The war fever that overtook the country after the attacks was alarming, White said. During his service in the Marine Corps, White said he realized his perception of the U.S. military defending democracy was not correct. "It became apparent that our training had nothing to do with national defense, but everything to do with American elite national interests," White said. White said he was not opposed to war universally but evaluated each one on a case-to-case basis. In the case of the war in Iraq, White is opposed to the decision to invade. "My academic research has informed my decision to oppose this war and Bush's foreign policy." White said. Leonard Magruder, president of the Student Vietnam Veterans for Academic Reform, said he supported the war in Iraq. Although Magruder is not a war veteran, he said he was a Vietnam War historian. He said he saw parallels between the Vietnam War and the war in Iraq. Magruder said he thought the United States fought in the Vietnam War to stop the spread of communism from China and Russia. By invading Iraq, Magruder theorized, the Bush administration wanted a toe-hold in the Middle East to use as a deterrent of terrorist attacks on the United States. In both wars, the United States was trying to prevent threats to the country, one being communism and the other being terrorism, Magruder said. He said because terrorism was a major threat to the United States, he agreed with the war in Iraq. Adam Pousson, computer support technician for the Kansas Memorial Unions, served in the Navy from 1994 to 1998 and said his experience changed his idea of how the United States should use its power. "Before I went into the military I was like, 'This is the American way. Don't mess with us, or we'll blow you up,'" Pousson said. "But now I realize we have to handle our responsibility as a super power more carefully." The war in Iraq is an example of how the United States is using its power carelessly, Pousson said. The invasion of Iraq was too early and the United States is not over there just to liberate Iraq, Pousson said. Troy Heidner, information systems manager at the Kansas Memorial Unions, served as an avionic technician in the Persian Gulf War from November 1991 through February 1992. Heidner said he did not have a definite position about the legitimacy of the war. He said he understood both sides but leaned more toward being supportive of the war and the troops. What will happen after the war is what Heidner said he was uncertain about. — Edited by Anne Mantey Students question embedded reports By Lauren Bristow Ibristow@kansan.com Kansas staff writer "Embedded reporter" has become a household term the past week and a half, and television viewers have had the opportunity to watch bombing campaigns on Baghdad live, 24 hours a day. Students such as Mike Grabb, Overland Park senior, have mixed feelings about the media's coverage of the war with Iraq. "The reporters with the troops have brought me new aspects of the war that I didn't think about before. I saw Tommy Franks on TV saying that the troops had plenty of food but then, a half an hour later, the reporter said they were down to one ration a day." Grabb said, referring to General Tommy Franks, who is in charge of the U.S. Central Command. Grabb was surprised when a reporter told viewers that troops had to use the desert as a bathroom, he said. "You just don't think about things like that," he said. "If the reporters weren't there, I wouldn't know about the little things that I didn't thought about." But Grabb said he thought the media was providing too much coverage. "I don't want to hear everything," he said. "I just want to know the general idea of what is going on." Kelly Johnson, St. Louis senior, said she questioned the accuracy of all information the media and embedded reporters relayed. "I don't think we really know what's going on," she said. "It's television, so they "If the reporters weren't there, I wouldn't know about the little things that I hadn't thought about." Mike Grabb Overland Park senior control everything you see." Although Johnson said she liked to be updated about what was going on with the war, at times she questioned the media's choices of broadcast material. "Watching a country being bombed live is just too real," she said. "I just don't think we need to see buildings being blown up." Dick Nelson, newsroom coordinator for KUJH-TV and KJHK Radio, said he thought embedded reporters were doing a good job reporting news, but downfalls existed to a reporter being with one group of people throughout the entire war. "It's really easy when you're receiving and relying on information from one side to lose objectivity," he said. "It's also really easy to get caught up in the spirit of the story." Nelson pointed out that embedded reporters do have restrictions about what they can report. "The reporters will say something like, 'I can't tell you where we are,'" he said. "But even with the restrictions, the coverage is certainly better than the first Gulf War when the media was limited to daily briefings from Riyad or someplace like that." Edited by Jason Elliott Baghdad survives bombs The Associated Press BAGHDAD, Iraq — Nearly two weeks after the U.S.-led air campaign began with daily raids on Baghdad, the Iraqi capital maintains the appearance of a functioning city despite damage to dozens of sites. The targets have varied greatly, from presidential palaces to residential areas and at least five telephone exchanges. But the city's power supply remains intact and street lights come on at night. The phone exchanges have provided the city's 5 million inhabitants with the most graphic scenes of destruction. Strewn among the wreckage are thousands of wires, furniture, computers, metal cabinets, chairs and the sponge used to fill in false walls and ceilings. The exchanges were struck in remarkably accurate hits, taking out the target and largely leaving everything around it intact. There have been no casualties in those middle-of-the-night strikes. That timing played out again late Monday and early yesterday. Allied warplanes and missiles blasted Iraq's Olympic headquarters, one of Saddam Hussein's palaces and what was believed to be an air force officers club. What a gas! GROC Scott Reynolds/Kansan Lawrence firefighters respond to a gas leak at the Texaco gas station at Ninth and Mississippi streets. The pictured vehicle struck and ruptured the gas line running from the tanker truck into an underground storage tank, releasing nearly 200 gallons of unleaded gasoline. Mark Bradford deputy chief of the Lawrence-Douglas County Fire and Medical, said that after working to contain the gasoline at the spill, the department began tracing any gas that entered the storm drainage system. He said that firefighters would use a boom or coffer dam to keep gasoline from entering the river. WELCOME OUR KANSAN. Friday KANSAS Kansas tops Western Michigan 8-1 in Hoyland Collegiate p. 10 kout spark Jayhawk & Powercat Charms 25 139 ITALIAN LINK BRACELETS Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care - UKR Gold * Stainless Steel * Semi-Pure Stones * Greek Letters The Etc. Shop LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS We Stand Behina Our Work, and WE CARE!" V INC. 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. LIBERTY HALL 644 7155 739 1912 ADAPTATION. (m) 9:30 only QUIET AMERICAN (m) 4:46 7:10 THE BREAD, MY SWEET (m) no show 11 Free State Draces on Wednesdays GO HAWKS! OPEN AT NOON ON SATURDAY GET HERE EARLY! ALL WEEKEND $250 Jumbo Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! $200 DOMESTIC TAPS SATURDAY MARCH MADNESS ON GAMEDAYS $200 TAPS & BOTTLES LIVE MUSIC every Saturday DJ MARLON MARSHALL & friends HOT, FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE! at the small table on Monday! open 7pm M-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! NewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNow. kansan.com PYRAMID Now. GO HAWKS! OPEN AT NOON ON SATURDAY GET HERE EARLY! ALL WEEKEND $2.50 Jumbo Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! $2.00 DOMESTIC TAPS SATURDAY MARCH MADNESS ON GAMEDAYS $2.00 LIVE TAPS & BOTTLES LIVE MUSIC FRIDAY-RIVAI every DJ MARLON & friends open 7pm M-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. OPEN AT NOON ON SATURDAY GET HERE EARLY! SATURDAY MARCH MADNESS ON GAMEDAYS $2.00 LIFE TAPS & BOTTLES LIVE MUSIC FRIDAY: RIVAL every saturday DJ MARLON MARSHALL & friends FATS BARWANDAYS 1016 Mass. Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. 6A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL2, 2003 $5 off any $20 service Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - B West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive your discount (coupon #8) $5 off any $20 service Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - R West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive your discount (coupon #8) KELLER WILLIAMS SPRING 2003 TONIGHT AT LIBERTY HALL 642 MASS STREET LAWRENCE KS WWW.KELLERWILLIAMS.NET IN STORES NOW KELLER WILLIAMS LAUGH TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT LIBERTY HALL Debate CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A to smoke were a problem, he said. So, the coalition will fight for smoking and nonsmoking sections in classrooms. He also said he would ban cellphones in the classroom — an automatic F to any student whose phone rings. Their Ideas Thomas said that while he was an off-campus senator for two years he contributed to the Off-Campus Living Resource Center. He also said he would work with city officials to stop the city ordinance that allowed house searches. Farokhi said her history of working with the multicultural affairs committee in Student Senate, as well as being president of Student Union Activities, helped her see what issues needed to be addressed. As chairman of the On Campus Safety Advisory Board, Knopp said he had a new perspective of campus safety and empathized with students who were afraid to walk home at night. "Obviously, SUA and Senate are quite different, but they are still serving the same constituencies," she said. As part of the KUnited platform, he plans to implement a "Jaywalk,"a service to escort students home from campus after dark. "No matter how lit campus is or how many blue lights there are, students still don't feel safe walking home," he said. Bell said she could represent both coalitions if elected. After winning a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Student Senate seat in Spring 2002, she gave her spot to the runner-up because she was appointed the student executive chair of Student Senate. Lord Wads said he was working for awareness and fun in Student Senate. He cited low voter turnout as a problem and brought outside quotes to demonstrate this, while entertaining the audience. "A low voter turnout is an indication of fewer people going to the polls," he said. One was from President George W. Bush. The second was, "An empty stomach hears no words," meaning low interest in Student Senate caused low voter turnout. Lord Wads said he wasn't looking for students' votes; he just wants to bring in some fun and have people hear his issues. "Maybe they'll laugh. Maybe they'll hate me, but either way, it doesn't really matter," he said. "As long as I'm bringing attention to what's going on." Theme Song Lord Wads said his coalition He said the coalition had always been part of the radical movement. was inspired by the theme song from the movie Boondock Saints. "It seems to be Delta Force to a T." he said. "We started seven years ago, and we're going strong." Thomas said Delta Force's theme song was Rage Against the Machine's "Renegades of Funk." Farokhi said "We Will Rock You" was her personal choice. Knopp said KUnited's theme song came from its efforts in Student Senate to raise the student hourly wage by 50 cents. He said its theme song was "In Da Club" by 50 Cent. "And now Andy's going to actually sing it for you," Bell jokingly said. The audience didn't get the pleasure. KELLER WILLIAMS SPRING 2003 TONIGHT AT LIBERTY HALL 642 MASS STREET LAWRENCE KS WWW.KELLERWILLIAMS.NET IN STORES NOW KELLER WILLIAMS LADOG TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT LIBERTY HALL Edited by Christy Dendurent March CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A mation and gaining more supporters as they walked toward the Kansas Union. Spectators of the march had mixed reactions to the group's protest. "I think there are some things in the country that are more important than that, but I know it's a problem." said Rob Werling, Fort Scott sophomore. "It's good they're standing up for what they believe in." Some students supported the groups' right to protest and to get its point of view heard. "I think our country is based on their ability to do this, and with current events, I support their right to do this," said Heidi Pritchard, Lawrence junior The group ended its march in the lobby of the Kansas Union, where it gathered to watch coverage of the national march. Pritchard said she was interested in finding out more information about the cause because it affected her as a woman. —Edited by Christy Den durent Election CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Jaimes said some candidates would gain votes and some would lose some. But it should mirror what's already there. told them not to count on it Whether two or three Progressive Lawrence Campaign candidates actually make it onto the commission, the mission of the campaign remains the same. Brooks said, especially in light of this election. "I wouldn't characterize this as a divisive election but an energetic one with hardworking can didates that raised important issues," he said. "Our goal now is to keep the lines of communication open to the commissioners from Lawrence neighborhoods. We want to get input from all the citizens and keep the citizens informed." "The 2 percent that show as being unreported actually include the advance ballots and the provisional ballots," Jaimes said. Jaimes said the results would become official Friday. Edited by Leah Shaffer Coalition rescues unidentified U.S. soldier CAMPASSALIYAH.Qatar U.S. Central Command early today confirmed the rescue of a U.S. Army prisoner of war held captive in Iraq. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks refused to provide any further details or identify the rescued POW. In a statement, Brooks said. "Coalition forces have conducted a successful rescue mission of a U.S. Army prisoner of war held captive in Iraq. The soldier has been returned to a coalition controlled area. More details will be released as soon as possible." The Pentagon has listed seven Americans as captured by Iraq since the outbreak of the war. In Washington, officials said the rescue involved one of the seven. The Associated Press GO HAWKS! open NOON Saturday! BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass. Lawrence Oh yeah, in the show baby. The 'Best' Seat on Mass. Street! Catch all the final four action on our 16tvs PLUS 2 HUGE 10ft BROTHERTRONS! WEDNESDAYS 10¢ DAMN GOOD WINGS! SPECIAL WINGS SERVED ON WEDNESDAYS! (0pm-PPP) "ORIGINAL" or Red Hot "Ass Burners!" $2 RED BULL/VODKAS $1 50 U-CALL-IT! TAPS & BOTTLES ON THE BIG GAMEDAY! THURSDAYS WOW! $2 00 TRIPLE WELLS! $2 50 Long Islands $1 00 shots of DRI $2 00 U-CALL-ITS! WHEN YOU DRINK, DRINK RESPONSIBLY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY SODAS ARE FREE AFTER 8PM. "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" WEDNESDAY, APRIL2, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Troops rescue POWsoldier The Associated Press WASHINGTON - American troops yesterday rescued Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, who had been held as a prisoner of war in Iraq since she and other members of her unit were ambushed March 23, the Defense Department announced. Lynch, 19, of Palestine, W. Va., had been missing with 11 other U.S. soldiers from the 507th Maintenance Company. The unit was ambushed near Nasiriyah after making a wrong turn during early fighting in the invasion of Iraq. Five other members of her unit were later shown on Iraqi television answering questions from their Iraqi captors. U. S. troops rescued Lynch near where her unit was ambushed, said Jean Offutt, a representative for Fort Bliss, Texas. The 507th Maintenance is based at Fort Bliss. Lynch had been listed as missing in action but was identified by the Pentagon Tuesday as a POW. She was not among the seven U.S. soldiers—including the five from the 507th shown on television — formally listed as prisoners of war. Offutt said she did not know whether Lynch had been wounded or when she might return to the United States. The rescued soldier's hometown erupted in celebration at the news. "They said it was going to be the biggest party this road had ever seen," Lynch's cousin Sherri McFee said as fire and police sirens blared in the background. "Everybody was really worried ... but we all remained hopeful and knew she would be home," McFee said. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks at Central Command headquarters in Qatar announced that a U.S. POW had been rescued but refused to provide any further details. In a brief statement, Brooks said, "Coalition forces have conducted a successful rescue mission of a U.S. Army prisoner of war held captive in Iraq. The soldier has been returned to a coalition-controlled area." Fifteen other Americans are formally listed as missing. The other POWs include two Army Apache helicopter pilots captured March 24 after their helicopter went down. The 507th Maintenance was attacked during some of the first fighting in Nasiriyah, a Euphrates River-crossing city where sporadic battles have raged since U.S. troops first reached it. Troops and military officials have said much of the fighting there had involved members of the Fedayeen Saddam and other Iraqi paramilitaries who had dressed as civilians and ambushed Americans. Lynch, an aspiring teacher joined the Army to get an education and take advantage of a rare opportunity in a farming community with an unemployment rate of 15 percent one of the highest in West Virginia. Central Command officials in Qatar, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Lynch had been rescued from a hospital in Iraq. Terror suspect attempts suicide The Associated Press SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A terror suspect attempted suicide at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba and was being treated at detention camp's new psychiatric ward, officials said yesterday. The man was saved by guards within seconds of the attempt in his cell late Monday, Army Lt. Col. Barry Johnson said. There have been 24 suicide attempts by 17 individuals since detainees began arriving at the remote naval base in eastern Cuba in January 2002, officials said. None has been successful. Johnson refused to provide further details of the suicide attempt but said that "most of them are by self-strangulation." He said that the detainee did not suffer "significant injury" and remains under observation in psychiatric facility, which opened March 23. The new ward has 20 detainees staying there, he said. Officials have denied that the 35-bed ward was created solely in response to suicide attempts, saying it is part of planned improvements to health care. Military doctors are treating about 80 detainees for mental health problems, with 60 percent receiving medication, officials said. Human rights groups have asked whether the interrogations were contributing to the suicide rate. The U.S. government says the roughly 660 detainees from 42 countries are suspected of links to Al Qaeda terror network or the ousted Afghan Taliban regime. None have been charged or permitted lawyers while they are held indefinitely and interrogated. NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NΣW ΣK Since 1913 ΣK Since 1913 KU Sigma Kappa Bringing sisterhood to life for 90 years KU EUKIP E.C. MIDDLEBAS 1874 formerly Bada Bing! formerly Bada Bing! The wildest party from here to Vegas! ALLSTARS Where everybody’s a player! 913 N. 2nd Street - Lawrence, KS (785)-841-4122 DRINK SPECIALS Monday: $2 Wells Thursday: $4 Red Bull & Jager Night Tuesday: 2 for 1 Cocktails Friday & Sat: $2 AllStar Shots Wednesday: $3 Boulevard & Rolling Rock Sunday: $3 - 22 oz. Bud & Bud Light New April 7th Don't Miss This Show! with private location I's Ultimate Ladies' Night Out Featuring special guests NOW INTERVIEWING for waitresses and cheerleaders all shifts mars new April 7th Light Don't Miss This Show! with private tunes I's Ultimate Ladies Night Out Featuring special guests HOW DO I JOIN? VISIT THE WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.KU.EDU/~YELLOW, READ AND SIGN THE FORMS ,AND TURN THE FORMS INTO THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE. TIRED OF SPENDING AN ETERNITY WALKING ACROSS CAMPUS? Bicycle WHAT IS IT? A COMMUNITY BIKE PROGRAM DESIGNED TO INCREASE ON-CAMPUS TRANSPORTATION ALTERNATIVES FOR KU STUDENTS. JOIN THE YELLOW BIKE PROGRAM HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? ONLY $10 TO PARTICIPATE THIS SEMESTER. WHERE CAN I RIDE? ON THE KU CAMPUS. A MAP IS PROVIDED ON THE WEBSITE. HOW WILL I ACCESS THE BIKES? TO ACCESS BIKES, ALL PARTICIPANTS WILL RECEIVE A KEY THAT OPENS ALL OF THE LOCKS SECURING THE BIKES. REGISTER NOW, ONLY 90 STUDENT CAN PARTICIPATE! FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT HTTP://WWW.KU.EDU/~YELLOW STUDENT SENATE 8A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 POST CIRCULA HONEY BUNCHES OF OATS 1 99 EA. WESTMINSTER 15 IQR. HONEY BUNCHES HEAD AT AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT PRICES GOOD APRIL 2 THRU APRIL 8, 2003 THURSDAY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ LB. FRIEDY SPECIAL JALAPENOS 78¢ LB. BONLESS BEET RUMP ROAST Economy Pair 1 58 LB. BONLESS PORK LOIN CHOPS OR ROAST Economy Pair 1 88 LB. BONLESS BONELESS FRYER BREASTS Economy Pair 1 68 LB. BONLESS CHOW FLAKE STEAK Economy Pair 1 88 T-BONE STEAK Economy Pair 4 48 LB. NAVEL ORANGES Economy Pair 1 28 EA. JOHSONVILLE BRATWURST Economy Pair 2 88 EA. WHOLE BONLESS PORK TENDERLOIN 2 98 LB. BAKER POTATOES 28¢ LB. DOLL COLE SLAW OR SALAD MIX 78¢ EA. THOMPSON OR RED SEEDLESS GRAPES 98¢ LB. FRESH BROCCOLI LARGE RUSH 78¢ EA. LARGE HEAD CAULIFLOWER 88¢ EA. PREMIUM RED DELICIOUS APPLES 68¢ EA. DIGIORNO PIZZA Original 12 2/77 EA. BREVERS ICE CREAM 1/2 GALLON 2 77 EA. DOUBLE 4X6 PRIMES FOR 100 VOUS AND CARTE 36¢ EA. ROBERT'S ORANGE JUICE 1 28 BILLION 88¢ EA. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS. WE ACCEPT MANUFACTURERS IN CORPUSS. Student devoted to helping disabled By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Courtney Bates is not afraid of challenge. The Chicago senior cares for children with disabilities when she's not taking classes to finish up her psychology and human development and family life majors. YANISHA LOWE "He still had to deal with things that other 17-year-olds were dealing with," Bates said. "Things like sexuality come up — it's just so much more difficult when a child can't communicate." Dan Nelson/Kansan Bates has worked with disabled children in both Kansas City, Kan., and Lawrence and has had an interest in helping them since she was young. — which we thought was a little strange," Rose Bates, her mother said. "She used to watch a Saturday morning program about sick children after the cartoons were over Although she's worked with kids with various disabilities, her time spent with a 17-year-old boy with limited speech and mobility skills was the most challenging. With the boy having no self-help skills, such as going to the bathroom on his own, Bates' patience was as good as gold. Although this job must test her patience, Anthony Brown, Bates' boyfriend, said she made it look easy. Courtney Bates, Chicago senior, is working on a bachelor's degree in psychology and human development and family life. "I find it very rewarding working with children with disabilities," Bates said. "I don't know how she does it," said Brown, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. "I don't have the patience." "It was pretty cool because Bates isn't the soft-spoken person that she may seem to be. In February 2001, she was instrumental in staging a protest against The University Daily Kansan. Bates, members of the Black Student Union and other organizations on campus were disappointed with the Kansan coverage of the Big 12 Conference on Black Student Government. With about 100 other students, Bates walked down campus and into the Kansan newsroom, dropping copies of the newspaper article marked with failing grades. nobody made a sound." Bates said. "The door is now open for an exchange of ideas." Her mother was not surprised at her actions. "We were usually one of the only African-American couples who lived in a predominately white setting," Rose Bates said. "She wanted the whole story told. She worked so hard to make it a success." This was not the first, nor the last time that Bates had voiced her opinion. In high school, she was involved with gay rights and AIDS education. After the protest, she served as the Black Student Union president. - Edited by Anne Mantey Mystery illness creates U.S. concern The Associated Press An airliner briefly halted on a West Coast tarmac yesterday was the most dramatic sign yet that a mysterious illness that has killed more than 60 people worldwide is provoking worry in the United States. Nobody in the United States has died from the illness, severe acute respiratory syndrome, called SARS. But about 70 cases have been reported in the country out of some 1,800 worldwide. Health officials here are not considering quarantines so far because the disease is not spreading as rapidly as in Asia and the related outbreak in Toronto. In Hong Kong, for example, some 240 residents of an apartment complex where SARS has spread were taken away to quarantine camps yesterday. But such measures don't yet appear warranted in the United States, said Tommy Thompson, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. "We are in the business of protecting the public health of all citizens," Thompson said yesterday in Atlanta. "If there is a virus that is explosive ... and the only way to control it is by quarantine, we have to consider it. But we're not there yet." Health officials say there's no sign that SARS is spreading freely throughout any American community. The disease, which originated in Asia, seems to be confined mostly to international travelers, to health care workers who have taken care of SARS patients and to those in close contact with SARS patients. They also say the SARS germ, not yet firmly identified, appears to spread mostly from droplets spewed out through coughing or sneezing. But it's possible it might also spread more broadly by airborne transmission, or by lurking on surfaces like doorknobs that other people later touch, the experts said. Short of quarantine, authorities around the country have taken other steps. In San Jose, Calif., an American Airlines flight from Tokyo was held on the tarmac after five people on board complained of SARS-like symptoms. The disease causes a fever, sometimes with chills, headache and body aches and can lead to a cough and shortness of breath. IT’S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. Tanglewood 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished studios, 1 and 2 berm apartment homes. Hanover Place 19th and Mass. (785) 841-1212 Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! 15th & Kasold 749-1226 Enjoy the comfort of a small community. Now Leasing! Models open daily. Hanover Place Hanover Place Orchard Corners Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, tims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com Jayhawks use talent to advance Many coaches say that to win the NCAA Tournament you need good play and luck. Kansas has proven this year you might need just one. It seemed that the Jayhawks had nothing go right for them this tournament. Gone was forward Wayne Simien. Gone was a number-one seed in the tournament. And gone was any thought Kansas could breeze to the Final Four. The selection committee dealt Kansas a cruel hand on Selection Sunday, as perennial powers Duke and Arizona stood in the way of a trip to New Orleans. It seemed the only way the Jayhawks could make it through the first four games would be to get lucky. They didn't. The Blue Devils and Wildcats posed two challenges for Kansas. Duke was determined to shut down the Jayhawks' perimeter game while relying on its own hot shooting, while Arizona's zone defense tried to take away Kansas' inside presence just as it had earlier in the year. Luck might have lost. Kansas did not. No doubt the Jayhawks faced adversity. If nothing else, the Jayhawks earned their spot in the Final Four. Against Duke, they showed their interior game, as Nick Collison carried Kansas with a 31-point, 18-rebound performance. As if on cue, Kirk Hinrich stepped up against Arizona, establishing a perimeter presence the Jayhawks desperately needed against the talented Wildcats. Former Kansas teams might not have passed the test. No one would have been surprised if the Jayhawks had faltered against Duke or Arizona, all the while cursing fate and claiming to be unlucky once again. This team, however, is not like the others. When Oklahoma faced a challenge in the tournament against Syracuse and its home-court advantage this year, the Sooners failed. When star Keith Bogans became injured for Kentucky, the team stumbled. SEE NEWELL ON PAGE 8B Comparing war, basketball General uses Williams as analogy for strategy in Pentagon conference By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter College basketball is full of war analogies: Games are battles and wars, players bomb three-pointers or fire a shots, offenses attack defenses and the list goes on. But in a role reversal yesterday, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Richard Myers used Kansas coach Roy Williams to explain the military game plan for Operation Iraqi Freedom. NORMAN BROWN Williams Addressing reporters during a Pentagon briefing with Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Myers said it was not unusual to change plan of attack shortly after entering combat, much like basketball. coaches shift strategies after tipoff "I'm sure Roy Williams—when he puta plan together to go meet Arizona," Myers said, "he had a plan and went to the floor that night and said 'OK, we're going to play Arizona, and here's our plan,' and I imagine that plan didn't survive 10 minutes, and so then he had to start adjusting. A…" PRESIDENT wegoing to adjust? You bet." Myers Williams said at a press conference yesterday that he had met Myers, a 1965 Kansas State graduate from Kansas City, Mo., and was flattered to be mentioned by the general but was quick to point out that, though basketball and war share terminology, they were apples and oranges when it came to importance. "It's peculiar to hear them talking about game plans, and we're talking about game plans," Williams said Throughout the United States' conflict with Iraq, Williams has been careful to avoid taking a public pro or con stance regarding the United States involvement in the war. However, he has not shied away from his support for the deployed, American troops. Williams said he was angered when friends of his had been met by protesters after returning from fighting in Vietnam. Williams said he understood there was going to be division among U.S. citizens, but he did not want soldiers returning from Iraq to meet a similar atmosphere. "If those guys don't support our troops then I have no freaking use for them," Williams said. Defense key against Marquette By Ryan Greene rgreene@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Marquette is not your typical Kansas opponent. Sure, if you've paid attention to the college basketball scene this season, you know about junior guard Dwyane Wade, but the rest may be pretty blurry. After all, Conference USA is not a traditional post-season powerhouse. For those of you trying to gain knowledge on the Golden Eagles before heading watching Saturday's game, here is your Marquette scouting report. 1) Wade is Public Enemy No.1. Senior guard Kirk Hinrich and sophomore guard Michael Lee may be the most important Jayhawks defensively if Kansas wants to play Monday night. Plain and simple, Wade always gets the job done, even though at times it may not be pretty. In Saturday's Elite Eight victory against top-seeded Kentucky, Wade recorded a triple-double with 29 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists. Wade can get it both shooting from the outside as well as slashing to the hoop, just like Hinrich. Wade is arguably the nation's top finisher when it comes to driving at the hoop, which is an attribute that typically tends to lure opponents into early foul trouble. No matter who the opponent, Wade will always find his way to the free-throw line, and Kansas will have to hope that he is cold from the charity stripe. One plan of action to beat Marquette may be to leave Hinrich or Lee on Wade 1-on-1, let Wade do his thing and concentrate on keeping his supporting cast from beating Kansas. Kansas' Take: "Dwyane Wade, he's a great athlete and a great player, and I would like the challenge of guarding him, to see if he's as "What has impressed me about him is that he is so versatile. He can beat you in so many different ways. He is just a great player." — Hinrich 2) Golden Eagles are playing with nothing to lose. Face it, nobody expected Marquette to wind up in the Final Four; probably not even the team itself. Marquette has proven that it can play the role of David, having beaten Kentucky and Pittsburgh on its road to New Orleans. The team's confidence has to be pretty high after beating Kentucky, who many analysts predicted to walk away with the championship. Basically, Marquette's biggest positive headed into this game is that it will not be scared by the Kansas mystique. Kansas' Take: Kansas' Take: "They have to be pretty good to beat Kentucky by 14, 15, or whatever it was. We come out and play terrible, we'll lose." — sophomore guard Keith Langford "We think they are as good of a team as we have played all year. There shouldn't be any overlooking of them. We know they are capable; they beat Pittsburgh and Kentucky, two of the hottest teams in the country, back-to-back." — Hinrich 3) Keith Langford will be needed on defense badly. More than likely, Langford will draw the defensive match-up with Marquette's freshman gunner Steve Novak. Novak is listed as a small forward, but like Texas' Brian Boddicker, spends most of his time on the perimeter. Novak's presence will be big for Marquette because he will keep his defender out from under the glass. In four tournament games, Novak is 14-for-20 WINCY 3 KENTUCKY 50 SEE MARQUETTE ON PAGE 8B Marquette junior guard Dwyane Wade slips past Kentucky senior forward Marquis Estill during Saturday's game. Wade helped drive the victory against top-seeded Kentucky with his 29 points. Contributed photo/Marquette Tribune KD Baseball defeats Bears again Scott Reynolds/Kansar Sophomore infielder Travis Metcalf waits for a pitch from the Southwest Missouri State pitcher while freshman Matt Baty prepares in the on-deck circle. Metcalf hit a grand slam in the third inning, scoring three players who had reached base on consecutive walks as the Jayhawks defeated the Bears 12-7 yesterday. By Daniel Bork dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas baseball team kept its momentum heading in the right direction last night. The Jayhawks (23-11, 1-5 Big 12 Conference) defeated the Southwest Missouri State Bears 12-7, one night after earning its first conference victory against Oklahoma State. The Bears were ranked in the preseason Top 25, but suffered their second loss to Kansas this season. The Jayhawks defeated the Bears 2-0 in Springfield, Mo. After neither team scored in the first inning, the Jayhawks scored three runs in the bottom of the second. Senior infielder Casey Spanish started the rally by hitting a single into the outfield. He then stole second base and advanced to third on a wild pitch. Freshman infielder Matt Baty continued his hot streak by hitting a double that drove in Spanish. Junior catcher Jake Kauzlarich hit Baty home with his third home run of the season. "You have to swing the bats in order to win these games, and we know that," coach Ritch Price said. "I am real pleased that we beat them earlier in a pitcher's duel and now we beat them in a slugfest, and I think that is a real confidence- booster for this team." Then the Jayhawks scored four more runs in the third inning. After three consecutive walks to junior infielder Ryan Baty, senior infielder Kevin Wheeler and Spanish, sophomore infielder Travis Metcalf hit a grand slam. It was the first grand slam from a Kansas player since "The last grand slam I hit was in high school, and those don't count anymore," Metcalf said. "I just went to the plate relaxed and looking for a first pitch fastball, and that is what I got." IEE BASEBALL ON PAGE 8B Both clubs like the long ball. No. 23 Kansas (21-9) has hit 30 home runs this season, two away from the school record established by last year's club. Wichita State (22-11) of the Missouri Valley Conference tied its single-season team record for home runs at 27 over the weekend during a home series with Illinois State. After clashing with several Big 12 Conference foes lately, the Kansas softball team will travel to Wichita for some in-state doubleheader play at 4 p.m. today against the Shockers of Wichita State. Shocker senior Audrey Walters recorded Wichita State's first four-hit game of the season with a home run in the bottom of the eighth in the Sunday finale against Illinois State. The school record for hits in a game is five, set by Walters. Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said most of the Shockers' offensive production was due to to first year coach Tim Walton. The former Oklahoma hitting coach has improved Wichita State's plate production in his time in Wichita, she said. "We know it's going to be a tough game," Bunge said. "We know we're going to be in for a dog fight. On the other hand we're not worried about what Wichita State is going to do to us, but what we're going to do to them." The 'Hawks have some hot bats of their own with a number of players registering multi-hit games, namely infielders Jessica Moppin and Nettie Fierros. The two freshmen have been on an offensive tear recently, posting home runs and hits. Moppin broke the freshman season home run record with her ninth blast on Sunday at Iowa State. Fierros went 4-for-4 in the first game against Oklahoma City last Tuesday. Before being swept by Illinois State over the weekend, Wichita State had been shocking most of its competition, going on an eight-game winning streak. Bunge wants her squad's aggressive tactics to end up being the difference in the doubleheader. 4 The Jayhawks will return to conference play this weekend with two games at Texas Tech, starting at 2 p.m. Saturday. — Steve Schmidt --- "When I was growing up and watching him, he was my hero... " Kansas freshman guard Stephen Vinson about Kirk Hinrich 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Inside Sports WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 Marquette coach awaits life-saving lung The Associated Press MILWAUKEE — Trey Schwab sits on the Marquette bench, breathing oxygen from a tube connected to a portable tank. He wears a cell phone on his hip, and he checks it every so often to see whether he's missed the call that could save his life. The 38-year-old assistant coach has a disease that is deteriorating his lungs, and a transplant is his only hope for survival. Schwab is at the top of a waiting list for a donor lung, and if a match is found, word will reach him through a vibration on his cell phone. He then would have just two hours to get to the University of Wisconsin Medical Center in Madison for the operation. This waiting game is not only tense for Schwab, it's an inconvenience because his team is playing in the Final Four in New Orleans. The Golden Eagles play Kansas in the first national semifinal Saturday afternoon, and Schwab left for the Big Easy yesterday to help with logistics for the team's trip. "The coach in me would like to put all this on a back burner for another week and not worry about it," Schwab said. "But this is life and death, and it'll happen when it's supposed to happen, and there's not anything any of us can do about that." Eagle A private jet will be waiting to whisk Schwab away from New Orleans should the call come while he's there. "We're actually pushing the two-hour window a little bit," Schwab said. "But hopefully we'll have a little bit of leeway if they find a lung for me." There was just no way he was going to stay back in Milwaukee after Marquette reached its first Final Four since Al McGuire led the urban Jesuit school to its only title in 1977, McGuire's last game as coach. He's ready — and hoping — for his phone to go off in the middle of the game at the Superdome, or in the middle of the night. "It's stressful on the bench and being so far away," Schwab said. "But I'd probably be in more stress if I had to sit at home and watch it on TV." For the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament, Schwab had a prop plane ready to take him from Indianapolis or Minneapolis, both of which were about an hour's flight from Madison. "He's everywhere we go lately. A jet is all part of the travel itinerary," coach Tom Crean said. "I hope he's there for the game, unless he can get it ahead of time. It's a no-lose situation for him." With New Orleans so far from Wisconsin, a faster airplane was needed to get Schwab back quickly enough for transplant surgeon Robert Love to perform the operation that could last up to 24 hours. "We're going to just have to drop everything and get to the airport as fast as we can when the phone rings," Schwab said. Shortly after Schwab arrived at Marquette last season, he and Crean developed a nasty cough they couldn't shake, and both men were diagnosed with walking pneumonia. But as Crean got better, Schwab only got worse. After numerous tests, doctors told Schwab that he had a rare, incurable disease called idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis that attacks the air sacs in the lungs, hindering the body's ability to process oxygen. After six operations and 15 months on the portable oxygen tank, Schwab moved near the top of the organ transplant list in February. When a donor match is made, the transplant surgeon will determine Schwab will receive one lung or two. Doctors began cutting back on some of his medications in preparation for the operation, sapping his strength and stamina. "Even healthy people get run down and tired this time of year," Schwab said. "So I've really had to get my sleep and take care of myself." He feels guilty because other members of the staff have picked up the slack. But not once has anybody complained. Crean said. Indeed, Schwab has become a source of inspiration to the Marquette's players and coaches in this special season. "Every time we think things are tough, you look at him and see a man who isn't breathing on his own," Crean said. "You can't help but draw inner strength." Guard Dwyane Wade said, "You can't really think that you're having a bad day if you think about what Coach Schwab is going through." "When I first got here, Coach said you have to lay it on the line every day, and I said, 'How can you do that every day?'" Wade said. "Well, I see how you can do that every day because what he's going through, he has to be strong every day." Doherty resigns as men's basketball coach The Associated Press Matt Doherty resigned yesterday as basketball coach at North Carolina, ending a bumpy three-year run marked by his failure to lead a storied program back to national prominence or even the NCAA Tournament. The Tar Heels failed to make the tournament in two of his three seasons. He leaves with three years left on a six-year contract that paid him $855,000 a season. Doherty's resignation came after athletic director Dick Baddour held a series of meetings with players and parents, some of whom complained about the coach's intense practices and drastic mood swings. Three players transferred last season and others talked about it this year. But sophomore Jawad Williams defended his coach and his methods. "Any coach across America has an anger problem. You have CAROLINA TAR HEELS The 41-year-old Doherty was a Tar Heel fixture long before he took over the program, having played with Michael Jordan in the early 1980s. He left Notre Dame and returned to North Carolina to succeed Bill Guthridge, and for the first season, things were fine. North Carolina went 26-7, but it slipped to 8-20 last season — the worst record in the program's history. This year, his youngteam finished 19-16 baddour picked the inexperienced Doherty after Roy Williams — former assistant to Hall of Fame coach Dean Smith — turned down UNC to remain at Kansas. It's unclear whether Williams, whose team is in the Final Four, will be a candidate again. But there was tension from the start, especially when Doherty didn't retain Phil Ford, Dave Hanners and Pat Sullivan as assistant coaches. Instead, he brought in his own staff from his lone season at Notre Dame. That move disappointed Smith, Guthridge and others at North Carolina. In 2001, when Doherty was The Associated Press' coach of the year, the team won 18 games in a row and was ranked No. 1 nationally. But even that team fizzled down the stretch, going 4-5 over its final nine games, including a second- round loss to Penn State in the NCAA Tournament. Off-court problems surfaced when star sophomore Joseph Forte decided to go pro, citing his inability to get along with Doherty as one of the reasons for leaving. Then came the disastrous 2001-02 season. The team lacked the overall talent of past North Carolina clubs because of the recruiting gap that stretched from the end of the Guthridge era to the start of Doherty's program. Still, many believe the Tar Heels should have been better. Three transferred - Adam Boone, Brian Morrison and Neil Fingleton - and some of Doherty's initial recruiting class also contemplated leaving. After the team's final game last Wednesday night, most of the players said they would return and supported their coach. Williams deflects questions about North Carolina The Associated Press Kansas coach Roy Williams deflected attention from himself as a candidate for the opening at North Carolina, requesting the focus stay on his Jayhawks trip to the Final Four. Williams said yesterday afternoon that he had heard rumors swirling about Matt Doherty's potential resignation as Tar Heels coach, which officially came a few hours later. But Williams said he would not discuss whether he was considering the North Carolina job for himself. "This is a very satisfying, exciting time for me and my players and the University "I'm not letting anybody bother me with any junk if it doesn't do anything with Kansas basketball, my players, great places to eat or rivers to spit in." Roy Williams Kansas men's basketball coach of Kansas and our basketball program," Williams said. "I'm going to enjoy the hell out of this week and I'm not letting anybody bother me with any junk if it doesn't do anything with Kansas basketball, my players, great places to eat or rivers to spit in. "I'm not messing with anything else. This is too exciting a time for me and our kids and our program. That's the extent of my conversation about any other job, whether it's North Carolina or anybody." Williams has dodged questions about the North Carolina position at times throughout the season as Doherty struggled to lead the Tar Heels to success. It was familiar territory for Williams. Williams was considered the Tar Heels' top choice the last time the position was open. After Bill Guthridge retired following the 1999-2000 season, Williams took a trip to Chapel Hill to have dinner with athletic director Dick Baddour and play golf with his mentor and North Carolina legend Dean Smith. North Carolina chancellor James Moeser speculated at the time that Williams left campus with the intent to take the position but could not break it to his Kansas team. Instead, a crowd estimated at 16,300 people — matching the capacity of Allen Fieldhouse — turned out for a news conference at Kansas' football stadium that Williams began with the words, "I'm staying." Within a week, Doherty was named the new coach of the Tar Heels. kansan.com Where would you rather be for Kansas POLL Final Four game? At the game in New Orleans At the game in the restaurant In Lawrence watching in a bar or restaurant With friend at a game-viewing party I'm not watching the game Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote Kansas Athletics Calendar TOMORROW THURSDAY Softball at Wichita State, 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. Track at Texas Relays,Austin,Texas,all day FRIDAY Baseball vs. Nebraska, Hoglund Ballpark 7 p.m. Track at Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, all day SATURDAY Basketball vs. Marquette, Louisiana Superdome, 5 p.m. baseball vs. Nebraska, Hoglund Ballpark, 2 p.m. Track at Texas Relays,Austin,Texas,all day Softball at Texas Tech, Lubbock, Texas, 2 p.m. Tennis vs. Tulsa, Robinson Outdoor Tennis Courts, noon SUNDAY Baseball vs. Nebraska, Hoglund Ballpark, 1 p.m. Softball at Texas Tech, Lubbock, Texas, 5 n Tennis vs. Colorado, Robinson Outdoor Tennis Cours, 11 a.m. Free forAll I would just like to let coach Williams know that when I was in New Orleans last month for Mardi Gras, me and my friends spit in the Mississippi River, so we like to think we had a small part in KU making it back to the Final Four. Go 'Hawks!' devouring our differences. --devouring our differences. Congratulations, Nick Collison, on being named First Team All-America. You're so awesome. I sure am glad the Duke women are getting the job done in the women's tournament, because the guys sure as hell didn't. Hey Free For All, MU rules. Hey Free For All, April Fool's. All scholarship hall residents are nerds All greek students are drunks. Resident hall students are immature. Off-campus students just don't care. EAT SPAGHETTI. STOP STEREOTYPES. Join us for a FREE spaghetti dinner April 16th 6 p.m. at the ECM Freshmen and sophomores from residence halls, scholarship halls, greek houses and off campus are invited. email registration and questions to sass@ku.edu include name and housing affiliation registration deadline is Thursday April 10th HURRY! ONLY 60 SPOTS AVAILABLE. sass hosted by students against spreading stereotypes $ \textcircled{7} $ FREE : BROWN BAG CLASSICS 12:30 - 1:00PM MOST WEDNESDAYS KANSAS UNION Make your lunch a classic. Please join the School of Fine Arts for free noon-time performances. Just bring your lunch because the drinks are on the Kansas Union. FREE : BAG CLASSICS MOST WEDNESDAYS KANSAS UNION School of Fine Arts K TODAY'S PERFORMER: EVAN GROSSHANS, BARITONE (ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, 4TH FLOOR) --- 4 } WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3P 'Unbeatable' Wildcats' future uncertain after upset loss By Travis Hubbard Kentucky Kernel via U-wire University of Kentucky MINNEAPOLIS — The team that was incapable of playing a bad game and always capable of overcoming an opponent's remarkable performance accomplished neither Saturday with a Final Four berth on the line. University of Kentucky, the consensus No. 1 team in the nation and winners of 26 straight, was reduced to chants of "overrated" by Marquette fans as the third-seeded Golden Eagles cleaned up the final garbage minutes of a 83-69 upset in the NCAA Midwest Regional final. The Golden Eagles played a near-flawless game, led by All-American guard Dwyane Wade's triple-double (29 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists), and shot 50 percent from the field against what many believed was the nation's best defense. Marquette shot 7-of-13 from three-point range, while Kentucky struggled to shoot better than 39 percent for the game and 25 percent from long range. played 24 minutes and scored a team-high 15 points despite a sprained ankle from the Wildcats' HK "We started off not making shots, and it carried over the rest of the game," said departing Kentucky senior Keith Bogans, who Thursday night victory against Wisconsin. Gerald Fitch also scored 15 points, but Marquis Estill — who scored a career-high 29 Thursday was outplayed in the post by Robert Jackson, who scored 24 and grabbed 15 rebounds. Kentucky shot 4-of-16 from long range and Bogans contributed three of the team's three-pointers cent during the first half and did not make a three-pointer until Bogans scored on a curl with 7:46 left in the first half. It was also Kentucky's only field goal in a 12-minute span until Cliff Hawkins drove and scored with 12 seconds left in the half. Marquette outscored Kentucky, 31-12, in the final 12 minutes and took a 19-point lead into the half, Kentucky's largest deficit of the season. "At the beginning of the second half we told ourselves, 'we've been down before,'" Bogans said. "We just couldn't get it down under a double-digit lead." Kentucky never got closer than 12,and only once did it threaten Marquette's double-digit lead. With less than 11 minutes to play, Antwain Barbour drove on two Marquette defenders and spun in the lane before converting a layup, but the minimal contact resulted in an offensive charge on Barbour and nullified the basket, keeping the lead at 59-47. Had the foul gone the other way, a Barbour free throw could have cut the lead to 9. Instead, Scott Merrit put the Golden Eagles up by 14 on the next possession. Then, Dwyane Wade took over and scored his last 12 points, including two explosive dunks. Kentucky coach Tubby Smith conceded defeat with 1:26 to play and his team down 83-64, substituting rarely-used reserves Josh Carrier, Bernard Cote, Ravi Moss and Brandon Stockton. Kentucky had few doubters after January, but things changed Saturday. Carrier may have scored the last 5 points of his Kentucky career when he scored the final 5 of the game. His father has publicly criticized Smith's use of his son. Senior Estill's return for a second senior season is also uncertain. And Smith may also consider NBA coaching jobs. Suddenly, the once-unquestionable 'Cats have plenty of uncertainties. Hall of Famer Connor dies after long illness The Associated Press CHICAGO — George Connor, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the first of the Chicago Bears' great linebackers, has died. He was 78. The first winner of the Outland Trophy, given to the nation's top college lineman, in 1946, Connor died Monday after a long illness. A star at offensive and defensive tackle, Connor became the first of the big, mobile linebackers when the Bears asked the 6-3, 240-pounder to stop Philadelphia's great running back, Steve Van Buren. Connor not only stayed at linebacker, he defined the position for future generations of Bears greats like Dick Butkus and Mike Singletary. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1975. "George typified what the Bears were back then — tough and hard-nosed," former teammate Ed Sprinkle said. Connor was an All-American at Holy Cross before World War II interrupted his college career. When he returned, he made All-American twice on two undefeated Notre Dame teams. Connor is remembered for one devastating tackle of Green Bay's Veryl Switzer on a kick return in Wrigley Field in 1955. Switzer's helmet flew one way, the ball another, and Bears linebacker Bill George recovered the fumble for a touchdown. "After five minutes, there was a roar from the crowd," Connor once recalled. "I asked Johnny Lujack what happened and he said, 'Switzer just got up.'" After a knee injury forced Connor to retire, he served as an assistant coach and later a broadcaster. He was a popular master of ceremonies for charity events and a successful Chicago businessman. Final Four berth brings Texas profit By Teresa Lo Daily Texan via U-wire University of Texas AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas men's basketball team's rise to the Final Four has been a profitable business for many local and out-of-state companies. Tickets have already gone on sale for Saturday's game, and businesses are taking advantage of the event. Representatives from Ticket City, an event ticket merchant, said tickets are being sold at prices ranging from $295 to $6,000. About 300 tickets had already been sold late Monday evening, and they expect that number to more than double by the end of the week. The NCAA allocated 4,500 tickets to the University, all of which are expected to be sold, said Mark Harrison, assistant athletic director. But the University's athletic department will not be making a profit from those sales. "We have to buy the tickets from the NCAA and sell them at the same price to our customers, so the University doesn't make a profit from it," Harrison said. "Ticket prices range from $120 and $140 up to $160, and they are for both the Saturday and Monday games." But the athletic department will make money from competing in the tournament. Each team in the Big 12 is given $130,000 by the NCAA for every game they play in, and the University will be given another $130,000 for this Saturday's game, Harrison said. And although the University "It won't make a considerable difference,but we do expect to do good business."Co-op President George Mitchell said. Co-op is a nonprofit organization, it's one business that will benefit from Final Four T-shirt and memorabilia sales. The real money will come after Texas makes it to finals; Mitchell said. The University will also benefit from the Co-op's revenue increase because the Co-op usually gives money back to the University. "We will give back to the University in the same ways that we always have," Mitchell said. "We will give $75,000 to student organizations, and we fund events such as Texas Revue and 40 Acres Fest. It will just add more (money) to it." Texas fans and student organizations, such as the Texas Wranglers and Sweethearts, have been scurrying to find tickets. "We are trying to get tickets since we have to go through the draw just like any other student," said Kevin Rainosek, Texas Wranglers president. "We'll decide how many people we send depending on how many tickets we get, but we hope to send 10 to 15 men. The Sweet-hearts are going through the same process." While they are waiting for tickets, scalpers are taking advantage of the situation by selling their tickets on eBay. Prices range from as low as $36 to almost $2,000. Local hotels in New Orleans also will profit from the Final Four games. "We are expecting a bunch of Texas fans," said Robert Alsobrooks, director of revenue management at the Garden District Hotel. "We held about 30 percent of our inventory for fans and we have sold 20 percent since last Saturday's game." Roy says “Jayhawk fans are the greatest... Be responsible. I care. Roy Williams ...When they CELEBRATE SAFELY.” The University of Kansas KU re 1 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL2, 2003 Coach helped build Texas powerhouse The Associated Press AUSTIN, Texas - The foundation for the Texas Longhorns' Final Four team was in place long before star guard T.J. Ford showed up. The swagger, desire and nucleus of talent coach Rick Barnes needed to build a great team arrived a year earlier with Brian Boddicker, Royal Ivey, James Thomas and Brandon Mouton. Barnes got each player to sign with Texas by convincing them basketball could be special at a football school. "He called Texas a sleeping giant," said Boddicker, the first McDonald's high school All-American to sign with Barnes at Texas. "Now we are emerging as a giant," he said. Thomas said the core group of players had taken the program to new heights. "When we came in as freshmen, we said we'd be on top," he said. "The hard work is not done. We have another year, and this weekend." Texas plays Syracuse on Saturday in the NCAA Tournament semifinals in New Orleans. Kansas and Marquette play in the other game. The Longhorns haven't been to the Final Four since 1946. It was Barnes who challenged them to wake up a program in a perpetual snooze. "I picked them to win the national championship." Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. "I hope I'm wrong." "Ford is the best point guard in the country, and they're big and physical. They've got all the answers like all the teams playing right now." When Barnes took over the program in 1998, he could see potential at a flagship university with more than 50,000 students, a deep pool of in-state high school talent and a winning athletic tradition. Boddicker was one of the first players he recruited. Boddicker led Duncanville High School to a Texas Class 5A state championship and was considering offers from several schools nationwide. He just needed to find the players who shared his vision. He was the multiple skills player Barnes needed: Big enough to rebound and post up inside, he can also step out for three-pointers. Boddicker was sold on Barnes and Texas basketball. "From the moment I first met coach Barnes, all he talked about was winning a national championship," he said. "I saw where the program was going and I wanted to be a part of that." Thomas, Mouton and Ivey were less heralded, but none escaped the recruiting eye of former Texas assistant Rob Lanier, now coach at Siena. This year's junior class is a big reason Ford plans to stay in college for at least another year "To play with these guys as seniors," he said. "That will be great." Oklahoma State prepares for season Daily O'Collegian via U-wire Oklahoma State University By Brad Blood STILLWATER, Okla. — With less than a week of spring football practices remaining, preparation for the Sept. 30 debut at Nebraska is on the minds of Oklahoma State coaches and players. Among those preparations is examining a Rashaun Woods nagging knee injury. Woods is going in for an MRI on Friday to examine a knee problem that has been with Woods since the past season. The step is being taken as a precautionary measure, and Woods says he feels at about an 80 percent playing level. Woods also said the little pain had gone down week by week. "I was held out of some practices (last season) to get ready for the game, I guess you could say," Woods said. "That really helped me get through the season, but I guess that was probably when it was when it was the worst. Now, it's getting better and better as the weeks go by. "The main concern now is to make sure that when the first game comes around, I'm painfree, 100 percent, doing what I can for the team." Cowboy coach Les Miles said the measure was being taken to get the senior receiver back to perfect health. "It's been just a little nagging deal," said Miles. "It doesn't appear that it will be anything serious but we're going to confirm that with an MRI. And if we were in the season, he'd be playing games, so it's more or less to get the knee back to perfect, and then go from there." During spring practices, Cowboy coaches are trying players out at new positions. One of those changes is seeing how corner back Vernon Grant plays at safety. With the OSU cornerback position solid, taking advantage of Grant's natural skills might best be suited for the safety position. sured for the safety position. "We feel like with (Darrent) Williams, Robert Jones and Daniel McLemore at corners right now — with Ricky Coxeff coming in — that in fact that corner crew is pretty good, without Vernon," said Miles. "Vernon is easily one of the more aggressive and sharpest tacklers and an extremely tough individual, and we'd like to have him have the ability to run support. "At that safety spot, we ask him also to cover. So, he gets to use his corner skills and he's a naturally tough run support guy." With two highly touted junior college safeties joining OSU in the fall, moving Grant might be a temporary thing. "This is a spring thing," said Miles. "And we really go into fall ball with the idea that we're finding the best starting crew to beat Nebraska — offense, defense, and special teams. One of the most hotly contested positions on the Cowboy roster last season was running back. In the offseason, Tatum Bell, who won the starting job for most of the season, has been working hard in the weight room. As a result, Bell is faster in spring practices in running the ball and is turning the corner on the defense better. Vernand Morency has also shown positive signs. Miles said the running back position was still a race between Bell, Morency and Seymore Shaw. "To me, it's a wide-open competition," said Miles. "Vernand Morency's played well today — he's got to show some consistency. Seymore Shaw the same, and Tatum Bell can not turn the ball over, if he fumbles the ball, we'll go with another back. "if(Bell) continues to play with consistency like he did earlier in the spring, he'll be a starter." Rookie pitchers help revive St. Louis The Associated Press ST. LOUIS — Two words say it all about the St. Louis Cardinals' rebuilt bullpen: Kiko Calero. The one-time Royals castoff, who is awaiting his major league debut at age 28, is just one of the many new faces that the NL Central champions will be counting on to hold the line. SL Louis also has three pitchers who missed all of last season with injuries — Cal Eldred, Russ Springer and Lance Painter. 15-day disabled list because of a setback in his rehab from offseason shoulder surgery, the four right-handed relievers currently active combined for 11 innings last season. All were by Dustin Hermanson, returning to St. Louis after a lost, injury-plagued season in Boston. With closer Jason Isringhausen starting the season on the The bullpen looks nothing like the pre-spring training projections. General Manager Walt Jockety is confident this group, which if nothing else is extremely wellrested, will hold its own. While other pitchers were struggling, Calero put up seven shutout innings in spring training. "When I signed, it was my dream to make the big leagues," Calero said. "I'm here and I hope to stay the whole season." Calero has been a starter throughout his minor league career, which makes him a perfect fit for this bullpen. Eldred, who made his first appearance since April 2001 in the opener, and Hermanson both made their names as starters. Nobody seems to know who's supposed to be the designated stand-in, and the role likely will shift depending on which teams they're facing. "I'm sure they've got plans," Hermanson said. "But maybe they're keeping us in limbo for a reason." Isrenghausen was scheduled to pitch at Class A Peoria last night in the first of perhaps 8-10 rehab assignments. He's basically back on a spring training-type regimen after hitting a setback in his rehab in mid-March. "I like our bullpen," Jockety said. "And it'll be a lot better when Izzy is back." Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence SHOP TODAY 12:00-5:00 25% OFF ENTIRE STOCK Calvin Klein Intimates EVERY HIGH-CUT • EVERY STRING • EVERY THONG EVERY BIKINI • EVERY BRA • EVERY CAMISOLE EVERY DAYWEAR STYLE Collection, reg. $10-$36, SALE $7.50-$27.00. Shown, underwire bra, reg. $27, SALE $20.25. Weavers 9th & Massachusetts 843-6360 WeaverS PUBLIC LIBRARY THE FRIENDS OF THE LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY ANNUAL BOOK SALE IN THE GARAGE AT 7TH AND KENTUCKY & IN THE LIBRARY GALLERY Members Night Thur. April 3...5-9 pm (Become a Member Today!) Fri.April 4...10 am-8 pm Sat.April 5...10 am-5 pm Sun.April 6...Half Price Day!...1-5 pm Mon.April 7...$7 bag night...5-8 pm Thur.April 10...$5 bag night...5-8 pm Sat.April 12...Giveaway Day...10 am-4 pm ADDITIONAL TITLES SHELVED DAILY! Includes a great selection in all categories If you need to make special arrangements because of disability, please call the Library at 843-3833 ext.123. Check out the tournament games on the big screen new martini list appetizers new wine list entertainment live The Lounge at Paisarps HISTORANTE open until 2 am • 2112 W 25 St. Sunrise Terrace Apartments Available Fall Full Fall - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ - Two Story, and Two baths - On Site Laundry - Some with w/d's - Digital Cable Ready - Balcony / Decks w/ view A The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Call to view . WEDNESDAY, APRIL2, 2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Jeter benched with shoulder injury 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts The Associated Press TORONTO — Even the highest payroll in baseball couldn't prepare the New York Yankees for what they face now — playing without leader Derek Jeter for at least a month. Jeter was placed on the 15-day disabled list yesterday after dislocating his left shoulder on opening night. The Yankees expect to be without their All-Star shortstop for much longer, and it could be up to four months if he needs surgery. "We miss him when he's out of the lineup for one game," manager Joe Torre said. "To have him out for an extended period of time, we're lucky we haven't had that happen before. This will probably be a month or more. There will be a big void." Jeter will fly with the team to Tampa, Fla., after tonight's game and have an MRI test tomorrow. The Yankees, who open a three-game series with the Devil Rays on Friday, hold spring training in Tampa and have extensive facilities there. The test will show the extent of the damage and whether Jeter needs surgery, said Jonathan Glashow, a shoulder specialist. The Yankees were more comfortable having their doctors in Florida examine Jeter than having tests in Toronto. Jeter hurt his shoulder in the third inning Monday night when he slid headfirst going from first to third on an infield groundout. Toronto catcher Ken Huckaby, covering third because of an overshifted infield, landed on Jeter's shoulder in a violent collision. Jeter was down for more than 10 minutes, writhing in pain as concerned teammates surrounded him. Some of the Yankees thought it was a dirty play. Huckaby called it a "freek" play and left a message on Jeter's cell phone, apologizing. Torre said Huckaby was just being aggressive, and Jeter said he wasn't sure whether the catcher could have avoided the collision. With a payroll of about $150 million — at least $30 million higher than any other team and more than double what most teams pay - the Yankees usually have the depth to overcome injuries. They have seven starting pitchers, an experienced closer in Juan Acevedo to step in when Mariano Rivera hurt his groin, and many players on the bench who were starters elsewhere. At shortstop, the Yankees aren't as deep. Jeter, a five-time All-Star, has been the Yankees' leader during their run of four World Series titles and five AL pennants since 1996. He has played at least 148 games each season, going on the disabled list only three times with minor injuries. "He'll be missed a ton, no doubt about it," first baseman Jason Giambi said. "This is just some adversity we have to overcome. We've all been through it before, just not with a player like Jeter. We have a lot of great players on this team and we'll all have to pick up the slack a little bit." Texas gets another chance to beat LSU By Lorne Chanby Daily Texan via U-wire University of Texas-Austin STANFORD, Calif. - Whoever said there were no second chances wasn't a fan of women's college basketball. When the brackets were set two weeks ago, slates were wiped clean. Now, No. 5 Texas will get a second chance against No. 3 Louisiana State, after losing to LSU, 76-58, on Dec. 28. This time, it's the West Regional final and a chance to advance into the Final Four. "There's definitely a great deal of respect (for LSU), but this game is just going to be about who wants to make it to Atlanta more," guard Tai Dillard said. "Each player on both teams is just going to have to play hard and just gut it out for 40 minutes since both teams want to go to the Final Four." The last time Texas and LSU played in Baton Rouge, La., a 40-minute effort could not be said of the Longhorns. Texas was up by 9 with 14:11 remaining in the game, but would end up losing by 18 points, as LSU went on 15-1 and 13-0 runs. "The first time we played them we were ahead of them, and then we had a long spell where we didn't score and took a lot of bad shots," forward Heather Schreiber said. "We started out really hot, and then we thought we could take the same type of shots the whole game." But that game was three months ago, and for the Longhorns, it has been a lifetime. The loss had dropped Texas' record to 6-3, and now they are 28-5 with a 16-game winning streak, the longest current streak in the nation. Another key difference from the first game is Jamie Carey. The Texas guard sat out the game with mononucleosis. Since then, Carey has led the team to the Big 12 Conference championship leading the team in three-pointers and assists and is third in scoring. LSU coach Sue Gunter said that Carey could easily change the game when the two teams played last night. "They've had a chance to scout, and Jamie knows a lot about them," Texas coach Jody Conradt said. "And we can't say that that's the factor that will make all the difference, but I will have a lot more confidence knowing that she's available." Carey will lead Texas against LSU (29-3), the Southeastern Conference tournament champions. The Tigers roster is stacked with talent, with six players who average at least 7.7 points, including SEC tournament MVP Temeka Johnson and SEC freshman of the year Seimone Augustus. "LSU, in my opinion, is the best team in the country," Conradt said. "I thought that in December when we played them, and I still feel that way." Over 10 Toppings to choose from!! .357 Special Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping $5 medium 1 topping $7 large 1 topping Open 7 days a week Dine-in or Carry-Out only RIDY'S HIZZHAIA 749-0055 704 Mass. Career Takes Flight You Come to a place where your career can take flight. You'll be surrounded by professionals ready to help you at a moment's notice. You'll develop working relationships that feel like family. At the end of the day, you'll know you've made a difference doing what you love to do. are given the presentation SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHERS - Provide year-round instruction to children with low incidence disabilities, autism, sensory impairment, moderates to severe learning and behavior problems, contains classroom programs, design and implement instructional programs to meet individual student needs based on a functional curriculum. High staff ratio with medical, psychology & therapy support in each room. Experienced teacher assigned for training & support. Degree in Special Education & certification in MR, SMD, will consider certification in BD with experience in multiple disabilities or additional special ed. cert., K-12. Competitive salary based on education & experience. Excellent employee benefits. Fill online Joller for information at jnoller@heartspring.org to submit a resume. EEO/MF 8700 East 29th Street North, Washington KS 67226 8103; 805; 1043 (714) 3615-6555, www.harperstudios.org HEARTSPRING We Buy, Sell & Trade USED & NEW Sports Equipment 1970 Grad Fest 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore Make your first step down the hill a "red carpet one" Featuring: - choose paper, typeface, print color, and special messages - 24-48 hr turnaround - Custom Embossed Announcements from 99¢ - Complete Regalia from $19.95 - Masters Regalia w/hood $42.90, Doctoral Regalia w/hood $49.90 - "Dad of a Grad"/"Mum of an Alumn" tees $14.95 Offer Expires April 9,2003 - Diploma Frames from $99.95 - Free '03 graduation tshirt (with $50.00 order) - Online ordering @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com LLC www.jayhawkbookstore.com·1420 Crescent Rd·843-3826 March Madness Sale Lawrence Athletic Club will reduce its enrollment fee by $1 for every point KU scored in its last tournament game. *Some Restrictions Apply* Go 'Hawks! LAC North LAC South 3201 Mesa Way 2108W.27th St. 785.842.4966 785.331.2288 LAC East 1202 E.23rd St. (behind Kantronics) 785.841.8200 Basketball PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS Try Chai Latte (1) La Prima Tazza "Sweet and spicy chai tea with milk" Serving Lawrence since 1990 Del Frutero Tenerife Catering & Travel Company experience Counts! 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE 1 941 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 AM - 9 PM SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY 11 AM - 9 PM THURSDAY - SATURDAY All 1/3 lb. charbroiled burger platters only $3.95 values 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening student union activities The University of Kansas 785-864-SHOW www.suaevents.com UPCOMING EVENTS OPEN MIC NIGHT 7:00 pm Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 WEDNESDAY Woodnuff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 free vouchers at sua sneak preview What A Girl Wants FEATURE FILM Die Another Day 7:00 a.m 9:30 p.m Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 THURSDAY BASIL BAND THURSDAY 3 PAIDAY 41TH Feature Film Die Another Day 7:00 & 9:30 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 tunes @ NOON 27a Tango 14:00 pm Union Plaza UNION VIEW LEVEL 4 @ kansas union, LEVEL 4 SATURDAY G TIN GREGBROWN PRESENTED BY Westside Folk 7:30 pm 7:30pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, Level 5 $18 w/aid, $20 non-student uniongallery T artist reception 7:00-9:00 pm INSTALLATION TITLELED "STOP LOOKING" 7:00-8:00 pm kansas unton, LEVEL 4 7:00.8:00 pm kansas union, LEVEL 4 TUESDAY WESTSIDE FOLK CONCERT SERIES Beth Amsel 7:30 pm Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 $5-STUDENTS $10-NO KUOI MUSIC ALL TICKETS for movies are $2.00 at the HAWK SHOP, LEVEL 4 KANSAS UNION OR FREE WITH AN SUA MOVIE CARD. FREE WITH AN SUA MOVIE CARD questions about these or other sua events? check suaevents.com or call the sua office at 864-509W 6B = THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN ENTERTAINMENT WEDNESDAY, APRIL2, 2003 WEATHER --- 草莓 TODAY 85 60 mostly sunny TOMORROW 80 45 partly cloudy mostly chance of MATTHEW MCCLASKY, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE HOUSE by Brian Godinez, for The University Daily Kansan THAT GIRL IS VIOLATING YOU WITH HER EYES, MAN. YOU FEEL VIOLATED! SHUT UP I AIN'T LYNN: SHE'S GOT IT BAD, GO TALK TO HER. LATER IM SO LONELY? THAT AIN'T NO PICK-UP LINE I EVER HEARD. IT JUST SLIPPED OUT. SHUT UP THAT GIRL IS VIOLATING YOU WITH HER EYES, MAN YOU FEEL VIOLATED? SHUT UP I AIN'T LYIN; SHE'S GOT IT BAD. GO TALK TO HER. EYES MAN VOLATED I AIN'T LYIN. SHE'S GOT IT EAD. GO TALK TO HER. LATER I'M SO LONELY? THAT AIN'T NO PICK-UP LINE I EVER HEARD. IT JUST SLIPPED OUT. THAT GIRL IS VIOLATING YOU WITH HER EYES, MAN YOU FEEL VIOLATED! SHUT UP I AIN'T LYNN: SHE'S GOT IT BAD GO TALK TO HER. DO IT! LATER I'M SO LONELY? THAT AIN'T NO PICK-UP LINE I EVER HEARD. IT JUST SLIPPED OUT. UMMMM- DO IT! HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 2). You're a strong leader and can develop excellent managerial skills. Practice on an older person who seems to be blocking your progress this year. This is a test. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 10. It's hard to be humble when you're so fabulous, but that would make you even more irresistible. You're in the groove. Enjoy the applause. Taurus(April20-May20).Todayisa5. Don't wait any longer to get your message across. It'll go through more quickly and forcefully now than it will later. Gemini(May21-June21).Todayisan8. Your job as a messenger has never been more important. Make sure everyone understands what's expected of them. Hold them accountable for their actions. Cancer (June 22- July 22) Today is 5. A distant friend hasle you're going through. Seek compassion, but not on company time. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 10. A person far away can provide the information you've been seeking. Holler if you need anything. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 5. People who like to push the limits like to have you around. You keep them out of trouble. That's your assignment again. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is an 8. You may be attracted to a military type, and with good reason. Although you're more of a pacifist, it's nice to know somebody who'll defend you. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 6. you don't like to be the first one charging over the hill. Let somebody else do that. Hang back and watch so that you'll know which way to go next. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 10. You've undergone some profound transformations over the past few years, and you're not done yet. You're at a very attractive point in your development. Relax and enjoy it. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 5. If you can manage to listen to a person with whom you disagree, you'll learn a lot. Most important, you'll discover his or her vulnerabilities. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is an 8. In an argument, you'll undoubtedly get the best of everybody. You have the facts at your fingertips, the right words on the tip of your tongue. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 5. An unexpected turn of events could bring an amazing windfall. Your generosity over the years is coming back to you. Crossword ACHROSS 1 Archipelago member 6 Big barrels 10 Alteration 14 River of Cologne 15 Wicked 16 Bohemian 17 Principal artery 18 Pro___ (in proportion) 19 Programming repetition 20 Just about 21 Labor group 22 Enameled metal ware 23 Ford flop 25 Unimportant thing 27 Sweeteners 30 Singer Celine 31 Sermonize 32 Cuts across 37 Trident-shaped letter 38 Condense 40 Beam 41 Female attendants 43 Prepare for the bout 45 Cincinnati nine 46 Mare's milieu 47 Peril 50 Relating to birds 51 Norwegian saint 53 Great brilliance 55 Use a sieve 59 Landed 60 Seethe 61 Mother in Madrid 62 Unusual 63 Singer Tennille 64 Marine expanse 65 Tinted 66 Rosebud, e.g. 67 Gives the go-ahead DOWN 1 Teheran's place 2 MacNelly strip 3 Old money in Milan 4 Plead 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. 5 Earl Grey or hyson 6 Sci-fi writer Jules 7 Benefit 8 Yugoslavian dictator 9 On a diagonal 10 Kind of cracker 11 Validation 12 Ring in the ocean 13 Melville book 21 Ship letters 24 Visionary 26 Deciphering stone 27 Last year's fresh 28 Major or Minor constellation 29 Increase 30 June celebrants 32 Speaker of baseball 33 Disencumber 34 Hermit or fiddler 35 Follow 36 "Auld Lang '___" 04/02/03 P A C M E R C I P L U G S L E O A C O R N A I S L E U R N T R A I T R E S E E M I T E U N M E A S U R E D B E R G S S S E R V E O O H S A C E O S L O A W L I N A N E R U P O N T E L A V I V P R O T E G E O R E S F A S T E D E S S P E R K F L U D E A D P L A N T S I L L S R E F E R E N D U M M I L L E R O D E C A N O N M A E S I R E S H Y E N A I M P T E E N S E S S A Y T A T Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 39 Write-offs 42 Composed 44 Pillage 46 Make a lap 47 Stash 48 Relieve 49 African country 50 Skirt style 51 Legitimate 54 Unruffled 56 Inspiration 57 Noisy fight 58 Hamilton bills 59 Cow call KANSAS The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that directs people of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, ethnicity, disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept Kansan Classified 1 100s Announcements Classified Policy 120 - Announcements Drummer wanted to play for "Joe and the Casio's." Only rockers need apply. Call Joe, Josh or Pat 832-8784 or stop by at 501 Nigel Street. 1 Marks JEWELERS Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 markinsc@swbell.net Quality Jewelers Since 1880 life SUPPORT advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 785/841-2345 www.hqce.lawrence.ks.us 125 - Travel Study Abroad in Madrid, Spain. Request a Free Catalog. (800) 266-4441. Or Visit www.GetGoChina.com 130 - Entertainment I E Dance lessons, ballet课, latin, and swing Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 313-2277 M M 200s Employment $$$ Search news sports sections, find high school athletics, and referrals, earn $100 per signed referral. Unlimited earnings More info: (877) BISELL $$ 205 - Help Wanted $800 weekly guaranteed. Stuffing envelopes. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Oakdale Enterprises, 1151 North State Street, Suite 231, Chicago, IL 60610. Together We Can Kate seeks summer nanny for kids. 8, 12, 13 NS, own car, references, great opportunity. Owenland Park, B1G 943-2671. MOVIE EXTRAS / MODES NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163 or 1020 All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to certain rules. Of the 98B which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preferee' in an advertisement based on race, religion origion. 205 - Help Wanted Be a Summer Camp Counselor/Educer In Kansas! Wildwood Outdoor Education Center 45 minutes south of KC seeks qualified counselors to lead educational and recreational activities. June-August. Salary DOE room and board. All are welcome to apply WSI and male staff strongly needed. (913)757-4500 or wildwood@peoplestelecom.net Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. CAMP TAKAJO for Boys, Naples, Maine TRIPP LAKE CAMP for Girls, Poland, Maine. Picturesque lakefront locations, exceptional facilities. Mid-June thru mid- August. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, swimming, land sports, water sports, trouts, outdoor skills, theatre arts, fine arts, music, nature study, secre- tarial. Call Takajo at 800-250-8252. Call Tripp Lake at 800-997-4347. Or submit an application online at www.takajo.com or www.tripplakecamp.com. Clinical national company, Overland Park seeks telephone interviewers (no sales) flexible hours, computer skills a plus. PT positions. Fax resume 913-661-1706. Cruise line entry level on-board positions avail., great benefits. Seasonal/year id 941-329-6434 www.cruisecaers.com sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Eroticincome Com. Men & Women Earn Money in Digital & Video Modeling as Adult Entertainer 18;Only 785-554-2793 Doormen and weekend day bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 Iowa. Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. Experienced gymnastic instructors needed. Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children preferred. Cater at Territ 913-489-5554. Experienced Nanny wanted Wednesday day for a 3 and 4 yr. old. If interested call Madison at 830-680-2159. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey/ www.surveydollars.com Help Wanted - Camp counselors wanted for best summer camp in Midwest. Apply online. www.midwestsummercamps.com Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It's not too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campinwadu.com or complete application in staff area of www.campinwadu.com. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistants! Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon. 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Resp incl: Assisting patrons, produc multimedia, maint. library records and materials, computer config/troubleshooting and many special projects. Req. quals: excel. customer service, computer & A/V experience, excell. communication skills. $65.00 hr. 15-25 hrs.wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For info call 864-7452. Deadline April 11, 2002 Part-time_morning help needed in busy doctor'soffice Call 749-0130 Interested in working with children and have a sense of humor? Raintree Montessori School, 4601 Clinton Parkway, located on 14 acres with pools, a pond and a pig named Wilbur has an opening for a classroom assistant in May (7:15-4:00; $21.00 YR.), a full-time are instructor for summer camp (degree required) and a late afternoon assistant (3:15-5:30, $8/hr.) now. Montessori certification not required. Experience and a sense of humor, however, are. Call 843-8800. 205 - Help Wanted Happy New Year Shipping position open immediately. $8/hr 20 hrs/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and resumes with 3 references to EEI, P.O. Box 1304 Lawrence, KS 66044. EOE/AA The Mass. St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house) The Rock Springs 4-H Center is seeking applicants for 40-50 summer staff positions. Applicants must be graduating high school seniors or college students. Positions are recreation instructors, including teambuilding, horses, environmental education, rilles, trap, archery, canoes, crafts and lifeguards. We also have several positions in foodservice, maintenance and custodial departments. Internships are available for those who qualify. Rock Springs offers a monthly salary and room and board. Rock Springs is a nationally recognized camp and conference center serving approximately 27,000 youth and adult each year, most during the summer. Rock Springs is located 14 miles south of Junction City, Kansas on K-157 Highway. For an application or more information you can contact me at: Rock Springs 4-H Center Rock Springs 4-H Center C O-James Farr 5404 West Hale K-157 Junction City KS 68444 785 257-3221 jarn@rocksprings.net TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS: HAVE FUN MAKE & $ Openings in ALL TEAM & IN. DIVIDUAL SPORTS, ALL WATER SPORTS. PLUS Camp/Hike, Ropes/Rock- Climbing, Ice/ Roller Hockey, Office/Secretaries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUNDRY. Travel allowance ONLINE APPLICATION www.campcobbossee.com or call: (800)473-6104 Home Helpers Inc. seeks companion for delightful elderly clients. Part time flexible hours, and excellent pay for honest, personable, employee. Call Julie, 331-5850. *Attention Lorem please* Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampibqs.com ATTENTION UNDER GRADS Are you feeling overqualified and underpaid? If so, call 832-1833 and find out how you can gain real world experience and make $700 per week this summer. BARTENDER POSITION BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great pay. Call 1-800-806-008 ext 1422. Bartender Trainees needed: $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-393-3965 ext. 531. BASS PLAYER wanted for top rated local cover dance band all styles. Call 785-749-3849. Youth Director Bath El Synagogue (Minneapolis, MN) is seeking a youth director. Responsible for programming and administration associated with the youth department (5th-12th grades). Bachelors degree and experience working with teenage youth required. Experience in a similar environment a plus. Staff supervisory/training skills, leadership training skills, and strong organizational and programming skills needed. Send resume to Search Committee, Attention: Richard Glassman, 701 Fourth Avenue South, Suite 500, Minneapolis, MN 55415, or rglassmanlaw@atlbi.com. --- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale S Cars from $500. Police Impound! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323; ext. 4565. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 325 - Stereo Equipment KEF O50 3-way speaker towers 8 OHM. Perfect. Sweetest jazz/classical sound. $500 for call. Call 749-1018. Car Stereo Equip. for Sale. New Alpine-MRD-M500-$300 obu. New Alpine-MRV-T420-$300 obu. New 2-10`J Audio WO w/box, $150 obu 2-10`Rockford Fosgate HE2 w/box, $150 obu. Calibration KG-854-7694-024 330 - Tickets for Sale ADMIT ONE ADMIT ONE. ADMIT ONE All NCAA Final Four tickets for sale, call (517) 351-1992 or order online at www.jamestheticketman.com FINAL FOURTICKETS http://www.studiplayground.com studiplayground@aol.com 1-888-534-7590 Wanted 2 Lower Level Tickets to Men's Final Four Basketball Game in New Orleans. Call 919-486-5845. A 405 - Apartments for Rent 400s Real Estate 1.2.3, & 4 BR aps avail, for summer and quiet. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU bus rue, laundry facility, Call 843-0011. 1. bedroom at Tuckaway, Washer/dryer, fitness room, TV, fireplace, hot tub, alarm system, overlock pool. Ask about apartment NT, Available June 1. Call 8387-3377 Regency Place. 2 BR available now. Walking distance to campus. 1301 Louisiana. Water paid, no pets. $590/mo. 841-8468 1 BR apt for sublease, avail June 1st, opt. lease for fall. Across from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month. water/ trash paid. No pets. Elizabeth. 834-6944. Available Aug 10 small studio apt in renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window AC, antique tub. 7th and 8th No pets.$370 Cust. Baidu 841-1074 PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Ant Homes Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool - Washer/Dryer - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - Basketball Court - Basketball Court - Security Systems - Garages Available Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Hall Management Office Apartment to City Home Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 *Washer & Dryer *Fully Equipped Kitchen *Serving Bar Blue Mow Management, Inc. Luxury at no Affordable Price Call 840.9467 for an appointment 405 - Apartments for Rent 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR triplex in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $955-1050, NO PETS. 841-5633 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $450/570. All appliances, ample parking, on-site laundry. Call 843-4909. High Pointe 2BR 1B4 available now, W/D, DW, Fitness Center, on pool. On KU bus route. $730/mo. 2001 W. 6th St. 841- 8468 1.2.3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. Available August 14, 814-6254 2 BR, 1 BA at 6th & Iowa. Pool, fitness room, alarm, private parking. Available New!$705 total remiton: 913-685-8756. 2 BR/ 1 BA near campus Available immediately or for summer! Call 913-219-4642 or 785-505-1116. 2, 3 and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. New! 804/806 New Jersey st. $895/mo. plus deposit. call 500-4148. 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage New! 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo. plus deposit. Call 550-4514. 3BR Apts, in nice house. Close to KU and Downtown, Hrdwd Firs, Free W/D use. Off street parking. $630-673, 841-3633 HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 NICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON FRI 6 LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME Lorimar Townhomes 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Washer/Dryers *Dishwasher* Microwaves *Patios* Fire Places *Ceiling Fans* Come enjoy a townhome community when no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer - swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome Model Open Daily! VILLAGE SQUARE apartment 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route Now Leasing! village@webserf.net West Hills 405 - Apartments for Rent Apartments 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 Avail, Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt, DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site, 384 BRA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 533 www.alparksinlawroom.com Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice remodeled 1 BR close to campus, quiet mature building. Gas, water are paid. No pets, no smoking. Startup $400-841-3192. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid 1712 OHIO Cable Aida Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 4th floor between Naismith & Ousdahl $JJ 5523 1301 W 24h & Naismith 842-5111 colony@jkxs.com www.colonywoods.com Open House Monday Friday 1:00-5:00 1&2Bedrooms - Indoor/Outdoor Pool COLONY WOODS - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - 2 Hot Tubs - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Need a place to live next year? - SHOT tubs * ExerciseRoom M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - car ports Williams Pointe Townhomes - full size washer/ dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - approx. 1600 sq feet - 1421 sq feet Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 Canyon Court Courtside Townhomes - Reasonable Rates - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom 842-3280 www.lirstmanagementinc.com Brand New Luxury Apartments *Washer/Dryers* *Diswasher* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Gas Fire Places* *Ceiling Fans* - Great Location Near Campus Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. *Now Leasing for Spring 2003* • 1, 2, 3 Bdrm • Washer/Dryer • Swimming Pool & Hot Tub • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Garages Available • High Speed Internet Connections • Security Systems Available • Small Pet Welcome 4100 Clinton Parkway 405 - Apartments for Rent For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway 405 - Apartments for Rent 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Available Aug small modern 2 BR apt in renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, central AC, DW, WD hookups, small fenced yard, declared cats or dogs under 20 lbs and over 2 yrs old. With pet rent and deposit $650 13th and Vermont. Call 841-1074. Avail. Aug, Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house, 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C, 10th & NY. No pets.$520.Call 841-1074. Avail, Aug. Small 1 BR apt., in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets. $450; Call 841-1074. Avail, June or Aug. Studio 1, 2, and 3 BR apt. in renovated older houses. Walk to KU or downtown, wood floors, window A/C, ceiling fans. De clawed cats welcome with pet rent and deposit. $370-1,050 for a tourcall 841-1074. College Station Apartments 26th & Redbud Lane 1 & 2 bedrooms $390-$495 6-12 month leases Pets allowed Free cable ♦ Laundry on-site Central Air On KU bus Route Call Today! 841-4935 HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.theforkrun.com MASTERCRAFT ADMINISTRY WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Designed with you in mind. Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 + Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-2415 NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 405 - Apartments for Rent Equal Housing Opportunity Moving to Wichita? Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship. Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studios and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. B38-8302 Now signing 1 YR, leases starting May/ June/July/Aug. No smoking, extras. well, keep 2 BPs apts. Quiet, all appliances, low utilities, A/C bus, route & more! $405/mo. Spanish Crest Apts. 841-6863 Save Your Money! Town home 3 bedroom. 2 bath. WD, fireplace. kitchen appl. garage/operate. pet. Subbase 6/1-7/31 $650. 766-5080. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in-cloats, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas. 843-4090 THE LEGENDS BRAND NEW FULLY FURNISHED 2 & 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPPED FITNESS CENTER 4101 WEST 24TH PLACE (Across the Alaskan Country Club) GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUSE GAME ROOM COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790 $^{80}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com 410 - Condos For Rent Very nice condo 3 bedroom, 2 bath Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eli at 841-4470. 415 - Homes For Rent 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. W/D hookups. FP vaulted ceiling, and garages small pet welcome. B482-3280. 430 - Roommate Wanted Near KU, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, central air/heat, garage, all appliances, fenced yard 203 Emerald $850.917-707-2296. 3-4 BR Houses. Some close to KU. Hidwd firs, Free W/D use. Off street parking. $895 $895. 841-3633 Available June or Aug 3 BR older house. 15th and New Nampshire. Wood floors, central AC, ceiling fans. DW, WD hook-ups, large closets, fenced yard, declawed cats, and dogs under 20 lbs. With pet rent and pet deposit. Discounted dramatically for June and July. Starting Aug. $1050. Call 841-1074. 2 roommates wanted for house across from campus. W/D, AC, $24/month each. Available 6/1, Call 833-7340 or 218-6543 Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, WID and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2util Avail Aug 842-4540. Roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apt. for fall sublease. Lots of extra amenities. $318/month plus utilities. Call 218-5043. Find it, sell it buy it in the Kansan Classified 435 Rooms for Rent --- or just read them for the fun of it. --- 440 - Sublease 1339 Ohio, 2-3BR, top of house. Parking, DW, A.C,$600 plus util. 913-845-2085 PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail, in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA 749-6000. Key House 1. bedroom apartment wanted to sublease for the summer.Call Amy at 812-2650. 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail, June 1 and/or Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Exercise room. Exercise $795/mo. $200 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. 2 BR's avail, after finals at Jefferson Commons for summer. May rent already paid for. Rent negotiable. Most utilities paid. W/D. cable, pool, weight room, furnished. Call Enkir AHayle at 841-784-1797. 733 Arkansas. 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 story duplex. Just doors down from Louise's West. Avail June 1. Call Aaron at 312-9915. Amazing Summer Sublease! bedroom out of 3 total available now or after May 15. Brand new complex with AC, W/D, gated, pool and fitness, and your own bathroom. Regular $350, but leasing for $280 plus utilities. Call 785-766-9151. Brand New Duplex! 3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD. 2 car garage. Available Mav 1st. - July 31st.Call 785-842-4279. Jefferson Commons sublease avail. immediately. Female wanted to share 3 BR, 3 BA $375/month. Free August rent. Call Sue at 612-743-3011 or 763-542-9881. Room for rent of 3 BR apt, in Tuck- away avail, for summer, quiet setting, pool. Call Jonathan at 218-3548. Sublease avail. now: 3 BR 3 BA at Jefferson Commons. Free month's rent. Cable, internet, W/D, fully furnished. Some util. paid; $370/mo. Call Pat: 913-526-6005. Sublease Now. Avail, with option to renew. 2 floor, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Close to campus. Fun. Fum. I interested, call DJ218-6100. Summer sublease, 308 W. 16th Street. 4 bedroom, 2 bath. Good landlord. Nice front porch. Call 785-979-9617 or 816-213-0601. - 500s Services 505 - Professional Term Paper Editing! Term Paper Editing Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 866-693-E9D TRAFFIC-DUIT-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matters/Residency issues divorce, ordinal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelay 16 East 421 B-842-5116 Free Initial Consultation 510-Child Care Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; bread curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233. 8B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 2003 everyday. KANSAN Amy-Jill Levine Vanderbilt University April 6-8,2003 Lawrence and Topeka Yuki Kuroda "Women's Role in the Bible" April 6 * 9:45 am Plymouth Church and 11 am First Presbyterian "The Bible and Sexuality" April 7 • Brown Bag Lunch 11:30 am Burge Union, Iron Grid Room "Giving Birth to the Church:The Lost History of the Women Who Followed Jesus" April 7 • KU Department of Religious Studies Annual Lecture 7:30 pm Kansas Union, Malott Room "Jews and Christians in Conversations: The Future of Inter-Faith Dialogue" April 8 * King Lecture at Washburn University 7:30 pm For event locations and times call 843-4933 or www.ecmku.org click on Theologian In Residence. Marquette CONTINUED FROM PAGE 18 from beyond the arc. What makes him tough to defend is that he's 6-foot-10. If Novak is able to get open, he could make Kansas pay, as 55 of his 66 field goals in 32 games this season haye come from three-point range. 4) Robert Jackson is a load inside. In Saturday's Elite Eight victory, Robert Jackson showed up to play. The senior forward had 24 points and 15 rebounds against Kentucky's tough inside combination of Marquis Estill and Jules Camara. Of the three big men that Marquette starts, Jackson is the only one who stays in the paint, meaning that junior forward Jeff Graves will be focusing on him defensively. Jackson is able to flop around and draw cheap fouls on defenders, which is a problem that has plagued Graves all year. Physically, Jackson and Graves have roughly the same capabilities, but Graves will have to play smart defense and maybe even tune down the intensity at times if he wants to stay on the floor. "I saw a little bit of the Kentucky game. He likes to bang, too. The past couple of games, I have just been banging with other centers. That is why I think it will be to my advantage." — Graves Kansas' Take: Amidst rumors of North Carolina looking at Lawrence for its next coach, Roy Williams has already done an outstanding job of coaching by refusing to comment. Now Williams has to prepare a solid game plan against Marquette's Tom Crean, whom he greatly respects. 5) Outcoaching Tom Crean will not be an easy task. Crean is a former assistant under Michigan State's Tom Izzo a coach notorious for preparing his teams for postseason battles no matter how outmatched they may be. Cream is in the same boat as Williams, in that his team has youth and inexperience on the bench. Both coaches have done an outstanding job this tournament of handling foul situations, and it will be interesting to watch their head-to-head coaching chess game. What may give Williams an advantage is his three previous trips to the Final Four. Williams already knows how to prepare his squad for the New Orleans media frenzy. Kansas' Take: "What does that mean if you can handle the media or the atmosphere? I mean that has nothing to do with it when you step out on the court. The media and the atmosphere aren't going to bounce the ball, not going to stop you from committing turnovers and boxing out."—Langford When the Jayhawks faced an impossible bracket, they simply won. Newell CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Edited by Jason Elliott By defeating two of the most storied programs in the basketball history, the Jayhawks did anything but back into the Final Four. While Texas, Syracuse and Marquette advanced in front of home crowds, Kansas proved itself more than 1,500 miles away. What happened in Disneyland for the Jayhawks was truly magical. Maybe it was seniors refusing to lose. Maybe it was extraordinary play. Maybe it was destiny. But it was not luck. All this for a little luck. Upon arriving in New Orleans, Roy Williams will undoubtedly spit in the Mississippi River. He will rub some special landmark and try to avoid the hotel he stayed in during the 1993 Final Four, when he lost to North Carolina. The thing is, this year he might not need it. Sometimes it's better to be good than lucky. Jesse Newell is an Emporia freshman in journalism. Baseball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B After secing one run in the fifth inning, the Jayhawks continued swinging the bats well. Ryan Baty hit an RBI triple, which scored senior infielder Brandon Shepard. Wheeler followed Baty's triple with his team-leading eighth home run. Junior Chris Smart started for Kansas and pitched four quality innings allowing only one hit and no runs. The victory was Smart's first of the season and evened his record at 1-1. KANSAS 12 - SMS 7 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E SMS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E Kansas 0 3 4 0 3 1 0 1 K 12-11 1 Kansas: Carson Smart, John Durant Kenny Feliciano, Don Cray and Brandon Johnson. Chris Williams, Dady Clarke, Chris Krawczyk, Rick Wilson and Jake Gibbrow. Wis. Smart Sara Johnson Loss-Marshall Homerun: Tony Piazza, Kevin Wheeler, Travis Motcatall and Jake Kazukami Price will give the team the day off today, but the Jayhawks will return to the practice field tomorrow in preparation for a series against Nebraska this weekend at Hoglund Ballpark. Edited by Jason Elliot Notre Dame opens spring football season By Joe Hettler The Observer via U-wire Notre Dame SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Darrell Campbell flashed a big smile after Notre Dame's first spring practice Monday. After seeing the returning defensive starters out on the field for the first time since January, the senior has every reason to be happy. Unlike last year, when newly named coach Tyrone Willingham had to begin implementing his pro-style offense for the first time, the Irish are already familiar with the coaches, plays and schemes. Practice was kept simple for the first day, and Willingham said the focus of practice would be more on individuals — until players practice with pads later this spring. "It's going to take a little while to get us cohesive again as a unit because we're missing four guys that are going to the NFL," said Sean Milligan, the only return from last year's squad. "We think we're on the right track and we have some good guys in there." First Management Living Communities. Live with the best. First Management Living Communities. Live with the best. Highpointe 6th and Iowa 1, 2, & 3 Bdrm Fireplace Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 Chase Court 19th and Iowa 1 & 2 Bdrm Fireplace Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Walking Distance to KU On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 1, 2, & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available Gated Entry High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apts 1, 2, & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 832-8805 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL OTHER LOCATIONS Abbots Corner 410W.18th St Applecroft 1735W.19th St Canyon Court 200Comet Lane Carson Place 1121 Louisiana Chamberlain Court 1733Ohio Hawthorn Houses 3600W.24th Hawthorn Townhomes 2300 Hawthorn Dr Melrose Court 1605 Tennessee Oread Apartments 1201 Oread Parkway Townhomes 3520W.22nd Regency Place 1501 Louisiana Stadium View 1040 Mississippi HOURS Mon-Fri: 9-6 Sat: 10-4 Sun: 12-4 Highpointe Chase Court 19th and Iowa Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 6th Street Knopf Drive Mountain Way Cornet Lane 4006578914 Thursday April 3, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 126 Today's weather 80° Tonight: 46° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864.4810 or editor@ransan.com Jumping THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University, Lawrence make cameos in films past and present Jayplay lawplay lawrence naught on Film House approves cuts for obscenity By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The amendment to the state budget that would punish public universities for buying or showing obscene materials aimed at the human sexuality class offered at the University of Kansas survived the negotiations between the Kansas Senate and the House of Representatives this week. Senate added the amendment banning obscene pictures and videos to its version of the state budget bill last week. House negotiators accepted the amendment as part of the compromised budget bill completed Tuesday. The budget bill will likely go to the House of Representatives early today and to the Senate this afternoon for approval, said Pat Saville, secretary of the Kansas Senate. Sen. Susan Wagle (R-Wichita) proposed the amendment to the Senate last week, accusing Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, of using inappropriate visual materials and making inappropriate comments in class. Her amendment would eliminate state funding for any university department that buys or shows obscene materials for any course, including human sexuality classes. This puts the $3.1 million state budget for the School of Social Welfare, which offers the human sexuality class, at risk. Wagle's secretary said she was unavailable for comment. Although Dailey's material is explicit, he A. K. Bharathi said, it is educational and appropriate for a college-level course. Dailey said he would not be able to comment on the amendment until after the legislative session had ended. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said Friday the state Legislature shouldn't be deciding curriculum or teaching materials for the state's universities. She said these concerns should be referred to the Board of Regents. Dailey has not adjusted his teaching since the Legislature and the media zeroed Douglas A. Ferguson in on his class last week. The most noticeable difference in his class in the last week has been an increase in attendance, Preston Dargan, Dallas sophomore, said. Although guests are always welcome in his class, Dailey asked members of the press to leave if they weren't in class to learn. Wagle "As far as the class goes, it's a necessary goal to keep the classroom a safe environment," Dargan said. "He's one of the best people I've seen at doing that." Luke Middleton, Lawrence graduate student, wrote an e-mail to all student organizations on behalf of the Men Can Stop Rape organization to encourage students to write Wagle or their own state representative about the amendment and to send an e-mail to Dailey to express support. Middleton said Dailey was a University icon, beloved by thousands of current students and alumni. Edited by Melissa Hermrock Supporting the troops A man in a white shirt is holding a balloon and looking at another person in a dark suit. They are sitting inside a vehicle, possibly a car or bus, with the interior visible through the window. The background shows a blurred outdoor scene with trees and sunlight. Jonathan Ng, student body president, and Chancellor Robert Hemenway tie a yellow ribbon on a tree in front of Strong Hall in honor of the troops fighting in the war. The yellow ribbon ceremony was in conjunction with the Student Senate resolution, which passed last night, to thank University of Kansas students, faculty and staff who have been deployed. Senate passes funding for Israel Alliance ad By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer In a 25-19 vote, Student Senate passed a bill to fund the KU Israel Alliance for $556. The group plans to use the money in addition to $200 of privately donated funds to sponsor a full-page ad, which will say, "We members of the University of Kansas community, support maintaining and enhancing the mutually beneficial relationship between the U.S. and Israel," in The University Daily Kansan. "This campus and these students support the status quo between relations between the U.S. and Israel, which currently includes promoting peace in that region," said Sam Hopkins, Prairie Village sophomore and group member. The ad includes more than 1,100 names from the KU community who signed the group's petition supporting the quoted statement. "I don't think it's fair when we scrutinize groups and not others," said Loren Malone, student body vice president and Senate president. "That's just not right." Senate questioned the group's mission, content of the ad and whether Senate had the right to question the ad's content. Malone said Senate rarely asked to look at advertising content when funding groups. Senate's funding code dictates that Senate could fund partisan activities but not their ideals. Karen Keith and Adam Obley, holdover senators, opposed the funding amount. "It sets a precedent of opening up Senate to paying for political statements," Keith said. Student Senate funds events but not messages for political groups such as the KU Democrats. Senate does this because the events can benefit all KU students, Keith said. STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE The two funding amendments failed 17 to 22 last night. Keith said instead of funding the group the full $556, Keith and Obley said Senate should give them standard club funding of $431 — or just $224, which is the standard limit for Kansan advertising The KU Israel Alliance was up-front with Senate and voluntarily showed an example of the ad's content, Malone said. For more on Student Senate, see page 10A. For a repeat of last night's presidential/vise-presidential debates, tune into JHJK 90.7 FM at 3:30 p.m. Also in the ad is a statement describing the group's purpose,which is "to promote dialogue among students of all religious and political persuasions regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict." The group includes members from the far right, the far left, the farther left and those in between, said Benjy Simon, Overland Park sophomore and KU Israel Alliance member. The group has no set belief or political stance, he said. Jeff Allmon, community affairs director, sponsored the bill to fund the group. He didn't agree with any proposed amended changes or Senate's discussion of the ad's content. Allmon said the group's mission of promoting dialogue about issues a world away was a positive action, citing that campuses across the country have conflicts over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, some violent. The group began in January and wants the full-page ad to attract students to the group. "This is our debut. This is our fireworks show," Hopkins said. "This is a proactive step from the KU Israel Alliance and Student Senate saying, 'No, not on our campus,'" he said. "Within the group, there is no black and white," he said. "Our group started as being gray." "This is a dumb argument of semantics that is screwing over this group," he said. Edited by Todd Rapp Election recount changes outcome By Lauren Bristow and Cal Creek lbristow@kansan.com and cccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writers After an election recount yesterday, one Lawrence City Commission candidate leapfrogged another, claiming the last commission seat by 149 votes. Tuesday night unofficial results showed that Lynn Goodell had won the third and last commission seat by 184 votes. But the Douglas County Clerk's Office discovered an error yesterday, giving David Schauner. Tuesday's fourthplace candidate, the victory. The mix-up gave all three commission seats to the three candidates supported by the Progressive Lawrence Campaign: Mike Rundle, Dennis "Boog" Highberger and Schauner. The results are still unofficial. Douglas County commissioners will certify the results tomorrow morning. The recount didn't affect any other outcomes. Patty Jaimes, Douglas County clerk, called Schauer about the possible mix-up yesterday morning. "It took me by surprise," he said. Goodell could not be reached yesterday. The Douglas County Clerk's Office discovered the error in ballot counting yesterday morning after the manual count of ballots showed a discrepancy from the computerized count. "We record the number of people at the polls on election night," said Patty Jaimes, Douglas County clerk. "When we compared those numbers to the number that the computer gave us, there was quite a difference." Tuesday night's final printout indicated 25,016 voters cast a ballot. Records taken manually showed only ELECTION RECOUNT Candidate % of votes % of votes Tuesday yesterday Mike Rundle 20.44 20.84 Dennis "Boog" 17.91 18.22 Highberger David Schauner 16.59 16.96 Lynn Goodell 16.92 16.59 Lee Gerhard 14.88 14.51 Greg DiVilbiss 13.27 12.88 Source: Douglas County Clerk 18. 218 ballots were cast. Jaimes said the error had occurred when officials loaded the disks containing ballot counts from two counting machines into the computer that added those results together. The human error caused 7,002 ballots to be counted twice, she said. Lee Gerhard, who came in fifth after both Tuesday and yesterday, said he expected someone to demand a full recount once the results were certified. Gerhard said he wasn't happy with how the election was handled. "This is not how to run an election," he said. Although he said he was pleased Tuesday when Goodell won, he understood that Lawrence residents elected the Progressive candidates. If the voters were unhappy, changes could be made in the next election in 2005, he said. "The people voted for them," he said. "We're going to have to live with them." —Campus editor Michelle Burhenn contributed to this report. Edited by Andrew Ward Good day, sunshine --- Brandon Baker/Kansan Annika Williamschen, Applevalley Minn., freshman, Kathy Kalbac, St. Louis freshman, and Holly Hollenbeck, Neodesha freshman, lounge outside Oliver Hall. Warm spring temperatures reached 87 degrees yesterday and drove students outside to enjoy the sun and cloudless sky. It is expected to be partly cloudy today with a high of 83 degrees. --- --- 2A THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY,APRIL 3,2003 The Inside Front News briefs CAMPUS Body found in Lawrence; death ruled suicide by police Lawrence citizens walking in Prairie Park Nature Preserve found the body of a 53-year-old Overland Park man yesterday afternoon in southeast Lawrence. Lawrence police Lt. David Cobb said police determined the cause of death was suicide. The body was found at about 2:30 p.m. yesterday. Lawrence police had roped off the entrance to a walking path near 28th Street Terrace and Harper Street, near where the body was found. Police do not intend to release any more information about the death, Cobb said. Erin Ohm Wadsworth, Foertsch swap spots, back on ballot Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade are back on the ballot with new presidential and vice-presidential candidates, simply by trading places. Brett "Lord Wads" Wadsworth. Overland Park senior, will now run as vice president and Andy Foertsch will be the presidential candidate. The Elections Commission disqualified presidential candidate Wadsworth and his running mate, Faertsch, March 26 because 128 of the mandatory 500 signatures on the ballot were invalid. Foertsch found a clause in the code, which stated that a coalition can find new candidates if it could get 500 more signatures. The "new" candidates, Wadsworth and Foertsch, collected more than 600 signatures by 5 p.m. Monday. Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner, validated the signatures and will redo the ballot to include the candidates. "Lord Wads is good," Wachal said. "He's in the clear." Cate Batchelder STATE Sergeant from Wellsville killed by grenade in Iraq Butler was killed in action Tuesday in Assamawah, Iraq, when a rocket-propelled grenade hit his vehicle, military officials said. Butler, 24, of Wellsville, was assigned to Headquarters Company. 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment, at Fort Riley. Joe Butler, Jacob's twin brother, said his family was notified by the miliary at 11:45 p.m. Tuesday. Butler's parents, Cindy and James, live in Wellsville, a town about 40 miles southwest of Kansas City, Mo. WELLSVILLE — Army Sgt. Jacob "I just know for a fact that he died fighting for our freedom and doing something that he loves to do. That's really all I can tell you at this point in time," Joe Butler said. He said his brother Jacob joined the Army in 1998. He was stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, and later transferred to Fort Riley, Joe Butler said. According to Fort Riley, Butler had been at the post since Nov. 19, 2001. He was a cavalry scout in his battalion, where his duties included taking point and performing reconnaissance. Butler, who was single and had no children, was part of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Armored Division at Fort Riley. Speaking on behalf of the family, Staff Sgt. Sheldrick McNeal of Fort Leavenworth said, "The family doesn't want to talk right now and they don't have a statement." City trying to raise money to boost tourism in wetlands GREAT BEND — With the help of an $8.5 million visitors center, Great Bend officials think the Cheyenne Bottoms wetlands area could become a major tourist attraction. But first, they have to come up with the money. Former Gov. Bill Graves authorized a $2.4 million grant for the area before leaving office. City officials think spending even more would help attract thousands of extra visitors. The state had planned to start building a $2 million center this spring with limited exhibit space, new restrooms and a classroom. Those plans have been halted as leaders consider raising the extra funds to build an $8.5 million center. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Constant war coverage can cause extra stress for people with loved ones overseas. KUJH TV'S Meredith Brengle reports tonight at 5:30, 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00. News: Ashley Earnest and Cary Dreher Weather: Matt Lauban Sports: Zach Lee kansan.com On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 90.7 kJba Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU TENNIS To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Film Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Ellie Larson, Westwood freshman, takes advantage of the spring weather at the tennis courts. Larson was one of the 16 people that filled the courts yesterday afternoon. Brandon Baker/Kansan ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com The Russian and East European studies department will sponsor a Central Slavic Conference from 11 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. today in the Kansas Union. Call 864-4236. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a Veggie Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. The Student Development Center will sponsor a Nontrad Brown Bag Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Alcove E in the Kansas Union. Contact Laura Morgan at 864-4064. Patricia Ybarra of theater and film will give a Merienda Brown Bag Lecture on "Staging Tixcala, Mexico" at noon at 318 Bailey. Call 864-4213 ■ Reed Anderson will give a Tour du Jour lecture on "Thomas Scully's'Lady in the Lake" at 12:15 p.m. today in the Spencer Museum of Art.Call 864-4710. University Career and Employment Services will give a workshop on "Resumes from Scratch" from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the PC Lab in the Burge Union, Call 864-3624. Daphne Fautin of the Kansas Geological Survey will give a lecture on "Biogeoinformatics of Sea Anemones and Other Hexacorals" at 3:30 p.m. today at 1005 Haworth. Call 864-5887. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS60445. Elyssa Faison will give a lecture on "Cultivating Women, Cultivating Workers in Interwar Japan" at 4 p.m.today in the ECM,1204 Oread Ave.Call 864-3843. Et Cetera ■ Alexei Kourbanovski of the State Russian Museum in St. Petersburg will give a lecture on "Vladimir Tatlin; A Freudian (De) Constructivist of the Russian Avant-Garde" at 5:15 p.m. today at Room 211 in the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4713. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will practice from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. today at 207 Robinson. Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. The Multicultural Resource Center will sponsor a Diversity Dialogue Panel Discussion on "The Closet is Open, But We're Not Coming Out" at 7 p.m. today at the Big 12 Room in the Kansas Union, Contact Keith Flovd at 864-435-9070 The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. Student Union Activities will screen the film Die Another Day at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at Woodruff Auditoro. rium in the Kansas Union, Tickets are free with an SUA movie card or $2 at the Hawk Shop. Call 864-7469. University Theatre will present The 10-Minute Play Festival at 7:30 p.m. today at Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Call 864-3381. The KU Symphony Orchestra will perform at 7:30 p.m. today at the Lied Center. Tickets are $5 for students. Call 864-3436. Carole Pateman of the University of California-Los Angeles will give a philosophy lecture on "Democratizing Citizenship: A Case for Basic Income" at 7:30 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.Call 864-3976. David Bergeron of the department of English will give a lecture on "Shakespeare in the Closet" as part of the Humanities Lecture Series at 7:30 p.m. today in the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4798. The KU Karate Kobudo Club will practice from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. today at St.Lawrence Catholic Campus Center. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422. The University Daily Kansas (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bi-weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the on Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045 rilled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Read all about it on www.kansan.com PRESENTS GREG BROWN 04-5-03 7:30 PM WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION LEVEL 5 $18 W/KUID $20 NO KUID TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE KU STATE UNION FUNERAL SUA WIDE POCK student union activities • The University of Kansas Metropolitan College WESTSIDE FOLK WWW.GREGBROWN.ORG WWW.WESTSIDEFOLK.ORG Academic Computing Services free computing workshops All workshops are FREE for KU students, staff and faculty, but REQUIRE registration for everyone. Register at Register at www.ku.edu/acs/train or 864-0494. Workshop descriptions and schedule www.ku.edu/acs/calendar Questions? Get help at question@ku.edu or call the ACS Help Desk at 864-0200. Directions & map: www.ku.edu/acs/directions Become A Microsoft Office Specialist Web Authoring: Foundations Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all. Web: April 3, 2018 - 4:30 p.m. Burlin Media Lab Set yourself apart from your peers and get certified as a skilled desktop computer user in Microsoft Office programs. Certification is available to all KU faculty, staff and students. Each exam costs $65; fees must be paid prior to the exam you wish to take. To register or to find out more, visit www.ku.edu/acs/certification, send email to kcu@ku.edu with code 964_0484. Web Authoring: Introduction Prerequisite: Web Authoring: Foundations. Requires registration for all. Tues., April 8, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Budig Media Lab **Photoshop:** Introduction Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all and $475 for log-on.KU Tues. April 8, 9 a.m.-m., Budig PC Lab PowerPoint: Intermediate Prerequisite: PowerPoint: Introduction. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Wed., April 9, 1-4 p.m., Budig Media Lab web Authoring: Intermediate Prerequisite: Web Authoring; Foundations and Web Authoring; Introduction. Requires registration for all. Tues., April 15, 8:30-11:30 a.m. Budin Media Lab EndNote: Introduction Prerequisite: For KU faculty, staff and students only. Requires registration for all. Tues., April 15, 1:30-4:30 p.m., Budig Media Lab Excel Introduction Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU Wed. April 16, 2014. Budio Media Lab NEW! Microsoft Office Specialist Certification Exam Prerequisite: For KU faculty, staff and students only. Requires registration for all and a $65 fee. Thurs., April 17, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Budig Media Lab 1 THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Use of cell phone comes with awareness of etiquette The Protocol School of Palm Beach offers etiquette seminars on fine dining, job interviews, and... cell phone use? Yes, those handheld technological miracles are both easy to use and easy to abuse. Web sites like phonebusiness.com and letstalk.com offer suggestions for cell phone users who are disconnected from proper use etiquette. Learn to Locate that 'Off' Button A cell phone is small enough to be taken anywhere, but there are some places where a ringing cell phone is sorely unprofessional and just plain rude. According to phonebusiness.com, the cell phone fanatic, or "bore," is constantly "taking and making calls in public restrooms, during church services and riding along in the rental shuttle while squeezed alongside of others." COMMON CENTS COMMON CENTS This individual, the site explains, sacrifices effectiveness and professionalism for convenience and immediacy. Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com According to LetsTalk, a San Francisco wireless service provider, 39 percent of Americans surveyed in 2000 thought it was acceptable to speak on a cell phone in a public restroom. That must have to be one important phone call. In some places, a ringing cell phone will never be acceptable. Movie theaters, job interviews and funerals are obvious places. Nothing sounds more unprofessional than being in a job interview and having your Scooby Doo ring tone start up. Some teachers will penalize students whose phones go off during class, a threat they add to their syllabi. At the very least, a teacher may demand to answer your cell phone when it rings, which I have seen one teacher do recently. "Hi, who is this?" the teacher asked as the student turned lobster red. "Well, she's in class right now. Can I have her call you back?" Use your judgment. If in doubt, turn off the phone or put it on a vibrate setting. Keep the Private Detail Keep the Private Details Private Recently a bus driver told me he often unintentionally overhears cell phone conversations. Last week a female student was talking on her cell phone about her persistent cramps and irregular bleeding. "I don't want to hear about that." he said. Don't Sacrifice Safety The truth is, no one does. Be mindful of what you say when talking on your phone in public — you never know who might be listening. In her article "Cell Phone Etiquette" at bcentral.com, Joanna Krotz said that in 2002, about 41 state governments considered proposals to restrict or ban the use of cell phones while driving, according to the National Council of State Legislatures. The problem is that plenty of accidents happen when people are driving without two hands on the wheel. Invest in a hands-free set or make the conversation wait until you get home. Watch Your Volume Just because your cell phone is the size of a Tootsie Roll doesn't mean you have to speak louder to make up for it. It's a cell phone, not a megaphone. Enough said. Rochie is a Wichita senior in journalism. Each week she covers a different consumer issue. University researchers conducting tests on new wireless transfer technology By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Computer users will no longer suffer from the wire connecting blues. Researchers at the University of Kansas and The Information and Telecommunication Technology Center finished their first round of tests last month for Bluetooth Special Interest Group, based out of Overland Park. The University teamed up with Bluetooth SIG this year to test technology that allows for wireless transfer of information between electronic equipment such as computers cell phones and printers, said Leon Searl, software research engineer at ITTC. "Bluetooth is supposed to make it easier to transfer data. Hooking things up to wires is always a pain in the rear to do," Searl said. The inspiration for the name Bluetooth came from Danish King Harald Bluetooth, who united a number of countries in the Scandinavian area around A.D. 900, said Joe Evans, professor of electrical engineering and computer science. "The idea behind Bluetooth is to try to unite a lot of the effort of the wireless data communications," he said. One test the researchers performed ranked the device on a scale of one to five, ranking how easy the product is for an everyday user to operate. If a product receives a one it means it's extremely difficult to use. Five indicates the user didn't have to look at the user manual and the technology is fairly simple to use. "Bluetooth is supposed to make it easier to transfer data. Hooking things up to wires is always a pain in the rear to do." "We're testing at the very highest Leon Searl software research engineer at ITTC level from the perspective of the average everyday user." Searl said. "Technically, the devices may be able to operate for the test, but is it easy for the user?" The Bluetooth Special Interest Group represents 3Com, Agere, Ericsson, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia and Toshiba and hundreds of Associate and Adopter member companies. Researchers did almost 400 measurements on products containing Bluetooth hardware from these companies, said Searl. Bluetooth technology can work at distances up to 300 feet but the general use is at most 30 feet, Searl said. The interest group has contributed $33,000 in funding for the program. This money pays the salary of two KU employees working solely on testing for Bluetooth SIG, said Joseph Evans, professor of electrical engineering and computer science. The University's partnership with Bluetooth is an important one, said Dan Deavours, research assistant professor at ITTC. "It will help us better understand the technology." he said. "It will help us in formulating future relevant research ideas and getting students involved in technology." Edited by Ryan Wood Pilar Pena/Kansan Leon Searl, Information Resource Manager at Information and Telecommunication Technology Center, tests the transmission of information on a cell phone. The testing is part of the project that ITTC is doing for Bluetooth Special Interest Group. formerly Bada Bing! The wildest party from here to Vegas! ALLSTARS Where everybody’s a player! 913 N. 2nd Street · Lawrence, KS (785)-841-4122 DRINK SPECIALS Monday: $2 Wells Thursday: $4 Red Bull & Jager Night Tuesday: 2 for 1 Cocktails Friday & Sat: $2 AllStar Shots Wednesday: $3 Boulevard & Rolling Rock Sunday: $3 - 22 oz. Bud & Bud Light Main Review April 7th Don't Miss This Show! with private VIP on I's Ultimate Ladies' Night Out Featuring special guests NOW INTERVIEWING for waitresses and cheerleaders all shifts Male Review April 7th Don't Miss This Show! with private top 1 on I's Ultimate Ladies' Night Out As an engineer in the U.S. Air Force, there's no telling what you'll work on. (Seriously, we can't tell you.) United States Air Force applied technology is years ahead of what you'll touch in the private sector, and as a new engineer you'll likely be involved at the ground level of new and sometimes classified developments. You'll begin leading and managing within this highly respected group from day one. Find out what's waiting behind the scenes for you in the Air Force today. To request more information, call 1-800-423-USAF or log on to airforce.com. U.S.A. Air Force U. S. AIR FORCE CROSS INTO THE BLUE 24 A 4A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 TALKTOUS editor 864-4854 or khanderson@kansan.com Jenna Goopeert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoopeert@kansan.com and jhenneng@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Keitting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mglibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Find tree that lives to protest sprawl Sihka has graced Lawrence with her presence. This free-spirited individual spent a short time lending her considerable — if sedentary — talents to the defense of one dead tree. The limbs had been removed, and it was obvious the tree was not long for this world. Perhaps in the future she could select more appropriate trees, preferably ones that are still alive, to sit in. As our cities expand with the effects of urban sprawl, countless trees are bulldozed every week to make space for new Wal-Marts and Home Depots. What was the significance of that one tree, especially in an area of Lawrence that is not overly developed and in fact is surrounded by many green areas? Aperson does not need to go far from downtown to find a nice park. It hardly seems appropriate to label the picturesque Massachusetts Street district a "concrete jungle." This self-described nomad should probably wander away from 8th and New Hampshire streets and find new trees to defend, preferably ones that have not yet shuffled off this mortal coil. Matt Pirotte for the editorial board SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersep@kansan.com. The Kansan will run as many submissions as possible that conform to these guidelines. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES maximum limit 650 word limit **Include:** Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) **Also:** The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. Maximum Length Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Faculty (faculty member) SUBMITT 1. E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Stauffer-Flint Dance Party, White House Style Bombs over Baghdad! This jam ROCKS! You could say its "the bomb," yo! Emily h No1 3/24/13 Jennifer Wade for The University Daily Kansan PERSPECTIVE Spacecraft's peaceful message lost on those who launched it Humankind did one of its most memorable acts in our bloody and banal history on March 2, 1972. The spacecraft Pioneer 10 was launched. With it, we sent a message: We are here. We come in peace. This message is debatable, as the most cursory reading of human history shows. Has a day passed in our thousands of years of that was not marked with murder, torture and war? Pioneer 10's task was to gather information about Jupiter and Saturn and beam that data back to Earth. Remarkably, it was also intended to escape our solar system, fly away and never return. Dreaming that this space probe might someday be discovered by intelligent extraterrestrials, Pioneer 10's creators attached to it a gold plaque, illustrating what humans look like and where our planet is located. The plaque shows the position of our sun relative to 14 pulsars — spinning stars whose regular bursts of radiation could serve as beacons for determining the Earth's location — and to the center of our galaxy. It shows the position of Earth relative to the other planets in our solar system. And it shows a naked man and woman, carefully drawn to reflect evolved human features, circa 1972. The man's right hand is raised and open, symbolizing humanity's peaceful intentions toward the eventual discoverers of the spacecraft. Pioneer 10 was the first object ever sent into space bearing an explicit message to otherworldly species. --- Rachel Robson opinion@kansan.com When Pioneer 10 was launched, our COMMENTARY Back on Earth, the Soviet Union and United States threatened each other with firepower sufficient to destroy all human life, several times over. Pioneer 10 kept phoning home, reporting its latest discoveries. nation was at war in Vietnam. As the craft completed its two-year Jupiter mission and headed to Saturn, Saigon fell. Crossing the orbit of Neptune in 1983, Pioneer 10 became the first man-made object to leave our solar system. Regular signals from Pioneer 10 provided astronomers with an example of what an intelligent transmission from space might sound like. Scientists with Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence trained their radio telescopes on Pioneer 10's signals to practice distinguishing meaningful messages from the random noise that reverberates through space. Hutus dismembered their Tutsi neighbors with machetes in Rwanda. Attempts at genocide resumed in the Balkans after a brief hiatus. Although it would still respond to telegraphed commands from home, in 1997 Pioneer 10 stopped sending signals on its own. The anodized gold tablet easily could last a billion years in the vacuum of space. That's 10,000 times longer than Homosapiens have existed. Given the uncertainties of life, and our penchant for violence, it is possible that Pioneer 10 and its message will outlive the species who created it. On Earth, the killing never stopped. The last signal Pioneer 10 sent to us was received on Jan. 22. It did not respond to commands in February or March, and was subsequently declared lost by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Pioneer 10 speeds ever farther from its home planet, with a plaque that speaks to our hopes for the future. We will never hear a message from Pioneer 10 again. 首 It makes no comment on Saddam Hussein or the "Shock and Awe" offensive. It is silent on the usual bloody business of human life. From the perspective of our short human lifespan, Pioneer 10 is practically immortal. At that time, it was almost 8 billion miles away. We have gone to war, again, but Pioneer 10 is innocent of that. Perhaps it will persist long enough to see humans fulfill the promise we sent out to the stars. Pioneer 10 bears to an uncertain future a message so rare and beautiful it is hard to believe that it is our own. "Here we are," the plaque proclaims. "We come in peace." Robson is a Baldwin City graduate student in pathology at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 图 There's a drink they're serving in Key West right now called the Stomp. Apparently this thing advertises that it can get you bombed in 15 minutes. Ah, with spring comes warm weather, and with warm weather comes girls in skimpy outfits. God love spring. I have a friend who has a gallon of pee in his refrigerator. I am the Justin Timberlake of metal. I happen to know that my SAT score was over 200 points higher than President Bush's, but my daddy couldn't pay to get me into Yale. Does that mean I should be making the country's decisions? 图 Apparently putting my roommate in a box and trying to get rid of her in front of a grocery store was also a bad idea. Survey says the creature in the box should be cute and cuddly. Major props to Catherine Bell for keeping the Student Senate elections in perspective. Go KUnited! Oh, and I'm not Greek. So put that in your pipe and smoke it. 图 as Mesopotamia. Six thousand years ago, people there were domesticating animals, beginning to use agriculture and giving rise to some of the earliest known cities such as Ur, Babylon, Kabala and Nineveh. Many scholars throughout the world believe that writing, accounting and even bureaucracy were born in this ancient land. Next week the city of Columbia will vote on whether or not to legalize marijuana. I guess Mizzou doesn't suck as bad as we all thought. I'd just like you to know, AE Pi had three cop cars buzz up to their house. Busted! --as Mesopotamia. Six thousand years ago, people there were domesticating animals, beginning to use agriculture and giving rise to some of the earliest known cities such as Ur, Babylon, Kabala and Nineveh. Many scholars throughout the world believe that writing, accounting and even bureaucracy were born in this ancient land. as Mesopotamia. Six thousand years ago, people there were domesticating animals, beginning to use agriculture and giving rise to some of the earliest known cities such as Ur, Babylon, Kabala and Nineveh. Many scholars throughout the world believe that writing, accounting and even bureaucracy were born in this ancient land. Easter falls on 4-20 this year. Put that in your pipe and smoke it. as Mesopotamia. Six thousand years ago, people there were domesticating animals, beginning to use agriculture and giving rise to some of the earliest known cities such as Ur, Babylon, Kabala and Nineveh. Many scholars throughout the world believe that writing, accounting and even bureaucracy were born in this ancient land. My roommates and I were sitting around wondering how exactly do you attach boobie tassels? I would just like to say that even the Preview Channel is rooting for KU. Just check out their new colors. 图 髓 You know you're a freshman when it's 2 in the morning and you're making a fake ID instead of working on a paper that's due in 12 hours. My veins are blue. The blood comes out red. Coincidence? I think not. as Mesopotamia. Six thousand years ago, people there were domesticating animals, beginning to use agriculture and giving rise to some of the earliest known cities such as Ur, Babylon, Kabala and Nineveh. Many scholars throughout the world believe that writing, accounting and even bureaucracy were born in this ancient land. PERSPECTIVE I pledged Phi Kap this semester, but it really sucks. I'm dropping out. Bombing Iraq destroys ancient artifacts that can never to be recovered, replaced Most people who are opposed to the war have many reasons why they stick to their beliefs, but I am here to present one that doesn't get a lot of press coverage in this era of 24-hour, live war coverage from the front lines. This idea goes back to a document that was drafted on May 14, 1954, at The Hague. The document came to be known as the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict. It is a clear outline of what should be done with artifacts and archaeological sites in the event of military conflict. The war in Iraq is a perfect example of why this document was drafted. GUEST COMMENTARY Ford Inbody opinion@hansan.com With every explosion of a bomb, missile or even the firing of a rifle, the armed forces risk destroying a piece of culture that can never be reclaimed. Iraq sits in the "Cradle of Civilization," once known D. R. BURTON The past decade has not been kind to this area, the site of military action spearheaded by the United States. After Desert Storm in 1991, there was a surge We find ourselves in a similar situation today. The Iraq Museum in Baghdad contains many irreplaceable artifacts such as cuneiform documents from Uruk and Sumerian texts dating from at least 2,500 B.C. in looting of national artifacts from archaeological sites and museums, which found their way into the hands of private collectors by way of the black market. In 2001, the Taliban destroyed the huge Bamiyan Buddhas believed to be as old as 1,300 years. The American population needs to wake up and help preserve these priceless and irreplaceable artifacts in danger by simply raising awareness of the situation. Right now, the United States has no plan to help rebuild these sites after our war on Iraq. The country still hasn't recovered from the post-Destert Storm exodus of scholars out of the country. We have to plan for the future to help Iraq rebuild its cultural and archaeological programs, and to help get knowledgeable people who know how to help protect and rebuild these wonderful sites. The Hague Convention of 1954 has a list of 88 countries that support the protocols for protecting cultural property. On that list are countries such as Australia, Egypt, France, Germany, Iran, Israel, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and yes—even Iraq. The United States is not on the list. The United States needs to become aware that Iraq has a culture and heritage that unites all of humankind. This area witnessed the birth of human civilization, but it shouldn't also have to witness the death of it. We need to think twice before we destroy it. We must protect our history, and we must remember our past. - Ford Inbody is a Shawnee sophomore in anthropology. 1 THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A " what has STUDENT SENATE ever done for me? " S Each year, Student Senate levies more than $14 million in student fees, which are used to directly fund numerous student services on campus. A major daily function of Student Senate is to help maintain and improve these services. Listed below is a breakdown of your student fees. These are all services available to you as a result of STUDENT MONEY. YOUR MONEY. student senate activities $17.50 educational opportunity fund $6.00 student union $45.00 campus transportation $16.00 student health $92.00 child care facility construction $4.00 campus environmental improvement $2.00 legal services $7.00 university athletics $20.00 student media $3.00 newspaper readership program $5.00 campus safety $2.00 student recreation $62.00 total: $281.50 (per semester) Your student fees provide you with numerous services you may have never even known about. For example, you can get free legal advice and help with filing taxes from Legal Services for Students, four major newspapers each day through the Newspaper Readership Program, access to Watkins Health Center, free admission to non-revenue sporting events, SafeRide and access to the new student recreation center set to open next fall. Additionally, the student senate activity fee helps provide funding for numerous student organizations for their annual activities and events. The educational opportunity fund provides more than $250,000 to academic departments and campus organizations with money for scholarships, new student positions and staff support all directly benefitting the student body. STUDENT University of Kansas SENATE If you have any questions regarding your student fees, please contact your student senator or call the Student Senate office at 864-3710. Visit our web site for more details about other projects and issues affecting KU students. www.ku.edu/~senate JONATHAN NG, Student Body President (jng@ku.edu) LOREN MALONE, Student Body Vice President (Imalone@ku.edu) --- A 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY,APRIL 3,2003 We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS Kentucky Place Apartments Now Leasing 2 BR Apartments For Fall 2003! - Furnished apt, available. - Within walking distance to campus - Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves & dishwashers NEWS dishwashers - Large walk-in closets - Laundry facilities on site 841-1212 or 749-0445 Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Now taking applications for Fall 2003 - 1 BR & 1 BR Loft Apartment Available • Water and trash paid • Walking distance to Campus • Laundry facilities on site • Private off street parking • 24 hr. Emergency maintenance Call (785) 841-1429 for details Mon-Fri 9 am - 6 pm 1105 Louisiana EHO LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. CITY MUSEUM Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 Hanover Place Apartments Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! - Fully applianced - kitchen w/microwave Laundry facilities - Laundry facilities - Private off street parking - Central Heat and Air - Walk-in closets - Garages - Fireplaces - Washer/Dryer hookups - Walk to K.U. - On-site Manager Open Mic Night splits poetry, music - 24 hour emergency maintenance 14th & Mass. (785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO Division causes smaller turnout at monthly event By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer the first Wednesday of every month, University of Kansas students go to the Hawk's Nest on the first floor of the Kansas Union to compete for a $50 prize at Student Union Activities' Open Mic Night. Well, maybe compete is too strong of a word. The atmosphere in the dimly lit Hawk's Nest was relaxed as students sat back and listened to a few tunes performed by fellow students. A few worked on homework here and there, while two sat engulfed by their game "I didn't even know there was a prize," said Luis Narifo, winner of last night's prize. "I just came to practice for my band. 2 Tango." Narinfo was one of five performers to play in front of the 20 spectators. According to Nariño, this was a much smaller Open Mic Night than last semester, when the music was combined with poetry as 75 people than 20 perh. Both covers an songs are welcome. Mic Night night, a dent pe formed a Ph is h song and many played original music. Lisa Thalher mer, SUA arts coordin. said this se ter SUA decide the p mus nic "I didn't even know there was a prize. I just came to practice for my band, 2 Tango." Luis Nariño Winner of last night's prize we thought it needed its own night," she said. "Separating them gives the poets more of their own spotlight." Ray Hodgson, Topeka senior, has been to multiple Open Mic Nights and liked the separation of music and poetry. "Some people would come only for the music and didn't pay attention to the poetry," he said. Laura Fleming, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, freshman, disagreed. She liked the mix because more people came, and there was a better assortment of talent. "There was more variety when they were combined," she said. "Tonight was just guys with guitars." Thalhammer said she thought two nights were better for the performers because there would now be two prizes given out. "Before the performers had to decide between poetry or music, and there was only one prize," she said. "Now they don't have to decide." The first Open Mic Night was held in Spring 2002 and became a series last semester. The future is uncertain, Thalhammer said, because the next coordinator will make the decision. - Edited by Julie Jantzer kansan.com M. S. HENRY Paleontologist Paul Sereno has encountered some of the weirdest creatures that ever walked the earth. Yet some of the scariest things he's discovered aren't likely to become extinct anytime soon. Sad to say, mutual fund management fees will probably outlast us all. That's why Dr. Sereno was afraid of getting eaten alive. So he turned to a company famous for keeping the costs down. That meant more money for him and less for the monsters. Log on for ideas, advice, and results. TIAA-CREF.org or call (800) 842-2776 TIAA CREF Managing money for people with other things to think about. RETIREMENT | INSURANCE | MUTUAL FUNDS | COLLEGE SAVINGS | TRUSTS | INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT Paul Sereno became a participant in 1987. TIAA-CREF individual and institutional Services, Inc., and Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc., distribute securities products. © 2002 teachers insurance and Amory Association College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF), New York, NY. For more complete information on TIAA-CREF Mutual Funds, please call (800) 722-1206 for a prospectus. Read it carefully before you invest. A charitable donation was made to Project Exploration (www.projectexploration.org) on behalf of Paul Sereno. TIAA CREF APRIL 5, 2003 YOU PONDWOW 13TH ANNUAL SPRING POW-WOW APRIL 5,2003,GRAND ENTRY 7:00 PM KU CAMPUS AT ANSCHUTZ SPORTS PAVILION UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FIRST NATION STUDENT ASSOCIATION HOST SOUTHERN DRUM HOST NORTHERN DRUM HEADMAN DANCER HEAD LADY DANCER STUDENT HEADMAN STUDENT HEAD LADY MC AD SOUTHERN THUNDER EAGLE FEATHER DARYL JACK AMY BEARSKIN RYAN RED CORN YVETTE WASHINGTON MANNY KING JOE BOINTY FIUSA CONTESTS!! EVERYONE IS WELCOME! FREE ADMISSION! COME AND ENJOY NATIVE AMERICAN SINGING AND DANCING, ARTS AND CRAFTS, AND FOOD. VENDORS CONTACT STEVE BYINGTON AT 785.856.1396 FOR BOOTH INFORMATION. *ALCOLON AND DRUG-FREE EVENT* 14 THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • 7A Small-town guy adjusts to college By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Dan Nelson/Kansan Every face in the crowd and every name in the phonebook has a story behind it. Every week, Kansas writer Megan Hickerson tells the story of a randomly selected KU student AMERICA'S SHELL Hand Shop Justin Moravec's whole town could move into three floors of McCollum Hall. Moravec came to Lawrence as a timid freshman from a small town. Morrill, just south of Nebraska, is complete with a Dairy Queen, Subway and a Pizza Hut — the gas station closed down because of a lack of business. "I felt really sheltered," Moravec said. "I didn't know what was going on in the real world—it was really a big culture shock." Rather than spending his high school evenings partying with the majority of his class, Moravec camped out on the weekends Faces in the Crowd with his close friends. Because his grandfather is Morrill sophomore Justin Moravec pauses between classes outside Wescoe Hall. Moravec, who is from a small town, said coming to the University of Kansas was a culture shock. a preacher, Moravec grew up going to church every Sunday. Randy Moravec, Justin's father, said he thought Justin would make the right decisions. "Justin's got a pretty good head on his shoulders, and he knows when the line can be crossed," Randy Moravec said. Justin sensed his father's concern when he came to visit KU. "When my dad came, he didn't say anything, but I knew what he was thinking," he said. "He's probably wondering what I'm like when he's not here. I call him to let him knowI'm OK." His days are filled with business classes, and he attends service at the Church of Christ in Lawrence whenever he can. Moravec avoids smoking and excessive partying. "I'd like to tell my own kids my beliefs, and this was how I was raised. "Moravec said, 'I will encourage them, but it's ultimately their own decision.' Aside from small town gossip and minimal restaurants, Moravec found it easier to date girls when he had a smaller group to choose from. He said that girls in Lawrence were not as easy to go up and talk to. "I'm fairly confident, but sometimes girls here give me that don't even-look-at-me eye," he said. Although Moravec has no plans to return to Morrill after he graduates with his business degree, he misses seeing the people that he's known for 18 years. "It's easy to know what everyone's doing." Moravec said. "You know where everybody lives and know when they're home because you see their cars in the driveway." — Edited by Brandon Gay State well-prepared for 'agroterrorism' WICHITA — More than a year after the terrorist attacks made the word "agroterrorism" part of the language, Kansas agriculture has never been so well prepared to deal with the threat. The Associated Press At the same time, the state's farms remain frighteningly vulnerable. Kansas agriculture officials say. Limited state resources, great distances, unguarded crops and herds and the ease of a deliberate "Agriculture is so vast it is not like you can put a fence around it," said Lisa Taylor, representative for the Kansas Department of Agriculture. infection make American agriculture an easy target for agroterrorism. Jerry Jaax, associate vice provost for research compliance at Kansas State University, led a biohazard mission when he was in the U.S. Army that visited Siberia to witness weapons factories that produced smallpox and the plague. His experiences were detailed in the 1995 best-selling book, The Hot Zone. Jaax said one of the government's major concerns when the Soviet Union fell apart was what would happened to the people who worked in the weapons programs. He said there was some anecdotal evidence that Middle Eastern countries recruited them heavily. Agroterrorism received a lot of attention in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the anthrax mailings and growing fears of an assault on the nation's food supply. food supply A long-proposed biosecurity research facility at Kansas State University got a boost with last year's announcement of a $3 million research project on foot-and-mouth disease. Farm industry groups are also urging producers to be vigilant. New proposals arise without tax increases In December 2001, the Kansas Farm Bureau hired a retired agent for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation to study Kansas farms and put together a plan that producers can use to protect themselves. No tax increases are contemplated in the $10.2 billion budget bill drafted Tuesday by House and Senate negotiators for the fiscal year that starts July 1. But it would leave the state with a deficit of about $230 million on June 30, 2004, according to legislative staff. The Associated Press Sebelius has not called for a tax increase. Her package includes proposals to accelerate the collection of local property taxes and some sales, income and mineral severance taxes, pulling $179 million worth of revenue into the next fiscal year. TOPEKA — two more of Gov. Kathleen Sebelius' proposals for preventing a deficit emerged from committee yesterday, after negotiators completed work on an unbalanced budget. The House Taxation Committee yesterday advanced a bill accelerating property tax collections to the full House — but did not endorse it. The Senate's tax committee did the same for a bill accelerating the collection of the other taxes. Sebelius also has proposed covering the budget deficit by issuing $175 million in bonds backed by the state's expected revenue from the national settlement with tobacco companies. A special House committee voted Tuesday to send the bond plan to the full House but did not endorse it. Under the compromise budget bill, most state employees would receive a 1.5 percent raise in mid-August. Sebelius had sought a full year's worth of the raise, while the Senate had voted to make it effective in mid-July and the House had not approved any raises. State aid to public schools would remain unchanged at $3,863 per pupil — a point on which the governor and both chambers had already agreed. Votes on the budget bill are expected this week in both the House and Senate. Lawmakers begin their annual break on Saturday and are unlikely to study how to erase the projected deficit until they reconvene April 30. Sebelius' tobacco bond proposal is part of her plan to raise $405 million to fund state government through mid-2004, avoid a tax increase or more spending cuts and create a $175 million cash reserve. Other elements of the plan include an expansion of legalized gambling and accelerated collections of local property taxes and some state income and retail sales taxes. Republicans on the special House committee studying the bond proposal expressed reservations about incurring long-term debt to fund annual operating expenses. But House Speaker Doug Mays (R-Topeka) said he had promised House members they would vote on the idea. House debate is expected today. "It's pretty tepid." Mays said of the committee's action. "It means the committee has problems with it, but we're not willing to kill it in committee." The committee's minority Democrats wanted the proposal sent to the full House with the panel's endorsement. That effort was rejected on a 4-3 party line vote, with Chairman Ray Cox (R-Bonner Springs) abstaining. GO HAWKS! open NOON Saturday! BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass. Lawrence The 'Best' Seat on Mass. Street! Catch all the final four action on our 16tvS PLUS 2 HUGE 10ft BROTHERTRONS! THURSDAYS $2 00 TRIPLE WELLS! $2 50 Long Islands $2 00 U-CALL-ITS! $1 00 shots of DR! THE MADNESS CONTINUES... $2 00 Miller Lite TAPS & BOTTLES ON THE BIG GAMEDAY! "YOUR NCAA TOURNAMENT HEADQUARTERS!" "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" oh yeah, in the show, BABY. 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WAR THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 Iraqi,U.S. relations: from friends in'80s to foes in'90s Road to latest feud dates back decades By Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer As constant war updates flood newspapers and television, viewers are inundated with images of bombings and bloodied bodies. Josh Robison, Wichita senior said he had stopped paying attention to every piece of breaking news even news he helped report. Robison works as a production assistant for Channel 6, and is continuously surrounded by war updates. Over time he has become desensitized, he said. "I would say most people like to pretend they care about the war," Robison said. "But it's so far removed from my day-to-day life." Robison said he didn't know much about the background of the war with Iraq, which may be one reason he had become so complacent. War coverage can be confusing for students who know little about the history between the United States and Iraq. What follows is the early history of Saddam Hussein's rise to power and the United States' struggle to bring him back down. The information is a summary of a timeline featured on pbs.org. Saddam Surfaces as Leader (1937- 1979) Hussein was born in 1937. In the 1950s, Hussein joined the Ba'ath Party, an underground Arab nationalist party that planned to assassinate Iraqi leader General Abdel Karim Kassem. Hussein was wounded in a 1959 assassination attempt but managed to flee to Cairo. In 1963, Kassem was assassinated by the Ba'ath Party. Hussein returned to Baghdad as a Ba'ath interrogator and torturer but was jailed when his party was overthrown. In 1968, the Ba'ath Party again seized power in Iraq under Hussein's cousin Ahmad Hassan Al Bakr. Hussein became Bakr's right-hand man, but Hussein had his eyes on the presidency. Hussein staged a palace coup in 1979, and Bakr resigned for health reasons. Hussein assumed the presidency. Iran/Irag War and U.S. assistance Iran/Iraq War and U.S. assistance (1980-1988) In 1980, Saddam sent 200.000 troops to attack Iran. ■ Ronald Reagan became president in 1981 and endorsed a policy stating that neither country would emerge from the war with additional power. Fearing Iraq might lose the war, the United States helped Iraq gain information about the Iranian fronts in 1982. In 1986, Reagan agreed to sell arms to Iran in exchange for the release of U.S. hostages held by terrorists in Lebanon. Hussein found out about the deal, known as the Iran-Contra scandal, and vowed never to trust the United States again. Iraq attacked the town of Halabja, Iraq, in 1988, killing 5,000 Kurds. The United States condemned Iraq's use of chemical warfare. A cease-fire was declared in 1988. In 1990, Iraq was billions of dollars in debt and officials were angry with its Arab neighbors about the low price of oil, its primary source of cash. In July, Iraq amassed 100,000 troops at the Kuwaiti border. The Gulf War (1991) President George Bush warned Hussein that he would not allow Iraq to be a bully. Hussein refused to remove his troops by Jan. 15, the U.N. deadline, and Bush declared war. The air war lasted six weeks, ending on Feb.28,1991. - After the cease-fire, Bush encouraged Iraqis to rise against their leader. Shia Muslims in the south took up arms against Hussein. U.S. troops were ordered not to intervene, and tens of thousands of Shia Muslims were killed. In the north, Kurdish forces also tried to rebel, but were decimated. In April 1991, the United Nations passed Resolution 687. It allowed Saddam to stay in power but ordered him to destroy his weapons and allow inspections of all weapons facilities. Iraqi deception over weapons of mass destruction began shortly thereafter. The Aftermath (1993-1998) In 1993, President Bill Clinton ordered a bombing on Iraqi intelligence headquarters in response to a recent assassination attempt on former President Bush while he was visiting Kuwait. In 1995, Hussein Kamel, Hussein's son-in-law, told U.N. officials where the weapons of mass destruction had been hidden. Inspectors discovered Russian-built fermenters used to produce anthrax and substances used to grow biological toxins. Kamel accepted Hussein's invitation for a safe return nine months later, but after crossing the Iraq border, Kamel and his brother were captured and killed. In 1998, Saddam ends cooperation with inspectors and accuses the United Nations of espionage. President Clinton ordered Operation Desert Fox, a four-day bombardment of key Iraqi military installations. Rumblings of War (2001-2003) The World Trade Center and Pentagon are attacked by Al Qaeda. President George W. Bush announced on Sept. 11, 2001, that the U.S. would "make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor them." Bush's State of the Union speech addressed the "axis of evil" that included Iraq, Iran and North Korea. Bush said the United States would act pre-emptively to deal with such nations. In November 2002, the U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 1441, which threatened "serious consequences" if Iraq did not offer unrestricted access to U.N. weapons inspectors. After four years, the United Nations resumed weapons inspections in Iraq. Hussein repeatedly refused to meet U.N. deadlines for destruction of long-range missiles. Bush declared war on March 17 after Hussein and his sons refused to leave Iraq within a 48-hour deadline. — Edited by Ryan Wood TURKEY Caspian Sea Mediterranean Sea 6 3 Halabja 1 Baghdad IRAN IRAQ Osirak 5 Cairo EGYPT 2 7 KUWAIT SAUDI ARABIA Persian Gulf Red Sea Arabian Sea Donovan Atkinson/Kansan WAR WITH IRAQ 1) Baghdad — Iraqi capital and stronghold 2) Osirak — Location of Israeli bombing that destroyed nuclear reactor during Iran-Iraq war 3) Halabja — Hussein attacked this town with chemical weapons during Iran/Iraq war, killing 5,000 Kurds 4) Kuwaiti border — Hussein amasses 100,000 troops to invade Kuwait in 1990 5) Cairo — Where Hussein fled after failed assassination attempt on Kassem 6) Kurdish Forces and 7) Shia Muslims — Both headed toward Baghdad after cease fire in Gulf War MARINER'S DOGS 1986 Brandon Baker/Kansan As people gather during a war debate sponsored by Students for Peace, a man who wouldn't give his name speaks of the good the United States is doing with Operation Iraqi Freedom. Both sides of the war debate were represented yesterday at Wescoe Beach. Students argue ethics, justification for war By Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Students who are familiar with the war's history cannot seem to agree on whether a war with Iraq has been warranted. Members of Students For Peace hosted a debate yesterday on Wesco Beach. Several students gathered to speak or listen to the informal, open mic debate Amanda Flott, Omaha junior, who helped organize the debate, said there's a laundry list of reasons why the United States went to war. None of these reasons, she said, were noble causes. "It's not about humanitarian intervention." Flott said. "It's about the U.S. trying to achieve world domination." Ethan Nuss, Salina freshman. War is the only way to get rid of Saddam Hussein, said Jenni Sweeton, Overland Park senior "It appears to me that he's a cruel dictator that needs to be taken out of power," Sweeton said. said President Bush was using the war as "a weapon of mass distraction" that would make people forget the nation's drooping economy. Dallas Rakestraw, Wichita senior, said whether war was justified was not important. Regardless, he said. America's troops should be supported. "Saddam's lied to the United Nations, and he's lied to the United States," Rakestraw said. "Finally, America is calling him into check." - Edited by Ryan Wood LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749-1312 ADAPTATION. (m) 8:30 only QUIET AMERICAN (m) 7:10 8:40 THE BREATH, MY SWEET (m) 4:00 only today's time only - Students 24:00 today Jayhawk & Powercat Charms 1029 Massachusetts PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-Play A 841-Play HD ITALIAN LINK ITALIAN LINK BRACELETS - 18K Gold * Stainless Steel * Semi-Finished Stones * Greek Letters The Etc. Shop 928 Massachusetts * (785) 843-0611 To Do List: Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County List: Take a Study Break Add something to my resume. Be someone's friend. Make a difference Complete your list. Stop by or call today! 211 E. 8th St. 785-843-7359 - Private patio or balcony 4 BR 2 Dash Furnished & unfurnished - 4 BR-2 Bath - Friendly on-site manager - 4 BR -2 Bath w/Study Models open daily 749-4226 15th & Kasold Mon.-Fri.9:00-5:00 Spicy Red Wine Sauce!! Almost the Weekend Thursday Special!!! 16" Pizza 2 toppings ONLY $10% the tax 2 drinks Open 7 days a week 749-0055 704 Mass. Voted Best Pizza Alm BUDYA PIZZHA 749-0055 704 Mass. - Dorm units available - Sparkling pool Orchard Corners Apartments - On-site laundry Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! We offer: - Small pets welcome - 2 BR - 2 Bath w/Study FEDERAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY We offer: - On KU bus route LZC Lawrence Athletic Club will reduce its enrollment fee by $1 for every point KU scored in its last tournament game. *Some Restrictions Apply* March Madness Sale Offer Expires April 9,2003 LAC North 3201 Mesa Way 785.842.4966 LAC South 2108 W.27th St. Go 'Hawks! 785. 331.2288 LAC East 1202 E.23rd St. (behind Kantronics) 785.841.8200 THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 WAR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 9A Parents should discuss war topics By Nikki Overfelt overfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer War isn't easy for college students to understand, but imagine being 4 years old. Students like Lori Bell, Pittsburgh sophomore, are learning to see the war from a different perspective: that of their children. Bell's 4-year-old son, Matthew, whom she describes as inquisitive and smart, has begun to pick up on news broadcasts discussing the war. "He hears the word, but doesn't understand the concept," she said. Bell and her husband want to answer his questions, but they also want to shield him from being overwhelmed and worried. Bell said. "It's scary for us," she said about the war. "We don't want to scare him." But she also realizes they can't protect him from everything, she said. "You can't shelter them forever," she said. Bell isn't alone. There are approximately 775 students at the University of Kansas who have children, according to the Office of Institutional Research and Planning. It's important to talk to kids about the war if they are asking questions, said Eric Vernberg, child psychology professor and director of the KU Child and Family Services Clinic. Vernberg is also one of the core experts for the Terrorism and Disaster branch of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network. How much parents talk to their children about war depends on the child and his age, he said. With younger children, parents should be particularly protective because they have the hardest time understanding the events, Vernberg said. "Parents should serve as a buffer and protective shield to information," he said. This information includes both media coverage and conversations about the war. If children are young enough that they are not aware of the war and are not expressing interest, it's not necessary to inform them of all that's going on, he said. For kids who are in middle-to-late elementary school it's important for parents to talk to them because they've probably heard about it at school, Vernberg said. The kids can have dramatic misunderstandings about things, such as how much personal danger they are in, he said, so it's necessary for parents to clarify what's happening. For children of all ages, Vernberg said, it's good to watch coverage of the war with them and limit the amount of coverage they are watching. "I don't think it's helpful for kids to see a lot of coverage," he said. "A lot of images are kind of disturbing." The images can cause the children to worry about their personal safety and can cause them to become preoccupied with the war and have nightmares, he said. The images can also spur anxiety for people they know are involved in the war, he said. Bill Tuttle is an American studies professor who has done research on children coping in World War II. Tuttle said the danger with war coverage was that it often blends in with other television programming. "Children can almost become desensitized," Tuttle said, "because it's just like another show." Tuttle said the most important advice for parents was to tell children you would always be there for them, and you understood their fears. For more information about talking to children about the war students can contact the KU Child and Family Services Clinic at 864-4416. Kansan staff writer Nicole Roche contributed to this story. - Edited by Brandon Gay Students discover war similarities By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer While American troops make their way to Baghdad, University of Kansas students are sitting in classrooms learning about past wars and the similarities between them and the war in Iraq. Ted Wilson, professor of history, teaches the "The History of the Second World War." He said he did not attempt to focus on Iraq, but he couldn't ignore what was going on overseas. "I haven't changed the class," Wilson said. "But I do take the opportunity to point out parallels at appropriate times." Wilson said students could better understand the war in Iraq if they learned about past conflicts, such as defending supply lines, the training of troops, the attitude of the country, government propaganda and media coverage. For instance, the Japanese Kamikaze pilots of World War II parallel suicide bombers. "We are watching history in the making," he said. "And we can have a better understanding by paying attention to the issues World War II possessed." Kaci Nash, Omaha, Neb. sophomore, said she enjoyed taking the class because she could study the long-term affects of war, as well as the patterns as they developed. The more I study World War II "We are watching history in the making. And we can have a better understanding by paying attention to the issues World War II possessed." Ted Wilson Professor of history the more parallels I see, and it's scary to see the result," she said. "In 20 years people will be studying this war, and we are a part of it." Steve Sodergren, graduate teaching assistant for the class, said the students were at an advantage by taking the class at this time. "They read their textbooks and then have the media for a frame of reference," he said. "It's impossible to not make connections." Sodergren said he devoted class time to discussion and linked the two conflicts but tried to avoid political debates. He said that although students were paying more attention to the war in Iraq, they were not relating it to World War II as much as he would like. "The present is a reflection of history," he said. "It is important to understand history to understand our present, just don't overdo it or you'll become burned out and psychologically damaged." - Edited Melissa Hermreck American forces battle in sight of Baghdad American forces fought their way to within sight of Baghdad's skyline yesterday and claimed the destruction of a pair of menacing Republican Guard divisions. Bombs shook the capital as Army and Marine armored columns took separate, converging paths toward the city from the south. The Associated Press thousands of troops within the so-called red zone — an imaginary line on the map near the capital where Iraqi use of weapons of mass destruction is most feared. The rapid advances brought An Army Black Hawk helicopter was downed by small-arms fire near Karbala, site of fierce fighting between the Army's 3rd Infantry Division and Iraqi troops, including Republican Guard forces. Seven soldiers were killed and four were wounded and rescued. officials said. The military campaign unfolded as Pfc. Jessica Lynch, a 19-year-old prisoner of war freed in a daring nighttime rescue, was flown to Germany for medical treatment. But the joy over her freedom was tempered by word that the special forces who rescued her also found 11 bodies. Increasingly, there were signs that Iraqi civilians were eager for the arrival of invading forces. Some smiled and waved as Marines rolled through Nasiriyah in tanks and other military vehicles. There were moments of humanity, as well, in the 2-week-old war. In Nasiriyah, American snipers summoned help for an Iraqi woman in labor in a pickup truck. Navy Hospitalman 1st Class Kyle Morris delivered a healthy baby and named her "America." Battles in Iraq may endanger artifacts from ancient world By Kelley Weiss kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writer In Western Civilization, a graduation requirement for most students, the class begins with the Mesopotamia, the Fertile Crescent and the city of Babylon. All of these monuments, dating back to the beginning of the first urban civilizations, are in modern-day Iraq. In any war, markers of cultural heritages are in danger. But in Iraq, the traces of civilization's beginnings could be at stake. Associate professor of French and Italian and Humanities and Western Civilization, Diane Fourny, teaches Western Civilization. Fourny said she was concerned about the fate of the rich history of Iraq's monuments. She said she specifically had noticed an early image of the war that showed a startling familiar image. The image displayed a palace representing the Ziggurat formation of ancient Aztec and Mesopotamia civilizations. After looking twice, Fourny realized it was Saddam Hussein's palace built in the image of the ancient Ziggurat. Seeing the damaged remains of the palace was upsetting to Fourny, not because it was Hussein's palace, but because it was a building built in the tradition of the Mesopotamia. "I found it very sad when I was showing a slide from 3,500 years ago of a Ziggurat in my Western Civilization class and realized that American bombs were blowing up the modern version." Fourny said. Fourny said the world would lose an important part of history if thousand-year old monuments from the country were destroyed. "Not only human life would we be lost in war but human memory," Fourny said. Ivana Radovanovic, professor of anthropology, said many archaeological monuments in Iraq dated back to the beginning of civilization. The first recorded script, by King Hummarabi, of inscriptions of law, the city of Babylon and the first record of a Radovanovic said that the way the media was portraying Iraq and what most people thought about the country was void of the huge importance of the history of Iraq. food producing community were found in Kurdish territory. "When you say Iraq people see desert, sand and oil," Radovianovic said. "They're not aware that it's much more than that — for me it is ancient Babylon, not just sand and oil." If the monuments and archaeological sites in Iraq were to be damaged or destroyed it would be a tragedy, Radovanovic said. "It would be disastrous and horrible," Radovanovic said. "All these monuments are monuments of human history." Roche Lindsey, Dubois, Wyo. graduate student in archaeology, said although he was worried about the safety of the archaeological sites in Iraq the likelihood of any real destruction was minimal. "The reality of what will really get affected is very small because they are underground." Lindsey said. "Although things in the open air hidden by a Tell, or hill, soldiers won't know it's a site." If artifacts were to be destroyed, though, it would have irreplaceable effects. Lindsey said. "Archaeology is a nonrenewable resource." Lindsey said. "Once it's gone it's gone." John Alexander, professor of history, used the example of priceless artifacts destroyed in Lindengrad, modern-day St. Petersburg, by the Germans during World War II as what could be lost in war. Several pieces of art were taken by the Germans and Russians, and much of it was destroyed during air raids. But, Alexander said he was not concerned that the coalition forces would target ancient monuments and artifacts in Iraq. "I think the American command would be very loathe to be accused of destroying the heritage in Iraq," Alexander said. "Ethically they would be very reluctant." - Edited by Brandon Gay START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MISS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT •1/4" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells EVERY NIGHT •1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 •Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 941 EVENING AT T DELI INC. 0 are you in a band? KJHK PRESENTS FARMER'S BALL "BATTLE OF THE BANDS" TURN IN SUBMISSIONS TO 2051-A DOLE CENTER DEADLINE APRIL 8TH QUESTIONS? CALL 864-4745 90.7 KTHX 10A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 Hide-and-seek stresses agenda issue Senators approve Saferide increases By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer CITY OF NEW YORK Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan Last night, hide-and-seek became more than a ragtag game of neighborhood kids bored on a summer night. The boundaries of the Delta Force hide-and-seek game are defined for the group congregated on Wescoe Beach. The game was organized to bring awareness to the need for more safety lights on campus. Delta Force freshmen and sophomore candidates organized the event to emphasize one of its platform topics: campus safety. "It's just to highlight the lack of lighting on campus and to see how many spots there are to hide," said Christine Moses, Topeka freshman and a Delta Force organizer. Delta Force put campus safety on its agenda because of the results from a survey released by the KU Task Force on Women's Needs. Forty-seven percent of KU female students who took the survey said they avoided taking classes at night because they thought campus was unsafe. "Lighting alone doesn't necessarily solve the problem," Moses said. In response, Delta Force plans to make sure sidewalks are kept visible and add more lighting and blue lights, which provide immediate contact to the KU Public Safety Office at the touch of a red button. She said blue lights were a big concern because attackers could still assault, even with better lighting. "We need resources to help prevent that," she said. Andy Knopp, chairman of the Campus Safety Advisory Board, said he had worked with the board to fund more than $90,000 in lighting projects on campus this year, including four blue lights. After the safety board collected more than DELTA FORCE ACTIVISM OVER APATHY 1,000 student surveys during Campus Safety Week last December. Knopp said the results showed that blue lighting was not as high a priority. "Generally students feel safe, and the students who do not feel safe are a smaller minority who would be better served for by the "Jaywalk" service." said Knopp, Manhattan junior who is running for student body president with KUnited. "Jaywalk," a KUnited platform idea, is a volunteer service that would walk students home at night from libraries or tests. Drew Thomas, Delta Force presidential candidate, said adding more blue lights would help make student-living areas safer. He said it would be useful to have blue lights on campus, but the ultimate problem still existed of bridging the gap between where off-campus ends and on-campus begins. Besides placing blue lights on campus, Delta Force wants to target gray areas such as the Lied Center parking lot, the walk from Memorial Stadium to GSP-Corbin Hall and the area between JRP Hall and the nearby residential areas. But for the sake of the game last night, the organizers limited the playing field to the triangular parameters set by Wescoe Hall, Fraser Hall and Spencer Research Library. Ryan Mills, Fort Scott sophomore, is a Delta Force candidate for engineering senator who helped organized the event. He said before the game that he hadn't scouted out his hiding spot yet but was sure spots were everywhere. Moses said she had heree on a spot underneath the Wescoe steps. "It's like being a kid again," she said. "It been how many years since I played?" - Edited by Julie Jantzer Explosion causes 'total war' on terrorism The Associated Press MANILA, Philippines - The Philippine president ordered a "total war" on terrorists after a bomb exploded yesterday near a bustling wharf in the southern port of Davao, killing at least 16 people, including two children. Forty people were injured in the blast, the second in Davao in less than a month. The death toll would have been higher if the nation was not already on high alert for terror acts, officials said. The government said it was looking for similarities to a March 4 blast that was blamed on a Muslim rebel group. That bombing killed 21 people, including an American missionary, at the city's international airport. Three Americans were wounded. That Muslim group, the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front, or MILF, condemned yesterday's bombing and denied responsibility for the previous one. Violence continued early today in Davao when gunmen lobbed two grenades and used a machine gun to strafe a Davao mosque, police said. There were no casualties or damage. Davao is a predominantly Roman Catholic city on southern Mindanao island, home to a decades-old Muslim insurgency that has claimed hundreds of lives in recent months, including dozens in bombings and ambushes. The attacks come at a time of debate over the mandate of U.S. troops in the war on terror in the Phillippines, where Muslim insurgents have battled the government for decades. Although President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is one of Washington's biggest supporters in the war on terrorism, she has ruled out a combat role for American soldiers. Arroyo planned to go ahead with a scheduled visit to Davao on today. But she said the city was "in a state of lawless violence" and she would order the military to help police crack down on "lawless elements and terrorists." With a ship getting ready to leave, the area outside the wharf's gates — where passengers can catch public transport or eat at a row of food stalls — was teeming with people when the bomb exploded at about 7 p.m., blasting a shallow crater along the highway in the city's Sasa district. Farewells turned to cries of pain and anguish. Health official Dolores Castillo said many victims were vendors and children. A Roman Catholic nun who just arrived on a boat was killed as she sat in the back of a car stalled in traffic while leaving the wharf. Another nun and the driver were injured, witnesses said. van about 100 yards from the site when the bomb went off. Larry Laura, 39, was drivino Police chief Supt. Isidro Lapena said initial investigations indicated the bomb was stashed in a barbecue food stall. "I ... saw people shocked, speechless, crying and just watching bodies scattered on the ground a few seconds after the blast," he said. "We think the security at the pier worked because the attackers were not able to bring the explosive inside," Lapena said. Arroyo, who chastised officials at Manila's international airport and largest mall for lax security during surprise visits last week, went on radio to urge vigilance. "We must not be intimidated," she said. "The police and the military alone cannot do the job. This is a total war requiring the full attention and resources of the entire community. By Henry C. Jackson cjjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Finding a ride home at night may be a bit easier for students now, but it will cost them. Student Senate last night Student so approved a bill that will increase the number of cars in the Saferide program by three and will frowm. STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE and will, for the first time, add a summer program. The additions to Saferide will increase student fees by $2, but students will not have to pay the increase until after the proposal clears the Board of Regents. "We realize there's a huge demand for Saferide," Aaron Jacobs, off-campus senator said. "Students need to have a safe way home. We feel by expanding Saferide more students will use it." The new cars will be used to meet increased demand on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. The summer program, which will be started on a trial basis, will run Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. Last night's bill also approved an increase in funding for Saferide advertising. Last night's bill was a longstanding project for the Transportation Board, Eric Braun, transportation chairman and a co-author of the bill, said. "I felt strongly enough about this that I've been working on it for two years." Braum said. Braun, St. Louis senior, said the Transportation Board was initially concerned about the increase in student fees. A survey in Fall 2002 changed his mind. The informal poll showed that 80 percent of students would approve of a $2 to $3 increase in student fees if it went toward expanding the Saferide program. David Mitchell, graduate senator, said though the bill's increase in student fees raised concerns, decreasing drunken driving took precedence. STUDENT SENATE Student Senate approved What happened: expansions to the Saferide program, including program, including Three new cars A summer program on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights Increased advertising for the program What it means: A $2 increase in student fees after approval from the Board of Regents "Anything Student Senate can sponsor to decrease drunk driving is a welcome step." Mitchell said. "All the student deaths related to drunk driving at KU that I can remember could have been prevented by a call to Saferide." Last night's bill passed nearly unanimously, with only one nay vote and minimal debate. Michael Roessler, graduate senator, said he voted against the bill because he was concerned about the increase in student fees. "I guess I wasn't adequately satisfied that summer usage was worthwhile," he said. "I wasn't adamantly against the bill, but I wasn't sufficiently convinced that the bill was necessary in light the tuition increase and other fee increases." Mitchell said although he voted for the bill, he would have liked more discussion of the bill. "Anytime you increase fees it's always an issue." Mitchell said. "I think Senate weighed it heavily, but it might have been better to see more debate." "This is just one step, it's not the end game," Jacobs said. Jacobs said last night's bill would be the starting point for any further increases in the Saferide program. Further additions to Saferide won't be seen until after the effects of the new cars, increased advertising and summer program could be gauged, Jacobs said. Edited by Andrew Ward Robinson arraigned on more charges HARRISONVILLE, Mo. Serial killer John E. Robinson Sr., already sentenced to death in Kansas, was arraigned Tuesday in Missouri on charges of killing two women and a teenage girl. Robinson, 59, sat silently through his first appearance in Cass County Circuit Court as Associate Circuit Judge William Collins entered "innocent" pleas for murder, fraud and forgery. Collins also scheduled a preliminary hearing May 14 for Robinson. Prosecutors have the option of presenting the case to a grand jury instead of holding the preliminary hearing, Cass County Prosecutor Chris Koster said. The Associated Press Summer at KU in KC Undergraduate Program KU Edwards Campus Gering, IL 60431 Going home to KC this summer? KU Edwards Campus The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Call (913) 897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu Enroll Today! Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. KU June 3 EAGLE Summer Semester begins June 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 Household Hazardous Waste Program City of Lawrence- We've grown. And so have our hours. NEW EXPANDED HOURS include weekday and evening hours. ALL BY APPOINTMENT. CALL 832-3030. - Household Cleaners MATERIALS ACCEPTED: - Paints and Paint Related Products - Automotive Products - Pest Control Products www.LawrenceRecycles.org Miscellaneous: Household Batteries and Mercury Thermometers I G THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 11A Jailed sex offender out on probation The Associated Press COLBY — A man jailed for six months after he was accused of videotaping girls in the shower room at Brewster High School during a volleyball tournament must spend two years on probation and complete a sex offender rehabilitation program. Adam F. Juenemann, 24, of Brewster, reached a plea agreement in the case and was sentenced last Friday in Thomas County District Court. He pleaded guilty to eavesdropping, criminal trespassing and criminal damage to property, all misdemeanors. The six months Juenemann has spent in jail will count toward the probation time. Judge Richard Ress, who also fined Juenemann $1,000, said the rehab program will have to be completed even if it extended beyond the probationaryperiod. At the request of Thomas County Attorney Allan Taylor, Ress also ordered Juenemann to pay restitution to the Brewster schools and for any out-of-pocket expenses incurred, such as counseling costs, incurred by the victims. The videotaping took place during a junior varsity tournament in September. Participants included girls from the Colby, Jennings, Brewster, St. Francis and Chevlin school districts. Coaches who identified girls on the video said more than 50 of them were taped in the shower room. Parents, coaches, school officials and students filled the courtroom for Friday's hearing. Undersheriff drops challenge to caucus The Associated Press OLATHE — A Johnson County Undersheriff has dropped his challenge to a caucus vote in which he lost his bid for sheriff by eight votes. Frank Denning said Tuesday he would not challenge the vote, despite concerns that the election did not follow established rules. He received 151 votes in last week's Republican caucus to nominate a replacement for Sheriff John Foster, who recently died. But Currie Myers, a senior agent at the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, collected 159 votes one vote more than he needed to win the March 25 caucus election. Retired state trooper Smokie Siecgrist received four votes. Of 625 Johnson County precinct leaders,317 registered to vote at the caucus and 314 ballots were counted. Denning complained that 314 ballots were cast, even though the credentials committee reported only 312 registered delegates. County Republican Chairman Andy Wollen said the committee missed five voters in its quick count to determine if a quorum was present. Gambling bill would allow track slots The Associated Press TOPEKA — A bill allowing more gambling in Kansas advanced out of a Senate committee Wednesday but faced an uncertain future because of a partisan dispute. Without endorsing it, the Federal and State Affairs Committee sent the bill to the full Senate for a vote on allowing slot machines and other electronic gambling devices at Kansas' five dog and horse tracks. Voters in the tracks' home counties and neighboring counties would have to approve. The state would receive 30 percent of the profits from the expanded gambling, although the bill had specified 20percent before a subcommittee rewrote it. Republican leaders want the Senate to debate and vote on the bill Friday and bar any further consideration of gambling. But Senate Democrats want more than one chance to get the measure passed, because lobbyists for gambling operators believe the bill will fail if it is put to a vote Friday. Expansion of gambling is a key element of a $405 million revenue package proposed last week by Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, who is seeking to balance the budget through June 2004 without raising taxes. Sebelius has said developers have agreed to pay $30 million upfront, as a credit against future taxes, for the right to operate slot machines at the five tracks and at a casino in Dodge City. The Dodge City element was not included in the bill forwarded by the committee. Republicans, who control the Senate, generally dislike the idea of staking the state's financial health partly on gambling. — coaxed the proposal out of committee to honor a GOP pledge to put Sebelius' package before the full chamber. But the Senate's top two Republicans — President Dave Kerr of Hutchinson and Majority Leader Lana Oleen of Manhattan The Senate's top Democrat, Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, accused Kerr of effectively "Xing out" an important part of Sebelius' plan by forcing an almost certain defeat of the gambling measure. Wichita State to get Welcome Center The Associated Press WICHITA — Wichita State University plans to break ground this fall on a $4.75 million center that will welcome students to its campus. The Marcus Welcome Center will house the university's admissions and scholarship offices, a 100-seat auditorium, meeting rooms and interactive displays of the university's history. It will also include a garden patio, which will overlook the school's Braeburn Golf Course. The 34,500-squarefoot center is expected to open by fall 2004. About $2.2 million in private funds has already been raised and the remaining half should be raised before the center opens, said vice president for university advancement Elizabeth King. The project will not require state funding. "This welcome center will really be the new front door to the university, welcoming prospective students to the campus, welcoming parents and welcoming friends," vice president for student affairs Ron Kopita said. The center is named for Howard and Rose Marcus, who donated $1.1 million toward its construction. Howard Marcus, a local phi lanthropist and chairman of Marcus Food Company, said he was proud to continue his family's tradition of supporting Wichita State. In the early 1970s, Marcus' parents, Sam and Milly Marcus, helped fund the Marcus Continuing Education Center, which will be razed to make room for the new center. Man indicted for 'Baywatch' fraud plan Howard Marcus said the university is "embracing the 21st century with a new vision." The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A former Kansas City man was indicted Wednesday on charges he defrauded investors by leading them to believe they were investing in a company associated with the syndicated "Baywatch" television series, U.S. Attorney Todd Graves said. David William Port, 49, now of Great Britain, allegedly defrauded investors in England, New York, California, and Utah of nearly $360,000 between October 1998 and October 2000. In the scheme, investors in the company — PCG Media were told it would produce high returns because it held worldwide syndication rights to "Baywatch," Graves said. Victims were allegedly told "Baywatch" star David Hasselhoff invested in the company and that restaurants themed after the beach drama would be taking over for the Planet Hollywood franchise, Graves said. The indictment says Port falsely told investors the company was publicly held and traded and had prominent merchandising clients, including None of the claims were true. Coca-Cola, McDonald's, Philip Morris and the U.K. Lottery. Port also allegedly misrepresented the company as financially sound and falsified a merger with the Home Gambling Network in order to convince investors to send more money, promising he would later repay the funds, Graves said. HOOPS & HYATT SPORTS BAR & GRILL HYTTOER SPORTS BAR & GRILL KU WELCOME KANSAS JAY HAWKS TO NEW ORLEANS HYATT’S HYTTOPS SPORTS BAR & GRILL IS YOUR COLLEGIATE BASKETBALL HEADQUARTERS! 4 Big Screen TVs Plus 12 Television Monitors with Satellite Feeds Outstanding Selection of Premium and Local Beverage Favorites AwardWinning Food and Service CLOSEST SPORTS BAR TO THE SUPERDOME HYATT REGENCY NEW ORLEANS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO GET A COLD ONE BEFORE THE GAME! AT LOUISIANA SUPERDOME Optional Campus Fees is now integrated with Online Enrollment. Sign up for Options during online enrollment. Optional Campus Fees Sign Up Instructions: 1. Sign In enroll & pay 2. Click Enroll and Pay 3. Click Learner Services 4. Click Academics or Finances 5. Click KU Optional Fees 6. Select your Options 7. Click yellow Save button *DO NOT CLICK ON BACK ARROW IN WEB BROWSER SLAB, BOCO, Tradition Keepers, Jayhawker Yearbook, KU on Wheels, All Sports Combo, All-Arts Package, Parking, Career Services, SUA Movie Card, Park & Ride www.ku.edu/~options All scholarship hall residents are nerds. All greek students are drunks. Resident hall students are immature. Off-campus students just don’t care. EAT SPAGHETTI. STOP STEREOTYPES. devouring our differences. Join us for a FREE spaghetti dinner April 16th p.m. at the ECM. Freshmen and sophomores from residence halls, scholarship halls, greek houses and off campus are invited. email registration and questions to sass@ku.edu include name and housing affiliation registration deadline is Thursday April 10th HURRY! ONLY 60 SPOTS AVAILABLE. hosted by students against spreading stereotypes HYATT LEGACY NEW ORLANDS Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 The Fun is a Click Away A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence Red Lion Cafe SUNDSINCE FESAL BOSSIN EMPLOYMENT sass 12A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 3 top seeds in women's Final Four The Associated Press Atlanta will have to find room for two 800-game winners. Tennessee's Pat Summitt is headed back to the women's Final Four and Jody Conradt of Texas will join her after a 16-year absence. Defending champion Connecticut and Duke also made it in a field of favorites. Connecticut, Duke and Tennessee all were No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament. Texas was a No.2 seed and got in by knocking off top-seeded LSU 78-60 in the West Regional final Tuesday night. The national semifinals will be played at the Georgia Dome on Sunday, Connecticut (35-1) meeting Texas (29-5) and Tennessee (32-4) going against Duke (35-1), which beat the Lady Vols 76-55 back on Nov. 24. Summitt, who has guided her teams to six NCAA titles, will make her 14th Final Four appearance with 820 victories, more than any Division I coach. Conradt, who has Texas in the Final Four for the first time since 1987, isn't far behind with 817 wins. Connecticut is in for the fourth straight year and will try for its third title since 2000. Duke is making its third appearance in five years. Texas will take a 17-game winning streak and an outstanding low-post duo to Atlanta. Heather Schreiber scored a career-high 32 points in the victory over LSU, while Stacy Stephens added 14 points and 12 rebounds. The Longhorns were one of the nation's most prominent programs through the 1980s. They slipped a little in the 1990s, then became a force again after Conradt gave up the athletic director's job for the women's department in 2001 and concentrated solely on coaching. Texas won the Big 12 regular season and tournament championship and hasn't lost since a 71-69 setback at Kansas State on Jan. 25. Tennessee lost badly to LSU in the finals of the Southeastern Conference tournament, but the Lady Vols had nearly two weeks to get ready for the NCAA tournament and Summitt is at her best when she has that much time to prepare. Playing its first four tournament games at home, Tennessee won by an average margin of 33.5 points.The Lady Vols advanced as the Mideast Regional champion with a 73-49 victory over Villanova, coached by Summitt's new best friend, Harry Perretta. Senior Kara Lawson has been playing with more determination than at any time in her Lady Vols career. She and another senior, Gwen Jackson, are the top two scorers, but many others have had big games this season because Summitt will rotate nine or 10 players, sometimes in the first half. Connecticut, which won the East Regional with a 73-64 victory over Purdue on Tuesday night, made it back to the Final Four in what for any other school would be a rebuilding season. The Huskies lost four starters from last season's unbeaten championship team and all were taken among the top six picks in the WNBA draft. That left UConn relying on Diana Taurasi and a group of players who had little or no previous experience, including three freshmen. Taurasi, who plays with a flair that few can match, led and the rest followed. Connecticut won its first 31 games to run its record winning streak to 70 before stumbling against Villanova in the finals of the Big East tournament, a loss that left the Huskies in shock. But they regrouped in the NCAA tournament and now they're headed for Atlanta, though Purdue gave coach Geno Auriemma's bunch a scare. UConn needed five free throws by Taurasi and four by Maria Conlon in the final 2:43 to hold off the fast-charging Boilermakers, who whittled a 22-point lead to six. Duke was ranked No. 1 until losing at home to Connecticut on Feb. 1. The Blue Devils have won 15 straight since and were winning by big margins — until getting the NCAA tournament. While Alana Beard has continued to score in the tournament she averaged 21.5 points in the first four games—her teammates have fallen off. Duke has not scored more than 66 points in any NCAA tournament game, but fortunately for the Blue Devils, their defense has been sound. They had 12 blocks and 11 steals in beating Texas Tech 57-51 to win the Midwest Regional on Monday night. Still, the Blue Devils will need more from players such as Iciss Tillis, Michele Matyasovsky and Sheana Mosch to have any success in Atlanta. Croquet, campus-style (2) John Nowak/Kansan "We're breaking ground at KU," said Andy Pull, Colfax, N.D., junior, as he putted towards the hydrant near Malott Hall. Pull and friends Derek Hanson, Oskaloosa junior, and Andy Schutter, Olathe sophomore, played croquet from the Fraser Hall front lawn to Malott Hall. Puttin' in the sun Boy Scouts play croquet. Derek Hanson putts a croquet ball toward the stairs leading past Budig Hall. Hanson and friends Andy Pull, left, and Andy Schuttler played a croquet game through campus yesterday afternoon using objects, such as hydrants and poles, as goals. Schuttler said it was a great sunny day and no one else had ever done anything like it. John Nowak/Kansan Representative plans to protest Masters The Associated Press AUGUSTA, Ga. — Martha Burk's lawyers asked a judge yesterday to override the sheriff's decision prohibiting her from demonstrating at the front gate of Augusta National during the Masters. The request comes 10 days before Burk plans to protest at the club because of its all-male membership. Burk, chair of the National Council of Women's Organizations, wants thousands of golf fans to walk by her demonstration. But Sheriff Ronald Strength says the closest Burk can legally protest is a 5-acre site just less than a half mile from the gate. A city law revised last month gives Strength broad authority to regulate protests. Burk's lawyers told a federal judge that their client was denied access to public property outside the gates because Augusta wants to protect its image — not public safety, as the sheriff has said. Burk was not at the hearing. "This is an embarrassing protest and I'm sure the city would rather it be moved up the street where there are fewer people around to see it," said Sarah Shalf, one of Burk's lawyers. Augusta officials deny blocking Burk's free-speech rights. They say the busy street in front of Augusta National is crammed with pedestrian and vehicle traffic during the tournament, making it dangerous for protesters. "It is the paramount duty of the government to provide for public safety," said Jim Ellison, an attorney for the city of Augusta. Strength has approved permits for about 900 protesters from various groups during Masters week. He testified that he never considered allowing protests at the front gate or across the street. Though Augusta's law requires permits only for groups of five or more. Strength even one protester by the gate would be too many. Burk's protest is planned for April 12, the third day of the Masters. EVERYTHING BUT ICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts "Sweet and spicy chai tea with milk" The Farnes Tailor La Prima Taza You Try Chai Latte Serving Lawrence since 1990 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE Experience Counts! SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHERS – Provide year-round instruction to children with low incidence disabilities, autism, sensory impairment, moderate to severe learning障碍. Help students develop six to eight children. Design and implement instructional programs to meet individual student needs based on a functional curriculum. High staff/student ratio with medical psychology & therapy support services provided in school. Experienced teacher assigned for training & support. Degree in Special Education & certification in MR, SMD will consider certification in BD with experience in multiple disabilities or additional special ed. cert., K-12. Competitive salary based on education & experience. Excellent employee benefits. Contact Julie Noelle for information at jnoeller@heartstart.org or submit a resume. EBOFM 8700 East 10th Street North / Wikia KS 67226 BIO 803-104-934 | f(116)346-0555 | www.hartsprings.org Construct three practice problems. Come to a place where your career can take flight. You'll be surrounded by professionals ready to help you at a moment's notice.You'll develop working relationships that feel like family.At the end of the day,you'll know you've made a difference doing what you love to do. Career Takes Flight HEARTSPRING The College of Liberal Arts & Sciences Alumni Club announces the THE COUNTY OF CLAS WEST VIRGINIA WANTED: Advisors who have given quality time and who have genuinely heiped KU students make good decisions about their educational and career goals. 2003 J. MichaelYoung Academic Advisor Award Students may nominate any faculty member in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences who advises students in the College. One award is given in each of the three divisions of the College. Recipients will be honored at a public event and will receive a cash award. Nominations due by April 10. Nomination forms available at www.clas.ku.edu or contact nlott@ku.edu The Lied Center What's Happening Next? lied.ku.edu All Tickets Half Price for KU Students! of Kansas Saturday April 5 7:30 p.m. Twyla Tharp Dance This spectacular company will perform Westerly Round, fusing classical ballet with American folk dance; Even the King; and Surfer at the River Styx. 1 Cantus, male vocal ensemble Sunday, April 6 2:00 p.m. 12 This wonderful a cappella concert will include Gregorian chants, Renaissance molets, American folk songs and African-American spirituals. It's a party! Following the concert, you are invited to stay for the Lied Center's 10th Anniversary, 2003-04 Season Announcement. For Tickets.Call 785 864 ARTS Line Arts ticketmaster University of London MADE IN UK tickets.pro STUDENT ADVANCE SENATE Upon Request THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • 13A SPORTS IN BRIEF Kansas' Collison finalist for award The Los Angeles Athletic Club announced yesterday that Kansas men's basketball senior forward Nick Collison was a finalist for the John R. Wooden Award. Collison is Kansas' leading scorer, averaging 18.6 points per game and leading rebounder with 9.6 per game. He's started all 36 games this season and scored his 1,800th point in Kansas uniform. The list, which has been been pared down from 30, had included Kansas forward Kirk Hinrich at the midseason cut. Hinrich was named to the 10-member Wooden Award AllAmerican team. The award will be presented April 12 at the Athletic Club. Ballots were not due until after the start of the NCAA basketball tournament. The selections were based on more than 1,000 votes by national media and college basketballexperts. Other finalists include T.J. Ford of Texas, Dwyane Wade of Marquette, Oklahoma's Hollis Price and David West of Xavier. Each of the five finalists will have $15,000 donated in his name to his university's scholarship fund. The Wooden committee will also present the Legends of Coaching Award to coach Roy Williams at the ceremony. -Kansan staff reports Honorary referees announced for Relays The Kansas Relays committee announced its honorary referees Monday for the 76th Kansas Relays. The men's and women's college and high school division each has its own honorary referee. iowa State men's track and field coach Steve Lynn was given the honor in the college men's division. Butler County Community College track coach Kirk Hunter received the honor in the college women's division. Mark Hanson,track coach at Blue Valley West High School in Overland Park,was named the honorary referee in the high school boy's division. Martha O'Rourke,track coach at Jenks High School, Okla., is the high school girl's honorary referee. Honorary referees have been named since the first Kansas Relays in 1923. The coaches chosen are recognized for their contributions to the sport of track and field and the Kansas Relays. "It is an honor to have them associated with the Kansas Relays as our referees for 2003," said Kansas Relays meet director Tim Weaver. "Each is respected by coaches, athletes and officials alike, making them excellent referees for a premiere event like ours." The Kansas Relays will be held April 16 to 19. Past referees include Knute Rockne, Glenn Cunningham, Bill Easton, Joe Schrag, Steve Miller and Al Oerter. — Chris Wintering Malashock CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A The wall Price speaks of is normal in the baseball world. Pitchers' arms tire. Hitters' weaknesses get exploited. Focus strays. It's natural. The toll and repetitiveness of the everyday grind of baseball will slow every sandlot squad from time-to-time. It's the response to the wall that counts. And Price got to his players fast. Yesterday, he met with his players individually. He talked goals, he issued challenges, he heeded advice and he answered questions. He wants his team on the same page heading into the meat of Kansas' Big 12 schedule. He doesn't care his team just went 1-5 to open the conference season. He won't accept seeing a head drop, or a shoulder slouch, because there is no room for that. Not now. Not when the Jayhawks next five opponents, starting this tomorrow with No. 16 Nebraska, are nationally ranked. "We just have to try and creep back into the race," Price said. "We know we're not going to win five in a row. But we do know that we can try to win each series." Aiding Price is the most explosive offensive attack at Kansas in years. Three Jayhawks — senior pitcher/designated hitter Kevin Wheeler, senior left fielder Casey Spanish and junior first baseman Ryan Baty — are hitting more than .375. Last year, no one passed 341. "I think they're so talented, three of the best players in the country," Price said. "They all have goals of playing professional and all will work hard enough to do it. I feel like we're as good as anyone in the country with the bat in our hands." Future Jayhawk teams may not need the current team's hitting clout, but it's required this year. Because the wall smacked the current pitching staff right across the face this past week. The 'Hawks allowed more than 10 runs per game the past two weeks. If crafty left-handers Wheeler and junior Ryan Knippschild can fool some hitters as they have this year, and juniors Brandon Johnson and Chris Smart can perform out of the bullpen as they've shown at times, Kansas can get by. Price can't wait to recruit a hard-throwing power pitcher, but for now, Kansas will have to get by on sheer will. Then again, there's no questioning the heart of this team. "The effort has been there from day one," Price said. "I'm so proud of these guys. They work hard, don't complain. Good things happen when you do that." Malashock is an Omaha senior in journalism. Baseball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A get on base on the offensive side of the game. "He went the entire season last year without making an error," Price said. "Almost every series he makes a plus play in the outfield, and he is just a tremendous center fielder for this club." Price said his ability to run had opened up the rest of his game. Now he is batting .300 and is second on the team in stolen bases. "I think he is as good as a leadoff hitter as there is in the Big 12 Conference," Price said. The third and final piece of the outfield is Tribble. Earlier this season, Tribble set the Kansas record for hits in consecutive games when he hit safely in 21-straight games. So far this season Tribble is batting.331 with 43 hits, three home runs and 21 RBI. Tribble is also one of only three players on the team to play in all of Kansas' games this season; Spanish and Baty are the other two. Tribble appears to have a bright future ahead as Price projects him to be a seventh- to 10th-round draft pick in next year's 50 — round Major League Baseball draft. "Tribble is a real special ballplayer. He is a guy that always plays hard, and he has a real strong arm from right field," Spanish said. "He doesn't say much because he is always so focused, and he definitely has a bright future ahead of him." As the Jayhawks prepare for this weekend's series against nationally-ranked Nebraska, Spanish, Hayes and Tribble's names will all appear in the starting lineup, with their teammates and coaching staff expecting big things from them. - Edited by Julie Jantzer POLL kansan.com for Kansas' Final Four Where would you rather be game? At the game in New Orleans In Lawrence watching in a restaurant bar or restaurant party With friends at a game-viewing game-viewing I'm not watching the game Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote. Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY TOMORROW Track at Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, all day Baseball vs. Nebraska, 7 p.m. Hoglund Ballpark Track at Texas Relays, Austin, Texas, all day SATURDAY Men's basketball vs. Marquette, 5:07 p.m., Louisiana Superdome Baseball vs. Nebraska, 2 p.m. Hoglund Ballpark Track at Texas Relays, Austin, Texas. all day Track at Emporia State Relays, Emporia, all day Softball at Texas Tech, 2.p.m., Lubbock, Texas. Tennis vs. Tulsa, noon, Robinson Outdoor Tennis Courts SUNDAY Baseball vs. Nebraska, 1 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark softball at Texas Tech, 1 p.m., Lubbock, Texas Tennis vs. Colorado, 11 a.m., Robinson Outdoor Tennis Courts Regents Court Apartments Large 3&4 BR,2 full bath apartments for rent with Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Large fully Applianced Kitchen including Microwave & Dishwasher Gas Heat & Hot Water Central Heat & Air Off street parking On KU bus route 24 hr. Emergency maintenance For m For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 Mon.-Fri. 9-5 EHO 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Campus Place APARTMENTS Walk to Campus Apartments Available for Summer 2003 2 bedroom/2 bath 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft - Private Balconies & Patios 4 bedroom/2 bath 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance Custodian Manager - Fully Equipped Kitchens - Call or stop in TODAY for private showing - Off Street Parking - Gas, Heat and Water - Fornished & Unfurnished Apt. available Thursday, April 3, 2003 Mon.-Fri.9am-5pm EHO - Steps of the application process - 7:00-8:00 pm Malott Room Kansas Union - Answers to your questions Speak Your Mind Online poll weekly at kansan.com - On-site Manager Learn about: - Pre-Law Office resources and assistance If that's your plan, don't miss this informational meeting. LAW SCHOOL IN FALL 2004? THE Questions: Wendy Rohleder 785.864.2896 wrohled@ku.edu LAW SCHOOL APPLICATION PROCESS - sponsored by the Pre-Law Society • fully equipped nutritian (dishwashers*, disposal, Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished Studios, land 2 Bedroom apartment homes. 951 Arkansas (785)749-2415 - Fully equipped kitchens (dishwashers, dishwashers) disposal INC. stove, refrigerator, microwave) TANGLEWOOD APARTMENTS - Laundry facilities on site - Within walking distance to KU campus - Telephone and cable outlets in each bedroom - Central Air - Ample off-street parking for tenants Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care - 24 emergency maintenance - On-site manager - 24 emergency maintenance We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!" 842-8665 858 Four Wheel Dr. Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 THE FRIENDS OF THE LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY ANNUAL BOOK SALE IN THE GARAGE AT 7TH AND KENTUCKY & IN THE LIBRARY GALLERY LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS Equal Housing Opportunity * Available in select units Members Night Thur, April 3...5-9 pm (Become a Member Today!) Members Night Sun.April 6.. Mon.April 7 Fri.April 4 Sat.April 5... Sun April 6. Half Price Day!...1-5 pm 10 am-8 pm 10 am-5 pm Mon.April 7. Then April 10 ...$7 bag night...5-8 pm ...5 bag night...5-8 pm Thur.April 10 Sat.April 12 ...$5 bag night. Sag night... 5-6 pm Giveaway Day...10 am-4 pm ADDITIONAL TITLES SHELVED DAILY! Includes a great selection in all categories If you need to make special arrangements because of disability, please call the Library at 843-3833. ext.123. open until 2 am • 2112 W 25 St Cheek out the tournament games on the big screens new martini list appetizers new wine list entertainment live The Lounge at Paisanos RISTORANTE color • nails • waxing • textu color • nail • waxing • textu color • nails Hair Experts Design Team 2100-BWest 25th Street •841.6886 •800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) 14A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 WEATHER + TODAY TOMORROW SATURDAY 80 46 above average temperatures 60 33 cooler 59 38 chrome for rain later TODAY 80 46 above average temperatures TOMORROW 60 33 cooler SATURDAY 59 38 chance for a late in day — TIM BUSH, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE DOCK BOYS by Scott Drummond, for The University Daily Kansan HEY PAT, HOW'S IT? AW NO! MARQUETTE IS TOTALLY GOING TO BEAT KU AND GO ALL THE WAY THIS YEAR? WHAT THE HELL IS JAY DOING? LOOKS LIKE A BELATED KU CHORE. 草莓 Rainy Day DOCK BOYS by Scott Drummond, for The University Daily Kansan HEY PAT, HOW'S IT? ALL NOT! MARQUETTE IS TOTALLY GOING TO BEAT KU AND GO ALL THE WAY THIS YEARS? WHAT THE HELL IS JAY DOING? LOOKS LIKE A BELATED KU CHOKE. HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 3) You're quick yet deliberative this year, innovative yet practical. This can be a very successful combination, especially since you're also lucky. And, of course, the better prepared you are, the luckier you'll get. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is an 8. You should be a wealthy person — you'd do so much good with the money. Allow abundance into your life by being extra generous. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 6. You're becoming more decisive, though you still have considerations. You hate rushing into things, and that's good. You're becoming more certain. Keep asking questions. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a7. Resist the urge to be impetuous. Take time to contemplate recent developments. Watch what people do, rather than just listening to what they say. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 6. Just when you thought you couldn't bear the pressure, it starts to ease. Friends are coming to your rescue. You're not alone. Leo (July 23-Aug.22). Today is an 8. New contacts you've made and data you've received can help advance your career. Don't brag, but do let the news get out to someone who'll be impressed. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 7. You've been through a few tough days. Line up a celebration. Tonight and tomorrow look good for love, and Saturday ain't bad either. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 7. Don't let your partner spend all the money without your input. Stay involved, or you'll end up paying for something you don't even like. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 6. A gentle, quiet person can teach you some valuable skills. Follow orders from a brassy type, but settle down later with one who's good at not talking. agittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is an 8. You've had time to do some serious bonding. Now, get back to work. Show that your love is true by building something solid together. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 6. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 7. You may feel as if you've been trying to convince people who already had their minds made up. Relax tonight with someone who understands you without a word being said. Try out a new idea in the privacy of your own home. Something that you've been thinking about could greatly improve your level of comfort. Get the best. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 7. Although you might be able to get by on your good looks, it really isn't necessary. You're smart, too. Prove it by taking on a challenging assignment. Crossword ACROSS 1 Dance under a pole 6 Preliminary work 11 "__ Loves You" 14 Bailiwicks 15 Sri __ 16 Blue 17 After-dinner speaker 19 Pub choice 20 Completely 21 Cut off 23 Oscar-night wheels 24 H.S. course 26 Lawyer's org. 29 Self-satisfaction 34 Gate fastener 36 Ump's cohort 37 Roast beef order 38 Bronte governess 39 Bonehead 41 Wildebeests 42 Spring shape 43 Call for help 44 Rib 45 Malaysia's capital 49 Ave. crossers 50 Designer Cassini 51 Asian sea 53 Floorboard support 56 Enrolled 60 Plus 61 New York 64 Curling surface 65 Travel course 66 Eyes flirtatiously 67 Poetic pasture 68 Fully full 69 Damp DOWN 1 Not on time 2 Pressing need? 3 Carnivore meal 4 Pesto herb 5 Bird that lays a 3-lb. egg 6 Downhill ski race 7 "Take It " (Eagles hit) 8 Blasting stuff 9 Island guitar 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. 10 Astronomical measure 11 Belgrade resident 12 Aperture 13 Wide-mouthed pitcher 18 Short note 22 Come into view 24 Jazz singer Laine 25 Knife handle 26 Smart guy? 27 Louisiana backwater 28 Open courtyards 30 Spectrum creator 31 Grandmothers, to tots 32 Pie part 33 Toadies' replies 34 Orchestral strings 39 __ of Wight 40 Magician Henning 44 Window over a 04/03/03 Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. I S L E T V A T S S P A T T R H I N E E V V I L A R T Y A O R T A R R A T A L O O P N E A R U N I O N T O L E E D S E L T R I F L E S U G A R S D I O N O R A T E T R A N S E C T S P S I A B R I D G E R A Y H A N D M A I D S T R A I N R E D S S T A B L E H A Z A R D A V I A N O L A F E C L A T S I F T A L I T B O I L M A D R E R A R E T O N I O C E A N D Y E D S L E D O K A Y S door 46 Modifies 47 Matched up 48 Encourage 52 Release 53 Hoosegow 54 As soon as 55 Suggestion 56 Plat division 57 Spanish painter 58 Western tribe 59 Irritating one 62 Extinct bird 63 Place Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, Kansan will not knowingly accept Y 100s Announcements Classified Policy 120 - Announcements 1 Drummer wanted to play for 'Joe and the Casio's'. Only rockers need apply. Call Joe, Josh or Pat 832-8784 or stop by at 501 Nigel Street Marks EWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swbell.net advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law, life SUPPORT 785/841-2345 www.hiucr.lawrence.ks.us HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 130 - Entertainment I Dance lessons, ballet.com, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 313-227 Men and Women 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted Happy Birthday 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcamp jobs.com. $$$ Search news, sports sections, find high school athletes, send referrals, earn $100 per signed referral. Unlimited earnings MoreInfo (877) BISELI $$$ ATTENTION UNDER GRADS Are you feeling overqualified and under- paid? If so, call 832-1833 and find out how you can gain real world experience and make 7500 per week this summer. versity of kansas regulation (la). All real estate agency must report to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great call Pay 806-808-0062 ext 1422 Bartender Trainees needed. BASS PLAYER Bartender trainee needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext 531. Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. Clerical national company Overland Park seeks telephone interviewers (no sales) flexible hours, computer skills a plus. PT positions. Fax resume 913-681-9706. 120 - Announcements 205 - Help Wanted Happy Birthday F1 Be a Summer Camp Counselor/Educor in Kansas! Wildwood Outdoor Education Center 45 minutes south of KO seeks qualified counselors to lead educational and recreational activities. June-August Salary DOE+room and board. All are welcome to apply WSJ/and male staff strongly needed. (913)757-4500 or wildwood@peoplestelecom.net Doormen and weekend dart bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2229 Iowa EroticIncome Com. Men & Women Earn Money in Digital and Video Modelling as Adult Entertainer 18;Only 785-554-2793 Exotic dancers, Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766 7600 or 1.785-221-5900. Experienced gymnastic, instructors needed. Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children preferred. Call Teri193-695-5554 Shipping position open immediately. $8/hr. 20 hrs/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and or resume with 3 references to EEI, P.O. Box 1304 Lawrence, KS 60044 EOE/AA Experienced Nanny wanted Wednesday day for a 3 and 4 yr. old. If interested call Madison at 830-8600. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH GYMNASTICS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865-0856 Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6:21-8:18. It's not too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campwinadu.com or complete application in staff area of www.campwinadu.com. Cruise line entry level on-board positions avail. great benefits. Seasonal/year rd. 919-323-6948 www.cruiseser.com MOVIE EXTRAS / MODES NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450 day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163 ex. 1020 Part-time morning help needed in busy doctor's office Call 749-0130 Sate Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary, students welcome and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277 9787. www.collegepro.com The Mass. St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). Interested in working with children and have a sense of humor? Raintree Montessori School, 4601 Clinton Parkway. located on 14 acres with pools, a pond and a pig named Wilbur has an opening for a classroom assistant in May (7-15:40:00, $21,000 YR), a full-time instructor for summer camp (degree required) and a late afternoon assistant (3:15-5:30, $8/hr.) now. Montessori certification not required. Experience and a sense of humor, however, are Call 843-8800. 120 - Announcements Fraternities • Sororites • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so with the program it works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. F1 205 - Help Wanted Kate seeks summer nanny for kids. 8, 12, 13 NS, own car, references, great opportunity. Overland Park, 816-943-2671. Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Leneva. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469- 5554. The Rock Springs 4-H Center is seeking applicants for 40-50 summer staff positions. Applicants must be graduating high school seniors or college students. Positions are recreation instructors, including teambuilding, horses, environmental education, rifles, trap, archery, canes, crafts and lifeguards. We also have several positions in foodservice, maintenance and custodial departments. Internships are available for those who qualify. Rock Springs offers a monthly salary and room and board. Rock Springs is a nationally recognized camp and conference center serving approximately 27,000 youth and adults each year, most during the summer. Rock Springs is located 14 miles south of Junction City, Kansas on K-157 Highway. For an application or more information you can contact me at. Rock Springs 4-H Center C O Jami Farr 5404 West Hwy-K-157 Junction City, KS 68441 785 - 257-3211 jarn@rocksprings.com Don't forget the 20% student discount when placing a classified. With proof of KUID 20% student discount TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS HAVE FUN- MAKE & $ Openings in ALL TEAM & IN- DIVIDUAL SPORTS ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS Camp/Hike, Roes/Rock Climbing, Ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Secre- taries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM BOARD/LAUNDRY Travel allow- ance ONLINE APPLICATION: www.campcobbossee.com or call: (800) 473-6104 Youth Director Beth EI Synagogue (Minneapolis, MN) is seeking a youth director Responsible for programming and administration associated with the youth department (5th-12th grades). Bachelors degree and experience working with teenage youth required. Experience in a similar environment a plus. Staff supervisory training skills, leadership training skills, and strong organizational and programming skills needed. Send resume to Search Committee. Attention: Richard Glassman, 701 Fourth Avenue South, Suite 500, Minneapolis, MN 55415; or rglassmanlaw@atlb.com. After-Class workout. First-Class pay. FedEx Ground Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 - Weekly paycheck - Tuition Assistance - $.25 raise every 90 days for a year - 3-5 hour shifts - 5 days a week - $10-11/hr starting pay - $100 new hire bonus - paid vacations and holidays - Need ability to load, unload,and sort packages. % Find it, Sell it, Buy it in the Kansan Classifieds THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 15A 205 - Help Wanted --- Help Wanted - Camp counselors wanted for best summer camp in Midwest. Apply online, www.midwestsummercamps.com. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7480, evenings. Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon; 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Resp. incl: Assisting patrons, produc multimedia, maint, library records and materials, computer config/troubleshooting and many special projects. Req. quals: excellent customer service, computer & A/V equipment experience, excel, communication skills. $6.50/hr. 15-25 hrs/wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For info call 864-4785. Deadline April 11, 2002. Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistants! Hiring Teacher's Aid. 1-6 afternoons. Days may vary. Also hire any hours for fall. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 M Michigan, 841-2185 Home Helpers Inc. seeks companion for delightful elderly clients. Part time flexible hours, and excellent pay for honest, personable, employee. Call Julie, 331-5850. *Attention Loren please call* X 305 - For Sale S Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3232 ex. 4565. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance, $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 325 - Stereo Equipment Car Stereo Equip. for Sale. New Alpine-MRD-M500 -3300 obo *w*. New Alpine-MRV-M240 -3300 obo *w*. 2-10* JL Audio W0/w box. $150. obo 2-10* Rockford Fogseat HE2 w/box. $150. call 875.840-6294 330 - Tickets for Sale ADMIT ONE ADMIT ONE ADMIT ONE All NCAA Final Four tickets for sale, call (517) 351-1992 or order online at www.jameshtheticketman.com 400s Real Estate A FINAL FOURTICKETS http://www.studiplayground.com studiplayground@aol.com 1-888-534-7590 Wanted 2 Lower Level Tickets to Men's Final Four Basketball Game in New Orleans. Call 913-486-5845. 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 bedroom at Tuckaway, Washer/dryer, fitness room, TV, fireplace, hot tub, alarm system, overlooks pool. Ask about apartment N7. Available June 1. Call 818-3377 High Pointe 2BR 1BA available now, W/D, DW. Fitness Center, pool. On KU bus route. $730/mo. 2001 W. 6th St. 841- 8468 1-1 BR Apt. Next to Campus Avail. Aug 1. 1346 Ohio. $490 per month. Utilities paid. Call 550-0426 Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. W/D hookup. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR. 3 BA town- houses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closes, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patio, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas, 843-4090. CLOSE TO CAMPUS, Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom. 1 bath duplex. $870. 900 Block Michigan.Call 843-4090. Avail. Aug: Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi, Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pants $450, Cal:341-1074. 405 - Apartments for Rent CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Avail, June or Aug. Studio 1, 2, and 3 BR apt. In renovated older houses. Walk to KU or downtown, wood floors, window A/C; ceiling fans. De clawed cats welcome with pet rent and deposit. $370-1,050 for a tour call841-1074. Available Aug 10 small studio apt in renovated older house. Wood fittings, ceiling fans, window AC, antique tub. 7th and Ohio No pets. $370. Call 841-1074. Available Aug small modern 2 BR apt in renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, central AC, DW, WD hook-ups, small fenced yard, declawed cats or dogs under 20 lbs and over 2 yrs old. With pet rent and deposit $650. 13th and Vermont Call 841-1074. Moving to Wichita? working an internship. Quality Apartments Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studios and 1 bedrooms. Start at $285 & $295 Amidon Place Apt. 2727 Amidon. 830-8302 Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice remodeled 1 BR close to campus, quiet mature building. Gas, water are paid. No pets, no smoking. Starting $400,841-3192. Avail. Aug. Nice 2 B apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C. 10th & NY no pets. $520 Cal 841-1074. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paint ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 24th between Naismith On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841.5533 SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic on 8th St.) Luxurious 2,3,&4 - Garages; w/d Hookups - Bedroom Townhomes - Microwave Ovens - Some with Fireplaces - Some with Fireplaces - On KU Bus Route - Swimming Pool MON - FRI 10-12 & 1-5 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 - Washer/Dryer - Fireplace - Swimming Pool * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 THE LEGENDS L BRAND NEW www.firstmanagementinc.com FULLY FURNISHED 2,3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE 6th & Iowa (785) 856-5800 4101 WEST 24TH PLACE home from the Alameda Country Club LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 405 - Apartments for Rent NESTLE ENERGY WAREHOUSE Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. 9355-1050, NO PETS: 841-5533. Great 3BR's Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances; ample parking on-site laundry. Call 843-4090. 3 BR apts, FP skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD wook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Call 785-748-9807 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. New! 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo. plus deposit. Call 530-4148 3BR Apts. in nice house Close to KU and Downtown. Hrdwd Flrs. Free WID use. Off street parking $630-673, 841-3633 / BR house, 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown. $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Gall 505-0426 1.2.3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. Available August 1st, 841-6254 1. 2.3, & 4 BR apls available, for summer and fail. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus rie, laundry facility, Call 843-0011. Courtside Townhomes Beach towk - Washer/Dryers - Dishwasher - Microwave - Gas Fire Places - Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. Canyon Court For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway 4100 Clinton Parkway 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Brand New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing for Spring 2003 - 1,2,3 Barm * Warber/Dryer - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool & Hot Tub - Fitness Center - Basketball Court - High Speed Internet Connections * Security Systems Available * Small Mobile Welcome - Garages Available 842-3280 MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT - Single Family Homes - Duplexes - Townhomes - Apartments - Condos - 1, 2, 3, 4..Bedrooms Call today. 841-4935 We have something for you. www.masterplapmanagement.com MASTERCRAFT Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-241 19th & Mass·749-0445 Regents Court ♦ NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Equal Housing Opportunity SCHOOL 405 - Apartments for Rent Regency. Place. 2 BR available now. Walking distance to campus 1301 Louisiana. Water paid, no pets. $590/mo. 841-848. Now signing YR. Leases starting May June/July Aug. No smoking beds. Extr nice, well-leaved 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/month. Spanish Civet Crep. 841-8688. Save Your Money! 3 BR apts. 1_1/2 BA, FP, skylights. 1 car gear, all appliances. W/D仓库 up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath, W/D, fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/opener, no pet. Sublease 6-1/7-31 $650, 766-5080 1 BR apt for sublease, avail; June 1st; opt. lease for fall. Across from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month; water/ trash paid. Pet names. Elizabeth. B34-8944 earth up Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes Washer/Dryers* *Dishwasher* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Fire Places* *Ceiling Fans* Come enjoy a townhouse community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net COMMONS PARKWAY Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - Fitness Center - Washer/Dryer - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool - Basketball Court 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 360 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Models Open Daily 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790"savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com A Aval. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt, DW, CA, micro, inlandy, on site. 384 BR 2 BA 900R, 4B8 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841-5533 www apartmentinnawrence.com 1712 OHIO 2 BR! / BA near campus. Available immediately or for summer!! Call 913-219-4642 or 785-550-1116. 2. 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169. 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. St.,$415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 100 Now Leasing for Fall Blue Mosa Management Inc Apartment & Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Now Leasing for Fun Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes Blue Moon Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5290 W. 15th. Suite 101 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 *Washer & Dryer *Fully Equipped Kitchen *Serving Bar 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment - OffRo Busshouts • Indoor/OutdoorPool COLONY WOODS 1301 W, 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@ixks.com 1&2Bedrooms 1301 W. 24h & Naismithi 842-5111 colony@kkks.com colony.woods.com - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 CHASE COURT 1 & 2 Bedroom Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome Model Open Daily! www.firstmanagementinc.com HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEARNING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 NICE, QUET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSSES PATIO/BALCONY ON GATE MANAGEMENT 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MONDAY-9 NO. LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME Need a place to live next year? LeannaMar Townhomes - full size washer/dryer - approx. 1600 sq feet - paid cable (ext. basic) Williams Pointe Townhomes 410 - Condos For Rent - 1421 sq feet - full size washer/ dryer - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 ٣٠٤ Very nice condo. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Ealt at 841-4470. 415 - Homes For Rent ... 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. W/D hookups; FP, vaulted ceiling, and garages small pet welcome. Call 842-3280. 3-4 BR Houses. Some close to KU. Hirdwd firs. Free WD use. Off street parking: $695 $895 841-3633 430 - Roommate Wanted Available June or Aug 3 BR older house. 15th and New Hampshire, Wood floors, central AC, ceiling fans, DW, WD hook-ups, large closets, fenced yard, declawed cats, and dogs under 20 lbs. With pet rent and pet deposit. Discounted dramatically for June and July. Starting Aug. $1050. Call 841-1074. 2 roommates wanted for house across from campus. W.D. AC. $250/month each. Available 6:11 Call:832-7340 or 218-6543 2 keys Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2 unit Avail 842-4540 Roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apt. for fall sublease. Lots of extra amenities $318/month plus utilities. Call 218-0543. 440 - Sublease house key 1. bedroom apartment wanted to suplease for the summer. Call Amy at 812-2650. 1 bedroom apartment. 16th & Tennessee. Available May 1st. Rent negotiable. Call Kristen at 393-1549 2 BR's avail, after finals at Jefferson Commons for summer. May rent already paid for. Rent negotiable. Most utilities paid. W/D, cable, pool, room weight, furnished. Call Ask or Hayley. 785-841-1797. 733 Arkansas, 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 story duplex. Just doors down from Louise's West. Avail June 1. Call Aaron at 312-915-8261. Brand New Duplex1 3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD, 2 car garage. Available May 1st - July 31st. 751-842-4279. PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has Full private BA. 749-6060 Room for rent of 3 BR apt, in Tuck-away avail, for summer, quiet setting, pool. Call Jonathan asap at 218-3548. Sublease avail. now: 3 BR 3 BA at Jefferson Commons. Free month's rent, Cable, Internet, W.D. fully furnished. Some util. paid $370/mo. Call Pat: 913-526-6005. Sublease Now. Avail, with option to renew. 2 floor, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Close to campus. Furn. In interested, call DJ218-6100. Summer sublease. 30 W. 18th Street. 4 bedroom. 2 bath. Good landlord. Nice front porch. 785-979-9617 or 816-213-0061. 500s Services 505 - Professional ... Term Paper Editing! Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 866-869-6371 510 - Child Care Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Ace 842-2233. Kansan Ads Work For You Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 16A THURSDAY,APRIL 3,2003 Jayhawks lose in spite of effort By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Forget the Kansas softball team's troubles with the Big 12 Conference. Yesterday afternoon, Wichita State of the Missouri Valley Conference proved it was all the Jayhawks could handle and a little bit more. After sweeping visiting No. 23 Kansas 8-2 and 4-3, the Shockers (25-11) got the Wichita State tallied 12 runs in the first game. This time it was Kansas, a team known for its home run power, that threw bad pitches leading to out-of-the park blasts. attention of the Jayhawks (21-11) and showed they could wave their own wheat. Freshman Allison Horst added a home run in the sixth inning, which added extra insurance, as Wichita State tacked on three more runs during the inning. home runs with 28. Still in the midst of the Wichita State offensive extravaganza, Kansas freshman second baseman Jessica Moppin hit another home run, her 10th of the year, in the fourth inning. She finished the game going 2-for-3. Kansas junior pitcher Kara Pierce took Shocker senior Jody Lupo hit a homer in the second inning as part of a four-run inning that ripped the game wide open. The home run broke the Wichita State school record of single-season team The second contest had a much better start for the Hawks. After a walk, a wild pitch and a barrage of singles, Kansas started the game scoring two runs in the first. 2023.11.25 星期四 the loss, dropping her to 13-7 on the year thegainsscoringtwo After freshman catcher Melaney Torres scored via a walk and a stolen base in the third, Kansas led 3-1 in the middle of the third. Wichita State, with an array of singles of its own, tied the game 3-3 in the bottom of the third. The defining moment of the game came in the bottom of the fifth. With the bases loaded, Wichita State senior Audrey Walters scored after freshman Julie Darling was hit by a pitch from Kansas senior Kirsten Milhoan. Milhoan fell to 8-4 overall. Next up for Kansas is a two-game weekend trip to play Texas Tech at 4 p.m. Saturday in Lubbock. - Edited by Julie Jantzer Upgrades, repainting to benefit Relays By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas Relays is one of the biggest track and field meets in the country, and now it is going to look like it. During the past four months, crews have worked to renovate the area in and around Memorial Stadium for the 76th Kansas Relays, which will be held April 16 to 19. "With the setting at the foot of the Campanile hill, the MegaVision video board and the amenities of Memorial Stadium, we have many natural advantages over other meets," said Kansas Relays Meet Director Tim Weaver. The improvements include renovating the throwing field adjacent to Memorial Stadium and repainting the track This is the first time since the new surface was laid down during the fall of 1999 that the Hershberger Track has been repainted. The fields adjacent to the east side of Memorial Stadium have been completely redesigned and now feature two concrete, curbed shot put areas, a regraded field and a new hammer throw and discus cage. "The restriking of the track has made a tremendous difference that everyone who enters the stadium will immediately notice." Weaver said. "It looks like a brand new surface." The renovations were made possible by the donations of the Ash Grove Charitable Foundation and several track and field alumni. Kansas track and field and cross country coach Stanley Redwine said he was thankful to these foundations. "These facilities' improvements are yet another way that the Kansas Relays help the track teams recruit national-caliber athletes and give them first-rate training venues when they get here," Redwine said. Scrimmaging for confidence SCHULKE Edited by Todd Rapp Brandon Baker/Kansan Above: Dan Coke, Moore Haven, Fla., running back, and Ronnie Amadi, Alief, Texas, defensive back, practice defensive plays. Coach Mangino said the defense was beginning to understand its role. Right: A football player takes a moment for a drink to cool himself during football practice. The team practiced yesterday as part of its spring-season training. 10 By Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com Kansan sportwriter Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan The Jayhawks' third open practice resulted in their first 11-on-11 scrimmage, as the team split to give fans their first look at a true game simulation. With uniformed referees calling the game, coach Mark Mangino focused his offense and defense on making plays in goal-line situations. "We just wanted to put them in a tough spot, have them face adversity and see how they fight through it." Mark Mangino Kansas football coach "What we wanted to do was put our offense in a situation where the pressure was on them to get the ball in the end zone, and we wanted to put pressure on our defense to keep them out of the end zone," Mangino said. "That's an area of our game on both sides of the ball we need to improve from last year." Mangino said he also Mangino said he also wanted to see how his team would respond to a challenge. lenge. "We just wanted to put them in a tough spot, have them face adversity and see how they fight through it," Mangino said. said. The team had a scare early in the scrimmage when tight end Lyonel Anderson, after making a sliding catch, received a hard hit from defensive back Ronnie Amadi. Anderson stayed down for a few minutes but was able to walk off unassisted. He later returned to practice. Before the scrimmage, Mangino spent much of his time instructing the offensive and defensive lines. With starters Justin Sands, Ton Damiani and Greg Nicks graduating in May, the offensive line is looking to gain experience during spring practices. "We're really getting a little bit more confidence on the offensive line," Mangino said. "We have to just continue to stay the steady course." The coach said it would take time for the new players to become accustomed to each other. "The offensive line is a position that takes awhile to develop and get a continuity because it's the only place on the field where you have five guys right next to each other," Mangino said. "There's no place else on the field like that, so you need to get that chemistry and you need to get everybody on the same page." On the other side of the ball, the defensive line continues to learn the defensive system. Mangino said the defense was beginning to understand its responsibilities better but had room for improvement. "We're not where we need to be just yet in that area," Mangino said, "but I think they're progressing well." Edited by Todd Rapp Veteran outfielders lead team By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com kansan writer kansan writersport Price will not shy away from talking about the talent and ability that his team has in the outfield. He starts three upper-classmen — seniors left fielder Casey Spanish and center fielder Lance Hayes, and junior right fielder Matt Tribble. Kansas baseball coach Ritch Price has been around the sport for a long time and has a good judge of talent and ability when it comes to college baseball players. So far this season, all three members are batting more than 300 with Spanish leading the way with a 409 batting average. Spanish is leading the team in runs scored and is tied with junior first baseman Ryan Baty for most hits on the club with 52. Bay for most men this year. "This is Casey's first year in the outfield, and he has adjusted real well," Hayes said. "At the plate, he is a phenomenal hitter who has been consistent all year for us, and whenever we need a clutch hit, he gets the job done for us. Last season, Spanish failed to reach the .300 mark at the plate and finished the season batting .291. This season, Spanish has already surpassed his production in hits, triples, home runs and runs batted in. Also last season, Spanish started the season at shortstop, which is what he played in high school, moved to first base, and at the end of the season, he played a few games at second base. Hayes' numbers are also up from last year. This year the senior from Mesquite, Texas, is batting .311 through 34 games. Last season, Hayes, the team's leadoff hitter, finished the season with a .252 batting average. Price said he was most impressed with Hayes' ability to make plays in the outfield, then find a way to Yankees 21 SEE BASEBALL ON PAGE 13A Scott Reynolds/Kansan Casey Spanish, senior left fielder, steals second base in the bottom of the second inning. Spanish connected for two base hits as the Jayhawks beat Southwestern Missouri State 12-7 Tuesday night at Hoglund Ballpark. Baseball team hits wall, struggles to keep energy The Kansas baseball team knew it would come back to earth sooner or later. Come back to how a rebuilding college baseball team with a new coach should play ball. But for a while, almost 30 games, Kansas could do no wrong. The Jayhawks swept nationalpower Louisiana State. They had players named national player of the week three times. They ascended to a multiple-week stay in several national polls. They became a Kansas sports topic of conversation other than Roy's boys during the spring not an easy feat. But then, last week, Kansas struggled in being swept at Missouri to open its Big 12 Conference schedule. Reason for panic? No way, said first-year coach Ritch Price. Not even after the lav Ryan Malashock rmalashock@kansan.com SPORTS COMMENTARY hawks dropped two more Big 12 games this past weekend before breaking into the victory column against Oklahoma State, 10-8 Monday afternoon. "I think that we've overachieved a bit to start the season," Price said. "We've got to keep in mind, we're 23-11. That's unbelievable. But we have hit a wall." SEE MALASHOCK ON PAGE 13A Lawrence caught on Film p.8 "STARRING MICHAEL JACKSON BLAZE" A MUSICAL BY HOLLY WOODS AT THE MONROE AVE. CINEMAS IN BOSTON AND NEW YORK STORYLINE FILM PRESENTED BY AMC LANTERN STUDIO, 230 EAST 14TH AVENUE, BOSTON, MA 02210 JACKSON'S DREAMS & DEVOTIONS STORYLINE FILM PRESENTED BY AMC LANTERN STUDIO, 230 EAST 14TH AVENUE, BOSTON, MA 02210 THE ORIGINAL SONGS OF BLAZE STORYLINE FILM PRESENTED BY AMC LANTERN STUDIO, 230 EAST 14TH AVENUE, BOSTON, MA 02210 A CINEMATIC COMPOSITION BY MICHAEL JACKSON AT THE MONROE AVE. CINEMAS IN BOSTON AND NEW YORK STORYLINE FILM PRESENTED BY AMC LANTERN STUDIO, 230 EAST 14TH AVENUE, BOSTON, MA 02210 DENVER WASHINGTON "THE SCREENS UP!" "BORN TO FIGHT AT THE BEST" HE GOT GAME THE FEEL GOOD MOVIE Or The Year! Julia Roberts in Erin Brockovich Based on true events The screenplay is written by Julianne Bennett. The cast is based on the true story of a teenage girl named Erin Brockovich. CHIPS WHOOOP! IS HILARIOUS! STORIE SCORES! The Story of Jerry Seinfeld to the rise of a movie star. EEDDIE JOHN MAYON ROADING BRAVE WHOOP! "IS HILARIOUS!" The Village Voice "The Brave People of the World" Mary Lou Williams "Fairy Tale Music" "THE TRUNGLE UP" "BOOZEIL, WAGINGER AT NO END" HE GOT GAME 2 * THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN INSIDE THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 Jayplay The University Daily Kansan 3 Trends Find out why some students are mad about herbs 3 Live music calendar Where to go, what to do 4 Trends Spacers gain popularity 5 Trends Making your own alcohol is often cheaper 6 Trends Flush plays host to first fashion show 7 Sex What to do when your loved one cheats 10 Music Aaron Passman reviews the SUA-sponsored concert in the Kansas Union 8 Cover Find out Lawrence's ties to Hollywood 11 Eat This Warm weather brings a new season for spring recipes 12 Film Paltrow doesn't measure up in her latest venture 13 Movies Around Town What's playing and where 14 Video games Robotech requires defensive strategy 15 Tongue in Beak Dr. Seuss' most lovable dryad makes pleas against smogulous smoke THE UNIVERSITY DANIEL KANSAN - 3 8 Lawrence in Hollywood Find out all of the connections Lawrence and KU have to Tinseltown Coming next week... - Jayplay staff writer Neil Mulka gives you all the details about Lawrence's street performers Tell us your news Contact Brooke Hesler at bhesler@kansan.com Cover illustration Donovan Atkinson LADIES' NIGHT TONIGHT ONLY AT: sports • music darts • billiards JACK FLANIGANS Bar and Grill $1.50 U-CALL-IT 18 TO ENTER, 21 TO DRINK LOCATED ON 27RD STREET BEHIND MCDONALD'S SAKAROFF'S the salon Voted “Best Salon on the Hill” by students head GAMES GRAHAM WEBB Nolita 12 E 8th St. • 841-4247 THURSDAY, APRIL3, 2003 TRENDS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3 Fresh herbs add health,spice to meals By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Fresh herbs are a way for students to spice up bland meals while adding a healthy component to their diet. And they can be grown in the comforts of apartments or residence hall rooms. Herbs are durable plants that require little care but provide a big taste to your bland college meals. While some students don't cook with fresh herbs because they are costly, shelling out a few extra dollars doesn't bother Lauren Collar, Overland Park junior. "I buy fresh herbs at the Merc quite a bit — I buy lots of basil," Collar said. "Fresh herbs have a richer flavor, and I don't mind the cost." Because small herb plants are lowmaintenance they can thrive in the windowsill of a residence hall room. Anita Vail, employee at Pines Howard Garden Center and Green Houses, 1320 N. Third, said the easiest herb "Fresh herbs are good for you entire body. They are good for your heart, they help lower your blood pressure,and they are also good for you mind." Nit McComas Thai Chef at Zen Zero, 811 Massachusetts Street plants to care for were mint, oregano and sage. They need 10 to 12 hours of sunlight daily and a bit of water. "Most people water them too much," Vail said. "Allow them to dry a little between watering—they shouldn't be soggy. Besides adding life to your home, fresh herbs can really add some zing to the average college diet. Nit McComas, Thai Chef at Zen Zero, 811 Massachusetts Street, adds fresh herbs to almost all of her dishes. Not only does she value the extra taste, McComas said that fresh herbs were essential to a healthy lifestyle. "Fresh herbs are good for you entire body," McComas said. "They are good for your heart, they help lower your blood pressure, and they are also good for you mind." Though some students include fresh herbs in their diet to better their lifestyle, others include them just to have a good time. The mojito, a popular alcoholic drink that's made with dark rum, soda water, lime juice and fresh mint leaves, is becoming increasingly popular. Ryan McGilley, Cleveland senior, said he would try the herbal concoction. "Mint has an aromatic and soothing quality, and I like rum," McGilley said. Fresh herbs add that extra zing to your diet. From pasta to rum, fresh herbs can turn bland ingredients into award-winning dishes. Remember, a little goes a long way. Edited by Brandon Gay Osage Gardens Inc. Photo illustration by Dan Nelson/Kansan Some herbs, like these at the Merc grocery store at 9th and Iowa, can also be grown at home. CALENDAR TODAY Floyd The Barber, 7 p.m. at Pachamama's The Soundtrack of Our Lives, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck Griffin / Gang of Fours at the Jazzhaus In Kansas City... Poncho Sanchez at Gem Theatre The Supertones / Relient K / Pillar / John Reuben / Sanctus Real, 7 p.m. at The New Earth Coffee House Two-Thirty Eight / The Autumn State / Cheating Kay, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Wolf Eyes / Neil Burke at Your Face Shandon Sahm / The Litigators, 9 p.m. at Grand Emporium - Stacey Earle / Mark Stuart at Davey's Uptown Eye Theory / Pull / Lareado, 10 p.m. at The Hurricane TOMORROW Papa Roach / Non Point / Reach 464,7 p.m. at Liberty Hall Mark Gottschall, 6 p.m. at Pachamama's Big Smith at The Bottleneck The Bel Airs at the Jazzhaus Steve Fonseca Comedy Showcase, 10:30 p.m. at Duffy's Lounge, Ramada Inn Tullamore with bagpipers from K.C. St. Tavern Key / Sounds Good, 10 p.m. at Fatso's Smith Brothers, 9 p.m. at Stu's Midtown Tavern In Kansas City... The Vines / The Music, 8 p.m. at Uptown Theater Sound Transmission / Supraluxx / Gutbunny at Davey's Uptown Ross Christopher, 8 p.m. at Borders Bookstore, 91st and Metcalf streets Truth Cell / Given With Honor, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Neil Burk "Sinking Body" at Your Face. The Grand Fiasco / Floodplane, 9 p.m. at Grand Emporium Thunderhead — A Rush Tribute at The Hurricane Kathy Troccoli at Kemper Arena SATURDAY Love Squad / Leave / The Daybirds at The Bottleneck Andrew Ripes & Dumbie, 10 p.m. at Johnny's Back Fordb Blues Band 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. No Lessons / Javier Mendoza / Jeff Kanterman at Abe & Jake's Landing Twyla Tharp Dance, 7:30 p.m. at Lied Center The Band That Saved the World at the Jazzhaus Greg Brown / Karen Savoca at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union Midtown Tavern Battlefest Finals (Session II), 9 p.m. at The Pool Room In Kansas City... Vibralux at The Brick Steep Cannon Rangers, 8 p.m. at Davey's Uptown Honky Tonk Chateau / Lust-R-Tones / Pendergast, 10:30 p.m. at Davey's Uptown Princess Superstar / Mac Lethal / DJ BeeCan, 9 p.m. at The Hurricane - Brave Combo New CD Release Party, 9 p.m. at Grand Emporium SUNDAY Cantus, 2 p.m. at Lied Center Aislers Set / Hella / The Quails, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... Ramona Quimby, 3 p.m. at Folly Theater The Love, Peace & Soul of Poetry, 8 p.m. at Uptown Theater MONDAY Delgados / Aerogramme / Nameless# Headman, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... Brodiokie at The Brick Brother Ike's Rural Grit Happy Hour, 6 p.m. at Grand Emporium TUESDAY Aislers Set / Murder by Death, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck No Lessons / Another Day at Granada Theatre In Kansas City... Beerzone / The Skags / Brass Knuckle Choir / Hot Plate, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Julio Iglesias, 8 p.m. at Ameristar Hotel & Casino Nonetheless, 7 p.m. at YahWeh Cappucinno House Club Wars Invitational Round feat. Shiver / Hydrafader / Penumbra, 9 p.m. at Grand Emporium Sound Transmission at Grand Emporium WEDNESDAY Rise Against the Arrivals, 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck Tone Loc / Dru Money / Miss Dezz, 8 p.m. at Abe & Jake's Landing Kansas City... Electric Eel Shock / Pixel Panda/ An Emergency, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Savoy Brown feat. Kim Simmonds at Grand Emporium - Jason Boland and the Stragglers at Davey's Uptown Broken Cowboys at Beaumont Club 4 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TRENDS THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 Stretching quickly gains popularity By Marissa Stephenson mstephenson@kansan.com Javplay staff writer Stretching is attractive to students despite some of the risks involved. Elijah Moore, Dodge City senior, says the question he gets asked the most about his spacer is whether it hurts. He got the piercing more than a year ago and said he hadn't had problems with it. Plugs, gauges, talons, eyelids, spools barrels, spacers all of these terms are used to describe the jewelry in a stretched piercing. The popularity of stretching is growing, and more and more often on campus and in cities across the country, you can find people stretching out their piercings to accommodate a variety of plastic, metal and alabaster jewelry. Mary Brennan, professional piercer at Freaks on Broadway, 4037 Broadway Kansas City, Mo., said stretching originated in ancient tribes in New Zealand Australia and Africa. "It started around the same time period and for the same reason — it was a way to show rank within the tribe," Brennan said. "The higher your rank, the larger the hole, or gauge, in your ear." Brennan said she thought the popularity of stretching came to North America through the spirituality of Hinduism. "It was picked up through Hinduism, which holds the idea of bringing your body to a higher level by altering it," Brennan said. Brennan said the popularity of stretching had grown in the past five years, bringing it from the underground to the mainstream. "It's very hard to keep certain sizes in," Brennan said. "It seems like everyone started about the same time, because we're always running out of the same gauge sizes at the same time." Elijah Moore, Dodge City senior, said gauge sizes could range from a 10 gauge all the way to a 000. The smaller the number size, the bigger the gauge, or hole, in your ear. "Once you get past a 000, it goes into diameter sizes, 1/2-inch or a 1-inch gauge for example," Moore said. Moore's ears are at a 1/2-inch gauge right now, a size he said took him five to six months to get to. "You have to start out small, usually with a 10 gauge, then gradually taper your ears to the size you want," Moore said. He said a general rule was to wait three weeks to a month before one tried to increase the size so the skin had plenty of time to harden and heal. Brennan said stretching involved taking a taper (in the shape of a cone), which slides through the hole of the piercing to stretch it open, then the jewelry slides in after. The jewelry comes in a vast variety. Brennan said the current popular item was eyelids hollow metal rings. "With the eyelids, you can see right through the person's ear," Brennan said. "People like to wear them because it's easier to tell what size they're up to." Brennan and Moore both caution against stretching a piercing too fast. Trying to jump over sizes to get to a higher gauge can be painful and dangerous. "If you try to jump sizes you can blow out your ear, roll the skin out, create scar tissue and cause bleeding," Moore said. "As long as you taper correctly, it really doesn't hurt at all." "I thought I was going to a professional piercing parlor — they tried to take me from a 0 to a 1/2 inch, which is jumping about six sizes. It completely tore my ears," Lawson said. Joy Lawson, Olathe sophomore, knows the pain of jumping sizes. Lawson wears 3/8-inch plugs, solid pieces in the ear and says she has a different reason for wearing them. "Lots of people wear them because they think they look cool. I wear them because I saw them used in religious rituals, and I'm a religion major," she said. "It seems to be a predominately guy thing to do, probably because it isn't deemed attractive on girls, but I also think it's a way to show you're part of an alternative counter-culture." Lawson said she frequently received comments on her ears, along with her 16 other piercings. "I have a lot of piercings, so I think that draws more attention to my plugs," she said. "People always ask if it hurts or to see the hole, or they'll ask if I punched out the hole myself." With all her piercings, Lawson said it took her around 21/2 hours a week of cleaning maintenance. "I don't have to worry about my earplugs as much as other parts I have pierced," Lawson said. "I know I need to clean them if they start smelling like dirty belly buttons." Moore said he thought the smell was probably the worst side effect of having plugs. "Anytime you have a foreign object in your body, you're going to get a reaction," he said. "With this it happens to be a creamy, gross, pimple-like juice that smells like ass. You just have to make sure to keep them clean and you'll avoid." Moore suggested cleaning with soap and warm water. Brennan said that ears weren't the only body part that could be stretched to fit gauge sizes. Tongues, nostrils, nipples and cartilage also can be stretched for body jewelry. "Basically anything that you can pierce, you can stretch and increase the gauge," Brennan said. Darren Welch, Tonganoxie sophomore, said he would avoid going past a six gauge. "IIf go to law school, I'll have to take out all of my piercings," Welch said. "And I don't want to worry about a hole that could be permanent." Brennan said if one didn't want the holes anymore, it was best to size back down in the same steps one took to size up. "The safest way is to gradually go backwards in size," Brennan said. Lawson said she planed on staying at her current gauge. "I got up to a 1/2 inch, and they were huge. My ears sagged," Lawson said. "I wanted to go back down in respect for my parents and my future job." them clean, and you'll avoid the car fume $^{29}$ [Authorized by Julie Jantzer] THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2003 DRINK THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 5 Home brewing fun pastime By Lindsey Ramsey and Terry Cox lramsey@kansan.com and tcox@kansan.com Jayplay staff writers Alcohol may factor into the free time of many college students, but Timothy Bush has an advantage in that regard—he makes his own. The Englewood, Colo., senior began fermenting his own wine early last semester. "I think it first started with my dad," Bush said. "When I lived in upstate New York, my dad grew grape vines in our back yard and during the fall my friends and I would have fights with the grapes, so my dad never got to make any wine." Bush decided to relate what his dad had taught him to what he could learn at KU. "My freshman year, I took a class here called Microclimatology," he said. "Being an atmospheric sciences major, I was able to relate a lot of what I was studying to vineyards." Bush also took the opportunity to thoroughly learn about his love of wine when he went to work at a vineyard during last summer. "My primary job was to work with the vines and learn how to properly take care of them," Bush said. He learned a great deal about the process and some of the techniques the owners use, he said. "Plus I got paid to drink wine and talk with people from all over the country." With all the experiences Bush had gained working at the vineyard, he decided to try to make some wine of his own. He has made types of wine such as semi-dry Riesling, Pinot Noir, and is now in the process of making an apple wine. "The important thing to remember is it is a hobby," he said. Bush said it usually took one day, but the final product won't be ready for several weeks to several months. "It's also very expensive, so just when I have saved enough, it's about time to make another batch," he said. While the wine aged, Bush and his friends could not wait to taste the finished product. With the experience Bush has gained from bottling his wines now, he hopes to one day open a winery of his own. "You take great pride in something that takes months to perfect. I think many go out and drink and never think about where it comes from. I think the more you know about it, the more you enjoy it." Paul Vincent, Lawrence student, recently started brewing his own beer about a year ago. "A friend of mine makes his own wine, and got me interested," he said. I'm more of a fan of good beer than wine, so I started brewing. Besides, who wouldn't want to make their own beer?" These days, anybody with a dumper of malt and an overabundance of fresh hops can make a lip-smacking tasty beer. But don't be fooled. For first-time brewers it may take several times to get that right taste. "Some of the first batches I made really sucked, but after I learned some lessons I think they are better," Vincent said. "Of course, it's better than Budweiser. I'd be lying if I were to say that my oatmeal stout is better than Free State's, but I think it is almost as good and I have it on tap in my own home." In Lawrence, home brewers have a chance to come together and share recipes and methods through the Lawrence Brewers Guild. The Guild meets the second Thursday of every month at 7:30 p.m.Meetings are held at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. — Edited by Leah Shaffer GRAND VIN DE CHATEAU LATOUR PRESENTE GRAND CRU CERVE 1966 ROU D'ORGENSE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN loOK for Jayplay Thursdays. IoOK for Jayplay Thursdays. 7 6 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TRENDS THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 The VINES 96.5 BUZZ special guest THE MUSIC FRIDAY, APRIL 4 at 8:00pm The Uptown Theater Tickets on sale now! BOIN CDR IN STORES NOW! THE MUSIC Tickets available at all ticketmaster outlets, ticketmaster.com, or charge by phone at 816.931.3330. SUMMER CONCERT COUNTDOWN SATURDAY APRIL 26 THE UPTOWN THEATER IN KANSAS CITY ON SALE NOW SUM 41 NO USE FOR A NAME & AUTO Pilot OFF TUESDAY APRIL 29 THE KANSAS COLISEUM IN WICHITA ON SALE NOW LINKIN PARK SATURDAY MAY 3 THE UPTOWN THEATER IN KANSAS CITY ON SALE NOW STONESOUR POWERMAN 5000 WEDNESDAY MAY 21 The Pitch THE CITY MARKET IN KANSAS CITY ON SALE NOW New Found Glory Good Charlotte WEDNESDAY MAY 28 KEMPER ARENA IN KANSAS CITY ON SALE NOW TUESDAY JUNE 10 STARLIGHT THEATRE IN KANSAS CITY ON SALE NOW BEN HARPER & JACK JOHNSON THURSDAY JUNE 12 VERIZON WIRELESS AMPHITHEATER IN KANSAS CITY ON SALE NOW PEARL JAM TUESDAY JUNE 24 VERIZON WIRELESS AMPHITHEATER ON SALE FRIDAY APRIL 4 AT 5PM THE WARPED TOUR Fashion flaunted at inaugural show By Ron Knox jayplay@kansan.com Special to Jayplay In the musty, cluttered basement of La Tasca, the models for the inaugural Flush fashion show scampered in their underwear, nearly tripping over one another. They pointed and yelled for someone to get them something - from clothes, to hair products, to a cold can of Pabst Blue Ribbon. It was not for lack of organization. The show had been in the works for months, and the models had rehearsed virtually every night the previous three weeks. But it was simply a night of firsts for both the makeshift models and for Flush, 17 E. Seventh St., a young fashion boutique embarking on its first full-scale fashion show. "I'm nervous as hell," said Derek Hogan, owner of Flush and show organizer. "I'll be fine in an hour and a half, but right now I can't sit still." Hogan said it was a big moment for them. "The shows are hopefully going to become seasonal events," he said, "if this one goes off as well as I think it can." During the first act, the stage was arranged like the inside of a restroom, complete with stall, toilet and a sink that sat on a clothing rack for support. The models came out in pairs and trios, with each group entering the stall and, after some apparent close contact, leaving disheveled. Upstairs on the small stage, three men assembled the props for the extensive four-part show. Outside, patrons waited to enter, having paid $12 for advance tickets for food, drinks and post-show festivities. Part of the proceeds went to Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Douglas County. The models' performances ranged from the mundane to outright outrageous. The last couple featured Kyle Batten, Lawrence resident, wearing an athletic supporter and hip-waders, walking a girl out on a leash like a dog. After their in-stall antics, she rode him like a horse down the runway. The audience, a cross-section of Lawrence hip elite, was made up in part of employees from other local clothing stores. In front of the stage, four Arizona Trading Company employees sat, leaning I Brandon Baker/Kansan Leila Kim, Wichita senior, struts down the runway during the first Flush fashion show. Flush sponsored a fashion show with amateur models at La Tasca last week and gave part of the proceeds to Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Douglas County. back against their chairs, arms crossed over their chests. In the next act, the models came out in pairs and, in essence, stripped for the audience. In a mock shopping spree, the couples changed out of their purportedly unfashionable clothes into T-shirts emblazoned with Flush's custom-made designs, which were, in turn, modeled on the runway. Lawrence resident Steve Cruz was one of the announcers for the final acts, reading from blue note cards as the models walked the runway. "These two are ready for anything," Cruz said. Two male models strolled down the runway, one wearing red shorts and a hooded sweatshirt, the other in straight dark denim jeans. "It's a fun way to show people the variety of clothes we sell," Hogan said. Leila Kim, Wichita senior, walked out next in a woolly tan shirt and skirt, and a rimmed military-style hat. "Leila's outfit says 'Stop the fighting, boys. Let's start dancing,'" Cruz said as Kim turned on the runway. "War or not, you still need to look good. We salute you, Leila!" Kim saluted the announcers, and the announcers saluted back. Edited by Aude Mantey 11012419 THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 SEX THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN =7 Relationships change from cheating COMMENTARY You're back from spring break. Maybe you got hammered in Mexico or Europe. Maybe you went on a cruise or took the urban plunge with Alternative Breaks. A whole week away from school, work, family and the old ball and chain — and, boy, did you need it. I am very grateful for your help. I will be grateful to you if you can take the time to learn about me. Patrick Ross pross@kansan.com But ... did you cheat? And I'm not talking taxes here. I'm talking about having sex or making out with someone other than your significant other. Spending a week apart can be taxing on a relationship. The temptation to cheat can be ever-present in the nonstop party atmosphere that accompanies quite a few spring break trips. But what is cheating? What should you do if you have cheated or been cheated on? What happens to the relationship when one of you cheats? Why do we cheat? First, let's define what cheating is. Peggy Elam, licensed psychologist and former president of the Nashville Area Psychological Association, says "If your (partner) doesn't know about it, would object to it and would be hurt finding out about it, it's cheating." Making out is not OK if it would upset your partner. Even holding hands and cuddling are cheating in a way. Getting something out of a relationship that you are only supposed to get from someone you're dating is cheating. Of course, if there is an understanding between two partners that kissing or otherwise is acceptable, its not cheating. According to a recent study done at the University of Vermont, 87 percent of partnered participants had fantasies about sexual relations with someone other than their partners within the last two months before the survey. When coupled with the fact that 97 percent of all mammals are polygamous, this raises questions about monogamy and the psychological impulses to cheat. Being attracted to people other than your partner is natural. Keeping those feelings bottled up, however, is just asking for disaster. Two people who care about each other should feel comfortable discussing attraction to other people. Talking about things makes them solid and real and then they can easily be dismissed. So you cheated, now what? Honesty is probably the key here. You don't want your partner to find out from someone else. Telling on yourself as soon as possible will make it easier on you and the cheatee. If you know why you cheated, be up front about it. If it was a drunken mistake, 'fess up and chances are you'll be forgiven. If there are deeper reasons, such as you're not getting all that you want out of your current relationship, discuss the best course of action with your partner. The most important thing is dialogue. Breaking up is rough, but if a person thinks he wasn't involved in the decision at all, that can cut deeply. If you've been cheated on, Suzanne C. Saul, a psychologist with Meers, Inc. Consulting Psychologists, says, "The first thing to do is stay focused on attending to one's feelings, until the shock of the discovery begins to diminish." Finding out your partner has a cheating heart is hard, and anger is sure to be the first response. The two of you need to talk, but a yelling match will make things harder. The worst thing you can do is blame yourself or be too accusative of your partner. If the relationship is relatively new, perhaps you both should move on. If there is a deep level of commitment, then it's time to make some tough decisions. If both of you want to stay together, a few counseling sessions wouldn't hurt. If you're itching to cheat, talk to your partner. If you've cheated and it was just a big mistake, be honest and resolve never to do it again. Being cheated on isn't the end of the world, but it sure can feel like it; delicacy is required. Ross is a Topeka freshman in journalism. GOT A SEX QUESTION? E-mail Patrick Ross or Lindsey Hodel at pross@kansan.com or lhodel@ kansan.com. All names will be kept confidential and not used in print. FINAL FOUR* WATCH PARTY KU vs. Marquette • Saturday, April 5 Multiple Projection Screens and TVs The Came from ANYWHERE in the Building Dear students of the Best Sound System in Lawrence Everything is Here Come, First Served Doors Open • Serving Food! ABE&JAKE'S LANDING FINAL FOUR is a registered trademark of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. ABE&JAKE'S LANDING Coming Events... No Lessons with guests Javier Mendoza and City Limits Saturday, April 5 After the Game Tone Loc Wednesday, April 9 Pat Green WED. APRIL 16 saturday, april 12 pomeroy. 8 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COVER STORY THE UNIVERSE THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2003 Lights,camera,KU The University and Lawrence pop up in Hollywood fare JAMES CAAN BILLY DEE WILLIAMS BRIAN's SONG DAY AFTER ROBERT LENTON RUNNING BRAVE NO LTE SHED BLUE CHIPS Leo Beuerman (1969) Arthur H. Wolf and Russell A. Mosser received Oscar nominations for Best Documentary short subject for this 13 minute film. The filmmakers captured the life, philosophies and business of Leo Beuerman, a disabled Lawrence resident who sold pencils in downtown Lawrence for a living. Herk Harvey directs a thriller shot primarily in Lawrence. The film tells the story of a teenage girl who survives a car accident only to be tormented by a strange phantom. It took Harvey three weeks to film this movie. By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Brian's Song(1971) Carnival of Souls(1962) John Wayne stars in the story of a federal marshal who squares off against William Cantrell. Cantrell is clearly a fictitious representation of William Quantrill, especially when he leads a band of guerrillas to raid Lawrence. Every two or three years a movie comes out that has ties to the University of Kansas or Lawrence. Whether it's a cameo by a former KU athlete or a scene shot on the steps of Wescoe Hall, a KU link to a movie can increase Lawrence's fame, civic pride and artistic value. The following movies have notable ties to the University: Billy Dee Williams stars as KU hall of fame running back Gale Sayers in this made-fortelevision project. Sayers played for KU from 1961 to 1964. The movie tells the story of Sayers' friendship with fellow Chicago Bear Brian Piccolo. James Caan plays Piccolo as the Dark Command(1940) two deal with life and death in the NFL. The Day After(1983) John Lithgow and Steve Guttenberg star in this made-for-television that portrays the effects of nuclear war in everyday America. The film primarily takes place in Lawrence and features Wescoe Hall and Allen Fieldhouse. ABC considered the movie so powerful that it provided 1-800 numbers for people to call to receive counseling during and after the original air date. Running Brave(1983) This Canadian release tells the story of Billy Mills, a Native American track star who won the Olympic Gold Medal at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo for the 10,000 meter run. Mills ran for KU from 1958 to 1961. He is the only American to win the CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE WHOOPI "IS HILARIOUS!" - WORLD NEW YORK "EDDIE SCORES?" -GARDEN STREET, CINEMAS NATION The Newest Coach in The NBA Has Got The Knicks Right Where She Wants Them. EDDIE THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2003 COVERSTORY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 9 DENZEL WASHINGTON "TWO THUMBS UP!" MORGAN & LEE "DENZEL WASHINGTON... AT HIS BEST!" WINNER 79 A SPINE LEE film HE GOT GAME A father's kindness depends on his son's choice. CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE Gold Medal for the 10,000 meter race in Olympic history. A detailed made-for-television account of the rise of Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Indiana. The cast and crew shot many sequences in Lawrence. Cross of Fire(1989) Blue Chips(1994) Nick Nolte struggles with the ethics and morals required of a college basketball coach. Former KU basketball players Adonis Jordan and Rex Walters have cameos as unnamed players on opposing teams. Eddie(1996) When Whoopi Goldberg wins the coaching spot for the New York Knicks, comedy ensues. Former KU basketball player Greg Ostertag puts in a riveting performance as Joe Sparks. He Got Game(1998) In the Spike Lee joint Denzel Washington and NBA all star Ray Allen star as estranged father and son whose only means of communication is through basketball, especially because Washington's character is in jail. Basketball coach Roy Williams makes a cameo appearance as himself. Ride with the Devil(1999) Ang Lee directs this pre-Civil War drama. The film features scenes of Quantrill's infamous raid on Lawrence. A handful of scenes were shot in Lawrence with assistance from KU students on the crew and acting as extras. Theater professor Paul Meier taught stars Skeet Ulrich, Tobey Maguire and Jewel the Missouri dialects for the film. Erin Brockovich(2000) Julia Roberts plays a single mother who raises her children while fighting legal battles for the little man. The real life Erin Brockovich graduated from Lawrence High School. About Schmidt(2002) Jack Nicholson once again acclaim as he plays Warren Schmidt a sad, lonely man entering retirement. After a tragedy occurs within his family, Schmidt travels across the country to sabotage his daughter's wedding. At one point in his marriage-wrecking trek Schmidt stops at his alma mater, the University of Kansas. Though the film makers did shoot some footage at KU, all scenes in the movie are actually the Univer- lack Nicholson once again gains sity of Nebraska. ... Go Huskers. The following actors, directors, producers and writers have notable ties to the University. "He certainly had the energy and creativity to go on to do greater things. It doesn't surprise me that he has," said Lawrence film studies graduate student Mark VonSchlemmer, who, as an undergraduate, worked with LaBute. Neil LaBute: This graduate of Brigham Young University came to KU to do graduate work in the late '80s at the department of theater and film. He has directed a number of feature films including In the Company of Men (1997), Your Friends and Neighbors (1998), Nurse Betty (2000), Possession (2002), and the upcoming The Shape of Things starring KU alumnus Paul Rudd. Paul Rudd: Rudd attended KU for one year before dropping out. He has appeared in such films as Clueless (1993), Romeo and Juliet (1996), The Cider House Rules (1999) and the upcoming The Shape of Things directed by Neil LaBute. He has also had a reoccurring role on NBC's Friends. Laura Kirk: This late '80s theater graduate of KU has appeared in a number of movies RIDE WITH THE DEVIL "The Feel Good Movie Of The Year!" Julia Roberts is Erin Brockovich JACK NICHOLSON ABOUT SCHMIDT "SOQUIRINGLY FUNNY! A-" "AS WHARTFELT AS IT IS HILARIOUS!" Lisa Picard is Famous A FILM BY CINEMAS DENNIS Schmidt is about perfect." RIDE WITH THE DEVIL "The Feel Good Movie Of The Year!" Julia Roberts is Erin Brockovich Based on a true story. JACK NICHOLSON ABOUT SCHMIDT "The Feel Good Movie Of The Year!" Julia Roberts is Erin Brockovich Based on a true story. "The Feel Good Movie Of The Year!" "SCURRINGLY FUNNY! A-" "IS HEARTFELT AS IT IS HILARIOUS!" —THE BOOK ROMANCE STORY Lisa Picard is Famous A FILM BY COMEDY DORIA X-RATED CEREAL Home is where better weed. JACK NICHOLSON ABOUT SCHMIDT JACK NICHOLSON ABOUT SCHMIDT SOUIRINGLY FUNNY! A-" "AS HEARTFELT AS IT IS HILARIOUS!" Lisa Picard is Famous "SOURISHINGLY FUNNY! A-" "AS HEARTFELT AS IT IS HILARIOUS!" NET TIME: ROUND STOR Lisa Picard is Famous A FILM BY GONNIE DUMM X-RATED CEREAL Home in one other work. Schmidt is about perfect." 10 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MUSIC THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 SUA rocks back with concert tour It's about time Student Union Activities did something that didn't suck. REVIEW After the past few jackluster years, SUA has come back with a vengeance, bringing fantastic events to campus such as Beck and The Flaming Lips, John Waters and most recently, The Advance Warning Tour, featuring Longwave, White Light Motorcade, The Raveonettes and The Mooney Suzuki. It was a sparse crowd Sunday night in the Kansas Union Ballroom, but those who came out got rocked hard, whether they wanted it or not. With four bands for five bucks, it was one of the most cost-effective shows to hit Lawrence in a long time. After all, even if all four bands sucked, you'd still be out only $5. Aaron Passman apassman@kansan.com But, for the most part, little suckage was found Sunday night, and New York City's Longwave started the night off with a strong thirty-minute set of oceanic, often dream-like indie rock. Longwave's vocalist/guitarist Steve Schlitz has a strong baritone voice, and songs like "Everywhere You Turn" and "Pool Song", both taken from their debut album "The Strangest Things", are at times reminiscent of the alltoo-short career of Joy Division. But the band also experimented with all sorts of noise, distortion and feedback, bringing to mind bands like Sonic Youth. THE ADVANCE WARNING TOUR Where: Kansas Union Ballroom When: March 30 LONGWAVE ... B WHITE LIGHT MOTORCADE ... D THE RAVEONETTES ... B+ THE MOONEY SUZUKI ... A+ OVERALL GRADE ... A- Second on the bill was White Light Motorcade, a band so mediocre, it defies the mind. Aside from finishing, the most exciting part of Motorcade's set was the vocal harmonies on songs like "My Way." But for the most part, it was a 30-minute set of filler tracks like "It's Happening." White Light Motorcade merely plays the same kind of cock rock as Rye Coalition but without the attitude or the sense of humor. The Raveonettes drew the biggest crowd of the evening, and they were in many ways the most interesting band. On their debut record "Whip It On," the Danish duo of vocalist/guitarist Sune Rose Wagner and vocalist/bassist Sharin Foo, whom, I might add, is stunningly gorgeous, set heavy limitations for themselves, keeping all songs under three minutes long, using no more than three chords in one song, and most impressively, writing all songs in the key of B-flat minor. But despite these limitations, their live performance, which also included a drummer and a second guitarist, was impressive. Foo's and Wagner's dual vocals were strongly reminiscent of both The Velvet Underground & Nico and even a bit of The Breeders. Songs like "Chains," "Wanna Dance," and "Beat City"were heavy on the bass and combined both a garage rock and a surf guitar feel. The Raveonettes were easily the most understated band of the night, but in a way, that made them all the more interesting in contrast to the other three. Let me put it this way: The Mooney Suzuki, the final act of the evening, is hands down one of the best live-bands I've ever seen. If The Who were a punk band on speed, they'd still have to work hard to compare to the Mooney Suzuki's style and stage presence. With the looks of Lou Reed and the posturing of Pete Townsend, vocalist/guitarist Sammy James, Jr. strutted, jumped and danced his way across the stage for 45-minutes, with energy like a hyper-active 8-year-old with ADD. "Gonna do it gymnasium-style tonight," James said to the crowd early on, joking about the Union Ballroom. "Rockin' and rollin' on a school night—that's how I like it!" The Mooney Suzuki's set centered mostly on tracks from their most recent album, "Electric Sweat," and it included breakneck speed versions of "Oh, Sweet Susannah," "In A Young Man's Mind," and the album's title track. But the piece-resistance came at the end of the set, when James and the band's bassist came down from the stage and into the crowd on piggyback, playing guitar and dancing with the audience. The Mooney Suzuki will be in Lawrence again on April 20, and if you know what's good for you, you'll show up. I promise you, you'll be hard-pressed to find a rock 'n' roll outfit this entertaining, no matter how hard you look. If The Mooney Suzuki is a religion, consider me converted. Passman is a Towanda senior in journalism and film. Hearts of Oak by Ted Leo / Pharmacists Reviewed by Aaron Passman apassman@kansan.com Put on your thinking cap, 'cos it's time for a riddle: What's rockin,' catchy, intelligent, witty and makes you want to shake your booty like no one's watching? The answer, dear reader, is Hearts of Oak,the new album from Ted Leo/Pharmacists,and it's one of the finest records released yet this year. After spending much of the '90s in the world of punk rock, Leo turned more to pop-rock songwriting on 2001's The Tyranny of Distance, his first record with the Pharmacists. Leo's a singer/songwriter with a FEDERAL BANKSY MUSEUM OF FASHION AND ART Contributed art difference, blending balladry, punk rock, classic rock and new wave styles all into one throughout the album. Leo's sound is something of a mix of all of the above, but with a hearty helping of both Morrissey and Elvis Costello thrown in for good measure. The album's third track, "I'm a Ghost," opens with a brief guitar riff before cutting to Leo's Morrissey-esque moan, backed only by drums and a thick, fuzztoned bass. Both the song and Leo are all over the map, turning on a dime from the driving drums and palm-muted guitars of punk to arena rock style guitar solos. On "The Ballad of the Sin Eater," the album's strongest track, Leo again centers the song around the drums and fuzz-toned bass. But what really makes the song great is how much Leo's lyrical wit and phrasing, along with the backing music, feel like something taken straight from the days of This Year's Model-era Elvis Costello. On that record, Costello and the Attractions (his backing band) center most of the record around bass and drums, and Leo follows suit on tracks such as "Sin Eater," I'm a Ghost." But Leo's wit is strongest on "Sin Eater" and "Where Have All The Rude Boys Gone?" his ode to the lost, happy-go-lucky days of ska. Anymore it's hard to find an artist with both talent and brains, but Ted Leo/Pharmacist have it in spades, and Hearts of Oak just goes to show that there's still life left in the world of quality rock — you just have to dig a little bit to find it. Take it from me, kids. It doesn't get much better than this. Grade: A Playing a show? Releasing a CD? If you would like to have your band reviewed, please contact Jayplay editor Brooke Hesler at bhesler@kansan.com or 864-4810. Read all about it on www.kansan.com. THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2003 FOOD THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 11 Spring can bring new dishes to dinner Tastes of fresh mint tea, crisp sugar-snap peas and ruby-red strawberries cross the minds of many in spring. Just thinking of biting down into a citrine-colored mango immediately makes mouths water. With the outstanding tastes of this season's produce, other colorfully peak items that can be found in the local grocery store include thyme, mint, dill, chives, lemon grass, limes, mangoes, papayas, strawberries, bananas, pineapples, coconutts, red potatoes, cauliflower, beets, radishes, peas, avocados, mushrooms, baby leeks, sweet onions, spinach and seafood such as halibut, red snapper, yellow-fin tuna and more. It's almost serendipitous to notice these spring foods at the local market, but with all the fresh delicious fruits, vegetables and herbs, it's now the time to create some springtime sensations, such as a spinach and mozzarella quiche or a grilled portabella mushroom sandwich. The possibilities are endless. So why not get into the spirit of things and cook up a warm-weathered favorites. To get your taste buds soaring, here is one of my all-time favorites; Red snapper with an orange, lemon-mango puree accompanying a tomato, basil and feta orzo pasta followed up with a piece strawberry lemon cake. Red Snapper with an Orange, Lemon, Mango Puree 2 Files of red snapper or sole 1 teaspoon of olive oil 1 mango, peeled, pitted, and cut into cubes 1/3 cup of orange juice 1/3 cup of lemonade 1/4 cup of water 1 tablespoon of minced garlic chives Salt and pepper to taste Salt and pepper to taste 1. In a blender, puree mango, orange juice, lemonade and water until smooth. Scoop aside. 1. In a blender, puree mango, orange juice, lemonade, and water until smooth. Set aside. 2. In a large skillet, heat olive oil over medium-high heat for five minutes. In the meantime, score the skin side with 2 shallow crosses. Place fish in the pan and sauté about two minutes on each side or until cooked through. 3. Place fish on a serving platter, drizzle sauce over the fish and sprinkle with chives. Enough for two servings. Tomato, Basil and Feta Orzo Pasta EAT THIS (1) 1 cup of orzo pasta 4 roma tomatoes diced and deseeded 2 tablespoons of chopped basil 1 garlic clove sliced 1/2 cup of feta cheese 2 tablespoons of olive oil Salt and pepper Christina DiGiacomo cdigiacomo@kansan.com 1. Cook the orzo according to the package directions. Heat a medium-sized skillet over medium-high heat. Add olive oil. Add tomatoes and garlic and let cook about five minutes or until the tomatoes are soft and tender. Take off the heat and toss in the basil. 2. Once orzo is done cooking, drain the pasta and add to the tomato mixture. Place back on the heat and add the feta cheese until slightly heated. Serve into a large bowl and top with extra feta. Luscious Lemon and Strawberry Cake 1 lemon cake mix 3/4 cup of sugar 3 tablespoons of corn starch 1/4 teaspoon of salt 3/4 cup of water 2 egg yolks 1 tablespoon of butter 2 teaspoons grated lemon peel 1/3 cup lemon juice Cool whip 15 to 30 whole strawberries, sliced 15 to 30 whole strawberries, sliced 1. Make lemon cake mix according to packaged directions, set aside and let cool. 2. In a small saucepan mix in sugar, cornstarch, salt and water. Cook over medium-high heat until mixture thickens and begins to boil. Boil one minute. 3. Place egg yolks in a small bowl, Take a spoonful of the cornstarch mixture and add to the egg yolks. Stir quickly. Keep adding more of the mixture into the egg yolks and stir. (This makes the egg yolks the same temperature as the cornstarch mixture, thus not allowing the eggs to scramble.) Place the rest of the eggs into the mixture in the saucepan. Then stir in butter, lemon juice and peel, just until butter is melted. Let cool. 4. In the meantime, run a knife around the sides of a pan to loosen cake. Remove cake from pan and let cool. With a serrated knife, cut cake in half widthwise. Place one layer of cake onto a plate. Spread about 1/2 of the lemon mixture on top of the layer and arrange sliced strawberries on top of the lemon filling. Add next cake layer and spread rest of the lemon mixture over the top of the cake. Spread the Cool Whip over the entire cake and garnish cake with remaining strawberries. 14 to 16 serving 14 to 16 serving DiGacomo is an Apple Valley, Minn., senior in communication studies. She studied at Dante Aligheri cooking school in Florence, Italy. TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 ON SALE NOW P TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 • ON SALE NOW Starla Benford Erin Moran From TV's Happy Days Amy J. Carle What Do Jayhawks Call Their Vaginas? THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES by EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets, www.ticketmaster.com, 816-931-3330. The Lied Center Box Office, or 785-864-ARTS *Service Charge may apply. 100 PATRICIA SCHNEIDER --- Jem FILM THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 Paltrow comedy not worth the 'View' REVIEW Gwyneth Paltrow as a flight attendant might be a good way to jump-start the lagging airline industry, but as the premise for a movie it feels a bit trite. Give me the Gwyneth of Shakespeare in Love and The Talented Mr. Ripley and leave the extended country-music videos posing as movies where they belong: with Reese Witherspoon. Stephen Shupe sshupe@kansan.com In A View from the Top, the new American-as-apple-pie comedy from Brazilian director Bruno Barreto, Paltrow plays Donna Jensen, a Silver Springs, Nev., native who dreams of leaving her trailerpark past behind. At the local bargain-basement commuting company, Donna hooks up with Sherry (Kelly Preston) and Christine (Christina Applegate), two other "unfortunate" souls blessed with extravagantly beautiful good looks. Soon, the trio signs up for the Royalty Airlines flight attendant program so they can fly the friendly skies far away from home. An internal monologue is heard over much of the film, and the appealingly simplistic narration such as "Everybody has to start somewhere," lulls us into submission. Barreto's easy-listening-classics soundtrack contributes heavily to what is initially a spry and bubbly tone that begins to fade as Donna leaves Silver Springs and ventures out into the big bad world. In A View from the Top, Gwyneth Paltrow plays a Silver Springs, Nev., native who dreams of leaving her trailer park past behind. A View from the Top represents situational comedy at a lazy low. Donna's ups and downs veer in no particular direction before the film wraps up with the subtly offensive message that women should learn their place and stay close to home. Her brief stint in Paris suddenly transforms her look into that of a fashion model with paparazzi pretensions. Even Paltrow's Dixie Chicks accent vanishes during the final stretch. Light comedy doesn't excuse such inconsistencies. But if there's a comedic go-to man working in films today, it's Mike Myers, who shows up as the flight-attendant guru John Whitney. Using Whitney's lazy eyesight like a flashlight searching for comedy gold, Myers fattens up every scene he'sin, conjuring great material seemingly out of thin air. Whitney's sudden outbursts often recall the glorious days when Myers had trouble CONTROLLING THE VOLUME OF HIS VOICE on Saturday Night Live. The presence of Candice Bergen (Miss Congeniality), as a novelist and mentor to Donna, only heightens the feeling that A View from the Top was tailor-made for someone like Sandra Bullock and that Paltrow is out of her element. She gets to act opposite one serious actor in the film, Mark Ruffalo (from one of the best films of recent years, Kenneth Lonergan's You Can Count on Me), and you can almost picture her sighing after a scene between them has been completed, realizing she'll have nothing to do in the next. VIEW FROM THE TOP ... C+ Comedies are critic-proof, and anyone Starring: Gwyneth Paltrow, Kelly Preston and Mike Myers. Rated PG-13 for language and sexuality. Playing at South Wind 12 Theatres, 3433 Iowa St. who chooses to buy a ticket for this sort of movie is bound to get what they paid for. But it's important to consider what might have been, what improvements might have been made. I suggest Paltrow consider a new career path, one with more ambition and fewer transparencies when it comes to slumming for the public's affection. In A View from the Top, Paltrow sends the same kind of mixed message. Note: If you go see the film at South Wind 12, be warned that the print is very badly scratched. This means vertical lines will appear sporadically on the screen throughout the showing. This makes A View from the Top especially difficult to sit through and not just because it's a lame movie. Shupe is an Augusta graduate student in journalism BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING MADE EASY WITH THE NEW WEEKLY SPECIALS YOU'RE TO KEEP ON THE BACK OF EVERY JAYPLAY BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING MADE EASY WITH THE NEW WEEKLY SPECIALS YOURS TO KEEP ON THE BACK OF EVERY JAYPLAY SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 MOVIES AROUND TOWN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN =13 The following reviews and summaries were written by Jayplay film critic Stephen Shupe unless otherwise noted. LIBERTY HALL Adaptation Grade: A-(Opens Friday) Contributed art In Dreamcatcher, four telepathic friends enter the woods for a hunting trip. Charlie Kaufman's Mad Hatter idea to write himself into his own screenplay pays off in spades in Spike Jonze's latest comedic stunner. Nicholas Cage gives a blistering performance as the screenwriter hired to adapt Susan Orlean's The Orchid Thief, a decidedly non-cinematic book about flowers. Meryl Streep plays Orlean in some of the best sequences in the film, which feature an Oscar-winning Chris Cooper as a greasy horticulturist who journeys through the swamp lands to lift endangered orchids. Charlie's descent from artistic integrity to derivative hell is one of the movies' most memorable unraveling acts in years, and Adaptation's restless originality all but guarantees it cult status. City of God (not reviewed) (Opens Friday) In Cidade de Deus (the City of God), kids with guns rule with an iron fist to keep the drugs flowing through Rio de Janeiro in the early 1980s. A kaleidoscopic view of the city is seen through the eyes of Busca-Pe, an intelligent youth with a gift for photography and staying out of trouble as bodies drop all around him. This violent epic from director Fernando Meirelles is already being hailed as one of the best films of the year. The Quiet American Grade: Atypical Seattle teen with girl issues who's secretly a CIA super-agent. I loved this movie the first time when it was called Spy Kids and directed by Robert Rodriguez, who makes movies with eye-popping visuals and plenty of conceptual wit. Apart from a few laughs and some snappy casting, Agent Cody Banks is dull to look at with a silly robot plot that's way too complicated for kids to follow. There's enough bikini-wear on display here that it prompted one tyke at my screening to call out, "Oh, my gosh!" When I was his age we were treated to such family-friendly classics as Home Alone and Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Thomas Fowler (Oscar nominee Michael Caine), a British journalist chasing the dragon and other interests in 1952 Saigon, meets Alden Pyle (should-have-been-nominated Brendan Fraser), an American charmer who falls in love with Fowler's Vietnamese girlfriend. When Fowler investigates a violent political faction, one that's fighting both the communists and the rebels, he finds Pyle waiting for him around every corner. Phillip Noyce's incredibly suspenseful rendering of Graham Greene's novel is the most politically inflammatory American movie in years, one that should provide plenty of fuel to the fire for today's anti-war movement. SOUTH WIND 12 Agent Cody Banks Grade: C — KRT Campus Malcom in the Middle's Frankie Muniz makes the leap to the big screen with this unexceptional kid adventure. Muniz plays a Bringing Down the House Grade: B There may be controversy about whether Bringing Down the House, with Steve Martin as the Stuffy White Guy and Queen Latifah as the Loudmouthed Black Chick, reinforces racist stereotypes. But few can deny that the silver-haired prig and the brassy babe are a unique comic alloy. Chicago Everybody sings and dances just swell in this Academy Award-winning take on the Bob Fosse Broadway hit, but after Chicago is over you may wonder what all the fuss was about. Director Rob Marshall's carbon-copy theatricality ensures you'll have a good time, but for less style over substance, see Bjork in the daring Dancer in the Dark. Grade: B- Dreamcatcher Grade: B- Four telepathic friends enter the snowy New England woods for a weekend hunting expedition, only to be hunted themselves by little green men. At the heart of this Stephen King story is one of the more intriguing ideas about alien invasions ever, where interplanetary monsters draw upon dreams and hide behind the friendlyneighbors imaginings of such movies as Close Encounters of the Third Kind. In King's book, this concept was overwhelmed by a seemingly endless race against time, and Dreamcatcher's director, Lawrence Kasdan, possesses no other ambition than to film it faithfully. Some of the acting — especially by Damian Lewis as a shape-shifting alien with a James Bond accent — is fun. But the demands of big budget sci-fi — creatures and special effects — quickly take over the picture. The Hunted (not reviewed) (Ends today) William Friedkin directed two classics back in the '70s (The French Connection and The Exorcist) and then faded fast. He has another shot at a comeback with this thriller about an AWOL assassin (Benicio Del Toro) who murders four deer hunters in the Oregon wilderness. Tommy Lee Jones plays the Special Forces trainer hired to track down the killer. Old School Grade: B+ A mile-a-minute tummy-tickler, Old School follows the travails of three 30ish friends unwilling to leave behind the glory of their collegiate yesteryear. A movie that spoofs the greek experience has the artistic license to be rowdy, bawdy and completely lacking in moral fiber. The director, Todd Phillips, plays by those rules while also giving the film an exquisite sixth sense for the kitsch 1980s nostalgia most yuppies just can't escape. And as a newlywed streaking his way to a quick divorce, Ferrell goes Farley in a comedy that's savvy enough to give him free rein. Phone Booth (not reviewed) Opens Friday) Hitchcock once had this crazy idea to set an entire movie inside a phone booth, and someone has finally filmed it in this cat-and-mouse thriller from director Joel Schumacher. Colin Ferrell stars as Stu Shepard, a low-rent media consultant who finds himself at the business end of a sniper rifle and unable to hang up the phone. Though he hits (see Flawless and Tigerland) far less than he misses (don't even think about seeing Bad Company and Batman and Robin), Schumacher has cast his new film with two of today's most beautiful actresses, Radha Mitchell and Katie Holmes. Tears of the Sun Grade: C- A Nigerian war film about genocide and American intervention, Tears of the Sun plays like Black Hawk Down minus the wall-to-wall slam-bang action of that previous film, leaving only the sketched-in human relationships to fill up a two-hour running time. Director Antoine Fuqua (Training Day) strives for a more contemplative war film a la The Thin Red Line, but the script has so much ground to cover that familiar faces like Isaiah Washington and Donnie Wahlberg barely register. Only the cinematographer, Mauro Fiore, seems to realize this is a movie designed to engage an audience, and he enthralls with striking tropical landscapes. Bruce Willis leads this solemn enterprise, a movie that undercuts his back-to-back M. Night Shyamalan triumphs, The Sixth Sense and Unbreakable. According to Miramax topper Harvey Weinstein, his studio paid Gwyneth Paltrow $10 million to star in the flight-attendant romantic comedy View From the Top. And it appears that Miramax spent all of $10 for everything else. View From the Top Grade:D+ — KRT Campus What a Girl Wants (not reviewed) (Opens Friday) Except for that disturbing individual who said Cindy Brady was eye-candy in last Friday's Free For All, none of us really care what a girl wants, but here's the synopsis anyway: Daphne (Amanda Bynes) feels incomplete about her perfect teenybopper life and flies to London to reunite with her father, who turns out to be a highprofile politician named Lord Henry Dashwood, Chew on that, Lord Wads 14 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIDEO GAME THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 'Robotech' needs defensive strategy Robotech: Battlecry is loosely based of the anime series Robotech. Actually Robotech is comprised of three series: Macross, Southern Cross and MOSPEADA. These series make up the entire Robotech War. Robotech: Battlecry for the Nintendo Gamecube is a fast-paced robot combat game that makes the player fly numerous missions to save civilization. The game is also for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox, but I wanted to check out the Nintendo version. REVIEW The main character is Jack Archer, part XBOX ROBOTECH BATTLECRY MP TDK Contributed art O. Roe of B. N. W. Chris Moore cmoore@kansan.com of the Robotech Defense Force. The player is in the Wolf Squadron in the Robotech Army. The humans stumble onto a crashed alien spaceship during the Robotech: Battlecry for the Nintendo Gamecube is a fastpaced robot combat game that makes the player fly numerous missions to save civilization. called "Veritechs." Veritechs can change from fighter jets to Battleleoids, which are human-looking fighting robots, to Guardians, which are half Battleloid, half fighter jet. The Veritechs were used to battle the Zentaedi forces because they were 40 feet tall. middle of World War III on Macross Island. The spaceship detailed that the technology was more advanced than that ofthe Earth. Scientists created "Robotechnology" from details from the spaceship All ofa sudden the Earth is under attack by the Zentaedi force. The Robotechnology was used to build transforming fighters The missions consist of many types of war-like scenarios. Some are dogfights with the enemy, reconnaissance missions where the player must find supplies for his allies, and search, rescue and protect missions. This means the player must find his allies, sometimes in the middle of a battlefield, and defend them from the enemy forces. These are the missions that are surprisingly difficult. As the game progresses, the missions become more challenging and the enemies become more hostile. During one mission, the player must protect the Earth from Zentraedi Armadas. The controls are not difficult, but it does become a pain to transform in the middle of a heated battle. The three different types of transformations for Veritech fighters have different strengths and weaknesses in certain situations. Also, as the ROBOTECH: BATTLECRY ... B Now available for Nintendo Gamecube, Playstation 2 and Xbox Rated T for Teen Sells for an average retail price of $30 for Playstation 2 and Xbox; $40 for Gamecube player completes more missions different designs and different Veritechs become available. The graphics aren't the greatest aspect of the game, but I like how they keep the cartoon-like look to it sometimes. The anime style is a good feature. The overall game isn't bad. The game itself has decent gameplay and makes the player change battle strategies in the middle of combat. If the player thinks he can just run in the middle of an enemy squadron and come out in one piece,he is mistaken. Sometimes defensive play is necessary in order to win. Moore is a Tulsa, Okla., freshman in journalism. 20" SPEAKERS Lots of powerful bass. Must sell. $150. Call 555-1212. If you've got it, we can sell it. You runs in. Tha Students receive 20% off. Call 864-4358 for details. erruelaz THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1 9 2 S 3 D O m e 10 d 11 c u 4 l 5 + o r a h 6 i n 12 + e r e s t i n g n s n g 7 g 8 KANSAN Crosswords KANSAN 15 This page is satire. All names are made up, except in cases when public figures are being satirized. Other use of real names is accidental unless otherwise noted. Questions? comments? Contact Lucas Wetzel at 864-4810 or beak@kansan.com TONGUEINBEAK WWW.KANSAN.COM/SATIRE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2003 Elections inspire weekend debauchery SUNDAY, MAY 26TH 1987 BEST OF BEST OF THE WEEK By J.C. Hackmuth beak@kansan.com Kansan Jayplay writer Thousands of revelers gathered in the streets last Saturday night to encourage high voter turnout in Tuesday's city commission elections. With enthusiastic cries of "Votel!" and "Go shirtless for suffrage!" a frenzied group of registered voters waves to news media. "This is a crazy time of year," said Nick Samson. "New city officials are elected. Last second shots go down. Pontiac." Cars lined Massachusetts Street and Jayhawk Boulevard as voters waved flags, exchanged high-fives and chanted "Final Four," referring to the final four days until election results would be announced. Sadie Jenkins, Lawrence resident, said she was watching television when she heard shouts and honks outside her Oread Neighborhood home. photo by Eric Braem/Kansan "People were going crazy," said Lawrence senior James Marshall. "I saw one guy with a Mike Rundle sign challenge an August Lafayette Huber IV supporter to a game of Risk. Another guy took his shirt off, and it wasn't even that warm outside. Kansans just love their politics, I guess." with signs reading "Hey W, you can't make up the rules as you go along." Across the street at the Granada, campus Republicans scarfed bags of Taco Bell in a counter-protest. "The local news networks had all this greenish footage of fireworks going off downtown," she said. "I figured it must be kids using the city elections as just another excuse to party." Borrowing a line from Roy Williams' halftime remarks about officiating during the Arizona-Kansas matchup earlier that night, Anti-war protesters stood in front of Urban Outfitters, 1013 Massachusetts. "We just feel like sometimes the other side isn't being told," said Stephen Richardson as he munched on a quesadilla. "Upgrade to steak." While students and police officers smiled and cheered about upcoming poll visits, basketball fans did not have as much luck. KU fans who had camped out in South Park to symbolically show support for Jayhawks were removed from their sports-fan Hooverville by Lawrence Police last Thursday. "I don't understand," said Aaron Dylan, author of The New Anarchist Cookbook: Tuna Treats, Mono Nachos and other delectable game daysnacks. "I thought curfew laws didn't apply to basketball fans." Meanwhile in Topeka, the KU Men's basketball team's return flight from California landed at Forbes Field at about 2:30 in the morning. The team was greeted by two unconscious fans, a cheerleader and a stray dog with a bugle. Kansas seniors called the welcoming party "What we get up for every morning of practice for four long years." PERSPECTIVES Cut down them trees COMMENTARY M. ROBERTS Ho Barris beak@kansan.com When you come right down to it, most environmentalists aren't so different from the mother of that fat kid that grew up right down the street from you. You know the one I mean, little Fatty McPherson with the red face, who was constantly out of breath. He lost all the neighborhood games, but for some reason his mother always insisted that it was because you hadn't played fair. "Playing fair" usually meant making special allotments on account of little Fatty's "condition." ask you, have we been unfair? Quite the opposite, the trees have been unfair. It's not like we ran right out and started hacking. No, we gave them a head-start, just like poor Fatty McPhrerson. We're not talking about a "count to a hundred" head start here, either. We're talking about a billion-year, count-to-three-zillion, we're-still-trying-to-crawl-out-of this-primordial-ooze head start. And what did the trees do? Absolutely nothing. They just sat there with smug grins on their not-faces. Occasionally one found a hiding place behind another tree, but that hardly qualifies as clever. So it is with the trees, dear readers. 1 I think it's about time for the environmentalists to stop this train of injustice. All we're doing is creating inferiority complexes in trees. It would be far more noble to just break down and admit trees are damned poor at hide-and-seek. They can't play by our rules, they can't play at all. And if they can't play by our rules, they can't play at all. You leave the trees be! COMMENTARY THE CAT IN THE HOUSE I am the Lorax. I speak for the trees, which you seem to be chopping as fast as you please. I am shortish. And oldish. And brownish. And mossy. And I speak with a voice that is sharpish and bossy. Developer! I shout with a sawdusty sneeze. I am the Lorax, I speak for the trees, I speak for the trees, for the trees have no tongues. And I'm asking you, sir, at the top of my lungs. I grow very upset as I huff and I puff. What are these things you make from my Truffula tufu? I'm also in charge of the Brown Bar-bo-loots who played in the shade in their Bar-bo-loot suits. The Lorax beak@kansan.com And happily lived, eating Truffula Fruits. Now thanks to your hacking my trees to the ground, there's not enough Truffula Fruit to go round. And my poor Bar-ba-loots are all getting the crummies. Because they have gas, and no food, in their tummies. You say "business is business" and "business must grow." Regardless of crummies in tummies, you know. Developer, I cry with a cruelfulous croak. Developer, you're making such smogulous smoke! My poor Swomee swans, they can't sing a note! No one can sing who has smog in his throat. Now all that is left 'neath the badsmelling sky is your big empty factory, and you and I. And all that I'm leaving you with here in this mess is a smile pile of rocks and one word...UNLESS. Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better, it's not. So plant a new Truffula. Treat it with care. Give it clean water. And feed it fresh air. Grow a forest. Protect it from axes that hack. Then the Lorax and all of my friends may come back. and all or my friends may come back. Dr.Schuss BRIEFLY Dance! Dance! Revolution! fails to overthrow school of Journalism While the second incarnation of the communist-themed dance party "Dance! Dance! Revolution!" was far from tragic, it did prove to be a farce. Red and black attire, solid turnout and spirited gyrations all failed to overthrow the administration of the William Allen White school of Journalism, which may be considering cutting the funding of proletariat-operated KJHK. "The music was great, but I thought it was hypocritical of them to charge those of us wearing the wrong colors 2 extra dollars," said Susana Kubin, Lamata, New Mexico, senior. "What happened to from each according to ability, to each according to need?" Lawrence's top drug cop actually a Mil-Spec security officer Lawrence Police officials revealed yesterday that former officer Stuart "Mike" Peck's cases had been dismissed because he had obtained all evidence and interviews for the cases while working for Mil-Spec Security, off. "When Peck stated he was a diligent and honest officer for 12 years,he stated the truth,"said Lawrence Police Chief Ron Olin."Unfortunately,he spent those 12 years working for Mil-Spec. KU Junior Tiffany Lopez, who lives in a Mil-Spec patrolled apartment said, "This is indeed a sad event for the war on drugs, and our parking lot." "Over Spring Break, giant terrorists played bacchi with the ball sculpture in front of Marvin Hall," read the e-mail. "To ensure the safety of faculty and students of a wide range of opinions, as well as the safety of the heirs of the Board of Regents, no aircraft will fly directly over Potter Lake, except for stunt Stealth Bombers owned by Coca-Cola." L.W. In an e-mail released to faculty and students, University of Kansas Chancellor Robert Hemenway ordered a "no-fly zone" over Potter Lake. Chancellor alerts staff, students of "No-Fly zone" over Potter Lake I'm not gonna lie, I'm a little drunk... squirrel 16 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT THURSDAY,APRIL3,2003 There's a better way to vent. 70 free for all 864-0500. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ABE & JAKE'S BUFFALO WILD WING! CRISTINA BAR $4 DEL Red Bull Vodka 1.2 Price Appetizers 8pm-10pm $2.50 Any Bottle 1.2 Price Appetizers 8pm-10pm $1.50 Cotton Margarita $2.25 2 Price Appetizers 8pm-10pm $2.26 Corona's $2.75 2.3 oz Microbrews $2 Bloody Marys $2.23oz Domestics $2.23 oz Domestics 1.2 Price Appetizers 8pm-10pm $2.23 oz Domestics 1.2 Price Appetizers 8pm-10pm www.thegranada.com FINAL FOUR PARTY 20th Theatre Screen KU vs. Marquette Day of Rest Championship Game 30th Theatre Screen Check out www.thegranada.com Check out www.thegranada.com $1.50 U-Call If Ladies Night 3 Red Bull + Vodka Dbls $1 &ayer Du & Carnd During KU Game $6.95 All you can eat Starting at 8pm. $2.75 Long Island Ice Teas Free Pool All Day Championship Game 1 KU Wins $6.95 All you can eat 1.2 Price Big Burgers $2 Boulevard Pints 25c Wings $2 Big Beers Family Night after 10pm $2.50 Imported Boiles $2 Bully Pins $1 Sex on the Beach $4 Shimelt Pins Eye Dee w/ Brother Ali (Rhyme Sayers Tour) Protect Groove 1 Well Singles $2 Me Ultra $4 Light Pilcher 1.50 Screwdriver $3 Orange Julius 1 Original Bottle Free Pool Midnight 2a.m 2.4-1 Wolf Singles $3 Dum Cusso $4 Captain Morgun Dbls Free Pool Midnight 2a.m 2 Dom Bottles $1 Puzzy Shoes $3 Long Island Free Pool Midnight 2a.m 3 Domm Gasto $2 Daiquirs $3 Blue Hawaiians Free Pool Midnight 2a.m $1.60 Bud Bud Lr. Bottles No Count 2 Vodka & Red Bull $2 Goors LC Drift DJ Randy Foster 2 Fireworks Show of Vodkas 2 Smiling Fans Big Bear Samma Anytime 2 All Absolutes No Cover DJs Chris & Mike McD 2 Micro Import Drafts $1 off all Martis $1 Wells $2 Calls DJ Randy Foster Frame Pop Dinner $2 Guinea, Import & Microwaved Parts Margarita Drink $2.50 Domestic Big Morns $7 Cream Margaret $2 WKC Dingo Game $2 Rolling Noods $2.50 Jamie Margaret $4.50 Chicken Fried Sausage $2 Boulevard Pnts $1.20 James Sumner 1.2 Price Burgers $2.66 Domestic Big Beers 50c Tacos $2 Ceramide $2.50 Margaret 30c Wings $2 Domestic Longnecks JACKS Friday April 4,2003 Vol.113,Issue No.127 Today's weather 62° Tonight: 33* 2 KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Complete Final Four coverage for Lawrence and New Orleans p.1B FINAL FOUR Game may shuffle night classes By Jessica Hood jhood@kansan.com jhodd staff writer Knock on wood — students with night classes Monday could be making adjustments. If the University of Kansas men's basketball team plays in the NCAA Tournament championship game Monday, night classes held in buildings that face Jayhawk Boulevard must be moved or dismissed by 7:30. No one would be able to enter the buildings after the University locked the buildings' doors at 7:15. The Jayhawks play the Marquette Golden Eagles at 5 p.m. tomorrow. If they win, the Jayhawks advance to the championship game Monday. Jeannette Johnson, assistant to the Provost, said she contacted all of the faculty listed as Monday night class instructors. Instructors were offered the opportunity to find alternate locations for the classes, Johnson said. Those streets also will be closed to traffic before the game's end. "I haven't had anyone who complained," Johnson said. "The big concern is that Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive will be closed to parking." Johnson said this plan would have also been followed if the Jayhawks had made it into the final game last year. The Jayhawks lost to the Maryland Terrapins in the NCAA Tournament semifinals. Kathryn Conrad, assistant professor of English, teaches a class that focuses on writer James Joyce on Monday nights from 7 to 9:50 in Wescoe Hall. Conrad said she talked with her class and decided to have class online. Students in Conrad's class will participate in an online discussion through Blackboard. "I dealt with it like a ice storm that might happen." Conrad said. "But since we only have class once a week, we couldn't afford to not have class at all." Johnson said she was asking faculty to let her know if they were canceling class or making alternate arrangements because of security concerns. Jennifer Huang, Wichita senior, is enrolled in the History of Silent Film on Monday nights. Huang was unsure of her professor's plans for Monday but said it would be a worthy occasion to cancel class. "I have missed tons of big Monday games for this class," Huang said. "It would make up for having to miss those games." — Edited by Michelle Burhenn LOCKING UP CAMPUS The following buildings will be locked at 7:30 p.m. Monday if the Jayhawks play in the NCAA Championship. ■ Wescoe Hall ■ Budig Hall ■ Marvin Hall ■ Art and Design Building ■ Lindley Hall ■ Snow Hall ■ Strong Hall ■ Bailey Hall West Nilevirus and the KU connection Twins' similarities lead to joint research By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com kansan staff writer Twenty years later, the brothers have found their paths crossing yet again. Both work on West Nile virus research. From an early age, twin brothers Oliver and Nicholas Komar shared a love for birds. in Colorado. Oliver is now a graduate research assistant at the University of Kansas and Nicholas is a microbiologist for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention "I would say we discovered when we were teenagers that we really enjoyed studying birds. Both of us looked for ways to make that a part of our careers," Oliver said. "Surprisingly, we both found it." The twins designed an ecological study of screech owls as high school students in Massachusetts. The results of their study were published in the regional journal Bird Observer in 1982 They hope to publish an article in the us ction SEE TWINS ON PAGE 6A Twin brothers Oliver and Nicholas Komar have joined together to research the West Nile virus in birds. The two have always had an interest in birds, dating back to their high school days, when their study of screech owls was published in a regional journal. Contributed art KU scientists find virus in Caribbean By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Researchers at the University of Kansas discovered cases of the West Nile virus in bird populations in the Dominican Republic in November. Five blood samples that were collected contained antibodies for the virus. "It's important to understand the ecology of West Nile virus in birds in tropical areas because it may help explain reemergence of the virus each year in the U.S." said Oliver Komar, graduate research assistant at the University of Kansas. Florida Atlantic Ocean Gulf of Mexico CUBA MEXICO Caribbean Sea DOMINICAN REBUPLIC SEE SCIENTISTS ON PAGE 6A Donovan Atkinson/Kansan West Nile exists in Kansas but threat isn't serious By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com kansan staff writer The West Nile virus arrived in Kansas for the first time last year, and scientists say it's not going anywhere. But despite all the hype West Nile gets in the media, the mosquito-borne virus doesn't pose that much of a threat to people with normal immune systems, said KU graduate research assistant Oliver Komar. "The flu causes far more deaths each year than West Nile does," Komar said, "The flu causes far more deaths each year than West Nile does. There's probably more worry out there about this than there needs to be." Oliver Komar KU graduate research assistant estimating flu fatalities at 20,000 annually. versus about 200 cases of fatal West Nile. "There's probably more SEE WEST NILE ON PAGE 6A Writing centers place wager on their teams By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer If the Jayhawks lose to Marquette tomorrow, the memory of Kansas' loss will hang in Wescoe Hall next week. A T-shirt from the writing center at Marquette University is in the mail, and students will see it displayed in the window of the KU Writing Center next week if Marquette defeats Kansas. The KU Writing Center made a bet with the Marquette's Ott Memorial Writing Center about the outcome of the NCAA semifinal game. Michele Eodice, director of the KU Writing Center, said the idea for the bet came after she attended a conference with Paula Gillespie, director of the Marquette writing center, and the two talked about the teams' progress to the Final Four. Eodice said she mentioned the idea jokingly to writing consultants at the center and they were excited and encouraged her to challenge Marquette. "We feel pretty confident that the University of Kansas is going to have to hang our shirt," Gillespie said. "I notice the campus is so pumped, and it's very exciting for everyone," she said. The staff at Marquette has covered the writing center's bulletin boards with headlines and photos of the team, Gillespie said. She said the staff at Marquette was also excited about the bet. Kim Robertson, Lenexa senior and KU Writing Center consultant, said she would e-mail her friend at Marquette if Kansas won to ask her to go by the writing center to make sure the staff was honoring the bet. Robertson didn't want to say too much about the outcome of the game. "I don't want to jinx it," she said. Eodice said the KU Writing Center would not send its shirt to Marquette until after the game for the same superstitious reasons. She said the KU staff would autograph the shirt before sending it to Marquette if, or when, Kansas wins. Eodice said Marquette wanted a picture of the shirt hanging in the window of the KU Writing Center if Marquette won. "We will honor the bet, but I don't think we're going to lose," she said. — Edited by Christy Dendurent You Are MARQUETTE You Are Marquette Times Marquette Can Be A New Type MARQUETTE Louis have landed Contributed art Marquette University's writing center staff is waiting on the outcome of tomorrow's Final Four game to settle a bat with the KU Writing Center. The winning group will have its school's T-shirt hung in the opposing center's window. A @ 12 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 News briefs STATI House gives tentative OK to sell liquor on Sunday TOPEKA—A bill allowing Sunday sales of包装 liquor in any city or county where voters approved was given tentative approval yesterday in the House. The measure also rewrites Kansas liquor laws to make them apply uniformly in all cities and counties. Huff's amendment passed, 71-47 and the House later advanced the bill on a voice vote. A final vote that could send the measure to the Senate is expected today. The Senate's version of the bill was a minor measure unrelated to liquor sales. The bill is a response to a recent Wyandotte County District Court ruling, which held that because the state's overall liquor laws do not apply uniformly across the state, local governments could exempt themselves from individual rules. The judge's decision upheld the decision of Wyandotte County voters to approve Sunday sales of packaged liquor. FBI investigation prompts WaKeeney sheriff to resign WaKEENEY — Trego County Sheriff Curt Bender has resigned after it was made public that the Kansas Bureau of Investigation was investigating him. The nature of the KB's investigation has not been disclosed. Authorities searched the sheriff's home March 25 but are not saying what they found. Bender's attorney, Paul Ollor, said his client submitted a two-paragraph resignation letter to Gov. Kathleen Sebelius and Trego County Clerk Kathleen Conness on Wednesday morning. The resignation was effective at noon the same day. Oller would not explain what the KBI was investigating, but acknowledged the inquiry prompted Bender to resign. County Attorney Dave Harding said Conness would hold the title of sheriff until a replacement for Bender was found, but duties of the office would be handled by Undersheriff Chad Mann. Police identify two men shot to death in Wichita WICHITA — Police said a man chased down his girlfriend's former husband, shot and killed him in a parking lot, then took his own life before officers could stop him. The men who died Wednesday were identified by police yesterday as Scott A. Smith, 34, the former husband, and his assailant, Eric S. Leckenby, 29. Police said Smith was dropping off his children at his ex-wife's home about 7 a.m. Wednesday when the boyfriend confronted him with a gun. Police said the boyfriend fired at and chased the ex-husband across the street, through a sloping ditch and muddy stream, and into a church parking lot. One man chased the other around a strip mall and confronted him again on the sidewalk in front of an electronics store. Both Smith and Leckenby were pronounced dead at a hospital. NATION Two Marquette fans die while driving to Elite Eight MILWAUKEE — Lori Rosenblum and Amanda Schepers were so crazy about Marquette University sports that they vowed to follow the Golden Eagles to Minneapolis for the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament. The women, though, never saw their team make it to the Final Four. They were killed in a traffic accident in western Wisconsin on their way to Saturday's game. Rosenblum, 24, of Arlington Heights, Ill., was driving west on Interstate 94 in St. Croix County around 10 p.m. March 28 when her vehicle crossed into oncoming lanes and was struck by two other vehicles, according to the Wisconsin State Patrol. Rosenblum and Schepers, 24, of Ladue, Mo., were pronounced dead at the accident scene. Also killed was a driver of another vehicle, Anthony Burtzel, 22, of Lakeville, Minn. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News kansan.com Greek organizations are taking the threat of terrorism very seriously. KUJH TV's Danice Brown reports tonight at 5:30, 7, 9 and 11. News: Tawnya Bach and Brooke Wehner news: tawnyh Barch and Brooke Werner Weather: Matt Jacobs Sports: Mike Alzamora On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 907 Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU THE WALKER MAN Anton Bubnovskiy/Kansan To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hell. Place it in the On Campus mail- box and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Andy H. Peterson, general maintenance and repair technician, cuts dead pine branches across the road from Stauffer-Flint Hall. He said that the cutting of this tree was the part of job of keeping all campus trees clear of dead branches. Peterson said that it was most difficult to cut the pine's branches because they were very sharp. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com The Center for Russian and East European Studies will present a Central Slavic Conference from 8:15 a.m. to 10 p.m. today and 8:15 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. Call 864-4236. Ayesha Imam will give an African studies seminar on "Women's Rights in Secular, Religious and Customary Laws in Nigeria" at 9 a.m. today at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union. Call 864-1064. The Center for East Asian Studies will host a Career Coffee from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the Kansas Union for students interested in careers that utilize their background in East Asian language or culture.Call 864-3843. Robert Baumann of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College will give a Laird Brown Bag Lecture on "Bosnia Stability and Reconstruction: The Role of Military Peacekeepers" at noon today at 318 Bailey.Call 864- 4236. Student Union Activities will screen Die Another Day at 7 and 9:30 onight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are free with an SUA movie card or $2 at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union.Call 864-7469. University Theatre will present The 10-Minute Play Festival at 7:30 tonight and tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday at Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Call 864-3381. Et Cetera Kristi Groberg, curator of the Heritage Hjemkomst Interpretive Center in Moorhead, Minn., will give a lecture on "A Morning in St. Petersburg" from 8:30 a.m. to noon tomorrow at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-4236. Black Faculty and Staff Council will hold a student awards banquet at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the ballroom in the Kansas Union.Call 864-0780. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS60045. The Department of Theatre and Film will sponsor a screening of the film Confederate States of America at 7 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday in Oldfather Studios, 9th and Avalon streets. Tickets are $7. Call 864-3511. The Twyla Tharp dance company will perform at 7:30 tomorrow night at the Lied Center. Call 864-2787. Student Union Activities will sponsor a gallery reception for senior art major Lisa Thalhammer from 7 to 9 tomorrow night at the gallery in the Kansas Union.Call 864-7469. The Swarthout Chamber Music Series will present the male vocal ensemble Cantus at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Lied Center. Call 864-2787. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, Astrid Baker will give a saxophone and piano performance at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Central Court in the Spencer Art Museum. Call 864-4710. The School of Fine Arts will sponsor a performance by Percussion Ensemble I at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at room 130 in Murphy Hall.Call 864- 3436. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 60454 The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bi-weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hilt items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. PRESENTS GREG BROWN 04-5-03 7:30 PM WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION LEVEL 5 $18 W/KUID $20 NO KUID TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE SOA BOX OFFICE KU MUSIC ANIMALS SUA WEST POINT POLE PRESENTS GREG BROWN 04-5-03 7:30 PM WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION LEVEL 5 $18 W/KUID $20 NO KUID TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE SUA PUX SPOT KU SUA WEST SIDE FOLK WWW.GREGBROWN.ORG WWW.WESTSIDEFOLK.ORG WESTSIDE FOLK WWW.GREGBROWN.ORG Walk to Campus Campus Place APARTMENTS 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Apartments Available for Summer 2003 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft 4 bedroom/2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath - Fully Equipped Kitchens - Furnished & Unfurnished Apt. available - Gas, Heat and Water - Private Balconies & Patios - Off Street Parking - 24 hr: Emergency Maintenance - On - site Manager Call or stop in TODAY for private showing Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm kansan.com EHO kansan.com News. Now. Check out the tournament games on the big screen new martini list appetizer's new wine list entertainment live The Lounge at Paisanos RISTORANTE open until 2 am • 2112 W 25 St. 1 --- FRIDAY,APRIL 4,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Plays stage Latin-American culture By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Students will have a chance to experience live Latin American theater today and tomorrow in downtown Lawrence as part of the University of Kansas' fifth Latin American Theater Conference. Live theater performances are open to the public in the late afternoon and evening, said George Woodyard, professor of Spanish and coordinator of the conference. "They are performed by actors and actresses from all over the world," he said. This year's conference focus is Puerto Rico and Cuba and features acting troupes from Puerto Rico, Spain, Costa Rica and California, Woodyard said. Previous conferences have focused on countries like Mexico and Argentina. All plays are in Spanish except for the final performance tomorrow night. One of the featured plays, La mujer que cayo del cielo by Victor Hugo Rascon Banda, relates directly to Kansas, Woodyard said. "It's about the case of a woman who was found institutionalized at a mental hospital in Larned, Kansas," he said. "The doctor, Miguel Angel Giner, who figured out why the woman couldn't communicate, will be here for the performance." La mujer que cayo del cielo, which translates to The Woman That Fell from the Sky, will be performed at 8 tonight at the Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Today's performances also include three short plays performed at the Spring Hill Suites, Sixth and New Hampshire streets, at 4:30 p.m. The conference will conclude tomorrow with the presentation of The Night of the Assassins at 5:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center. Tickets to all shows are $5 and available at the door. The department of Spanish and Portuguese sponsored the conference as a way for those interested in Latin American theater to discuss current issues in different regions of theater, Woodvard said. Approximately 175 people from across the nation and world registered for the festival, said Paola Hernandez, Buenos Aires, Argentina, graduate student. Woodyard said the conference also featured roundtable discussions and the presentation of academic papers during the day for registered conference guests. "The conference is beneficial to people who don't get to see a lot of live theater." Woodyard said. "But we also discuss issues of the featured nation, such as identity and cultural tensions." The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the center for Latin American Studies and the department of theater and film also are sponsoring the festival. To 'air' is human [Image of a person riding a snowboard over a snowy landscape, with trees in the background.] - Edited by Michelle Burhenn Jegen McDermott/Kansan Jeremy Bechtold, Lake of the Ozarks, Mo., senior, executes a back roll during the KU Ski Team's first spring practice. People interested in joining the club can contact the Organizations and Leadership Development Center at 864-4861. Students can avoid travel mishaps when heading to New Orleans By Jessica Hood jhood@kansan.com kansan staff writer Two weeks after spring break, students are hitting the road once again — this time for New Orleans. Kevin Liu, a travel advisor at STA Travel, located in the Kansas Union, said students renting cars should ask some key questions of But students planning to travel to the Final Four may not be prepared for potential problems that occur during travel. the renting agent. "A customer should double check on insurance requirements, mileage limits, pick up and drop locations and requirements of the rental agency." Liu said. According to the Fodors Web site at www.fodors.com/travelips, students should also ask questions about the company's policy dealing with late plane arrivals and vehicle mishaps. If traveling during a high traffic time such as the Final Four, ask if a confirmed reservation guaram- tees a car. Liu also said when dealing with hotels, students should ask about the requirement of deposits if the student wants a late check-in times, and students should look at each hotel's requirements. John Novotny, manager of Travellers Inc., 831 Massachusetts St., said students should check the conditions of their hotel reservations. Students should make sure they are being charged the rate that was quoted when the reservation was made. "It doesn't hurt to check the safety of the route you are taking. Also, double check walking and driving directions." John Novotny Manager of Travellers Inc. "Students often don't take the time to listen to the fine print," Novotny said. "You should have a clear understanding of what you have agreed to." Novotny said students traveling to New Orleans should be aware of their surroundings to ensure a safe trip. Getting a clear sense of direction for the area is also key, Novotny said. "It doesn't hurt to check the safety of the route you are taking," Novotny said. "Also, double check walking and driving directions." Other ideas for safe travel include not carrying large sums of money and keeping one form of identification in the hotel. Ruth Nye of Adventure Travel, 544 Columbia Drive, said students traveling to New Orleans should use common sense and be cautious. "Students should make sure to stay in groups," Nye said. "Also, they should make sure to stay in populated areas especially when down on Bourbon Street." Edited by Leah Shaffer informal STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE ELECTIONS ELECTIONS MONDAY APRIL 7TH 12:00 PM WESCOE BEACH DEBATE ASK YOUR QUESTIONS. VOICE YOUR OPINIONS. BE SURE TO VOTE! TH RACE TO BE IS... Watching the Hawks at the Stadium! South gates open 4 p.m. Saturday Game starts 5:07 p.m. - Big Screen - KU Dance Team - Baby Jay - Pep Band - Mardi Gras Beads - Concessions - Pregame Family Funzone - Post-game DJ & Music by KLZR The Lazer - And More! Go Javhawks! The University of Kansas Memorial Stadium KU vs Marquette KU Weather permitting NO Alcohol There will be no vehicle access to central campus Stadium celebration sponsored by the University of Kansas 4 5 4A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepfert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7567 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Prepare for perils of online system Because it is a new system, students and faculty now have to forget about the old system and learn how to work a new one. To do that, students have been completely informed by numerous e-mails that can be hard to keep track of. Online enrollment is here and with it comes a completely different system to learn and navigate. When using this new system, students should be wary of some of the things that can make this new enrollment system go from a smooth experience to a headache. On the enroll and pay Web site, students must use the links on the page and not the back buttons. Otherwise a warning screen might appear. Enrollment for Summer 2003 is still using the traditional method, which still requires an adviser's signature. It can be a hassle using two methods of enrollment when enrolling in both summer and fall classes. If a desired course does happen to be full or closed, the system will automatically enroll the student in an open section. Showing up in the wrong section on the first day of class and having it pointed out in front of 30 people is embarrassing. If a student forgets to check his hold status until the enrollment start date and has one, then it has to be cleared before enrolling in any classes. By the time it takes to clear it, a desired section could be full. If a student doesn't have regular access to a computer it could lead to missing out on a desired section. Some schools require advising and others don't. Different schools have different methods of advising for enrollment, and the process can become confusing for students enrolled in more than one schools. Enrollment doesn't have to be a problem as long as student plan ahead of time and know exactly what classes, line numbers and sections to enroll in. If problems persist, the enrollment center in Strong Hall or just the help buttons at the top of every enroll and pay page provide help while students adjust to the system. By design it is an easier system, with easy access to optional campus fees and providing easy access to enroll at leisure between every students' individual start and end date and times. By being prepared, headaches about the new system can be avoided. Jon Rafston for the editorial board WADE'S VIEW VOTE FOR ME ARA 2 Chalk rules $12 SPECIAL DO YOU KNOW WHERE THAT INFO MEETING IS? CHALK rules. 5:00 WESCOE BEACH PARTY I CAN'T READ IT BUT IT LOOKS LIKE THERE WILL BE DANCING ... AND #400 DRAWS??... PERSPECTIVE New study abroad programs do not ease safety concerns The Office of Study Abroad's cancellation of its program in Golffito, Costa Rica, was an unnecessary reaction to a situation beyond the University's control. Shannon Martin was not a member of the University's program at the time of her murder. Had she been a participant in the program at the time of her death, it would still be unfair to hold the University, the Tropical Studies Program or the town itself somehow responsible for what happened. I arrived in Golfito, Costa Rica, three months after Shannon's death and lived there through June 2002. My year in Golfito was the most valuable of my four years of study as a Jayhawk. I became part of a small-town community that was not inherently more dangerous than Lawrence or any other town in America. A "change in the environment" in Golfito after Shannon's death and the University's inability to protect its students in the face of this change are popular rationales for closing the program. But the real change after Shannon's murder was one in the University's superficial perceptions of the town. University officials' visits to Golfito during my time there were few and brief, always characterized by a lack of contact with the town itself, or even us, the students whose safety they were supposedly considering. Rather than feeling unsafe, the students I lived with in Golfito were puzzled by the University's reports of an ongoing change and the supposed dangers all around us we were somehow unaware of. The University has decided to offer new summer programs in Costa Rica to replace some of what they took from Golfito. Yet the University continues to hold grave misconceptions regarding the Golfito "problem" and the safety of KU students in general. San Jose is one of the more dangerous places in Costa Rica for the mere fact that it is the country's capital and a large urban center. Puerto Viejo is a rapidly changing bed of tourism and commercialized rasta culture. In a recent The University Daily Kansan article on the new programs, study abroad director Susan Grobeck-Tedesco cites the programs' physical distance from Golfito as main indicators of students' safety while participating in these programs. But the two sites chosen by the University are not exactly examples of safety and stability. Before Puerto Viejo's heydey, Cauhita,a very similar town less than 10miles up the coast was "enjoying" a climate similar to that of the Puerto Viejo of today. Touristic interest shifted to Puerto Viejo, however, after already deteriorating native-tourist relations in Cauhita reached a climax with the murder of two American girls there in the late 1980s. Violence is unfortunately not a problem isolated to distinct locales or situations, nor is it something that the University can protect its students from at every moment, be it during study abroad or while here in Lawrence. If students' safety is the University's main concern, someone needs to consider the shortsightedness of imaging that physical distance from Golfito is correlated with increased student safety in Costa Rica. The University needs to reexamine its stance on the town of Golfito, the Tropical Studies Program, and its supposed roles in the death of Shannon Martin and the safety of other students in Costa Rica. Costa Rica is a small country and the University cannot run forever from its so-called dangerous places. More importantly, it cannot hope to better protect students by doing so. Katie Mitchell is a Solon, Iowa, senior. PERSPECTIVE Student senators show devotion deserve same from student body Well, it's that time of the year again — Student Senate elections — and I am sure a lot of you are thinking, "Who cares?" Help yourself, your neighbor and your campus by answering this question with a definitive "I do!" What many people don't realize is Senators also vote on issues dealing with the larger scale of life outside the University of Kansas such as resolutions that show our support of or opposition to war and tuition issues. Student Senate votes on campus issues such as housing, transportation safety and student fees. The senators devote their entire Wednesday evenings to Student Senate. For example, on the Wednesday before Spring Break, Student Senate did not adjourn until 1:30 a.m. These dedicated students fight for what they believe is best for the students no matter the cost. You should be careful when choosing which candidate to vote for. Watching students vote for their friends or those who are in the same organization with them is sad and ridiculous. Making uninformed decisions based on personal favoritism detracts from individuals being able to make smart decisions on their own. Students should use their own minds to make decisions instead of adopting the beliefs of their peers without researching them first. So that is exactly what I encourage all of you to do before this year's election. The University Daily Kansan will print information about each candidate before the elections. You also have the option of visiting the Student Senate Web site at www.ku.edu/ - senate to read about Senators who are running for another term. Read this information and educate yourself about who will be the best person to serve you. Don't be another nonvoting student. Use your power to vote for changes you believe in. So spread the word, and educate yourself. Shannon Snapp is a Belleville junior in Spanish and psychology. She is a Delta Force candidate for CLAS. Free forAll Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com --it's 1:22 a.m. and I have two ideas. One of them was to buy lawn furniture. The other was to call the Free For All. The phone was right by my head and I have no money to buy lawn furniture, so here I am. To the person who said that KUnited is just a group of pretty, Frisbee-throwing Republicans, I say this: I'm not greek, I can't throw a Frisbee worth a crap and I'm a Democrat. Please save your stereotypes and get to know your candidates. 图 15 I went down to Florida for spring break and I'm still here. I like how Jonathan Ng likes to spend our student money to tell us about our student money. I will give $100 to the girl with the hainstest chest. Just meet me at JRP at 12:00 Friday, and you've got $100 A legend like B.B. King comes to KU and nobody writes about it in the UDK? What a shame. I work in Ellsworth, and this is to the idiot that broke in over the weekend and punched a bunch of holes in the wall. I was just wondering how his hand felt after he hit that stud. Dumbass. Just be glad you didn't punch in the wall that had concrete blocks behind it. 圆 The Parking Department loves online enrollment because now they can put a hold on you before you've even gotten a ticket. 医 It's good to see that Delta Force is running on the all-important hide-and-seek platform. B - To all the war protesters out there, I'd like to tell you something. You're doing about as much good as a screen door on a submarine. Yeah, this is to the cartoonists on the opinion page: it's already happened. It's called Michelob Ultra. 4 题 11 1 1 FRIDAY,APRIL4.2003 NEWS --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Medical students present research By Nikki Overfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Dropping weights on the spinal cords of rats, measuring the rotation of a model pelvis and studying inflammation in rats all in a day's work for three students at the University of Kansas Medical School. These were three of the 104 research projects presented Wednesday at the Student Research Forum at the school. Medical, graduate, nursing and allied health students conducted the research. Ninety-five students gave platform presentations and nine students gave poster presentations, said Kevin McIntire, who organized the forum. The students presented their research to a panel composed mostly of faculty judges, McIntire said. "The main purpose behind the Student Research Forum is to let students practice presenting data in an effective way," he said. "Every student at the Med Center will have to present data somewhere else in some way or another — either in the form of a diagnosis, or presenting data to an audience of international colleagues." Chris Roark, second-year medical student from Prairie Village, said presenting his research was a little nerve-racking at first. "It was one of the first times that I was actually presenting to a group of health professionals and doctors about work in their field," he said. "But overall it's a relaxed environment they provide and everyone there wants you to succeed." Roark's research involved working on a new technique to study how the blood flow in the spinal cord changes after a spinal cord injury. To do the study, he dropped weights on the spinal cords of rats and then scanned their spinal cords to examine the blood flow. Roark worked on his research for eight weeks in the summer and then for about four or five hours each month since the summer, he said. Brennen Lucas, third-year medical student from Wichita, got a free trip to Greece because of his research. Lucas presented his research at a scoliosis conference in Greece with a professor at the medical school before he presented it at the forum, he said. Lucas said presenting his research felt fantastic. In the summer between his first and second year of medical school, he started researching a way to measure pelvic rotation in patients with scoliosis. Lucas worked with a model pelvis and marked the rotation on the model. Brice Zogleman, second-year medical student from Wichita presented his research on inflammation. Since May 2002, Zogleman has been looking at inflammation on a micro scale. His research involves studying the signal pathways responsible for initiation of an inflammatory response. He used rats to perform the experiments. "Having the presentation done is a good feeling," he said. "That's a load off, I would say it's not actually done, though. There's still a lot of work that could done on the same project." But Zogleman isn't finished now that his presentation is over. He said he planned to continue his research. Edited by Christy Dendurent Reservists fill gaps in U.S. Military The Associated Press KANSAS CITY. Mo. — In the past four years, Sgt. Pat Shelton has spent a full 12 months away from his family and his job to serve with the U.S. military's 241st Air Traffic Control Squadron in St. Joseph, Mo. Shelton is one of America's reservoirs, who signed up to be part-time soldiers but are receiving more frequent calls to duty as the United States battles terrorism and the regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq. of paper." "Most people joined the Guard as a volunteer force," Shelton said. "They didn't anticipate — I didn't anticipate — being activated this much. But at the same time, I put my name on that piece With almost half of America's military force in the reserves, the country depends on part-time soldiers like Shelton to become fully devoted to any U.S. conflict. Reservists served 36 million days of active duty last year, according to the Pentagon. That's a tremendous jump from the approximately 1 million days American reservists put in during the 1980s and triple the service typical during the mid-1990s. The increase has some members of Congress and Pentagon officials concerned. "We have people in the Reserves who have been in Bosnia, Kosovo and now Iraq," Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kansas) said. at a Senate Armed Services sub committee meeting last week. "How on earth they can continue to do that is beyond me." U. S. Rep. Ike Skelton (D-Missouri) said he had advocated increasing the size of the active force in bills since 1995, but with no success. Skelton, the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, says the Pentagon has resisted increasing the active military, apparently because that would be expensive. Reserves are cheaper to maintain because they are paid only when needed. "The active duty is too small, especially the Army." Skelton said. "At some point, you are going to wear out those who are filling the gaps, mainly the Guard and Reserve." Many of the reserve units have specialized duties such as medical care, bridge building and chemical weapons response. Units with commonly needed specialties are called to duty more frequently. It's a dramatic change from the "weekend warrior" routine in which reserve troops trained every fourth weekend and two weeks a year, but were otherwise free to live their lives. Master Sgt. James Thompson, a reservist who has been on security duty at Fort Riley, Kan., for 18 of the last 19 months says it's not too much to ask. "I was born and raised in the United States," Thompson said, "and when it calls, I go." GUIDANCE SUNDRINE 7th & Florida NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Studios,1BR,2BR, 3 BR w/2 baths & 4 BR w/2 baths - Furnished Apt. Available - Gas heat & water - Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves - W/D in select Apts - Private balconies & patios - On-site laundry facility - Pool - On KU bus route - On-site Manager - 24 hr emergency Maintenance Models Open Daily! For more information call 785-841-5255 Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m SQUALIFIED MOUSING OPPORTUNITY TANGLEWOOD APARTMENTS 951 Arkansas (785)749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! 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Come out to Hoglund Ballpark as the Jayhawks take on Nebraska On Friday the first 250 fans in the gates will get a Kansas Jayhawk mesh back hat courtesy of KU Athletics. Students get in free with KUID 800. 34.HAWKS KUAthletics.com 3 KUStore.com Official All American Mall Network A 6A = THEUNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 Summit House Apartments Now taking applications for Fall 2003 - I BR & i BR Loft Apartment Available • Water and trash noid - Walking distance to Campus - Laundry facilities on site - 24 hr. Emergency maintenance Call (785) 841-1429 for details Mon-Fri 9 am - 6 pm 1105 Louisiana FHO EHO FUND RIGHTS APPROPRIETARY LIBERTY HALL 644 massachusetts street 1208 (785) 769-1012 CITY OF GOD Directed by Fernando Meirelles R FRI & SAT 4:00 6:45 SUN 1:15 4:00 6:45 9:30 Adaptation. PLAYING ONE MORE WEEK! FRI & SAT 9:40 only SUN 7:00 9:40 THE QUIET AMERICAN FRI no shows SAT 1:30 only SUN 1:30 4:15 WEEKEND TIMES ONLY! call or visit www.libertynall.net for times Scientists CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Komar said research in these areas improved the understanding of the ecology of tropical areas and could help predict a new introduction of the virus in the states. The KU researchers collected the birds using mist nets made of black nylon that stretch seven feet high and 35 feet long. Blood samples and tissue were sent to a laboratory at Colorado State and were tested in February. Barry Beaty, professor at Colorado State, runs the lab that performed the tests on the bird specimens. This is the first time a virus was found in a bird, but there have been reported cases of a person in the Cayman Islands who had the virus, Komar said. "It confirmed the results that the West Nile virus seemed to be in the Caribbean," he said. Kansas researchers became involved in the study because A. Townsend Peterson, curatorofbirds at the Natural History Museum, was interested in the spread of West Nile virus, Komar said. The research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation. West Nile virus poses a potential threat to endangered birds in the Dominican Republic. Research in those areas could provide answers as to which bird populations are at risk, said Nicholas Komar, microbiologist for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "There are numerous endangered species in the Dominican Republic," Nicholas Komar said. "That's true for most tropical islands. Island species are much more sensitive to extinction." The team of researchers have more trips planned to Central America and other areas of the Caribbean. The bird specimens are preserved in cabinets in the Natural History Museum. Oliver Komar said. "They will be here preserved for future studies. The same birds are useful for many more studies in the future," he said. - Edited by Ryan Wood "Take 5"...five minutes for 5% off on Fall '03 Books Preorder and Save an extra 5% Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill Preorder and Save an extra 5% IHS Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill or click and save at www.jayhawkbookstore.com West Nile CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A worry out there about this than there needs to be." That being said, any time an illness is fatal to even one person, there is a public health concern, Komar said. West Nile is particularly dangerous to the elderly or those with weakened immune systems, he said. In light of that risk, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment has come up with a set of simple suggestions aimed at preventing the spread of West Nile. Those suggestions include: - wearing long sleeves when outdoors if possible. - using DEET or some sort of insect repellent containing DEET. - limiting going outside at peak times for mosquitoes such as early morning and early evening. "The second people can do is to take a look at their environment and remove any standing water in areas around the house that might be a mosquito breeding ground," said department representative Sharon Watson. "There is some concern that mosquitoes that carried the virus last fall could have laid eggs that are already affected with the virus. But the more likely suspects are the migratory birds." "There is no 'too early' to start reporting dead birds," he said. "There was a case reported in Connecticut of a hawk that died in February, so That's where Komar and his colleagues at the Biodiversity Research Center come in. The group recently identified the virus in migratory birds in the Dominican Republic. In the past, the group also tracked the virus by testing dead birds in Kansas, though the department contracted the work with Kansas State University this year. that shows there is some transmission cycle through the winter. Report dead birds any time. Everybody's got to try to be a scientist on this." Tracking and testing dead birds is one of the most effective ways of following the spread of West Nile virus, Komar said. According to scientists from the department, every Kansas county except two reported at least one case of West Nile in either birds, horses or humans. Across the state, there were 794 horses reportedly infected with the virus last year, and 22 human cases, mostly concentrated in south central and northeast Kansas. Mark Hecker, maintenance superintendent with the Lawrence Parks and Recreation department, said his department planned to treat areas of standing water with a larvicide designed to kill mosquito eggs before they hatch. Those are the same precautionary steps his department took last year. Dead birds can be reported to the KU division of ornithology at www.nhm.ku.edu/birds. —Edited by Ryan Wood Twins CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A CDC's journal, Emerging Infectious Diseases on their collaborative research. Their article is about their research in the Dominican Republic last November. "I think that's probably typical of twins who grew up in the same surroundings to share a lot of interests." Nicholas Komar Centers for Disease Control microbiologist Though the twins both work on the West Nile virus, they have different areas of specialty. Nicholas works with vertebrate hosts and how the virus persists in the environment. Oliver studies endangered species of birds in order to create plans of conservation. "West Nile is a biological problem just like any other ecological problem." Oliver said. "We love doing science, asking questions and finding the answers to them." The twins not only do research on the same subject matter, but share another commonality as well. "We're both married to Salvadorian women who are sisters." Nicholas said. Oliver met his wife at his brother's wedding. "I went to the wedding in San Salvador. I was the best man. Six years later I married the maid of honor," Oliver said. Nicholas said he does not find these commonalities unusual. "I think that's probably typical of twins who grew up in the same surroundings to share a lot of interests," Nicholas said. "We have similar personalities." - Edited by Ryan Wood Roy says “Jayhawk fans are the greatest… Be responsible. I care. Roy Williams ...When they CELEBRATE SAFELY.” The University of Kansas ns are est... sible. care. KU 1 FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 SPORTS --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 7A Kansas eyes Tech's record in weekend softball games By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter After getting its Jayhawk feathers ruffled by Wichita State on Wednesday, the Kansas softball team will try to get back to its winning ways at Texas Tech this weekend and improve its Big 12 Conference record in the process. Starting at 2 p.m. tomorrow, the visiting Jayhawks will take on the Red Raiders. The two teams will meet Sunday at 1 p.m. Despite its national recognition, No. 23 Kansas (21-11 overall, 1-5 Big 12 Conference) sits in eighth place in the Big 12. Texas Tech is in last at tenth. Looking at the Red Raiders losing record at home (14-32, 1- 7) , one would think a series in Lubbock, Texas, would be a perfect place to improve a conference record. To make things worse for the Red Raiders, the team is riding a nine-game losing streak after being swept by Missouri. Southwest Texas, No.18 Oklahoma State and No. 5 Texas. But Kansas coach Tracy Bunge knows better than to overlook any team in the Big 12 after the less-than-mediocre Iowa State Cyclones split a series with Kansas last weekend. "You look at their record and you think it's going to be a cakewalk," Bunge said, "but everybody in the conference is able to beat everybody on any given day. I'm hoping that everyone has learned that we cannot take team any team in this conference lightly." In contrast to Kansas' home run-happy lineup, the Red Raiders have struggled at the plate, hitting only .252 as a team. The Red Raiders have held their opponents to an average of .264, however. Holding that average down are sophomore Kristina Blair, freshman Erin Crawford and sophomore Amie Stines, who have a combined earned run average of 2.82. Kansas' offensive attack is sure to get a good test against the trio. The 'Hawks will next be in action in Omaha, Neb., as they will take on Creighton in a doubleheader starting at 5 p.m. Wednesday. The Kansas baseball team will try to make up for its recent losses in conference play this weekend when it hosts No. 11 Nebraska for a three-game set. Jayhawks to go to bat against Cornhuskers Coach Ritch Price will send senior Kevin Wheeler to the mound today to start the series. Wheeler will be followed by junior Chris Smart and Ryan Knippschild. Edited by Michelle Burhenn Smart has only started two games all season, including a start March 18 against Southwest Missouri State. In that game he pitched four scoreless innings. Price said he was hoping to get five or six quality innings from Smart. Freshman Matt Baty will also be in the starting lineup this weekend. He is leading the team with a .447 batting average and The Jayhawks are 1-5 in conference play and will look to this weekend to make up some ground on some other teams in the conference. will start at second base. The normal starting second baseman, freshman Ritchie Price, will move from second base to shortstop. The Cornhuskers will start lefthanded pitcher Aaron Marsden today to match Wheeler. Marsden is 5-0 this season with a 1.89 earned run average. Quinton Robertson and Zach Kroenke will follow Marsden. Offensively, Nebraska is led by Matt Hopper who is batting. .413 with 10 home runs and 25 RBI. Daniel Berk Kansas City Chiefs' schedule released CHIETSFOOTBALL KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs schedule was released yesterday, with the regular season opener coming Sept. 7 at home against San Diego. The Pittsburgh Steelers come to town Sept.14 before the Chiefs travel to Houston for the first time in seven years to play the second-year Texans. The Chiefs will play five nationally televised games, including an Oct. 20 clash at Oakland and a Sunday night game at home against Buffalo The Oakland game will be the first regular-season Monday Night Football game for Kansas City in three years. Associated Press 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts APRIL 5 2003 KU PONWOW 13TH ANNUAL SPRING POW-WOW APRIL 5,2003,GRAND ENTRY 7:00 PM KU CAMPUS AT ANSCHUTZ SPORTS PAVILION HOST SOUTHERN DRUM HOST NORTHERN DRUM HEADMAN DANCER HEAD LADY DANCER STUDENT HEADMAN STUDENT HEAD LADY MC AD UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FIRST NATION STUDENT ASSOCIATION SOUTHERN THUNDER EAGLE FEATHER DARYL JACK AMY BEARSKIN RYAN RED CORN YVETTE WASHINGTON MANNY KING JOE BOINTY FUGA CONTESTS!! PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS We Buy, Sell & Trade USED & NEW Sports Equipment Jayhawk & Powercat Charms 25.7 EVERYONE IS WELCOME! FREE ADMISSION!! COME AND ENJOY NATIVE AMERICAN SINGING AND DANCING, ARTS AND CRAFTS, AND FOOD. VENDORS CONTACT STEVE BYINGTON AT 785.856.1396 FOR BOOTH INFORMATION. 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Nominations due by April 10. Nomination forms available at www.clas.ku.edu or contact nlott@ku.edu FINAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Kentucky Place Apartments Now Leasing 2 BR Apartments For Fall 2003! - Furnished apt. available - Within walking distance to campus - Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves & dishwashers - Large walk-in closets - Laundry facilities on site For more information call 841-1212 or 749-0445 Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MISS. STREET DELI DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 IDNC FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT - Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 -$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis -$2.00 Wells 1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 Fat Tire pints for $2.00 - Fat T1 C 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 1 7 A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8605 9255 Four Wheel Dr. SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SPRING BIKE SALE APRIL 5-13, 2003 HURRY IN FOR THE BEST SELECTION! 804 Massachusetts St. Downtown Lawrence APRIL 5-13, 2003 HURRY IN FOR THE BEST SELECTION! KANSAN everyday Regents Court Apartments Large 3&4 BR,2 full bath apartments for rent with Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Large fully Applianced Kitchen including Microwave & Dishwasher Gas Heat & Hot Water Central Heat & Air Off street parking On KU bus route 24 hr. Emergency maintenance For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 Mon.-Fri. 9-5 EHO The Lied Center of Kansas What's Happening Next? lied.ku.edu All Tickets Half Price for KU Students! Twyla Tharp Dance Saturday April 5 7:30 p.m. form This spectacular company will perform Westerly Round, fusing classical ballet with American folk dance; Even the King; and Surfer at the River Styx. Cantus, male vocal ensemble Sunday, April 6 2:00 p.m. AIRLINES This wonderful a cappella concert will include Gregorian chants, Renaissance motets, American folk songs and African-American spirulina. It's a party! Following the concert, you are invited to stay for the Lieder Center's 10th Anniversary, 2003-04 Season Announcement. BROWN BUTTERFLY SATURDAY. APRIL 12 - 7:30 P.M. SPORTS ...a bold fusion of music, dance, multimedia and theater, celebrating the style, spirit and times of Muhammad Ali. Craig Harris, Creator & Composer Maries Yearby, Choreographer featuring *Movin' Spirits Dance Theater* Jonas Goldschmidt, Video Artist NATIONAL Awards GREAT WORK Sweet Honey in the Rock SUNDAY, APRIL 13 7:30 P.M. Sweet Honey vocal S School of Fine Arts University of Birmingham STUDIOE SCROLL MEDIA SENATI vocal gospel, jazz and blues This soultle ensemble performs vocal arrangements touching on social issues. It's music for the mind as well as the ear. CornerBank Corporate Sponsor Tickets Call 785 864 AR1S With both conference and non-conference battles this weekend, the No. 75-ranked Kansas tennis team will look for its first victories at the Robinson courts. "We have two important matches this weekend and we have the ability to compete closely and win," coach Kilmany Waterman said. "We've had some very windy practices, but I think Tennis planning for home matches The Jayhawks, 7-8 overall and 3-5 in the Big 12 Conference, take on the No.46-ranked Tulsa Golden Hurricane at noon tomorrow. The Golden Hurricane looks to ride the momentum of a 4-3 upset over the Oklahoma State Cowgirls on Wednesday. Alicia Pillay leads Tulsa with a No.24 ranking they're ready to finish the season on a positive note." Sunday, Kansas faces Colorado, which is right behind the Jayhawks in the Big 12 stands. The Buffaloes stand at 9-5 overall and 2-4 in conference play. The Jayhawks are also leading the all-time series with Colorado, 21-5. Kansas owns the all-time series against Tulsa at 10-2-1. in singles and a No. 50 ranking in teams with Alexandra Durska. Junior Emily Haylock is 10-5 while playing at No. 3 singles during the spring season. In doubles, junior Courtney Steinbock and Paige Brown hold a 6-3 record when playing together this season. "Both teams we are playing are quality opponents, but we really have the ability to compete with them and all four of our remaining matches," Waterman said. Soccer looking to overcome thin bench Jonah Ballow By Shane Mettlen smeltten@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas soccer team will be at home for the second time this spring Sunday when it takes on Creighton and Oral Roberts at SuperTarget Field. The Jayhawks are 1-2-2 on the spring season after notching a victory and a tie at Iowa last weekend. Kansas coach Mark Francis said he liked the improvement he was seeing from his team this spring. "The things we've been working on this spring have been getting better," Francis said. "We played well last weekend. We ran out of gas last weekend in the second game, but I thought we played well." Francis said the team was in good shape, but a lack of depth with only 11 players made doubleheaders tough. "The players' condition isn't a concern," Francis said. "In soccer it's impossible to play two games in one day. We would never do that in a real season, but in the spring you only have a few dates and you want to get as much in as possible." Creighton will play its first game of the spring season at SuperTarget Field, near 19th Street and Ousdahl Road. Bluejay coach Bruce Erickson said his team wasn't bringing in a specific game plan but wanted to play solid soccer. "We're coming to play." Erickson said. "I don't know if there is anything particular we will try to work on. We just want to build off what we did last fall." Francis said typically the spring season was about improving as a team rather than focusing on the opponent. "I don't really know that much about Creighton or Oral Roberts," Francis said. "We don't really do scouting reports in the spring. We just want to work on getting better." — Edited by Michelle Burhenn Royals defeat White Sox, off to a 3-0 start The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Chicago White Sox were supposed to be AL Central contenders and are 0-5. The Kansas City Royals, who lost 100 games last season and then slashed payroll, are 3-0. What gives? "A lot of people are surprised. Honestly, I'm not," said Royals rookie Ken Harvey, whose goahead single off Billy Koch keyed a seven-run eighth inning in yesterday's 12-6 victory. "We have a lot of talent here," Harvey said. "People don't want to give us credit for that." Kansas City, 3-0 for the first time since 1979, scored all its runs with two outs. After Harvey's two-run single put Kansas City on top 7-6, Brent Mayne hit Koch's next pitch for an opposite-field, three-run homer. The White Sox, 0-3 for the first time since 1995, committed four errors and wasted a great day by Jose Valentin, who had a pair of two-run homers and a triple. "It was just a horrific game by us," Chicago manager Jerry Manuel said. "That's one of the worst games I've seen us play in a long time. It's not the fact we lost three games. It's how we lost this one." The White Sox play their home opener today against winless Detroit. The Royals' Mike Sweeney was 3-for-3 with a homer, three walks and three RBIs. Chicago led 6-5 in the eighth when Tom Gordon (0-1) hit Joe Randa with a pitch and Sweeney walked. Damaso Marte walked Desi Relaford with two outs, loading the bases, and Koch relieved. He had 44 saves last year for Oakland, but couldn't convert his first chance with Chicago, which acquired him during the offseason. Mayne tied a career-high with four hits and had four RBI. "I didn't hit the ball well until the last one," he said. "I shanked the first three. I was lucky." Angel Berroa doubled and scored on third baseman Joe Crede's second error of the game. Rick White forced in another run with the bases loaded when Sweeney walked for the second time in the inning. Valentin hit his first homer of the season in the fifth off Miguel Asencio, then hit a two-run homer off Kris Wilson in the sixth for a 6-5 lead. It was his 14th multi-homer game. International Student Association presents... International Awareness Week SUNDAY, A -Flavors of the World Kick-off Dinner 6pm Lawrence Catholic Center MONDAY, APRIL 7 -Open Game Night 6-9pm, Hawk's Nest TUESDAY, APRIL 8 -Muslim Women in America Dr. Saadia Malik 11:30-1pm, Alderson -Picture the World 6-9pm, Auditorium Lawrence Public Library WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 -Salsa Workshop 6-7:30pm, Ballroom THURSDAY, APRIL 10 THURSDAY, APRIL Fashion Show & Dance 3pm, 4th Floor Lobby Firsthand Experience in Iraq Prof. Scott Harding 6-7pm Big 12 Rm FRIDAY, APRIL 11 Week 12-5pm, Ballroom -Rhythm of the World 10pm-2am $5 admission 130 Office of Study Abroad Applied English and Literature International Student and Scholar Services 9am-5pm, Robinson Field $5 per team -Festival of Nations 7pm, Woodruff Auditorium ISAwNr All events are free and in the Kansas Union unless otherwise stated Campus Coupons brought to you by Campus Coupons KANSAN & kansan.com Dr. Kevin Lenahan Optometrist 935 Iowa 838-3900 $99 Eye Exam & Disposable Contacts Price includes: Eye exam, contact lens fitting, two follow up visits, and two 6-packs of two wk disposable contacts of doctor's choice. Does NOT include color, tone, or bilateral lenses. Not valid with insurance or any other offers. Exp. 4/22/03 BUY 1 CARD, GET 1 FREE! (up to $1.99 value) expires 4/22/03 ROD'S Hallmark SHOP 2329 Iowa, Lawrence • 841-2160 GUMBY'S Pizza 841-5000 1445 W. 23rd (next to Paper Warehouse) Gumby's DESTROYA 14" Large 1 topping Pizza anytime $6.99 Delivered * Not valid with gift or coupon MTW 4 pm - 3:30 am Thu 4 pm - 3:30 am Fri 4 pm - 3:30 am Sat 4 pm - 3:30 am Free Full Color Copies with each order of 10 copies or more receive 3 copies free. originals can not exceed 8 1/2" x 11" Exp. 4/11/03 All Printing Services Wescoe Publication Center. 1520 Wescoe Hall. (Next to Cafeteria) 864-3354 Yello Sub 75¢ Off Any Sub Not valid with any other offers 624 W. 12th 841-3268 1814 W. 23rd 843-6000 Exp. 04/22/03 Teller's RESTAURANT & BAK Free Pizza or Pasta *with purchase of one item of equal or greater value. NOT GOOD FOR CARRY-OUT. DOES NOT INCLUDE DRINKS OR TAXES. 740 Massachusetts (786) 043-4111 Historic Daupinville Lawrence Russell Steiner Creamier: Double Ice Cream Buy 1 get one FREE caramel apple exp. April 22,2003 Hours: Mon Sat 9:00-6:00 pm Sun 12:00-6:00pm 1300 W. 23rd st 788.830.860.33 * equal or lesser value. Offer good at the Lawrence location on ly Save 60¢! Medium Double Cheeseburger Meal for $3.49 (plus tax) Valid only at the Kansas Union. Exp. 04/22/03 MARKET BURGER KING 6 1 Final Four Preview Beware of the Phog ... Mardi Gras style John Nowak/Kansan SPECIAL SECTION FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Road trip map with sites Big Gravy goes Final Four bar hopping to stop and see, p. 2B to the Big Easy, p. 5B Here and there, p.11B Final Four game previews, p. 3B Kansas basketball players Heard on the Court, p. 12B Final Four updates this weekend on kansan .com. 27 2B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FINALFOUR FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 Road trip pit-stops make a memorable Final Four 1. Lawrence KANSAS 2. MISSOURI 3. 4. ARKANSAS 5. MISSISSIPPI 6. New Orleans By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Sureyou could spend as much as $800 roundtrip and just fly to the Final Four in New Orleans. But chances are all flights are booked, and what college student would turn down a road trip with friends? Donovan Atkinson/Kansan The 983-mile journey is fairly easy. Take Interstate 70 East to St. Louis. Once in "The Lou," take I-55 South to New Orleans. The drive may be long, about 16 hours, but the Kansan has compiled a list of places that might make your Road to the Final Foura little more fun. START 1 Allen Fieldhouse It's a short trip down I-70 to Columbia. However, because the Tigers have never been to a Final Four, they can't tell you much about the road there. 2 University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. What coach Quin Snyder can tell you is how he managed to lose to all four of the Final Four teams while keeping his hair looking so great. 3 Anheuser-Busch Companies, St. Louis Last year Kansas coach Roy Williams and his team rubbed the Billiken's belly at St. Louis University for good luck. After a first-round scare from Holy Cross and Kirk Hinrich leaving the game with an injury, coach Williams changed his tune. "I believe the Billiken will have to get his thrills some other way," Williams said after the Holy Cross game. Well, a great way to get your thrills in St. Louis would be to stop by Anheuser-Busch for a tour. Word is that it gives free samples. 4 Mississippi River, Blytheville, Ark. In 1991 and last year, coach Williams had his team spit into the river for good luck. Both teams made the Final Four but failed to win it all, so spit at your own risk. I-55 South toward New Orleans runs parallel to the mighty Mississippi River. However, there is a place near Blytheville, Ark., where I-55 is a part of the Great River Road, which offers a scenic view of the river. 5 Graceland Mansion, Memphis, Tenn. Mike Sheridan, Cincinnati senior, is one of many students who will be making the long road trip to New Orleans. He said that along the way he planned to visit Elvis Presley's famous mansion, Graceland. While Sheridan wasn't sure if he would pay for a tour, he did have an idea of what he would do there. "My plan is to go to Graceland, cue up some Michael Bolton 'Walking in Memphis' and let the good times roll," Sheridan said. 6 Birthplace of Britney Spears, Kentwood, La. For many college-aged men, a small town off of I-55 is Mecca. It is where perfection was created. It is, of course, the birthplace of the reigning Princess of Pop, Britney Spears. One of the students making the trek to New Orleans was excited about stopping here, but doubts Britney would be hanging around the Kentwood Livestock Kitchen or Kinchen's Indoor Rodeo Arena (yeah, those are real places). "She is probably too Hollywood to still be there," said Adam Bleser, Overland Park senior. "But she does have a sister, right?" 7 END Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans, La. Edited by Amber Byarlay ATTENTION KU STUDENTS CITY CAR Make sure you get home safely Call 864-SAFE! MOTORSPORTS safe RIDE Safe Ride Operates 11:00 PM - 3:00 AM Seven Days a Week! STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS SENATE IN WHEEL 5 GOOD LUCK TOMORROW, 'HAWKS!!! Come cheer for our guys on big screen TVs! Jayhawk CAFE Doors open at 10 a.m. Saturday Patio will be open LAWRENCE 843-9273 It can only happen at The Hawk! A 1 --- FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 FINALFOUR --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Final Four teams go claw to claw, hue to hue 'Hawks to play Golden Eagles for championship game berth Kansan file photo By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter KANSAS 11 KANSAS 44 BRASH 50 Some how, some way, the Jayhawks are in New Orleans preparing to play Marquette at 5:07 p.m. tomorrow in the first game of the NCAA Final Four. They made it. Quite an accomplishment, considering Kansas couldn't make it past the semifinal round of the Preseason National Invitational Tournament and started the season with a 3-3 record. Even more impressive was that the Jayhawks won out in a West Regional that featured Duke, Notre Dame, Illinois and Arizona. Sophomore guard Aaron Miles looks to pass the ball against Nebraska earlier this season. Miles is averaging 6.9 points per game for the Jayhawks, who will play in their second consecutive Final Four starting tomorrow against Marquette Tack on the fact that sophomore forward Wayne Simien didn't play a game during the tournament, and some might say it sounds downright surprising to hear former critics pronouncing 2003 the year of the layhawk. "Nobody thought we were the favorite before this," sophomore guard Keith Langford said, "so we're still using the same motivation we've been using throughout the season. Anybody that's put us as the favorites now are just jumping on the bandwagon late." Langford and the Jayhawks may be skeptical of their new supporters, but a match-up with the team that bounced tournamentfavorite Kentucky out of the running won't allow for too many distractions. Kansas is junior guard Dwayne Wade. Against Kentucky, Wade posted a triple-double, an almost unheard of feat in college basketball. The Wildeats simply had no answer for his 29 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists, and they bowed out 83-69. The performance was enough to earn Kansas coach Roy Williams' respect. "He's really good," Williams said. "I don't know how you describe that part of it. He's a guard, but he's a powerful guard. He can shoot, but he can take the ball to the basket. He can pass and he can rebound. To have a triple-double in the regional finals, you can go back a long way and I don't know if you'll ever find that." A triple-double is a little out of character even for the all-everything Wade, but he still averages a team-best 21.6 points per game. Heisalso an All-American and one of five finalists for the Wooden Player of the Year Award. The Jayhawks know firsthand what kind of player it takes to earn those credentials. Their senior leader, Nick Collison, has an identical resume. Superstars aside, Kansas senior guard Kirk Hinrich said all the players would be ready to battle. "They are a great team." Hinrich said. "We think they are as good of a team as we have played all year." KANSAS VS. MARQUETTE KANSAS(29-7) MARQUETTE(27-5) P No. Player Ht. Yr. PP RPG F 4 Kick Collison 6-9 Sr. 18.6 9.5 F 5 Keith Langford 6-3 Sr. 18.6 9.5 G 11 Aaron Miles 6-1 Sc. 8.9 3.2 G 11 Jeff Graves 6-1 Jr. 8.7 6.4 G 25 Michael Lee 6-3 So. 4.7 2.2 F 33 Bryant Nash 6-6 Jr. 3.0 2.4 F 33 Moulaye Nishq 6-1 Jr. 1.3 1.5 - Opponent: Marquette - When: 5:07 p.m. Saturday - Where: New Orleans F No. Player Ht. Jr. PPG RG F 1. Todd Townsend 6-7 Su. 60.0 2.7 G 3. Davy Jones Wide 6-5 Jr. 21.8 10.3 G 4. Davy Jones Wide 6-10 Jr. 6.0 10.5 G 34 Travis Diern 6-1 So. 12.1 13.3 F 55 Robert Jackson 6-1 Sr. 15.4 17.5 F 20 Steve Novak 6-10 Jr. 6.8 2.1 G 32 Joe Chapman 6-4 Fr. 2.4 1.3 G 40 Ferry Sanders 6-8 Fr. 2.3 1.7 TV: CBS Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM By Kevin Flaherty By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The other semifinal contest: battle of the orange teams While Kansas matches up against Marquette in one game of the Final Four, the other matchup will have the crowd seeing orange. The Syracuse Orangemen (28-5 overall, 13-3 Big East Conference) will square up against the burnt orange of the Texas Longhorns (26-6, 13-3 Big 12 Conference). Here are some keys to the game. Syracuse's vaunted 2-3 zone Syracuse is always a terror in tournament time because its defense is so hard to overcome. "His (Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim) zone has always been good," Barnes said. "The one he's got now is the length of his players, big and athletic, taking away gaps." Rick Barnes, Texas coach, said the Syracuse zone defense was its trademark. Syracuse rebounds well out of its zone, and few teams outside the Big East have figured it out. If Texas can pass well and can find the holes in the zone, it should advance to Monday night. My star is better than your star Both teams have All-American caliber players in T.J. Ford and Carmelo Anthony. Texas's Ford, the lightning-quick Naismith award winner, is averaging 15.1 points per game, 5.3 rebounds per game and 9.5 assists per game during the tournament. Anthony, everybody's national freshman of the year, averaged 22 points per game and 10 rebounds per game over the season. Anthony said Ford was one of the fastest players in college. Quick versus strong "We're going to try and keep him in front of us and make him turn the ball over a little bit," Anthony said. Syracuse is extremely long and quick in several positions and has shown that quickness can be better than brute strength. Texas is big and brawny, led by James Thomas on the interior, but it has to box out and keep Syracuse from pogo-jumping all over the floor. Bottom line — if Ford can get into the lane, expect to see Texas in the championship game. If Syracuse can force him to shoot, it will advance. Either way, expect to see orange. The X-Factors After the stars, both teams have players who can take over a game. Syracuse's Gerry McNamara and Texas' Brian Boddicker are both fantastic three-point shooters who can shoot their team into a game when they're on. Syracuse's Hakim Warrick and Texas' Brandon Mouton are both slashers offensively and shut down players defensively. Look for Mouton, also a strong three-point shooter, to have an effect on the game before all is said and done. GO HAWKS! open NOON Saturday! BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass. Lawrence "The Best' Seat on Mass. Street!" Catch all the final four action on our 16tvS PLUS 2 HUGE 10ft BROTHERTRONS! OPEN AT NOON ON SATURDAY! Get Here Early--or you WDN'T GET IN! THE MADNESS CONTINUES... $200 TAPS & BOTTLES ON THE BIG GAMEDAY! "YOUR NCAA TOURNAMENT HEADQUARTERS!"" WHEN YOU DRINK, DRINK RESPONSIBLY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY SODAS ARE FREE AFTER 9PM. "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" Congrats on a great season We Love Kansas Basketball! Bittersweet Garden & Floral 514 E.9th 843-5954 Now There’s a better way to vent. free for all THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN HAWKS! open NOON Saturday! BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass. Lawrence "The Best' Seat on Mass. Street!" Catch all the final four action on our 16tvS PLUS 2 HUGE 10ft BROTHERTRONS! OPEN AT NOON ON SATURDAY! Get Here Early--or you WON'T GET IN! THE MADNESS CONTINUES... $200 TAPS & BOTTLÉS ON THE BIG GAMEDAY! "YOUR NCAA TOURNAMENT HEADQUARTERS!" WHEN YOU DRINK, DRINK RESPONSIBLY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY SODAS ARE FREE AFTER 9PM. "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" There’s a better way to vent. There's a better way to vent. Congrats on a great season We Love Kansas Basketball! Bittersweet Garden & Floral 514 E. 9th 843-5954 ree for all THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews Now. NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews kansan.com 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FINALFOUR FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 News. Now. FI Matador Café LUNCH BUFFET FRIDAY ONLY 11:30-2:00 $6.75 all you can eat OPEN FOR DINNER Tues-Sat 5:00-9:30 446 Locust St. 841-3837 Serving Lawrence for almost 50 years. "It is the right of every pregnant woman to give birth, and the right of every child to be born." 24 hours 1-800-550-4900 FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL PREGNANT? THINK YOU MIGHT BE? LET US HELP YOU. Birthright 204 W. 13th ~ 843-4821 GREAT COFFEE IN A COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE SERCUNIHO SRMCHEES HOMEADE SCONES BISCUIT AND AIMEE'S COFFEEHOUSE 1025 MASS. SORRENTO BARBECUES • HOMEADE SCONES • BISCUITS AIMEE'S COFFEEHOUSE FREJH SEAFOOD AND PAITA 4821 W.6th street 312-9057 MARISCOS FRESH FEAFOOD AND PAITA Come watch the game on a HUGE projected screen at Marisco's and get great drink specials! Go 'Hawks! Kansas boys living their dreams Basketball team's reserve players proud to be Jayhawks Kansan file photo KANSAS KANSAS KU KANSAS 33 Senior forward Brett Olson, freshman forward Christian Moody and freshmen guards Stephen Vinson and Jeff Hawkins celebrate with teammate Bryant Nash, junior forward, from the sidelines. Vinson, a Lawrence High School graduate, said going to the Final Four as a Jayhawk was a dream of his growing up. By Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter A boy sits on a basketball, elbows on his knees, gazing up at Allen Fieldhouse before him. The poster is titled Jaydreamin' and it holds special significance for Stephen Vinson and Brett Olson, a pair of Kansas-born Jayhawks. "I really am that kid and this is really living it out," Vinson, a Lawrence freshman, said. "This has been an unbelievable time for me." For Vinson, the Final Four holds extra meaning. Averaging 15.9 points and eight assists as a senior at Lawrence High School, Vinson was offered scholarships at UMKC, Baylor and Kansas State. However, the guard stood behind his dream to become a Jayhawk and accepted a walk-on position with the team this year. "I do realize it is what every Kansas kid wants to be, and it is what I wanted to be," Vinson said. "This is what I pictured when I decided to come here." Olson's path to New Orleans was a little rockier. The senior from Chanute tried out three times to make the Kansas squad but failed to make the cut all three years, finally securing a spot this year on the 13-man roster. In the last week, Olson has role-played as Dahntay Jones of Duke and Ric Anderson of Arizona, while Vinson has imitated As reserves, the two play key roles in team practices. Both play on the red squad, the unit which mimics the team that Kansas is about to face. JJ Redick, Salim Stoudamire and Marquette star Dwyane Wade. Vinson has also drawn the unfortunate task of facing teammate Kirk Hinrich. "It's bad because usually Kirk's guarding me and so it's really hard to get a shot off," Vinson said. "As you saw, Kirk blocked Salim Stoudamire's shot a couple of times and blocked Jason Gardner. He practiced that one on me a lot. I definitely give him good practice for blocking shots." When Kansas arrived in Lawrence at 4 a.m. Sunday after defeating Arizona, 5,000 fans crowded Allen Fieldhouse to welcome the team home. Olson didn't expect the big turnout. "I know I wanted to be in bed, and I knew they had to want to be in bed also." Olson said. "They made the sacrifice and that was Stephen Vinson Freshman guard "I do realize it is what every Kansas kid wants to be, and it is what I wanted to be. This is what I pictured when I decided to come here." really great. It was a pretty big motivation." Vinson, on the other hand, has seen the pep rally from both the fan and player perspectives. Last year, he was a member of the crowd welcoming the 2001 team back to the Fieldhouse after a victory over Oregon. "It was just amazing when you walked in," Vinson said. "Just to be greeted the way we were, it makes your accomplishments really worthwhile. You really feel special when you know you have people behind you." The two do not get as much media coverage as their Jayhawk counterparts, but they remain an intricate part of the team. "We don't get as much attention as we should because we're not the ones going out and scoring 30 points," Vinson said, "but we still have a lot of fun." The pair will try to savor every moment of the Final Four experience. "You imagine this," Vinson said, "but you never think it's true until it actually happens." Especially to that little boy. The one with his elbows on his knees. The one just Jaydreamin' away. Edited by Christy Dendurent THE GARDEN Jefferson Commons unique student apartments Home is where your FRIENDS are. Individual Leases Pool Plaza and Jacuzzi Call us about our Current Specials! Now Leasing for Fall 2003! Washer/Dryer in Every Apartment Updated Fitness Center Cable with HBO, MTV and ESPN Lighted Basketball Court Internet Access Amenities, Rents and Incentives are subject to change. 2511 West 31st Street Lawrence, KS 66047 www.jeffersoncommons-lawrence.com Call for more information 785-842-0032 TOMMY CURRY & DARIA BELLMAN AUTHORITY OF CINEMAS 70 6th St. 40 Kasold Drive University of Kansas 59 Louisiana St. Massachusetts. St. Clinton Pkwy. 10 W. 31st. St. Iowa St. 23rd St. Haskell Indian Nations University JEFFERSON COMMONS South Lawrence Trafficway JFL 8 1 . FRIDAY,APRIL4.2003 FINALFOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 5B Graves becomes force for Kansas By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter Kansas coach Roy Williams wouldn't talk about Jeff Graves. He said there was no point, he wasn't on the team. That was shortly after the junior forward reported to campus, weighing 293 pounds and looking less like the Jayhawks' sixth man and more like the product of six meals a day. He was overweight, out of shape, and Williams wasn't about to believe that a summer car wreck was to blame for Graves' physical conditioning. "Two-hundred ninety-three pounds was Jeff Graves' problem," Williams said. "Not a car wreck." Graves responded. He eventually ran enough laps in a short enough time to make the team, and he lost 18 pounds. But he picked up another problem: fouls. He began to commit silly fouls while filling in for senior forward Nick Collison or sophomore forward Wayne Simien. The fouls were a nuisance, but they weren't critical with Collision and Simien dominating the competition. That all changed when Simien went down with a dislocated shoulder against University of Missouri-Kansas City. If Graves had a grace period, it was over. Suddenly, Kansas needed him to start and to stay out of foul trouble. Again, Graves responded. He started with a 10-point, 12-rebound performance against UMKC. Now weighing 260 pounds, he averaged 10 points and 11.4 rebounds during the next four games, never in serious foul trouble. Then it happened again. He began to foul. His five-foul, 6-point outing Jan. 22 against Colorado was the beginning of a tail-spin. He was in constant foul trouble in the next six games and never scored more than 9 points. Williams and the rest of the Jayhawks began to question Graves' concentration. When Graves skipped class and was late to a workout in the week before a Feb. 19 game with Colorado, the Kansas basketball family began to air their concerns in the media. "He's got to get his life straightened out," Williams said after the Colorado game. "He's got to do the right things everyday." Graves' teammates weren't any more sympathetic after the game. "When coach has to constantly be on you and discipline you," Simien said. "We're tired of seeing that. With what we're trying to do here, there's no room for that." Graves never fought back against the criticism, although he had plenty of ammo. His best friend from his high school days in Lee's Summit, Mo., had accidentally and fatally shot himself while playing with a gun earlier in the week. Still, Graves would make no excuses for arriving late to practice and missing class. "It's my fault," he said. "I must suffer the consequences." And so he kept playing, hearing every word and changing. He was slimming down—now 250 pounds—and growing up. KANSAS 42 NORTI Faced with arguably the toughest regional in the NCAA tournament, Graves was becoming the player that his coach and teammates knew he could be. In Kansas' most important game so far, he manhandled the Arizona front line, making all six of his field goal attempts, scoring 13 points and snatching 15 Junior forward Jeff Graves grabs a rebound against North Carolina. Graves has stepped up after the season-ending injury to Wayne Simien on Jan.4. Kansan file photo rebounds. No longer was he Jeff Gravy, as he had been called by a local pundit. A rigid jaw bone replaced bloated cheeks, and compliments replaced criticism. Graves was part of the team. Not only did Williams talk about him after the game, he even smiled while he did it. Williams' early-season criticism of Graves turns into motivation — Edited by Ryan Wood Jeff Graves' performances in recent games have left fans scratching their heads and asking, "When did Graves get good?" In Saturday's game against Arizona, Graves scored 13 points on 6-of-6 shooting and a career-high 15 rebounds. "Right now I feel I'm on cloud nine," Graves said. "If there was a cloud 20, I'd be on that." Yet just months ago, coach Roy Williams publicly dogged Graves for showing up for fall practice grossly overweight at 295 pounds. "He needs to do more pushaways," Williams said in the fall. "Pushaways from the table." COMMENTARY At the time, Williams' remarks seemed cruel. But could his early criticism have helped Graves step up on the court? The junior forward said yes COMMENTARY "If a coach doesn't talk to his Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com Graves faced many difficulties in his life at that time, including a car accident in the fall that he said nearly killed him. players, obviously he doesn't care much about them," Graves said. "It kind of drove me." He understood Williams' initial concerns. "It was my responsibility to come back here in shape," Graves said. "I wasn't at the time, but I work my butt off now." Sophomore Aaron Miles said although he was impressed with Graves' playing ability, he also shared his coach's initial doubts. "When he came back in that shape," Miles said, "I didn't think he wanted it enough." Now Miles said Graves was crucial to the team's success—as long as he stayed out of foul trouble, that is. Graves' father was recently called for active duty and is stationed in Delaware. Graves said Tuesday he wasn't sure if his dad would be sent to Iraq. For now, he said he wanted to continue making his father proud. And his coach, too, for that matter. "I've been on his tail every single day, and I'm going to stay on him," Williams said. "It's paid off." Rochie is a Wichita senior in journalism. IT'S EASTON'S LTD FINAL CLEARANCE 1/2 OF 1/2 PRICE NO HOLDS NO LAYAWAYS, ALL SALES FINAL!! SELECTED MERCHANDISE ONLY!! SUITS SPORTCOATS CASUAL CLOTHING SHOES SELECTED MERCHANDISE ONLY!! LIMITED TIME ONLY! EASTON'S LIMITED 839 MASSACHUSETTS, LAWRENCE, KS 66044 Excited for the game? Forgot the speed limit? SPEED LIMIT 35 Contact Legal Services for Students for free advice. Congrats 'Hawks on a great season! STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY SENATE Legal Services for Students Rm 148 Burge ~ 864-5665 ~ Jo Hardesty, Director Pressure Relief Valve "It took a lot of pressure off, not having to work so many hours to pay my tuition." — Tama Aga KU Mechanical Engineering Student Senior Tama Aga has been busy at KU. In addition to his studies, he's served as a student senator and an officer in a host of student activities. The last thing he needed was to add the pressure of a full-time job. KU First: Invest in Excellence made it possible Donations to KU First, KU Endowment's $500 million fund-raising campaign, funded scholarships Aga received from Diversity Programs at the School of Engineering, letting him focus on his schoolwork, not his finances. ku first INVEST IN EXCELLENCE listing useful services Serving Good Luck Hawks! new martini list appetizers new wine list entertainment live The Lounge at Paisanos RISTORANIE open until 2 am • 2112 W 25 St. A day trip to the farm may be just the inspiration your garden needs! Great selection of Perennials and Herbs PENDLETON'S KAW VALLEY COUNTRY MARKET 1446 E. 1850 Rd. Lawrence, KS 66046 843-1409 www.pendletons.com 8 6E THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FINALFOUR FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 Sophomores complement seniors in post-season play By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Lawrence is abuzz with talk about Kansas' two seniors, Kirk Hinrich and Nick Collison. But the Jayhawks probably wouldn't be two victories away from the national championship without the play of their two starting super sophomores. LANGFORD Former Jawhawk Lewis Harrison said Keith Langford's nickname was "ESPN" for the way he gets up for big games. So far in this tournament, the moniker hites. The lithe lefty has sliced his way through defenses on countless plays, often contorting his body into mid-air pretzels to get a shot off in the lane. Collison said Langford was a great player. "The thing about Keith is that he can get to the basket against anybody," Collison said. "He plays really well in the big games and steps up when we need him to." Langford averaged 16.8 points and five rebounds per game in Kansas' first four NCAA Tournament games. Langford is the trumpet in Kansas' offense; almost all of his plays are noticeably spectacular to anyone watching the game. If Langford is the trumpet, fellow sophomore Aaron Miles is the flute. Increbly maligned for his failures, most of his successes come in relative obscurity. Intensely competitive. Miles plays lock-down on-the-ball defense "The thing about Keith is that he can get to the basket against anybody. He plays really well in the big games and steps up when we need him to." Nick Collison Kansas senior Aaron Miles and Keith Langford embrace after a Kansas victory. The sophomores have stepped up to become dominant members of the team.Both are expected to be important players in the Final Four. while distributing the ball to Kansas' scorers. There is nobody better at running the break and feeding the post than Miles. While not much of a shooter or scorer, Miles averaged 8.3 points, 6.5 assists and more than two steals per tournament game while not often turning over the ball. Langford said Miles played well in the tournament. Kansan file photo "He's so valuable to the team and gets everyone involved," Langford said. "He plays great defense on the other team's point guard, and we wouldn't be here without him." an advantage from last year's. "Last year we got there and some of us were satisfied with Miles is also somewhat of an emotional leader — whenever a teammate is in trouble, Miles comes to the rescue. It happened first against Jackson Vroman of Iowa State and again when Miles and Arizona's Channing Frye came to words last Saturday. Miles had the last laugh as the Jayhawks advanced to tomorrow's Final Four game against Marquette. that," Miles said. "This year we want to reach our goal, and that is to win a national championship." Miles said this year's team had If the sophomores complement the seniors and play well, Kansas could be partying into the night Monday in the Big Easy - Edited by Todd Rapp Domestic LAWRENCE "We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!" & Foreign AUTOMOTIVE Complete DIAGNOSTICS 842-8605 Car Care 2858 Four Wheel Dr. Russell Stover® Candies • Cookies • Ice Cream we're nuts about 'hawk basketball! All boxed chocolates with nuts 30% off! 23rd & Nalsmith 785.830-8603 Hours: Mon-Sat 9:00-8:00 pm Sun 12:00-8:00pm Offer good at the Lawrence location only through April 5, 2003 THE EARLY BIRD SHOPPER GETS THE BEST APARTMENT! CALL TODAY TO SEE OUR EXTRA-LARGE ONE AND TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS AVAILABLE NOW, OR A LOW DEPOSIT WILL HOLD AN APARTMENT FOR SUMMER OR FALL A CAT OR A DOG IS ALLOWED, NOT OVER 25 LBS. Pint25 2401 W. 25TH OFFICE:9A3 842-1455 kinko's 6 am-Midnight·911 Mass·843-8019 KU Basketball-the original All the rest are copies FRAMEWOODS 819 MASSACHUSE • 842-4900 Congratulations 'Hawks! 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Dr. Kevin Lenahan, O.D., P.A. Optometrist & Associates 935 Iowa *838-3200 $99 Eye Exam & Disposable Contacts Price includes: Eye exam, contact lens fitting, two follow up visits, & 2 six packs of disposable contacts of doctor's choice. Does NOT include color, toric, or bifocal lenses. Not valid with insurance or any other offers. Exp.3/25/03 4. FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 FINALFOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7P Immediate emergence Lee shakes off his doubters, including himself By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer As the year started he was just Aaron Miles' boyhood friend. He was nervous and error-prone on the court, quiet and benign off of it. His work ethic was, by his own accounts, dubious. There were even whispers that his bulky frame and high-school football experience might have made him better suited for the University of Kansas' football team. Michael Lee is still Aaron Miles' friend, and that's not likely to change. But life is changing for the 6-foot-3 guard. Last season Lee, a Portland, Ore., native was a seldom-used reserve. Most of the time Lee was mimicking opponents in practice scrimmages. "Just try to do what the team would do against us," freshman guard Jeff Hawkins said of life on the Crimson team in practices. "If their point guard likes to penetrate and pitch out, that's what I try to focus on to get them ready." Describing last season, Lee is blunt. "I knew what games I was going to play and which I wasn't," he said. "I got to sit back and relax and hope that Drew (Gooden) or Kirk (Hinrich) or Nick (Collison) or Keith (Langford) would step up and make the big plays." That has changed, and that is "My confidence level and my physical level are riding real high. Last year I doubted myself a lot.I was really questioning my ability to play at this level." Michael Lee Sophomore guard how Lee prefers it. "I'd rather be the person stepping up and making the plays," he said. The change in Lee's role is remarkable, especially considering Lee's precarious start to the season. During Kansas' lackluster performance in New York at the preseason NIT, Lee tallied only four minutes in a loss to unranked North Carolina and did not play — a decision by coach Roy Williams — against No. 7 Florida. Lack of playing time did little to improve Lee's work ethic. At the team's first practice after returning from New York, Lee was pulled aside by Williams after goofing around. The conversation would prove fateful. "Coach Williams pulled me aside and said, 'Michael, I haven't even given you a chance to play yet,' Lee said. "And you really showed me I have no reason to Miles, for his part, never doubted his old friend. put you out there." "Mikey, he was down on himself a lot," Miles said. "It wasn't funny, when he'd be telling me his doubts and everything, but I'd be laughing because I knew how good he was." A week later, Kansas traveled to play Oregon in Portland, Ore., Lee and Miles' hometown. A break out, 11-point, eight-rebound performance proved to Lee, his coach and the fans what Miles said he'd known all along: that he could be a key player for the Kansas men's basketball team. Since the Oregon game. Lee's minutes have steadily increased and his confidence—a big problem last year—has skyrocketed. "My confidence level and my physical level are riding real high," Lee said. "Last year I doubted myself a lot. I was really questioning my ability to play at this level." While Lee may never be a starter or play as big a role as his buddy Miles, he's happy to silence critics who said Kansas' bench would leave the Jayhawks in the lurch this season. "People say things you like and you may not like," Lee said. "You just have to know what you're doing and what you're capable of doing and go out there and do that." ANSA 23 —Edited by Ryan Wood Kansan file photo Sophomore Michael Lee delivers an inbound pass. When the guard arrived at Kansas he was seen by many fans as the weaker half of a package deal to make high school friend Aaron Miles a Jayhawk. In the past year, Lee has developed as a player and become the sixth man on the court. NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS KANSAS.COM 100 Pinnacle Woods APARTMENTS Pre-Leasing for Summer and Fall 1,2 & 3 BRs Available Hours: M-F 8:30-5:30 & Sat. 10-2 785-865-5454 5000 Clinton Parkway 1/4 mi. west of Wakarusa Lawrence www.pinnaclewoods.com DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street GO HAWKS! GO HAWKS! 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Contact Respiratory Care Education at KU Medical Center 913.588.4630 or inquire@kumc.edu by e-mail See Freshman Sophomore Advising Center for information and advising Halls KANSAS CITY MASCOT Madness 50% OFF OUR 18KT GOLD AND JEWELED JAYHAWK MASCOT COLLECTION: PINS, CUFF LINKS, STUD SETS, MONEY CLIPS, EARRINGS AND PENDANTS. THE JEWEL ROOM, HALLS PLAZA 816-274-3246 DOLLERIAFTS LIQUIDED PRODUCT --- A 8B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FINAL FOUR FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 Final Fourmania foreign for Niang By Shane Mettlen smettlen@kansan.com kansan.sportswriter Moulaye Niang doesn't know how to say Final Four in Wolof. Of course, no sporting event in his native Senegal can match the pageantry of the NCAA tournament, so why would his native language even bother with a word for it? "It's a very different country," the freshman forward said. "We like soccer and all that kind of stuff. I'd say that maybe the African Cup (compares to the Final Four), but this is big, really exciting." Niang is the least experienced Jayhawk when it comes to the Final Four. He and junior college transfer Jeff Graves are the only scholarship players who weren't with the Jayhawks for last year's semifinal in Atlanta. Niang received his first exposure to the pop-culture mega event that is the Final Four three years ago when he arrived in the United States to attend high school in San Diego. Having teammates with big game experience has been an aid to the novice Niang. Seniors Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich have helped him deal with the pressures that can be overwhelming at times. "We try to help him keep his mind on basketball," Collison said. "We just let him know we can be proud of what we did when it's all over, but now we have to think about Marquette and nothing else." While Niang has little Final Moulaye Niang is the least experienced Jayhawk when it comes to the Final Four. He and Jeff Graves are the only scholarship players who weren't with the Jayhawks for last year's semifinal in Atlanta. Four experience by Kansas standards, his mother, Seynabou Diouf, has even less. Niang said that the French cable television system that provides service to Senegal never broadcasts college basketball but does provide a skewed view of the war in Iraq. "She's kind of worrying about me because of the war going on," Niang said. "What they hear there and what is going on here are different. She thinks that I'm in danger so she's worrying all the time. She doesn't understand, she thinks maybe the guys are fighting here." Niang said he hoped that sharing his basketball experience will help case his mother's mind. "I'm planning on making a highlight tape, so I can take it with me when I go home," Niang said. "I can show her how good it is over here, how happy people feel. I think that will make her feel better." If all goes well for the Jayhawks in New Orleans then maybe Niang can feel good about adding a new word to his Wolof vocabulary—champs. —Edited by Ryan Wood NIANG 55 COLORADO Freshman forward Moulaye Niang defends a Colorado player on his way to the basket, Niang, a native of Senegal, has seen two other NCAA tournaments on television. This year's journey to the Final Four is the first time he has ever been a part of the madness. Kansan file photo Longhorn guard uses footwork talk on defense The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Royal Ivey took a long time to think about who might be able to stop his teammate, star guard T.J. Ford of Texas. Finally, only one name came to mind: Royal Ivey. "That's my teammate," Ivey said."I know all his moves." "I do it in practice every day," Ivey says with a smile, drawing a big laugh from Ford and a room full of reporters. And who's to argue? Texas coach Rick Barnes doesn't open his practices to the media, so only the Longhorns know what goes on behind closed doors. "Our guards go at it every day," is all center James Thomas will divulge. "When he and T.J. go one-on-one, look out." Ivey's play in games is no secret. He's the Longhorns best perimeter defender, picking up much of his nimble footwork from his days as an elite dancer in high school. Texas counts on him to shut down an opponent's best scorer, both on the court and in his head. He's the team's best trash talker, the guy who nicknamed Ford "Rat." "When Royal gets in some-body's head," Thomas said, "it's lights out." His verbal jabs are subtle, under-the-breath braggadocio meant solely for the ears of the intended target. He won't say what say exactly what message he'll have for Syracuse's 6-8 freshman forward Carmelo Anthony. "I can't give out my lines," he said. 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For more info check out our website www.pluggedonline.com grand opening: APRIL 23 LINCOLN AVE 87th St. Plane 1-35 435 OVERLAND PARK A N FINAL FOUR WATCH PARTY KU vs. Marquette on Saturday, April 5 Multiple Projection Screens and TVs Come from ANYWHERE in the Building Dear friends of the Best Sound System in Lawrence Having come, First Served Serving Food! ABE&JAKE'S LANDING FINAL FOUR is a registered trademark of the National Collegiate Athletic Association ABE&JAKE'S LANDING Coming Events... No Lessons with guests Javier Mendoza and City Limits Saturday, April 5 After the Game POLICE Tone Loc Wednesday, April 9 pormeroy Pat Green Granada ANYTHING BUT JOEY and ANYTHING BUT JOEY and ULTIMATE FACEBOOK Saturday, April 19 with special guest Key Doors' Zborn • All Ages FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 FINALFOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9B Heard on the Court PETER BANK Jayhawks sound off about going to the Final Four "I think I see how important it is right now." Jeff Graves Junior forward "I think we realize the opportunity we have. We are just really excited about what we have accomplished so far, but realize there is more to be done." A. M. PAGE Kirk Hinrich Senior guard P. H. BROWN YOUNG JEFFREY "We'll just party when we win." Jeff Hawkins Freshman guard "Whether I will feel fulfilled as a coach or not has nothing to do with winning a National Championship. It's one of my dreams, there's no question about that, but I don't let that drive me." "Last year, I think going to the Final Four I was nervous, but it wasn't on me. At the games I got to sit back and relax and hope that Drew or Kirk or Nick or Keith would step up and make the big plays. Now that I'm in the games I'd rather be the person stepping up and making the plays." Michael Lee Sophomore guard "I know people didn't expect us to get this far. So that's a whole lot different (than last year)." Bryant Nash Junior forward Roy Williams Men's basketball coach A. M. GILROY "You imagine this, but you never think it's true, until it actually happens." Stephen Vinson Freshman guard Y No matter the outcome, Williams likely to tear up Dadgummit, those famous tears are going to fall this weekend in New Orleans. No ifs, ands or buts — Roy Williams will weep. Again. But this time — unlike the previous 14 season-ending losses — Williams might cry out of joy. COMMENTARY this weekend will be Williams' best opportunity for the title, which has eluded him for 15 years and through three previous trips to the game's grandest stage, the Final Four. After a 3-3 start this season, Kansas fans definitely weren't making plans to the Big Easy. This season's squad doesn't drip dominance like 1997's Jayhawks did. And there might not be quite the quantity of quality players as last year's team. Rock Chalk citizens were holding their breath even more when Wayne Simien wrecked his wing in January, meaning an already bad-mouthed bench was going to play an even bigger role. But this team is talented, and more importantly, experienced, with seniors Kirk Hinrich and Nick Collison leading the way. There was the shocking defeat in Boulder, Colo., followed by the bizarre blow-out against Arizona in Allen Fieldhouse. The stinging setbacks to Oklahoma and Missouri in the Big 12 Tournament have settled in the back of people's minds because of the way the Jayhawks have played in the NCAA tourney. Kansas has not only survived in the tournament when critics thought the Jayhawks wouldn't, but advanced with another chance to win it all. Andy Samuelson asamuelson@kansan.com And in March, that's what the madness is all about. Now it's April, and the only thing that matters is a victory Monday. That's the one thing William hasn't done. "It's one of my dreams, there's no question about that, but I don't let that drive me," said Williams, who has only coached in one championship, losing to Duke in 1991. Yet it does. His 417 victories, which account for the highest winning percentage at.806 among active coaches with at least six years experience, are nice. Williams' three-time national coach of the year awards are the highest form of recognition a coach can receive. But they're not national titles. And until that title returns to Lawrence — however unfair a judgment it may be — Williams will be known as the best coach to have never have won the BIG ONE. "Coach obviously has taken a lot of criticism for not winning a national championship," Collison said. "But it's hard to do." Williams' mentor Dean Smith tried and tried to get one at North Carolina. But it took him 20 years and the help of a freshman named Michael Jordan before he finally broke through with a title in 1982. It took Duke eight trips to the Final Four before it hung a national championship banner in Cameron Indoor Stadium. "I don't think he's been given the credit he deserves," said Arizona coach Lute Olson of Williams after Kansas knocked out Arizona 78-75 in Anaheim, Calif., a week ago in the West Regional finals. Oison would know how hard it is to have your eyes on the prize but never win it. He needed 13 years and three Final Fours before his championship team's upset against Kansas made Williams weep. Some of the game's top coaches, such as Purdue's Gene Keady, Temple's John Chaney and fellow Final Four coach Jim Boeheim of Syracuse, are in the same position of Williams. Williams tries to remind fans, critics, his own players and maybe even more so himself, that the game is about relationships, not championships. "It's not something that I stay awake at night and think about," Williams said. "There's something on my desk that I talked about one time — 'Statistics are important but relationships last forever.' I decided many years ago that I wanted to be a college coach because I could have some influence on young people's lives just like my coaches did on me." But if the ring didn't matter, then tears wouldn't be shed, and success wouldn't be measured. Samuelson is a Wichita senior in journalism. 99 15th & Kasold 865-5400 Little Caesars® Sun-Thurs: 11:00–12:00AM Fri-Sat: 11:00–3:00AM CONGRATS ‘HAWKS ON A GREAT SEASON! Little Caesars® CAMPUS SPECIAL! • ONE LARGE PIZZA WITH ONE TOPPING $599 CARRYOUT Plus the Delivery Charge May Apply EXPIRES SOON Valid Only at Participating Locations Little Caesars® PIZZA BUNDLE! • ONE LARGE PIZZA WITH ONE TOPPING • 2 LITER • CRAZY BREAD • CRAZY SAUCE $999 EXPIRES SOON Valid Only at Participating Locations Little Caesars® PIZZA!PIZZA! COMBO • TWO PIZZAS, LARGE WITH 3 TOPPINGS $1199 EXPIRES SOON Valid Only at Participating Locations Little Caesars® PIZZA!PIZZA! 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A torrential snowstorm nearly crippling Lawrence couldn't do it, but Roy's boys may be able to pull it off: no school. Since early Saturday night, after successfully gaining revenge on the Arizona Wildcats, the dream started becoming more of a reality to students. "I heard about the possibility of not having school last year when we were at the Final Four," said Kelli Moran, Overland Park sophomore. "I think it would be great if we didn't have classes because it would give the chance for people to celebrate. And besides, I don't think anyone would come anyway." But Todd Cohen, assistant directory of University Relations, advises students not to get their hopes up yet. "Right now I would say students should plan on going to class," he said. Cohen said a welcoming ceremony for the team would be held when it returns. However, he said fans and students should take it one game at a time. "I think it would be great if we didn't have classes because it would give the chance for people to celebrate." Kelli Moran Overland Park sophomore Despite the University's words of caution, a number of faculty members have postponed tests or preemptively announced class will not be held depending on the outcome of the championship game Monday. Harry Shaffer, economics professor, has already postponed a makeup test for an exam that was originally scheduled Tuesday. Shaffer said to his class, "We're not a 100 percent sure there will be class on Tuesday, so just be prepared." On the other hand, some teachers have decided classes and tests will be held regardless. Either way, students, faculty and administration are supporting the team. But with the possibility of a school cancellation, most students said they would be cheering just a little bit harder. — Edited by Amber Byarlay Gearing up for safe celebrations Police. University make preparations to protect basketball fans By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer This year's Kansas men's basketball team has some similarities with last year's national champion, the Maryland Terrapins. Kansas is enjoying its second consecutive Final Four appearance, it has a coach that hasn't won the big one and it has senior leaders who refuse to lose. But there is one difference. Kansas fans should have little trouble celebrating safely. The Lawrence Police Department and the University of Kansas Public Safety Office are getting ready for tomorrow's Final Four game between Kansas and Marquette. "We are aware that there is a game tomorrow," said Sergeant Mike Patrick of the Lawrence Police. "We have a contingency plan for crowd control, but the specifics of our plan can't be revealed as far as numbers." Pattrick said this was done for good reason. The police don't reveal those numbers because they don't want to give fans an opportunity to thwart the officers' plans, Pattrick said. The department has handled the situation before. "Being in a Final Four game is nothing new to Lawrence," Pattrick said. "We've been in this situation before." A representative for the public safety office said it would have more officers on patrol and the officers would block off certain streets. Matt Norman, KU graduate, was in the riots that occurred in Columbus, Ohio, after Ohio State won the national championship in football and was in East Lansing when Michigan State won the basketball championship in 2000 "We have a contingency plan for crowd control, but the specifics of our plan can't be revealed as far as numbers." Sgt. Mike Patrick Lawrence Police Department "I'll never forget my first experience with tear gas," Norman said. "It was run, just run." Norman said the activity that went on in East Lansing and Columbus didn't compare with Lawrence. "There would be fraternities throwing couches on fire from their roof," Norman said. "I don't think there are enough people in Lawrence for something like that to happen." Last year after Maryland defeated Kansas in the Final Four, police in riot gear and riding horseback fired pellets into a crowd of about 400 fans. The crowd had amassed near Route 1 and Knox Road, looting stores, destroying two police cruisers and pelting officers with glass. About 10 people broke into a police car and stole flares that were later lighted and thrown at police officers. Terrapin fans also rioted the year before following a Final Four loss to Duke that led to $500,000 in damages to College Park. All this doesn't faze Pattrick. Students make plans to get to game "Sure, I think we're ready for any situation that may unfold," Patrick said. Edited by Amber Byarlay Money may influence decision for how to get to New Orleans By Mindy Osborne correspondence@kansan.com Kansan correspondent It's been a long, hard trip to New Orleans for the men's basketball team. But the trip for fans doesn't have to be as grueling; the question remains, fly or drive? For some avid basketball enthusiasts, flying the friendly skies is the only way to go. Her parents received the KU Alumni Package, which allots four tickets, hotel reservations and airfare for her family. For those who must fund their Alison Smith, Salina junior chose flying because of the convenience. "I am glad that I am flying just because it takes less time and is more comfortable," Smith said. "But if it came down to it, I would drive too." trip, flying might not provide as good of a deal. According to results researched yesterday on the Web site Travelocity.com, for a one-person, roundtrip flight, leaving Friday and returning Sunday, the cost would range from $334 to $649. Minimum travel time would be about two hours. Airlines with the best rates included Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and Northwest Airlines. There is always the option of the college cliché that is the road trip. While travel time varies depending on the route and the possibility of less-than-roomy accommodations, pros outweigh the cons. The trip will be much cheaper considering gas prices are on the decline and that is one of the trip's few expenses. Also, the car would provide the ability to get around New Orleans without spending any more money on a taxi, bus or street car. And for those with little money,the car could also provide overnight accommodations for the weekend. Edited by Amber Byarlay FedEx Ground IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Preload 1:30 AM–7:30 AM Sunrise 2:30 AM–7:30 AM Night Midnight–5 AM Other shifts available • Weekly paycheck • Tuition Assistance • $.25 raise every 90 days for a year • 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week • $10-11/hr starting pay • $100 new hire bonus • paid vacations and holidays • Need ability to load, unload, and sort packages. FedEx Ground After-Class workout. First-Class pay. Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 NO COVER! BEFORE 10 PM KU’s Newest & Hottest Dance Club & Bar Now Open Wednesdays Wednesday: $2 Anything $3 Doubles Thursday: $1.75 Pints $1.50 Any Shot Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Smirnoff Vodka Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $4 Pitchers 21 to Enter Doors open at 8pm 729 New Hampshire (Across from Borders) 838-4623 NO COVER! BEFORE 10 PM KU's Newest & Hottest Dance Club & Bar Now Open Wednesdays S Wednesday: $2 Anything $3 Doubles P Thursday: $1.75 Pints $1.50 Any Shot C Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Smirnoff Vodka A Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $4 Pitcher LAST CALL WHISKEY 21 to Enter Doors open at 8pm 729 New Hampshire (Across from Borders) 838-4623 FRIDAY,APRIL4.2003 FINALFOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 11B Viewing venues to fill up early for Final Four fanatics bain owners urge fans to arrive by 2 p.m. By Laura A. Clark correspondence@kansan.com Kansan correspondent You may not be hitting the court with Hinrich in New Orleans, but you still need a game plan for tomorrow. It usually takes about two hours to watch a Kansas basketball game. This weekend, however, be sure to set aside at least five hours if you want to catch the game at a sports bar. Lawrence bars have been preparing all week for the biggest crowds of the basketball season when the Jayhawks play Marquette tomorrow. Though the game is almost a thousand miles away, many bars promise an experience that rivals an Allen Fieldhouse game, complete with screaming, jingling keys and spirit fingers. Old Chicago, 2329 Iowa St., plays a pregame CD that puts fans in the mood by playing the national anthem, the Rock Chalk chant and "I'm a Jayhawk." At Molly McGee's, 2429 Iowa St., fans even divide themselves into sections to chant "go, fight, win," in the Fieldhouse tradition. "We have some crazy, crazy fans here. It's so much like Allen Fieldhouse," said Shannon Norwood, general manager of Molly McGee's. For students longing to be down in the bayou, some bars are getting into the spirit of New Orleans by hosting Mardi Gras-themed watch parties. JB StoutS Sports Bar and Grill, 721 Wakarusa drive.., and Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St., will be giving away door prizes and beads — no indecent exposure required. Some establishments will have special promotions on food, such as chicken wings, but most will focus on drink specials. Beer bottles, shots, draws and Jell-O shots are popular specials this weekend. To balance all the consumption, most bars will have added security staff on the floor, or at least more servers to keep crowds under control. "There is going to be a lot of drinking going on here. Normally the crowd is great and everyone knows they need to come in, behave, and not break things," said Jason Franklin, general manager of jefferson's Restaurant, 743 Massachusetts St. Wherever you go, make sure you show up early, or you run the risk of being turned away if the bar is over-crowded. For tomorrow evening's 5:07 tip-off, most establishments recommend arriving by 2 p.m. at the latest, but, of course, earlier is better. "To get a prime seat, before 11 is best. I'd be surprised if any table is available after 12:30. For the game, the first group of people showed up at 8:45, and by 9, we had five tables full," said Mike Kricsfeld, manager of Buffalo Wild Wings Grill and Bar, 1012 Massachusetts St. Depending on the outcome of the game, you can expect more festivities, as bars prepare for tomorrow night's celebration one Lawrence hasn't seen since 1991. "We're going to keep it open, keep the music on, and just let people party," said Jared Brandon, manager of Granada. Edited by Todd Rapp Experience Bourbon Street variety after viewing Final Four Picture a street crowded with people with women on balconies baring their breasts for beads. Jayhawk fans should not be alarmed. Though Mardi Gras is technically over, hypothetically it lasts year round. Everyone is trying to make a buck in the Big Easy — learn this now. From street dancers to street painters, if you see the show, you owe them dough. Typical situation: if you happen to be standing at the corner of Canal and Bourbon streets and someone comes up to you saying they know where you got your shoes, don't talk to them. This scam involves someone coming up to you and asking for a dollar if they can tell you where you 'got yo shoes.' So, you agree, and the next thing you know they're telling you "you got your shoes at the corner of Canal and Bourbon streets, because that's where you're standing with the shoes on your feet." It's lame, but many people fall for it. COMMENTARY While in the Big Easy, it is a must to have a hurricane. Some places to try these wonderful drinks are the Cat's Meow, 701 Bourbon St., Razoo's, 511 Bourbon St., and definitely Pat O'Brian's, O'Brian's, 718 Peter St. has a high velocity hurricane Meredith Carr mcarr@kansan.com that's a sipper. It's fruity but strong and will knock you on your ass. If you are on Bourbon Street and are looking for a meal that is within walking distance to some bars try Storyville District, 125 Bourbon St., for some authentic gumbo, creole, jambalaya or Cajun jumbo-shrimp. The French Quarter is within walking distance of Bourbon Street, and offers beautiful balconies giving an air of innocence during the day. It is a special place to shop for odds and ends. You O'Brian's has a high velocity hurricane that's a sipper. It's fruity but strong and will knock you on your ass. can find a shop for everything from wigs and vooodo spells to T-shirts and Mardi Gras memorabilia. The outdoor atmosphere at the Café Du Monde, 800 Decatur Street is great for a cup of Chicory coffee and a beignet ,a French doughnut that is flat and crisp covered with powdered sugar. Get there early because seats go fast. Other things to do, besides shopping in the French Quarter are watching the street painters getting your palm read or visiting the St. Louis Cathedral. Bourbon Street. The hub of Mardi Gras, balconies, beads and hurricanes. Be safe and have fun. Carris a Topeka senior in journalism. $5 off any $20 service Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - B West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive your discount (coupon #8) The Fun is a Click Away Optional Campus Fees is now integrated with Online Enrollment. Sign up for Options during online enrollment. Optional Campus Fees Sign Up Instructions: 1 Sign In enroll & pay 1 Sign in enron & pay 2 Click Enroll and Pay 3 Click Learner Services 4 Click Academics or Finances 5 Click KU Optional Fees 6 Select your Options 7 Click yellow Save button SLAB, BOCO, Tradition Keepers, Jayhawker Yearbook, KU on Wheels, All Sports Combo, All-Arts Package, Parking, Career Services, SUA Movie Card, Park & Ride www.ku.edu/~options GO 'HAWKS! SET 'EM UP JACK'S LAWRENCE'S FINEST SPORTS BAR menu • 5-100" big screen tv's • ntn trivia Set'em Up Jack's Lemmon Sauce Cold Beer • Good Food DAILY SPECIALS: BIG MONDAY: SUPER TUESDAY 50* TACOS $2.00 CORONAS $2.50 MARGARITAS 1/2 PRICE BURGERS $2.50 DOMESTIC BIG BEERS WEDNESDAY: 30¢ WINGS $2.00 DOMESTIC LONGNECKS THURSDAY: $2.00 GUINNESS, IMPORT & MICRO BREW PINTS 1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 1800 E.23RD ST.IN THE 10 MARKETPLACE Final Four Headquarters NOW OPEN BX Items Available Jayhawk Bookstore Teller's Laugh Live Love Eat Drink Everyday... 746 Massachusetts 785.843.4111 LUNCH MENU ANTIPASTI Teller's Mushrooms - sausage or vegetarian in our original famous gruyere cheese sauce $7.95 Eggplant romano - baked eggplant with four cheese and pomodoro fresca $4.50 Crostini - crisp toast rounds topped with mixed olive tapanade, roasted red pepper, ricotta cheese and fresh basil $4.95 INSALATA Keri's Big Salad - grilled chicken, mixed greens, tomatoes, onion, gorgonzola, bacon and balsamic vinagrette $7.95 Allegra's Big Salad - grilled salmon, mixed greens, capers, green olives, fresh mozzarella with lemon and olive oil $9.95 Steak Salad - balsamic beef tenderloin tips over a bed of mixed greens, onions, tomatoes and gorgonzola $8.95 A Slice and Salad - 1/3rd of a cheese pizza and house salad $5.25 PASTAS PASTAS Lasagna con Salisciace - a classic layered lasagna with ricotta cheese, Italian sausage and marinara sauce $7.95 Fettucine Salmone e Asparagi - sauteed salmon and asparagus blended together in a light cream sauce $7.95 Fettuccine con Pollo - chicken, garlic cream sauce and parean cheese $7.95 Linguini Lemonada - spinach, garlic, and lemon tossed with mushrooms and artichokes for a light healthy pasta $6.95 Lingini con Gameri, shrimp, garlic, olive oil, wine and hot pepper flakes, a classic $8.95 Tortellini Arrabbiata - cheese stuffed pastas served in a spiciella tomato cream sauce $7.95 PANINI PANINI Polpette di Casalinga - our hand made meatballs on a baguette topped with light tomato sauce and melted mozzarella $5.75 Pollo Parmesan - breast of chicken breaded and fried golden brown with fresh tomato sauce and melted mozzarella $6.95 Eggplant Parmesan - fried eggplant topped with light tomato sauce and melted mozzarella $5.25 Polo al Griglia - grilled chicken breast, lettuce, tomato, bacon and honey mustard $6.95 caprese - sliced tomatoes, fresh mozzarella and fresh basil, light and simple $5.95 Portobello Mushroom - balsamic marinated Portobellos with roasted red peppers and gorgonzola cheese $6.95 PIZZA Margherita - sliced roma tomatoes, homemade fresh mozzarella, olive oil and fresh basil $7.95 Napalata - pizza sauce, oregano, mozzarella cheese and olive oil $6.95 Chicken Spinach Sausage Pizza - pizza sauce and mozzarella covered with our own sliced chicken-spinach sausage $8.95 --- 1 } 128 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FINALFOUR FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 Kansas basketball fans have superstitions of their own By Laura A. Clark correspondence@kansan.com Kansan correspondent Dirty socks, sweat-encrusted T-shirts, stained pants. Nope, it's not laundry day. It's game day. Some aspects of Kansas basketball seem to inspire superstition. Sophomore guard Keith Langford changes shoes at halftime if he feels his performance is lacking. Sophomore forward Wayne Simien just doesn't feel right if he doesn't put on his jersey in a certain way. Even though the top Jayhawk himself, Roy Williams, says he's not superstitious, he'll likely make that trip to the Mississippi River to launch some saliva, as he has in previous years. Superstition is not limited to the team, though. Whether it involves clothes, food or personal rituals, many Kansas fans find themselves giving in to superstitions. While superstitions are technically irrational, for some students it seems to serve a psychological purpose. Scott Creel, Chicago junior wears the same suit the jayhawks wear during warm-ups to show his school spirit. He said he knew it didn't actually help the team, but his superstition helped get himself and others excited for the game. "My only superstition is to wear the velour suit," Creel said. It's the only thing I've got to do so we win." For other fans, it's all about location. Kelli Wilhite, Olathe sophomore, won't watch basketball games at bars. Since she watched Kansas' defeat to Maryland at a bar in last year's national semifinals, Wilhite has sworn off the combination of basketball and bars. "I'm not superstitious in general, but when it comes to basketball, it helps me because I get nervous. It's a relax factor for me." Wilhite said. This season, Wilhite has watched all tournament games with her best friend Trisha Shrum. Olathe sophomore. However, Wilhite left for New Orleans yesterday, while Shrum remained in Lawrence. Without the comforts of her superstition, Wilhite will still watch the game, though she does not have tickets. The success rate of a particular superstition is what makes it important. Once a superstition fails, it's time to pick another one. Or, if you're like Jordan Smith, St. Joseph, Mo., junior, just add another to the collection. For each game, Smith wears a blue KU shirt and a pair of KU socks, being careful to always wear the same sock on the same foot each time. He also keeps a bracket on which Kansas is the only team written in all capital letters. Smith doesn't shave during the NCAA Tournament and smokes a cigar after every victory. Like many other students, Smith says Kansas basketball is the only thing he gets really superstitious about. "It's kind of dumb, but it seems to be working. I do it because I feel like if I do those things, they will win. It's a mind set," Smith said. Edited by Leah Shaffer 021 By Justin Henning Kansan senior staff writer jhenning@kansan.com Stores brace for championship sales Bv Justin Hennina Kelley Weiss/Kansan Approximately 50,000 new T-shirts could be printed in Lawrence in less than 72 hours. Well, that, and a basketball victory tomorrowand Monday night. Angella Yarnell, Lawrence resident,picks out a Final Four T-shirt at a tent with Jock's Nitch and Prairie Graphics products. Yarnell joked that she was wearing her Final Four shirt from last year and said,"Here I am again buying another Final Four shirt, you'd think the shirt I have on was from 1988, but it was just last year." All it takes is a phone call and the flip of a printing press switch to make it happen. Right now, few of them have prints on them. The rest look like any other blank, white shirt, idly waiting in boxes for a chance to bear the banner of National Champion 2003. Other local sports apparel stores have similar plans in the event of a national championship. Jayhawk Spirit, family owned and located at 935 Massachusetts St., has already been through the 1988 championship. Brian Hoffman, manager of The Sports Dome, 942 Massachusetts St., said he had an exclusive design and press lined up, as well as a business plan. "We stayed open till 5 a.m. and reopened at 8 a.m." manager Willy Wilkerson said. "If we win Monday night, I'll keep the store open till 3 or 4 a.m., then take a nap in the back, regroup and reopen at 9 a.m. Tuesday morning," he said. But Massachusetts Street is not But Massachusetts Street is not the only place that would have late-night hours in the event of a Monday victory. Maggie Wilson, buyer for Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, said the store might have some shirts for sale Monday, but that they would definitely have shirts Tuesday. "People have this idea that you have to get things right after the game," Wilson said. "It's not you snooze you lose. People can still come in and get a perfectly nice Final Four T-shirt today or tomorrow." Yet with all the potential late night sales, security becomes an issue. Riots erupted and cars were set on fire at the University of Maryland after its team won last year and Michigan State even had riots after its team lost in this year's Elite Eight. "I could see it get out of hand," said Hoffman, who hired a security guard to work with him if he stays open until 4 a.m. "Between here and campus, I don't think anything's safe." Edited by Leah Shaffer WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET SANDWICHES The French Reason OUR AUTHENTIC FRENCH BREAD IS BAKED FRESH IN OUR STORES THROUGHOUT THE DAY. AND IF WE DON'T SERVE IT, WE DON'T SAVE IT. THIS BREAD IS NEVER. EVER FROZEN. FREEZER BURN, AS YOU KNOW, IS NO LAUGHING MATTER. RUG BURN, ON THE OTHER HAND. NOW THAT'S A LAUGHING MATTER. JIMMY JOHN'S Since 1903 SUPER SEAL WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET SANDWICHES WE DELIVER! 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DRIVE THRU CARWASHES WITH BLOWER DRYERS 3 LOCATIONS: 3 LOCATIONS: 6TH AND FLORIDA 9TH AND IOWA 1500 E. 23RD PHILLIPS 66 PHILLIPS 66 Kicks 66 Winston $2.99/pack $28.99/carton Camels $3.25/pack $28.99/carton Marlboro $3.44/pack $28.99/carton FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 FINALFOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 13B Opening the floodgates Basketball fanatics to rush local venues By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer University of Kansas students and Lawrence residents will be showing support for the men's basketball team from a wide variety of places Saturday. After the chaos following the Arizona victory, many students will go downtown during the game against Marquette. Lawrence freshman Ericka Brune said she wanted to be downtown where all the action was. "I don't think I'll go into any bars because I am not old enough to drink," Brune said. "Outside will be exciting enough." Topeka freshman Kassandra Snow planned on going to the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St., or Jack Flanigans Bar & Grill, 806 W. 24th St., with five to 10 friends. Buffalo Wild Wings Grill & Bar, 1012 Massachusetts St., expects a lot of business. General Manager Aaron Brinkerhoff said he had already taken 30 phone calls yesterday from people asking what time to show up to get a table. "I even had one girl call and ask if she should camp out over night," he said. The restaurant will open early at 9 a.m. Brinkerhoff said fans would have to come in early because this would be its biggest day of the year. Brinkerhoff estimated that his staff would see about 400 to 500 customers throughout the day. Many students and Lawrence residents will choose to watch the game from the comfort of their homes. Burdett sophomore Louis Stejskal wanted to watch the game at his apartment with about 10 friends. He said he wanted to celebrate after, as well as during, the game. Students with previous obligations that take them away from the game have found themselves trying to create a middle ground. Lawrence freshman Kelly Bell has to work at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St. She said the nurses would listen to the game on a radio at the nurses' station. The University is offering an alternative to bars, work and parties. At 4 p.m. the gates to Memo- riat Stadium will open. From then until tip-off at 5:07 p.m., there will be giveaways, Mardi Gras beads and music from the Kansas pep band and KLZR 105.9. "It's the ultimate watch party." said Todd Cohen, assistant director of University Relations. The game will be shown on the MegaVision screen and the University has invited all KU students and Lawrence residents to join Baby Jay and the dance team. The University also did this for last year's Final Four game, but the weather was much colder than what's predicted for tomorrow. A handful of basketball fans are fortunate enough to watch the game from a closer perspective. "I will be watching the basketball game in the New Orleans sports arena," said Joe Zahner, Lawrence resident. Zahner and four friends bought tickets off of eBay following the victory over Arizona. Their tickets allow them to see both Final Four games and the championship game Monday. - Edited by Christy Dendurent NEW ORLEANS - The palm trees lining the main promenade alongside the Superdome now sway amid cement barricades and tail chain-link fences. The Associated Press Fans who once could have easily flowed into the dome will now line up outside white tents that will serve as security checkpoints during Final Four games tomorrow and Monday. The scene is familiar in New Orleans, which hosted the first Super Bowl after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks and is now home to the first Final Four since the beginning of the war in Iraq. Big Easy prepared for Final Four Indeed, big events are nothing new to New Orleans. Since America went on heightened alert 19 months ago, the Big Easy has hosted one Super Bowl, two Mardi Gras, and several of the largest music festivals in the world. Security precautions for the Final Four will affect everyone this week, whether they're in town for basketball or just a night on Bourbon Street. On display at hotels are fliers instructing anyone going to the game what can and cannot be brought in to the dome. About 50 National Guard troops will patrol areas around the Superdome. City police have promised increased visibility both around the stadium and in tourist attractions such as the French Quarter. Agents from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms also will be part of the security detail, which will include a number of plainclothes officers. While federal officials declared the 2002 Super Bowl a National Special Security Event—placing the Secret Service in charge of security — that was a very rare occasion. Normally, that status is reserved for things like presidential and papal visits. Marquette coach's energy fuels team NEW ORLEANS — Tom Cream is a football coach in a basketball coach's body. The Associated Press It's not Dean Smith or Roy Like any coach, Crean's frenetic style is a hodgepodge of all the men who have influenced him. But whom does he admire the most? The 36-year-old dynamo who has led Marquette to the Final Four in just his fourth season never stops bounding up and down the sidelines. Williams or Mike Krzyezewski. It's not Jud Heathcote, Ralph Willard or Tom Izzo, all who hired him. It's Dallas Cowboys coach Bil Parcells,who he's never even met Cream isn't as gruff as Parcells — or Bobby Knight or Bob Huggins — but he does let his players know exactly how he feels, and usually at an earsplitting volume. Dwyane Wade, Crean's prized recruit and Marquette's first All-American in a quarter century, said players see Crean as a father figure practicing tough love. And their ears are usually ringing with the mile-a-minute wisdom of Crean, who knew so early this was his calling that he tagged along with his high school coach to scout opponents. Cream's name now comes up whenever a big-time job becomes available, including North Carolina's this week. Couch Potato Video "You'd rather be known for that than to be on a hot seat," Crean said. "The only time it's a problem for me is when it comes up in recruiting, and it does." Congratulations Hawks! Good Luck in New Orleans! from the winning team at Lawrence's favorite video rental store 1800 E.23rd·842-3400 lookin' Voted Lawrence's Best Wings MojoS tated Lawrence's Best Wing for the best place to watch the game? Basketball Special MOJOEXPERIENCE.COM CARRY-OUT SPECIAL, EXPIRES APRIL 7,2003 1 Big Screen TV & Many More! 20 wings for $7.50 30 wings for $12.00 50 wings for $18.00 714 VERMONT 841-1313 START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MISS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY- "WING IT" NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells F DELI INC. EVERY NIGHT 1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 O Gold Leaf Cemetery A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence Gul Loren Corns Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 Try the Iced Alexander La Prima Taza "Cold coffee with spicy milk chocolate." $$ \bigcirc $$ Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! THE HOME TOWER 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE ALTERNATIVE Weekend Breaks Now accepting applications for Spring 2003 Weeke Topeka Kansas City Weekend Sites April 11-12 May 2-3 Volunteer with drug and alcohol rehabilitation or families with children with disabilities STUDENT UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Alternative Breaks 428 Kansas Union aweb@ukans.edu www.ku.edu/~albreaks G GRAYSTONE Apartments that fit your lifestyle - Designed with the KU student in mind. (On KU Bus Route) - One-Two-Three Bedroom Apartments - Rates from $410 to $720 2512 West Sixth Street Lawrence, Kansas 66049 (785)749-1102 Email: graystoneapt@aol.com Also, Eagle Ridge Apts -- 530 Eldridge, 1 & 2 BRs --- 14B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT --- FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 Rainy Day TODAY 62 33 showers in the morning, windy TOMORROW 57 45 partly cloudy SUNDAY 49 38 rain and wind — WWW.WEATHER.COM CAPTAIN RIBMAN in Tele-Visions by Sprengelmeyer & Davis ...SUPPLY LINES DISRUPTED WITH SOME COALITION FORCES GETTING ONLY ONE MEAL A DAY. OK, THAT'S IT! THIS MEANS WAR! ...SUPPLY LINES DISRUPTED WITH SOME COALITION FORCES GETTING ONLY ONE MEAL A DAY. OK, THAT'S IT! THIS MEANS WAR! HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 4) If you're so smart, why aren't you rich? You can be this year if you give it some thought. Work through an old barrier — don't try to avoid it any longer — and achieve abundance. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is an 8. That check you've been waiting for could actually be in the mail, and not a moment too soon. Don't spend it all in one place. Plan ahead. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. You don't have to overpower your opposition, Just outwait him or her. One who's been resistant is becoming easier to convince. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 6. Ther"s nothing to be gained by hurrying. Move slowly and avoid a big mistake. Think carefully before you speak, too. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 6. Let people know that you expect to be paid handsomely for all your trouble. You've put up with a lot lately. Insist on fair compensation. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is an 8. An anchor you've been dragging is about to be set free. You'll have more energy soon. Meanwhile, do''t get impetuous. Be patient. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 7. Your imagination is being unleashed. Ideas will soon be abundant. You don't have to act on them all. Start with the ones that look fun. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 7. Dig into your hard-earned savings for a household repair or improvement. It's good to patch the roof before the rainy day. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 6. Your opinion is important and can help others reach a decision. You'll see something they've missed, so speak up even if you're not asked. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 7. If you concentrate and get a difficult job done, you'll be well rewarded. Give up an outgrown fantasy to achieve a realistic goal. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. Keep your money in your pocket and in the bank. You and your sweetheart feel better knowing it's there. Rather than splurging on a wild night on the town, have a wild night at home. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 6. A person who's been dragging his heels could finally get with the program. If you carefully work out what needs to be done, you'll find you have more support. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 7. The longer you study the issues, the better your chances of making a wise choice. Don't limit your input. Question everyone. Crossword ACROSS ACROSS 1 Christmas tune 6 Pronto letters 10 Sibilant signal 14 Popeye's girl 15 Compaq competitor 16 Marine salutation 17 Rescued 18 Product pitch 20 Develop 22 Side in a contest 23 Malden-name indicator 24 Exchanging letters 27 Bohemian 28 Agitate 31 Twirled 34 Hoople's oath 37 Israeli seaport 38 Actor Linden 39 Like some chairs 41 Dastardly 42 Once more 44 Canine cry 45 Mouth off 46 Signify 48 Mend 50 Posting area 56 Fat farm 58 Continental cash 59 Non-student local 60 Dilute 63 Condescend 64 Molecular component 65 First place? 66 Bob of the PGA 67 By way of, brief! 68 Proofreader's cut 69 No longer fresh DOWN 1 Trig. function 2 San Antonio landmark 3 Hippo's haunt 4 Infested 5 Bookkeeper's book 6 Madison Ave. offerings 7 Pac. pact 8 Witty Woody 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 53 54 55 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 $ \textcircled{c} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 9 Appeals 10 Touch lightly 11 "Lost Horizon" paradise 12 Lone 13 Youngster 19 Kate and Buffalo Bob 21 Perfume compound 25 Diminutive version 26 Long of "The Broken Hearts Club" 29 Sci-fi transportation 30 Dog feet 31 Roe source 32 Leaf 33 Mongolian capital 35 Stein filler 36 Indian metropolis 39 Half a buck's rack 40 Exhausted 04/04/03 Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. L I M B O S E T U P S H E A R E A S L A N K A L O W T O A S T M A A S T E R R A L E E N T I R E L Y S E V E R E L I M O C H E M A B A C O M P L A C E N C Y L A T C H R E F R A R E E Y R E I D I O T G N U S C O I L S O S T E A S E K U A L A L U M P U R S T S O L E G A R A L J O I S T S I G N E D U P A N D E E M P I R E S T A T E I C E R O U T E O G L E S L E A S A T E D M O I S T 43 Chit 45 Last to finish 47 Dodged 49 Domicilles 51 Eat away 52 Drying cloth 53 Ekberg or Baker 54 Brightest star in Orion 55 Thick 56 Smack 57 Track 61 Outback nester 62 Opp. of SSW Roommates stuck to the couch? Kansan Classifieds · Find them a job. · Find new roommates. · Sell the couch. 10% OFF ANY ORDER Culver's Beverage Center WITH KU ID FOR THE REST OF THE SEMESTER. 2111 W. 33RD STREET 856.1000 EXPRESS MAY 2, 2013 Hosanna Easter! April 20 Performances from Jesus Christ Superstar at the 11:15 service. Plymouth MASSACHUSETTS CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Every Sunday 925 Vermont Street www.plymouthlawrence.com Every Sunday 9:30 Traditional Worship 11:15 Contemporary Worship Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for hourly employment against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept 平 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements Drummer wanted to play for *Joe and the Casilo's* Only rockers need apply. Call Joe, Josh or Pat 832-8784 or stop by at 501 Nigel Street. F 24 Carrot Fresh Organic Produce! Classified Policy 9TH & 10WA· OPEN 7AM-10PM COMMUNITY MERCANTILE THE MERC! NATURAL FOOD GROCERY Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Marks JEWELERS Part-time morning help needed in busy doctor's office. Call 749-0130. Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksin@swell.net 130 - Entertainment Dance lessons; ballroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-2227 200s Employment Male Female Kate seeks summer nanny for kids. 8, 12, 13 NTS, own car, references, great opportunity. Oversand Park, 816-943-2671. 205 - Help Wanted 一 二 三 四 五 六 七 八 九 十 $$$ Search news sports sections, find high school athletics, send referrals, earn $100 per signed referral. Unlimited earnings MoreInfo (877) BISELL $$$ 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcmpjobs.com advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law, or in violation of newspaper's subject to Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which may require an advertisement any preference, limitation or position based on race, color, religion, 205 - Help Wanted 手拉手 一起走 CAMP TAKAJO for Boys, Naples, Maine TRIPP LAKE CAMP for Girls, Poland, Maine. Picturesque lakefront locations, exceptional facilities. Mid-June thru mid- August. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, swimming, land, sports, water sports, tripping, outdoor skills, theatre arts, fine arts, music, nature study, secretarial. Call Takajo at 800-250-8252. Call Tripp Lake at 800-997-4347. Or submit an application online at www.takajo.com or www.tripplakecamp.com Shipping position open immediately. $8/hr. 20 hrs/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and/or resume with 3 references to EET, P.O. Box 1304 Lawrence, KS 68044. EOE/AA ATTENTION UNDER GRADS Are you feeling overqualified and underpaid? If so, call 832-1833 and find out how you can gain real world experience and make $700 per week this summer. BARTENDER POSITION Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531 Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours great call Great Call 1-800-806-002 or 1422 BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band all Style. Call 785-749-3649. Clerical national company, Overland Park seeks telephone interviewers (no sales) flexible hours, computer skills a plus, position(s), Fax resume 131-661-9706. Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistantst Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon. 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Resp incl: Assisting patrons, produc. multimedia, maint. library records and materials, computer config/troubleshooting and many special projects. Req. quals: excel customer service, computer & A/V equipment experience, excell communication skills. $65.00/hr, 15-25 hrs/wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For info call 864-7853 Deadline April 11, 2002. 9787.www.collegepro.com sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary, students welcomed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277-9787 www.colleenporpo Interested in working with children and have a sense of humor? Raintree Montessori School, 4601 Clinton Parkway, located on 14 acres with pools, a pond and a pig named Wilbur has an opening for a classroom assistant in May (7:15-4:00, $21,000 VR.) a full-time instructor for summer camp (degree required) and a late afternoon assistant (3:15-5:30, $8/hr). now. Montessori certification not required. Experience and a sense of humor, however, are. Call 843-6800. news of the speed of light kansan.com 205 - Help Wanted LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at Girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature, sports, challenge course, dance and dramas). Early June – mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive eatery, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Call 303-778-0109 ×281 or email rmonda@gmshs.com MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDE Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163 ex. 1020 RECRUITER Fortune 500 company is seeking an individual with strong work ethic, goal driven, satisfaction from business development, desire to be community involved and most of all enthusiastic. The qualified individual will coordinate recruitment and make staffing decisions. Duties will include interviewing, testing, training and communicating with customers. Requires a strong people oriented personality, attention to detail and the ability to multi-task. College degree required. Please send resume to Manpower, 211 E. 8th St., Lawrence, KS 68044. EOE The Rock Springs 4-H Center is seeking applicants for 40-50 summer staff positions. Applicants must be graduating high school seniors or college students. Positions are recreation instructors, including teambuilding, horses, environmental education, rifles, traps, archery, canoes, crafts and lifeguards. We also have several positions in foodservice, maintenance and custodial departments. Internships are available for those who qualify. Rock Springs offers a monthly salary and room and board. Rock Springs is a nationally recognized camp and conference center serving approximately 27,000 youth and adults each year, most during the summer. Rock Springs is located 14 miles south of Junction City, Kansas on K-157 Highway. For an application or more information you can contact me at: Sate Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. The Mass. St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). Rock Springs 4-H Center C/O Jame Farr 5404 West Hawk K-157 Junction City, KS 65441 785-257-3221 jairr@koksprings.com TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS - HAVE FUN - $ OPENings in: ALL TEAM & INDIVIDUAL SPORTS, ALL WATER SPORTS; PLUS, Gampi-Hike, Ropes/Rock- Climbing; Ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Secretaries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOA/LAUNDRY, Travel allowance ONLINE APPLICATION LINE APPLICATION. www.campcobbsee.com or call (800) 473-6104 Help Wanted - Camp counselors wanted for best summer camp in Midwest. Apply online, www.midwestsummercaps.com. FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 15B 205 - Help Wanted --- Doormen and weekend day bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 Iowa. EroticIncome.Com. Men & Women Earn Money in Digital & Video Modeling as Adult Entertainment. 184-878, 755-2739 Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. Experienced Nanny wanted Wednesday day for a 3 and 4 yr. old. If interested call Madison at 830-8600. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOUGING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-885 0856. Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It's not too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campwinadu.com or complete application in staff area of www.campwinadu.com. Hiring Teacher's Aid, 1-6 afternoons. Days may vary. Also hire any hours for fall. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 M Michigan; 841-2185. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Youth Director Beth El Synagogue (Minneapolis, MN) is seeking a youth director. Responsible for programming and administration associated with the youth department (5th-12th grades). Bachelors degree and experience working with teenage youth required. Experience in a similar environment a plus. Staff supervisory/training skills, leadership training skills, and strong organizational and programming skills needed. Send resume to Search Committee. Attention: Richard Glassman, 701 Fourth Avenue South, Suite 500, Minneapolis, MN 55415, or rglassmanlaw@attbi.com. X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale S Cars from $500 Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3232 ext. 4652. S VDMII ONE VDMII ONE VDMII ONE 330 - Tickets for Sale All NCAA Final Four tickets for sale, call (517) 351-1992 or order online at www.lamestheticketman.com MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance, $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent Available in August. 1,2 bdrm. Close to GSP/Corbin between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841-1207 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. $415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 1,2,3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. Available August 1st. 841-6254 Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice remodeled 1 BR close to campus, quiet mature building. Gas, water are paid. No pets, no smoking.Starting $400.841-3192. Avail. August 1st, 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher. 831 Alabama. $110/month, Card 843-9540 Ext.21. 405 - Apartments for Rent Avail, Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C. 10th & NY no. Pets: 653, Bald 841-7147. Avail. Aug; Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets.$450.Call 841-1074. Avail, June or Aug. Studio 1, 2, and 3 BR apt. In renovated older houses, Walk to KU or downtown, wood floors, window A/C, ceiling fans. De clawed cats welcome with pet rent and deposit. $370-1,050 for a tour call 841-1074. Available Aug 10 small studio apt in renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window AC, antique tub. 7th and Ohio. No pets. $370. Call 841-1074. Available Aug small modern 2 BR apt in renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, central AC, DW, WD hookups, small fenced yard, declawed cats or dogs under 20 lbs and over 2 yrs old. With pet rent and deposit $650. 19th and Vermont. Call 841-1074. 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Bristol震. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd.$490 per month. W/D hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 740-4788. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR. 3 BA town houses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas. 843-4090. 3 BR apts. 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@ixks.com www.colonywoods.com 1&2Bedrooms - Exercise Room * Now Leasing for Summer & Fall - On KU Bus Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - 3 Hot Tubs - Exercise Room - New Leasing for Summ M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Canyon Court Brand New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing for Spring 2003 *Now Leasing for Spring 2003* 1, 2, 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available High Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 www.firstmanagementinc.com CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. HOLIDAY APARTMENTS Model Open Daily! - 1 & 2 Bedroom - On KU Bus Route - Fitness Center - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fireplace - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer www.firstmanagementinc.com 843-8220 - Small Pet Welcome NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1942 STEWART AVE. 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 Swimming Pool Fitness Center NICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY MANAGEMENT ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 405 - Apartments for Rent 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON-FRI 9-6 MON-FRI 9-6 LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block Michigan.Call 843-409. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 $560 On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousedahl 841-5533 1 BR apt for sublease, avail. June 1st, opt. lease for fall. Access from stadium, guaranteed pool. $425/month, water/ trashpaid. No pets. Elizabeth. 834-9944. 2 BR/ 1 BA near campus. Available immediately or for summer! Call 913-219-4642 or 785-550-1116. Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt. DW, CA. micro. laundry, on site. 382 BA $900, 48R B $1040, NO PETS. PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 533www apartmentsinlawnet.com 1712 OHIO 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments - Spacious, Luxury Apts. • All appls. + W/D • Water paid • 6 mo. leases avail. FOX RUN Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.theofxrun.com VILLAGE SQUARE apartments 》 Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 *1, 2, 3, Bedroom *Washer/Dryer *Fireplace *Swimming Pool *Fitness Center *Basketball Court *Small Pet Welcome THE LEGENDS L Since 1983 841-8468 6th & Iowa FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPPED FITNESS CENTER www.firstmanagementinc.com BRAND NEW CAR WASH & DETAIL B HUGE GAME ROOM COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM HIGH SPEED INTERNET GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAU BAY FULLY COOPERATED FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPORTS 4101 WEST 24TH PLACE (Across from the Blyton Country Club) LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 405 - Apartments for Rent (785) 856-5800 Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. 838-8302 1-1 BR Apt. Next to Campus. Avail. Aug 1: 1346 Ohio. $490 per month. Utilities paid. Call 550-0426 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail; for summer and all. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus 16, laundry facility. Call 843-0011. Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus 10th & Missouri Briarwood 4241 Briarwood Dr Tuckaway Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs,basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1.2.3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Models Open Daily 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com MASTERCRAFT WALKTO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 designed with you in mind Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 + Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon 9am-5pm NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 405 - Apartments for Rent Equal Housing Opportunity Now signing IYR, LEASE starting May june/July Aug. No smoking beets. Extra well-heard 2 BPs aft. Quiet, all appliances, low utilities, A/C, bus route here $405/mo, Spanish Credit Apts. 814-8888 Save Your Money! Town home-3 bedroom 2 bath, WD, Wired- place, kitchen appl, garage/opener, no pet. Sublease 6/1-7/31 $550-766-5080. Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NO PETS. 841-5533. 3 BR apts. FP, skylights. 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Call 785-748-9807 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage Newi 804/806 New Jersey St $950/mo. plus deposit Call 550-4148 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample parking, on-site laundry. Call 843-4090. 3BR Apts. in nice house. Close to KU and Downtown, Hrdc Flrs, Free WD use. Off street parking. $630-673. 841-3633 Blue Maua Management Firm Apartment & Town Home 7 BR house, 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown. $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8, 5045-0246 Now Leasing for Fall Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - Blue Meadow Management, Inc. Curacao at an Affordable Price 5200 W 15th, Suite 101 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ♦ Washer & Dryer ♦ Fully Equipped Kitchen ♦ Serving Bar 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment 1,2,3 Bedrooms Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. $^{00}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPENHOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com earth sign-up special Lorimar Townhomes 1.2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Dishwashers* Microwaves* Patios* Fire Places* Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Park way #F1 Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes 2 & 3 Beverages • Washer/Drivers • Dishwasher • Microwaves • Patios • Gas Fire Places • Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway 415 - Homes For Rent 410 - Condos For Rent دوگه ی جدید Very nice condo. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Ell at 841-4470. 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. WD hookups, FP, vaulted ceiling, and garages small pet welcome. Call 842-3280 3-4 BR Houses. Some close to KU. Hrdw firs, Free W/D use. Off street parking $685-$895 841-3633 4 Subleasers needed, new 4 BR town-house, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W,D rent $121.50, lease through July 31. 816-520-612 or 636-578-3505 or 620-340-3273. Available June or Aug 3 BR older house. 15th and New Hampshire, Wood floors, central AC, ceiling fans, DW, DW hook-ups, large closets, fenced yard, declawed cats, and dogs under 20 lbs. With pet rent and pet deposit. Discounted dramatically for June and July. Starting Aug. $1050; B481-1074. 430 - Roommate Wanted 2 roommates wanted for house across from campus. W/D, A/C. $25/month each. Available 6:11 Call: 832-7340 or 218-6543. Female for house ASAP, $175+util Cable, CH, CA, WD. Near campus & downtown 1 block from KU bus. 856-5511. Mature roommate wanted for 3 BD/nice house/WDC/IA/garage. Avail. NOW. $375+usl. No smoking. Call 766-7101 Grade student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, WID and garage. No smoking. $300 + I/II suit Avail 842-4540 Roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apt. for fall sublease. Lots of extra amenities. $318/month plus utilities. Call 218-0543. 435 Rooms for Rent 1 bedrooms available in house near campus. Utilities and cable included, W/D. Bedroom, bathroom $350/mo. 550-5812 440 - Sublease 1. bedroom apartment wanted to sublease for the summer. Call Army B12-2650. key house 1 bedroom apartment. 16th & Tennessee. Available May 1st. Rent negotiable. Call Kristen at 393-1549. 2 BR's avail, after finals at Jefferson Commons for summer. May rent already paid for. Rent negotiable. Most utilities paid. W/D, cable, pool, weight room, furnished. Call Ericka Hayleau, 841-784-1797. 3 BR Townhouse BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus, Garage, WD, Central Air, avail, mid-May Call Adam 830-8076. PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has a private BA. 749-606. Room for rent of 3 BR apt. in Tuck-away avail, for summer, quiet setting, pool. Call Jonathan asap at 218-3548. Sublease Now. Avail, with option to renew. 2 floor, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Close to campus. Furn. If interested, call DJ218-6100. Summer sublease. 308 W. 16th Street. 4 bedroom, 2 bath. Good landlord. Nice front porch. Call 785-979-9617 or 816- 213-0061. 500s Services 505 - Professional --- Term Paper Editing! Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 866-693-EDIT 510-Child Care Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233. 4 16B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT FRIDAY,APRIL4,2003 HAWKS THE LEGEND LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING THE LEGENDS WWW.TALEGENDSATKU.COM (785) 856-KU4U (785) 856-5848 THE LEGENDS L LAWRENCE ALVAMAR COUNERY CLUB K.U. 219 CLINTON Pkwy. THE LEGENDS 合 Monday April 7,2003 Vol.113. Issue No.128 blowing Today's weather 44° Tonight: 29° THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Soccer sweeps two spring matches, battles against harsh weather p.3B 11 Jayhawks soar into Championship Kansas' Nick Collison keeps the ball away from Marquette's Todd Townsend after snatching the defensive rebound. Collison led the team in defensive rebounds with a total of 11 for Saturday night's game in New Orleans. Aaron Showalter/Kansan Kansas cruises past Marquette into first title game since 1991 By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter NEW ORLEANS — There were no white knuckles or held breaths on Saturday. There was no need. After beating Duke and Arizona by a combined 7 points, Kansas blind-sided Marquette with the force of a Mack truck. Or maybe it was a Ferrari. Regardless of the analogy, the Jayhawks stomped on the gas early in the 94-61 victory, outrunning the Golden Eagles from the word go. Their 29-point lead after the first 20 minutes was the second largest For fun and interesting facts about Saturday's game, see page 8A. halftime advantage in the history of the Final Four. And if you were wondering who was driving the Jayhawk Express, look no further than sophomore guard Keith Langford and his navigator, senior guard Kirk Hinrich. Langford made 8-of-10 shots and scored 17 points in the first half, while Hinrich wasn't far behind with 5-of-12 shooting for 15 points. Langford said he knew early on that Marquette was going to have a difficult time stopping him from reaching the basket. "I think I realized it the first time I went baseline," Langford told reporters. That first time was a two-handed slam after the left-hander slipped past his defender on a quick move to the right. between Langford slashing to the basket. Hinrich burying three-pointers — 3-of-7 in the first half—and the rest of the Jayhawks filling any leftover holes, the Golden Eagles never seemed to know which way to turn. If they contained Langford and Hinrich, sophomore guard Aaron Miles would hit a layup between defenders, sophomore guard Michael Lee would knock down a three-pointer from the corner, or senior forward Nick Collison would tip in a missed shot. SEE FINAL FOUR ON PAGE 8A KANSAS 94 - MARQUETTE 61 KANSAS 94 - MARTINEZ Player Min. FGM-A FTM-A TP Reb. A Keith Langford 32 11-14 1-3 23 5 4 Kirk Hinrich 25 6-13 1-4 18 1 4 Nick Collison 26 6-7 0-4 1 1 3 Jeff Greaves 29 7-4 1-4 5 1 9 Michael Lee 22 4-8 2-2 13 6 4 Bryant Nash 28 1-4 1-1 3 4 0 Jeff Hawkins 6 0-3 0-0 0 0 0 Stephen Vinson 5 0-2 0-0 0 1 0 Moulaye Niang 4 1-3 0-0 0 1 0 Brett Olson 3 0-1 0-0 2 0 0 Christian Moody 3 0-0 0-0 2 0 1 Team Totals 200 38-71 10-17 94 52 22 Player Min. FGM-A FTM-A TP Rob. A Travis Dianer 35 1-11 2-2 5 1 2 0 Jackson Dickson 30 6-12 3-4 15 1 0 0 Downey Wade 39 2-12 3-4 19 6 4 10 Jones Krause 24 5-14 2-12 19 6 14 0 Todd Townsend 22 1-8 1-2 1 2 0 0 Steve Novak 22 0-3 1-2 1 2 0 0 Karon Bradley 18 1-7 0-0 3 1 0 0 Torin Sanders 18 1-7 0-0 3 4 0 0 Torine Chapman 10 0-3 0-0 2 4 0 0 Chris Hines 5 1-1 0-0 2 1 0 0 Jared Saiching 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Tony Gries 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Team 1 Totals 200 23-74 12-18 61 39 7 KANSAS 5 Aaron Showalter/Kansan Keith Langford drives past Marquette's Todd Townsend during the second half of the seminal game in New Orleans. After gaining a 59-30 lead at halftime, Kansas steadily dominated Marquette in the second half, eventually winning 94-61. Fans old,young,drunken,sober celebrate KU victory Kansan staff reports editor@kansan.com As the fight song toled from the Campanile, throngs of Kansas basketball fans flocked to Wescoe Beach to celebrate the Jayhawks' victory over the Marquette Golden Eagles on Saturday. Revelers came from all over Lawrence, including Memorial Stadium, downtown Lawrence and nearby homes and bars. "When we were 3-3, they all doubted," said Jimmy Dwyer, Overland Park freshman. "Who didn't doubt? I didn't doubt. Kansas fans didn't doubt. Where are we now? The national championship!" houses and barns Fans screamed, blew air horns, shot fireworks and yelled the "Rock Chalk" chant. "It's surreal out here," said Emily Zimmerman, Denver sophomore. "It's awesome because it really brings students together." Strangers moshed and embraced while people crowd-surfed, and a small band on the stairs outside Wescoe played fight songs and the alma mater, "Crimson and the Blue." Wescoe Beach stank of alcohol despite the patrolling KU police officers who asked people to dump their beer at the edge of campus. Beer bottles littered Jayhawk Boulevard. One fan crowd-surfed with a beer in hand. Others just held their Others shouted into cell phones to share the post-game atmosphere with friends and family. Fans of all ages yelled support for the Jayhawks in front of television cameras. drinks at mid-level taking discrete sips. Mardi Gras moyamay Mardi Gras mayhem Thousands of rallying fans filled downtown after the game, turning Massachusetts Street into a virtual Bourbon Street. A constant stream of revelers walked past immobile cars down the middle of the road, greeting each other, drivers and passengers with high fives and enthusiastic cheers. Those in automobiles responded with horn honks and music, starting frequent dance parties that transformed car roofs into dance floors. Disc jockeys in an apartment above Massachusetts Street blasted music out of their windows, inspiring more dancers on the ground below. SEE FANS ON PAGE 8A Vanity Brandon Baker/Kansan Jordan Harding, Wichita sophomore, plays the KU fight song to the crowd on Massachusetts Street. Harding plays with the band but was in Lawrence during the game. 1 4. 2 20 --- A - THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN The Inside Front MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 News briefs CAMPUS New location for MRC approved unanimously The Multicultural Resource Center will have a new home at the northeast corner of the Kansas Union. The executive board of the Memorial Corporation, the governing body of the Kansas and Burge Unions, unanimously voted to approve the location Friday morning. The Kansas University Endowment Association is negotiating with a potential donor for partial funding of the new MRC. In the passed resolution, the union won't be responsible for incurred costs of the project but will have a say in the planning process. "It's been amazing with the turnaround," said Jonathan Ng, student body president. "I wasn't expecting it to progress as fast as it has." Candidates debate today, tackle students' questions Students will have a free for all with student body presidential and vicepresidential candidates at an informal debate at noon today at Wescoe Beach. Questions may be asked on any topic. Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner, said she hoped questions would stray from coalition platforms. She has the authority to deem questions inappropriate. In the event of inclement weather, the debate will be canceled. — Cate Batchelder STATE 11-year-old Pittsburg girl wins bee with a flower TOPEKA—An 11-year-old Pittsburg girl, Nina Mathew, is this year's All-Kansas Spelling Bee champion. Nina, who won the contest Saturday in Topeka, is the first Crawford County speller to claim the state title in 20 years. Nina, a sixth-grader at Pittsburg Middle School, will represent Kansas in the finals of the National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C., in late May. Erin Keeley, who lives near Manhatan, was the runner-up. Erin, who is home-schooled, is a seventh-grader. Erin omitted both letters in the second syllable in "rhododendron" in the 16th round Saturday. Nina corrected her spelling and then confidently spelled "lemur" to clinch the title Erin's father, Boban Mathew, an oncologist at Mount Carmel Regional Medical Center in Pittsburg, said Nina was born about a year after he and his wife immigrated to the United States from Kerala, India. Some of the words that Nina spelled Saturday included "paraphernalia," "analgesic" and "salve." Third place went to Stuart Warkentin,14, of Concordia, who improved on his 32nd-place finish in the state contest last year. The Associated Press ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Dan Breslauer of the religious studies department will give a lecture on "The Vegetarian Alternative: Biblical Adumbrations, Modern Reverberations" from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the conference room in Hall Center for the Humanities. Call 864-4798. Peter Meszaros of Pennsylvania State University will give a physics lecture on "Gamma-Ray Bursts and Their Ultra-high Energy Signatures" at 4 p.m. today at David Mora Marin of the anthropology department will give a lecture on "Identifying the Standard Language of Classic Lowland Mayan Texts" at 3:30 p.m. today at room 206 in Blake Hall. Call 864-2384. room 3005 in Malott Hall. Call 864-4626. The Multicultural Resource Center will sponsor "Tunnel of Oppression," an awareness experience for students, faculty and staff about different types of oppression and their effects from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. today at the basement in Hashinger Hall. Call 864-4350. The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will practice from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.today at room 207 in Robinson. Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. Author Ivan Hall will give a lecture on "Why Do Americans Not Understand Japan?" from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. today at the Paul Adams Room in Adams Alumni Center. Call 864-3849. NEWS AFFILIATES KUJHTV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00. News: Brett Wiard and Laine Baker Weather: Brandi Gunter Sports: Doug Donahoo On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9 Then again at 6 p.m. 907 kansan.com Dont have time to listen to today's paper kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to Camera on KU THE HONOR BOY To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffart, Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Eric Braem/Kensan Members of the Marching Jayhawks play "I'm a Jayhawk" to a crowd of more than 1,000 fans in front of Wescoe Hall. Students crowd-surfed on Wescoe Beach and sneaked alcohol onto campus. Police closed Jayhawk Boulevard to traffic during and after the game Saturday night. Lied Center announces shows The performers for the Lied Center's 2003-2004 series were announced yesterday in honor of the center's 10th anniversary and the University of Kansas 100th anniversary of the Concert Series. "I'm really excited about the 2003-2004 series," said Tim Van Leer, executive director for the center. "It provides an opportunity to bring back artists that the community has responded positively to in the past, as well as introduce new artists." The announcements were made during an on-stage reception. twenty-seven different performances are planned next season including a free outdoor concert in conjunction with the center's birthday party that includes cake and ice cream, a sing-a-long performance of the Wizard of Oz and a special anniversary event featuring Yo-Yo Ma with the Silk Road Ensemble. Tickets for next season's shows go on sale to the general public on June 23. Lied Center 2003-2004 calendar - Lauren Bristow Alison Brown Quarter Free Outdoor Concert Aug. 22 Family Arts Festival and Birthday Party Ann 22 Sing-A-Long Wizard of Oz Single 4-0 Sept. 20 Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Miami City Ballet Oct. 8 Woven Harmon Woven Harmon Oct. 10 Talking Quartet Takacs Quartet Oct. 22 Oct. 22 Academy of St. Martin in the Fields with Murray Perahia Oct. 22 Scrap Arts Music Oct 28 Wadaiko Yamato, The Drummers of Japan Nov. 1 Le Bottine Souriante Othello New eighth blackbird Nov. 9 The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. Nov. 14 The Music Man Nov. 15 Canadian Brass Feb. 7 Joanne Shenandoah Feb. 13 CATS Feb. 17, 18 St. Lawrence String Quartet Feb. 22 Los Angeles Guitar Quartet Feb. 26 Verdi's La Traviata March 5 Concertante, chamber music octet March 14 Grease March 16 Scottish Rant, Bonnie Rideout Scottish Trio and the City of Washington Pipe Band April 2 The Pirates of Penzance April 8 Diavolo Dance Theater April 16 Yo-Yo Ma April 17 Bang on a Can All-Stars May 1 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 25 cents. Subscnptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence,KS66045. Et Cetera The University Daily Kansas (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Steuwer-Fint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 66045 rmed out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Domestic LAWRENCE "We Stand Behind & Foreign AUTOMOTIVE Our Work, and WE CARE!" Complete DIAGNOSTICS 842-8665 Car Care INC. 2858 Four Wheel Dr. LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • CIGARS • POOL 1009 MASS . LAWRENCE For you business majors,it's all about ways and means, isn't it? How's this for starters: a career-building job with an international financial services firm superior benefits - and healthy compensation. State Street, a world leader in the financial services industry, has both full- and part-time job openings at its Kansas City office, right now. $$ $ . Join your future - today! STATE STREET. For Everything You Invest In 2003 State Street Corporation ED5JAA Apply online. statestreetkc.com Redefine your world. Peace Corps Learn how you can make a difference. Tuesday, April 8: General information table 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Summerfield Info meeting and film show 7 p.m., Multicultural Resource Center (between Summerfield and Military Science Building) Questions? Contact Aline Hoey at peacecorps@ku.edu TRACS CONGO 1-800-424-8580 www.peacecorps.gov MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Living organizations debate hanging coalition banners By Cate Batcheler cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Coalition banners from KUnited and Delta Force hug Wescoe Hall. One is a professional-looking logo with crisp lines sporting red, white and blue. The other is a homemade-looking logo with a stamped delta symbol, sporting blue and yellow. Both banners claim the eye-sore known as Wescoe, intending to grab the student body's eye, and later, its vote. Banners fly on the outskirts of campus, too. At the west end of Jayhawk Boulevard, a KUnited banner is strapped to the Chi Omega house. Ashley Horstman, Wichita junior and Chi Omega president, said the banner was in support of the four individual members running for Student Senate seats, including Catherine Bell, KUnited coalition member, who is running for vice president, and not necessarily a statement that the house supported KUnited and not other coalitions. "We really try to stay impartial," Horstman said. "We respect that every woman has their own opinions." Elizabeth Brown. Topeka junior, walks by the banner every day to and from classes from her house, Delta Gamma. "We respect that every woman has their own opinions." Ashley Horstman Ashley Horstman Wichita junior "By putting a banner up, you're telling people this is what you have to vote for," she said. Even though no banner hangs from her house, Brown said girls in her sorority were easily swayed to vote for KUnited based on the stereotype that it was the greek coalition. "They're not given a chance to have an open mind," she said. "And if you aren't decided, then KUnited is just an easier way to go." Down the street from the Delta Gamma is the fraternity Theta Chi. A KUnited banner flies freely. Ben Kirby, Dallas junior and Theta Chi member, said the banner was put up after spring break. He said the fraternity was going to vote on whether to keep the banner up but hadn't followed through on the vote. One of its members, Andy Knopp, KUnited coalition member, is running for student body president. "In any organization, you want your own to win," Kirby said. Despite the banner, Kirby said he planned to look past the name to see the issues when he went the polls. On the opposite side of campus, the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee St., is planning to vote today on whether to hang a Delta Force banner on the cooperative house. Already, a Delta Force sign is posted by the door. A KUnited poster was hung in a window, but is now gone. Two Delta Force senators live in the co-op and more live in coops down the street. "If I have an opinion against the house, I'll go with that," said Ed Minges, Frontenac senior and co-op resident. Across the street, Minges can see a KUnited banner hanging on the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house. He said KUnited was able to fly more banners than Delta Force because it had more concentrated groups of supporters. Delta Force's majority of supporters are off-campus residents who don't live in large groups and aren't as likely to have the initiative to request a banner, he said. Neither coalition will be hung on the Black Cat Collective, an anarchist co-op at 1305 Tennessee St. Co-op resident Sean Whittier, Lawrence junior, said he probably won't be voting. "I just have doubts that they can do anything meaningful," he said. —Edited by Erin Chapman A sparkling victory P G Y Ajubilant KU fan shoots off a Roman candle from his car at 10th and Massachusetts streets after the game on Saturday. Fans celebrated downtown until the early hours of the morning despite the looming daylight-saving time. Jared Soares/Kansan Bill targeted at Dailey's sex class in hands of the governor By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The next stop for the state budget amendment that would cut funding from universities that used obscene videos in classes is on the governor's desk. The bill is aimed at Human Sexuality in Everyday Life, taught by Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare. The budget bill containing the amendment, proposed by Sen. Susan Wagle (Wichita), was approved Thursday by the House of Representatives. The obscenity amendment was originally included in the Senate's version of the budget bill and survived a House-Senate conference committee last week that negotiated differences between each chamber's version of the budget bill. The budget bill amendment was presented to the House on Thursday on final action with little opportunity to debate it, said Rep. Paul Davis (D-Lawrence). "There are a lot of legislators, including myself, who are very opposed to what Sen. Wagle has done," Davis said. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said two weeks ago the Legislature should not interfere with state university teaching materials or curriculum. Unless the governor uses a line-item veto for the amendment, the amendment will require the Kansas Board of Regents to eliminate funding for any university department that buys or shows materials considered obscene. Members of Student Senate traveled to Topela on Thursday to present a Student Senate resolution promoting academic freedom. "We didn't get the most positive response," said Johanna Maska, Student Legislative Awareness Board legislative director. "We met with the governor's people and we're expecting a veto." The University of Kansas does not tolerate pornography but supports Dailey and his teaching method, said Todd Cohen, assistant director of University Relations. All students who enroll in the class at the University are given numerous warnings about the course content before enrollment and are warned before viewing explicit materials, he said. "It's frank and provocative and everyone is warned," Cohen said. - Edited by Ryan Wood Summer at KU in KC Undergraduate Program KU Edwards Campus Celebrate 172 years in Greater Kansas City Going home to KC this summer? The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. Enroll Today! Call (913) 897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu KU Summer Semester begins June 3 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MASS. STREET DELI DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE PITCHER NIGHT TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT - Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 - $3.00 Cosmos & Martinis - $2.00 Wells - 1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 • Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 T DELI INC. 0 informal STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS D MONDAY APRIL 7TH 12:00 PM WESCOE BEACH ASK YOUR QUESTIONS. VOICE YOUR OPINIONS. BE SURE TO VOTE! 4A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION MONDAY, APRIL 7, 2003 TALKTO US editor 864-4854 or kherderson@kansan.com --world of ideas and knowledge reaches them. Jenna Goepert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Eric Ketting business manager 864-4358 or adsale@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Matt Fisher Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Roy's right Stay safe while you celebrate Within 15 seconds of the buzzer, the Roy's Rules of Order message flashed across the video board in Memorial Stadium encouraging safe, responsible celebration. Fifteen minutes later, Wescoe Beach and Massachusetts Street were seas of screaming fans. Rumors circulated of increased police surveillance and an inevitable riot. But as people crowd-surfed and covertly drank beers, police calmly stood by entrances to buildings looking on. The crowds stayed under control and there were few incidents, aside from Massachusetts Street's transformation into Bourbon Street. The hope now is that tonight's game will give Lawrence another reason to celebrate (knock on wood). After seeing a roaring Allen Fieldhouse welcome the Jayhawks at 4 a.m. on March 30, and after seeing Massachusetts Street on Saturday, it's hard to imagine what Lawrence might look like tonight (knock on wood again, seriously). Whatever happens, it's important to celebrate responsibly. Although there are only a few reports of arrests on Saturday, not all postgame celebrations demonstrate the level of pride that Lawrence has shown. Just last week, 18 people were arrested in Michigan after Michigan State defeated Maryland. That Lawrence remained in relatively good shape yesterday morning suggests a respect that's often missing elsewhere. It's that respect, not only for the University but for Lawrence as a whole that separates KU fans from others. But Roy's Rules of Order, while they attempt to point us in the right direction, are not specific enough. First, don't light anything on fire. Or at least don't light anything that you don't intend to smoke. Don't light any fireworks underneath cars, either. Second, don't overturn any cars. It would be interesting to see the difference in sales of shocks and struts after watching some of the cars on Massachusetts Street Saturday, but all those cars remained on four wheels. Third, if you're going to take the Massachusetts-to-Bourbon-Street transformation literally, remember that pictures last a long time, and beads don't come cheap. Fourth, if you're a teaching assistant, don't run through the streets with your shirt off. There's a possibility you might meet some of your students. Finally, get out and show your support for the basketball team when we take care of Syracuse tonight! Greg Holmquist for the editorial board LYDA'S VIEW CELEBRATE RESPONSIBLY Mark Lydia for The University Daily Kansan KAM CENSORED 11 MARK LYDA 2005 PERSPECTIVE Athletics shouldn't stop academics April 5,2003 - a day that will live in infamy for all true academics left on Mount Oread. Academic services and facilities at the University are being shut down this evening to ensure we all take time to worship the real focus on campus: athletics. Chancellor Robert Hemenway has declared that campus be shut down for purposes of security. Hemenway's given explanation for this bizarre course of action is laughable. The e-mail he distributed last week only confirmed that academics are being put in the back seat. 100 The official explanation of the campus lockdown is comparable to the end-of-the-world terror alerts we receive regularly from Ari Fleischer, White House press secretary. Just as the country readily accepts the terror alerts as gospel, the majority of campus will accept Hemenway's security rhetoric at face value. Fortunately, many faculty and staff members have reassured me that they recognize Hemenway's actions as little more than a commercial play to celebrate athletics while he turns his back on academics. GUEST COMMENTARY Present on every college campus although dominant on some and marginal on others, is the undergraduate subculture of serious academic effort. The essence of this system of values is identification with the intellectual concerns of serious faculty members. These students work hard, striving for exceptional grades. In the process, the Ben McCarthy opinion@kansan.com A good deal of Mount Oread is already dedicated to this culture. They are indifferent and resistant to serious demands that faculty would like to make on students for the sake of involvement with ideas and issues. It started Saturday night and continues into this week: The University's academic culture is being told that it has no place on Jayhawk Boulevard. Instead, and once again, we will find that collegiate culture frolics about with Hemenway's seal of approval. University certification—a diploma is more important than ever before. Naturally, students have to endure a myriad of academic problems present at large public universities to obtain the Collegiate culture, satisfied in a world of football and basketball games, fraternities and sororites, dates, drinking and campus social events, is much easier for Hemenway to appease and control than academic culture. diploma, a status symbol in our society. Academic shortcomings within the University are masked behind what Murray Sperber, professor of English and American studies at Indiana University, calls "the beer and circus." Sperber said universities would rather give students a parade of beer and circus — athletics — than invest the same time and funding to repair failings in the academic arena. It is obvious that Hemenway is counting on his circus biggest attraction — the men's basketball team — to provide relief for students. It is hoped that minor details such as tuition increases, lack of faculty hiring and grade inflation will be swept under the carpet in the coming weeks. Students will have little time to demand better standards in higher education when they are saturated with 24-hour victory celebrations. If Hemenway proceeds with his promise to shut down campus, I will not hesitate to respond by walking out on the University of Kansas. One day, the academic communities at public institutions of learning may stand up and hold individuals like Hemenway accountable for prioritizing the athletic circus ahead of academics. That will truly be a great day, but until it comes, I guess you better get going ... there is plenty of beer and circus available that I wouldn't want you to miss. McCarthy is a Lenexa graduate student PERSPECTIVE Candidates need to accentuate positive Student Senate campaigns, current and past, have mainly focused on problems at the University of Kansas. And, to an extent, rightly so. After all, Student Senate should be about improving the University. Candidates should be exploring new and creative ways to address student concerns. But they should also demonstrate to students all the wonderful reasons to take pride in the University of Kansas. GUEST COMMENTARY Low turnout and apathy have been familiar themes associated with Student Senate elections. Rarely do more than one-fifth of students turn out for elections. KUnited presidential candidate Andy Knopp thinks student involvement should not be blamed on apathy because they could be involved if given the right opportunities and leadership. Knopp is mostly right to call for student leaders But leadership alone will not involve students. Students are generally a smart bunch; they will not be led for the sake of following. They need something to believe in, something to wrap themselves in. This is what Student Senate campaigns miss: They need to tap into Jayhawk pride. Students from all walks of life are generally proud to be Jayhawks. Many of us grew up bleeding crimson and blue and many learned this tradition from alumni parents. The University also has not only been adequate academically, but is a leading institution west of Mississippi River. The William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications is one of the oldest in the country. The school has David Mitchell opinion@kansan.com fought for the theory of evolution for more than 100 years. An alumnus even discovered Pluto. The fraternity and sorority system boasts some of the most attractive mansions in Lawrence and many of the oldest chapters in the nation. Activism and protest have been part of the University tradition from the beginning, from alternative media of all forms to sit-ins to feminist movements to outright violence. Yes, many of us were born Jayhawks, but this tradition has allowed so many more to become Jayhawks. This is not to say that the University cannot improve. Tuition increases are threatening to price students out of such opportunities. Students deserve better access to course information to further their academic success. More can be done to continue our tradition of diverse thought by incorporating as many diverse backgrounds as possible. Women still face issues of sexual assault that have roots deeper than those of the University. The coalitions are right: These are extremely important issues that Student Senate should address in the upcoming Nevertheless, students will not come out to vote if their representatives continually tell them how bad their University is. The sentiment goes, "It must be so if the most active and involved students feel this way." This fuels criticism, cynicism and — yes — apathy. This style of campaigning continually cuts the legs out from under Student Senate. year. Candidates and coalitions need to continue offering solutions to our problems, but they need to anchor their issues to KU tradition. Students need to hear that they attend a University with a diverse campus, but more can be done to recruit and retain it. Students need to know they attend an academically rich institution, but more information can be provided for better choices. Students need to hear that women generally approve of campus life, but there are safety concerns that must be addressed. More than anything, students need candidates who profess the pride all of us have. As a senator and Delta Force coalition member, I know that all of this year's candidates have a strong commitment to this University and its heritage. Their candidacy alone demonstrates their obligation to serve the University and its students. In order for students of all types to feel that pride and sense of duty, Student Senate candidates must show their pride in the University of Kansas — not just their problems with it. Mitchell is a Hays graduate student in public administration. He is a Delta Force graduate candidate. Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to emit comments. Standorous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com - If Lord Wad wins the election, is he going to turn the Senate into a Parliament? Because that would be totally sweet. Febreze fixes everything. It freshens your air, it does your taxes, it even kills terrorists. 图 What's with the current craze over public hair? I went to this party and this girl was like, "I have the tightest pubes you've ever seen." Thursday's crossword clue for self-satisfaction is missing a square, because "masturbation" doesn't fit. 11. Just what was Bush's SAT score? So you know you're bored when you're chasing around your roommate trying to get her to play with your mole. 窗 I just touched my roommate's mole, and all I have to say is, gross. This is to the person who scored 200 more points on the SAT than Bush. Well I scored 200 more points than you, and I think you'd be a terrible president. I'm from Coffeyville, and if Catharine Bell is elected to Student Senate, I'm transferring to Mizzou, because I had enough of her crap in high school. 图 So the sidewalk chalk told me to vote for KUnited, because dinosaurs love KUnited, and KU Basketball also loves KUnited, so I think that's how I'm going to vote. Does anyone think it's weird that everyone knows Vin Diesel's name? What the hell? A kid asked his dad if God was black or white, and his dad said, "Both," and then the son asked if God was a man or a woman, and his dad said, "Both." Then the kid said, "Is God Michael Jackson?" - Sometimes late at night, when my roommates aren't home, I turn the lights off, light a few candles, slip into something sexy, and turn on old Jeopardy reruns. Mmm, Alex Trebec. This is to the person who was wondering how boobie tassels stay on: with some very good double-sided tape. And remember, boys and girls, there's no sex in the champagne room. - Dennis Dailey for president. So if you had to choose between a hippie, a greek, or an insane megalomaniac for Student Body President, who would you pick? - So I was watching the Colin Quinn show on Comedy Central, and I heard a good point. Isn't it rather ironic that Michael Moore condemns the U.S. for being excessively capitalistic while he weighs 400 pounds? I bet Senator Wagle never gets laid, and that's why she hates Dennis Dailey. 图 Hi, I'm a worker at GSP-Corbin, and I wanted to let the rest of the University know about some policy changes that everyone needs to be aware of. Due to the controversy surrounding the current war in Iraq, none of our staff is allowed to talk about the war at the desk. Although the war coverage can be on in the lobby, it should not be a topic while working, especially personal views about the war. 图 Running with KUInted is like being from Johnson County. You become Republican by association. Don't fight it MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A THE PLACE TO BE IS... Watching the Hawks at the Stadium! South gates open 7 p.m. Monday Game starts 8:18 p.m. Big Screen - KU Dance Team Baby Jay Pep Band Mardi Gras Beads - Concessions - Pregame Family Funzone - Post-game DJ & Music by KLZR The Lazer LAZER 105.9 - And More! KU The University of Kansas Memorial Stadium NCAA Championship Game KU KU Go Jayhawks! Weather permitting NO Alcohol There will be no vehicle access to central campus Stadium celebration sponsored by the University of Kansas Roy says "Jayhawk fans are the greatest... Be responsible. I care. Roy Williams ble. care. ...When they CELEBRATE SAFELY." KU The University of Kansas 5A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 Hashinger Hall commences annual celebration of its Spring Arts Week By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer tie-dyed. Students the way they decoupaged and made paper to kick off Hashinger Hall's Spring Arts Week last night. Many students were attempting the craft projects for the first time with direction from some more experienced residents. Eric Avery, Topeka freshman, is a theater major and said he thought it would be fun to try the different art projects. The materials were provided for all the projects, but some students put their own spin on the projects. Avery decided to decoupage a pair of his shoes to make them more interesting. Decoupage is the craft of layering torn material, usually paper, to create a mosaic effect. The annual event has been a tradition at the hall for more than 20 years. Allyson Flaster, arts coordinator for Hashinger, said the hall did art programs throughout the year but this week was its big event. The week includes activities from a variety of genres of art, such as literary, visual and culi- Sprint Arts Week Events tought. An show and live music by residents from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Hashigami Hall T Hashinger Hall Theatre - Thursday — Open Mic and Cookie Bake-off 8 p.m. in the Hashinger Hall Theatre Wednesday — 1 p.m. Festival at 8 p.m. in the 6th floor lobby Friday — Punk rock Band Night 9 p.m. in the Hashinger Hall Theatre nary arts. "We try to get a little bit of everything," Flaster said. Students will celebrate the culinary arts Thursday by sampling entries in a cookie bake-off during an open mic event. Samplers will vote on their favorite cookie. The music, art and films for the shows were produced by Hushinger residents. The films were submitted last Friday in order to be screened to make sure the content was appropriate. All of the events are free and open to the public. lando + 00." Edited by Brandon Gay Megan Nufer, Little Rock, Ark.. junior, trims out a quote from Cosmo for a craft project. The project was part of Hashinger Hall Spring Arts Week. John Nowak/Kansan Lunch, ceremony help Sigma Kappa enjoy anniversary By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer "I heard it was the 90th anniversary and I figured I'd bet ter be here." Pettijohn said. Norma Pettijohn made the trip from Topeka to help celebrate Sigma Kappa sorority's 90th anniversary Saturday. Pettijohn was initiated into the sorority in December of 1958. Pettijohn still keeps in touch with other members of her pledge class. Members began planning the event more than a year ago and sent out invitations to the lunch and ceremony early this semester. "It's a big event and we just wanted to make it as special as possible," said Melissa Ramsey, 1997 alumna and Advisory Board member. Invitations to the lunch were sent to chapter members across the country. Many members from the surrounding areas and few from outside the area came to participate. There were about 60 alumnae and 100 active members of the sorority in attendance. During the ceremony, active members honored their alumnae who came back to participate. "It's a big event and we just wanted to make it as special as possible." Melissa Ramsey Advisory Board Member Kate Disinger, Edina, Minn., freshman, was a member of the planning committee for the event and said she thought it was interesting to look through the pictures from the past. Keynote speaker Mary Lou Turner, 1956 alumna, talked about her experience as a Sigma Kappa and her history with the organization. "It offered me a wonderful home away from home," Turner said. Since she graduated Turner has been involved with the local chapter offices and recently the national Sigma Kappa Foundation. She also pointed out that the Xi chapter at KU was the third-oldest continuing chapter of Sigma Kappa. Current members are proud of the tradition. "It's exciting, 90 years is a long time and it's great we made it so long," said Theresa Barron, St. Louis freshman. Alpha Phi Alpha holds 10th annual Club Alpha formal dance Edited by Brandon Gay By Jessica Palmenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer years ago. Tuxedos and ball gowns filled the sixth floor of the Kansas Union on Saturday for the 10th annual Club Alpha formal event sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. The night of dinner, dancing and gambling has been a tradition for more than 50 years, although the name was changed from the Sweetheart Ball 10 "I went last year and knew it was going to be a lot of fun." "I went last year and knew it was going to be a lot of fun," said Elora Gregory Kansas City, Kan., sophomore. The men of Alpha Phi Alpha began setting up for the event at noon, but were able to watch the KU game on a television in the Union. The game also caused the event to get off to a slow start, but the crowd began to grow around 8 p.m. Club Alpha was also an opportunity for alumni and family members to come Elora Gregory Kansas City, Kan. sophomore and socialize with active members. Some alumni helped organize the event as well. Mario Griffin, who graduated in 2002, said alumni tried to help with upcoming events and tried to give back to the University and the active members. During the introduction to the night's events each of the members honored their mothers who were in attendance and thanked them for all they have done for them throughout the years. Prizes such as two DVD players, gift bags and gift certificates were also given away to people with the highest number of chips from the casino tables. Each year a Ms. Club Alpha is also crowned. Last year's recipient, LaToya Betts, Kansas City, Kan., junior, returned to reluctantly pass down her crown to this year's winner. "Its been an honor to be the Ms. Club Alpha Queen, and I fought them to let me keep my crown," Betts said. The members named Alicia McDougal, Lenexa sophomore, the 2002-03 Ms. Club Alpha. She was excited about winning the honor and attempted to call her parents after the announcement was made. — Edited by Brandon Gay CHILDREN'S MUSIC HOURS 1980 Oread Books with Melanie Dill Thursday, April 10th @10:30am Tuesday, April 22nd @10:30am Kansas Union, Level 2, 785-864-4431, Jayhawks.com THIS MOMENT... YEARS OF KU BASKETBALL TRADITION HAVE LED TO THIS MOMENT... GIVE 'EM HELL, 'HAWKS! 623 VERMONT 749-5067 International Student Association presents... International Awareness Week SUNDAY, APRIL 6 -Flavors of the World -Kick-off Dinner 6pm Lawrence Catholic Center MONDAY, APRIL 7 -Open Game Night 6-9pm, Hawk's Nest TUESDAY, APRIL 8 -Muslim Women in America Dr. Saadia Malik 11:30-1pm, Alderson -Picture the World 6-9pm, Auditorium Lawrence Public Library WEDNESDAY, APRIL -Salsa Workshop 6-7:30pm, Ballroom THURSDAY, APRIL 10 THURSDAY, APRIL 19 -Fashion Show & Dance 3pm, 4th Floor Lobby -Firsthand Experience in Iraq Prof. Scott Harding 6-7pm Big 12 Rm FRIDAY, APRIL 11 10pm, Ballroom 12pm, Ballroom Rhythm of the World 10pm-2am $5 admission Applied English Science International Student and Scholar Services SSWEEK SATURDAY, APRIL 12 -KU Soccer Mania 9am-5pm, Robinson Field $5 per team -Festival of Nations 7pm, Woodruff Auditorium All events are free and in the Kansas Union unless otherwise stated ISAWb LEARNING U New and Available Courses TOOLBOX? - Adobe Photoshop 6.0 • Adobe Illustrator 9 • Introduction to XML • Macromedia Flash MX • Microsoft Office XP • Microsoft Windows XP • Pocket PC 2002 Plus over 100 other course Plus over 100 other courses Do You Have The Right Skills To Succeed? If you haven't experienced the power of computer-based training (CBT) yet, you're missing out on a great way to pick up valuable skills. Stuff that'll make you smarter, and help you get ahead. CBTs are accessible 24/7 and free to all KU faculty, staff and students. All you need is a KU Online ID and some free time. So don't just sit there. Go somewhere. Visit the ACS CBT Web site at www.ku.edu/acs/cbt and sign up for a course today! --- 4 MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Black students, faculty honored By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com kansan staff writer Championship dreams were on the minds of many Saturday night, but basketball was not the only reason to celebrate. About 150 people gathered in the Kansas Union Ballroom at the 10th annual Black Faculty and Staff Council's Student Awards Banquet and Dance. The ceremony honored students and faculty for their academic and leadership achievements. "I'm so proud tonight," said Tony Daniels, associate director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs. "This is the pinnacle. This is the group that leads the way." Many of Saturday's award recipients were seniors. LaTisha Merrit, Liberty, Mo., senior and a recipient of the BFSC Student Achievement award, said receiving the award vindicated the hard work she had put in during her four years at the University. "It makes me really, really proud." Merrit said. "Especially with my parents being able to see this." kansan.com Jared Soares/Kansan The event marked progress in the University's push to increase minority enrollment and retention, said James Carothers, interim associate vice provost and professor of English. Go to kansan. com for a complete list of award winners from the Black Faculty and Staff Council Student Awards Banquet. "What you see tonight is see tonight, that you make progress one student at a time." Carothers said. The Black Faculty and Staff Council recognized outstanding black students and faculty at a banquet Saturday. "This is the group that leads the way," said Tony Daniels, associate director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs. Merrit said the ceremony was important not only because it recognized her academic achievements, but because it recognized her as an African American as well. "Sometimes you get down and all you hear about is black people dropping out," Merrit said. "This proves we're succeeding, that we're doing something remarkable." EASTERN YOUNG WOMEN'S GROUP In addition to the award ceremony, the event featured a buffet dinner and a disc jockey, who played primarily '60s and '70s music. the score of the game. The ceremony started at 6 p.m., about halfway through the Kansas and Marquette Final Four game. Most of the speakers made reference to the game and occasionally updated the audience on Despite the lure of basketball, more than 50 students attended the ceremony. committed to academics," said Chico Herbison, instructor of African-American studies. "And tonight proves it." "Even though these students love basketball, they're very - Edited by Anne Mantey Legislators then adjourned Friday night for a recess that ends April 30, when they reconvene for a wrap-up session in which the liquor bill could be considered again. The Senate rejected the bill 19-18. TOPEKA — The Senate narrowly defeated a bill to allow Sunday sales of packaged liquor in communities where voters approve, preventing the measure from going to the governor. As the two chambers' negotiators were struggling over the The legislation was sparked by a Wyandotte County judge's decision upholding last year's public votes in that county to allow Sunday sales of alcoholic beverages. KU measure Friday evening, Sen. Kay O'Connor (R-Olathe) simply moved for a Senate vote on whether to accept the bill as approved by the House. Vote defeats liquor law before sessions end Under the bill, retailers could sell packaged liquor on Sundays if voters in the city or county had approved. Contributed photo Soldier takes time out to show Kansas pride KANSAS LEGISLATURE tions would be rewritten to make clear that they apply uniformly throughout the state. U. S. Army Capt. Brad Loudon, a 1997 KU graduate serving with a tank battalion out of Fort Riley, e-mailed this photo to a friend Friday morning. The photo has appeared in many KU students' e-mail accounts. Kansas' overall liquor regula- The Associated Press Kansan staff reports editor@kansan.com Loudon, 1997 KU graduate serving with a tank battalion out of Fort Riley that is attached to the 3rd Infantry Division, emailed a photo to his friends Friday showing himself, dressed in combat fatigues, holding the crimson-and-blue flag in front of a wall-tile portrait of Saddam Hussein. U. S. Army Capt. Brad Loudon has found his way into the e-mail account of many University of Kansas students. KU's victory over Iowa State on Feb. 16 at a local bar when he got a cell phone call summoning him to Fort Riley for war duty. As a junior-high student in 1988, Loudon and two friends went to an Overland Park hotel to purchase NCAA championship tickets from Duke fans who were heading home after their team lost, his father, Byron Loudon, told the Lawrence Journal-World. A Chicago Tribune reporter traveling with his outfit has helped Loudon reach back to the United States. He has borrowed the reporter's cell phone on occasion to call his fiancee, Courtney Hoyt of Overland Park. She told the Journal-World that Loudon was able to listen to the Duke game last week. Loudon, 28, attended all of KU's NCAA Tournament games last year. He was celebrating Byron told the Journal-World his son took a KU flag with him. He had to trek through the Iraqi desert with a 60-pound backpack, but he found room to carry the flag. "Carrying the flag to Iraq will tell you the kind of fan he is," friend Jason Zuba told the Journal-World."He's fighting for his life, yet he can't wait until tip-off." The Kansas City Star contributed to this report. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 CUNQUE CLINIQUE Allergy Tested 100% Fragrance Free With the exception of Citrus fragrances What to wear? Free Outfitting Guide. Personalized beauty selections and how-tos, for a great look, to go Two great reasons to visit Clinique. What to Wear? Clinique's Makeup Outfitting Sessions. 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Experienced teacher assigned for training & support HEARTSPRING 8700 East 29th Street North · Wichita KS 67226 8703 B135·(104) 743-2165 · www.heartsprings.org www.heartsprings.org "Take 5"...five minutes for 5% off on Fall '03 Books Economics 101 Preorder and Save an extra 5% BCS Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill or click and save @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com Jayhawk & Powercat Charms kg Charms ITALIAN LINK BRACELETS - IRK Gold * Stainless Steel * Scarred Precious Stones * Greek Letters The Etc. Shop 928 Massachusetts * (785) 843-0611 BIKE SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR HIKE HURRY IN FOR THE BEST SELECTION! Bicycle SPRING BIKE SALE APRIL 5-13. 2003 804 Massachusetts St. Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000 Check out the tournament games on the big screen new martini list appetizers new wine list entertainment live The Lounge at Paisanos RISTORANTE open until 2 am • 2112 W 25 St. V 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BASKETBALL MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 Big games take back seat to jobs for some students By Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Emily Thomas was out of town last week so she couldn't ask off for Saturday's Final Four game — or tonight's championship game. For the most part, Thomas said her Blockbuster customers Saturday seemed clueless that Kansas was obliterating its opponent, Marquette. "A couple of people came in and said, 'Oh, the game's still on.'" she said. "Most of them didn't seem to care." Dealing with apathetic customers was frustrating for students who had to work during Saturday's game. Still, these basketball fans found ways to get updates on the game. Thomas said she and her Blockbuster co-workers kept running out to their cars to listen to the game Saturday. The manager also had a cell phone with online capabilities, so the employees logged on for the latest news. Mostly older people and women came in while the game was on, Thomas said. For some reason, the film Red Drago, was popular with renters. Blockbuster Video, 1516 W. 23rd St., had a mandatory employee meeting at midnight Saturday. Thomas said eight of the 14 employees showed up and they all "smelled like bar." Thomas returned home at 1 a.m. and had to open the next morning at 8 a.m. so she wasn't able to celebrate Kansas' victory with friends. She also lost an hour because of the time change. Tonight, Thomas said she planned to spend more time running out to her car to hear the score. "I just want to know if they won," she said. Jason Simon, Andale sophomore, had to work Saturday night at the Hereford House, 4931 W. Sixth St. He said a manager drew names to determine who would have to work during the game. He was one of those not-so-lucky individuals. Simon said he was frustrated that people would come to a restaurant during such an important game. "All the servers asked each other, 'What is up with these people? What town do they live in? We were like,'Show a little spirit — we're in the Final Four." Jason Simon Andale sophomore "All the servers asked each other, 'What is up with these people?' What town do they live in?'" he said. "We were like, 'Show a little spirit — we're in the Final Four.'" Simon said most of his customers were 35 or older and didn't seem to care about the game, though he did serve an 18-person wedding party that was crowded around the bar. Simon said he was often at the bar with them watching the game. The customers were in a good mood following the victory, Simon said. One man even proposed to his girlfriend. "I don't know if it had anything to do with how the 'Hawks did," he said. Simon said his manager gave him the night off tonight, along with everyone else who had to work during the Saturday basketball game. Cheryl Wozniak, St. Louis sophomore, and Justin Becker, Harper junior, both forgot to ask off for Saturday's game and had to work at Panera Bread Bakery-Cafe, 520 W.23rd St. Becker said he tried to hook up his television but couldn't get reception. The two ended up listening to the game in the back of the restaurant between serving customers. Wozniak said a lot of people who weren't from Lawrence came in during the game, and she wondered if they knew or cared about the game. Both employees said they would be able to watch tonight's game. "I learned from my mistake," Becker said, "and I asked off for the championship game." Edited by Ryan Wood KU fans of all ages flock to Massachusetts Street to exchange high fives, dance and display their excitement for the Jayhawks' victory over the Golden Eagles. Traffic was at a near standstill Saturday night because of the downtown party, which began at about 8 and continued into the early morning hours. Fans CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Partygoers scaled stoplights and shot off fireworks. No one was camera-shy. Perhaps the only differences between the downtown celebration and a New Orleans Mardi Gras bash were fewer people with beer in hand and more with clothes on. But there wasn't a shortage of bared breasts or alcohol, by any means. Debauchery-free jamboree The no-alcohol policy may have deterred some from watching the game at the stadium, but for about 1.500 fans, that was a reason for the videoboard. Lara Sampson came with her three children, I.C., 15, Mersadees, 5, and Lochi, 4. "It's good to be around the fans but still be with the kids," she said. Lara was a student during the 1988 championship and remembers being part of the crowd that flooded campus after the victory. She said she wouldn't be as crazy this time around but planned to have a good time. "I think Monday I'll probably have a baby sitter," she said. Stan Linnick came to Lawrence from Houston. "I heard the game was going to be in the stadium, so we got on a plane and came up here," he said. He bought his roundtrip $123 Continental Airlines ticket on special Friday with his wife, Rhoda Nelson. They stayed for the whole game, despite the cool weather and the stadium's cold, metal seats. "It's a blowout," Linnick said. "We're going to stay to the end just to make sure nothing happens." Their two daughters are KU alumnae; his daughter Elisa Nelson turned 23 Saturday. Linnick said they came for the game and the birthday, but mainly the game, he said, smiling. Skyler Carey, 2000 alum and Fort Riley resident, had been packing all day before arriving in Lawrence. He will be called to active duty soon. Carey, his wife and their two children made it to the stadium at tip-off. Carey didn't get to watch March Madness and the Jayhawks' Final Four appearance last year because he was in training at Fort Irwin, Calif. "I couldn't be happier," he said. "I've been waiting for a while for them to take it all." During the game at Memorial Stadium, Logan Henderson stood on the track wearing a balloon hoop hat on his head. The Houston junior was the object of attention during a commercial break as fans from the crowd tried to throw a small basketball into his hat. Henderson watched the game at the stadium because he thought the atmosphere would be fun. "It's rather exhilarating, especially when I have a hoop attached to my head," Henderson said. "I now know what it's like to be a backboard." Richard Johnson, dean of students, stayed on the track, front and center of the stadium crowd next to the band and cheerleaders. Periodically, he joined in with the Jayhawk spirit "I was a cheerleader in my other life," he said jokingly. Wearing a shirt that said "Big Easy" and colorful beads around her neck, Beth Baldin, Winchester freshman, was in good spirits walking up to the Campanile from the stadium. It was a much better atmosphere than her residence hall, she said. "I liked it," Winchester said. "There were a lot of people. Everyone was cheering at the same time rather than four people in the dorm room." Winchester summed up the sentiment of the night. "Silty Eagles," she said "Championships are for Jay hawks." Final Four CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A — Edited by Lindsay Hanson Not to mention the contribution from junior forward Jeff Graves, who played an active role on defense while grabbing nine rebounds and avoiding foul trouble long enough to play 27 minutes. While the Jayhawks were running on offense, they were making it awfully difficult for Marquette's All-American junior guard Dwyane Wade to get a clean look on the other side of the floor. Wade scored an average of 21.6 points per game during the regular season and has arguably the best one-on-one skills in college basketball. With Hinrich and Lee shadowing him, however, Wade had to work for each of his 19 points. Kansas continued to run, continued to defend and continued to dismantle Marquette well into the second half. At the 14:51 mark, the Jayhawks led by 43 points. They were still up 35 when Kansas coach Roy Williams indicated that he thought Marquette had suffered enough by substituting seldomused freshman guard Jeff Hawkins into the lineup for Langford with 6:16 to play. n't let up until Marquette stopped twitching. "Do you feel sorry?" Williams said when asked if he felt bad for Marquette. "You always feel compassion for the other kids, particularly for me, the other coach. But you can't tell your kids to stop playing." The victory moves the Jayhawks into the title game for the first time since 1991. They face Syracuse at 8:18 tonight. Edited by Ryan Wood Georgetown, St. John's NIWATE 3 Aaron Showalter/Kansan Marquette's Dwyane Wade struggles to overcome the defense of junior forward Jeff Graves and senior guard Kirk Hinrich. Wade scored 19 points in the game against Kansas. KU BASKETBALL: KNOW THE FACTS Kansas has a 7-5 record in national semifinal games. Tenight's game will be Kansas' first appearance in the NCAA championship game since 1991. Kansas is now the first Big 12 team to reach the championship game since the formation of the conference. The 33-point margin in Saturday's game was the fourth-largest ever in a Final Four game. The 29-point first half margin was the second largest in Final Four history. Kansas' Nick Collison moved into sole possession of second place on the Jayhawk's all-time scoring list with 2,078 points. Collison is now a top 10 NCAA Tournament rebounder. His 160 career boards in NCAA ties him for seventh place. Saturday marked Kansas' 30th win of the season. This is the sixth time in team history that the Jayhawks have won 30 games. Five of those seasons were under the reins of Roy Williams. The victory was the Jayhawk's 70th in NCAA Tournament play. Kansas is the fifth school to win 70 tournament games. Marquette's defeat was its first in an NCAA semifinal game. The Golden Eagles defeated Kansas in 1974 and Charlotte in 1977. Saturday marked Kansas' 12th straight victory against a lower seed. Marquette was the first non-football school to reach the Final Four since Seton Hall in 1989. Marquette nearly set an NCAA Tournament record currently held by Kansas. The Golden Eagles finished 40-of-81 (49.4 percent) from behind the arch in the tournament. The record for a single tournament is 51.9 percent, set by Kansas in 1993. Eight Kansas players made their first Final Four appearances Saturday. In the history of Kansas basketball, 110 players have played in a Final Four, which is second-most of any school. Only North Carolina has more with 121. - Kansas sports are now 3-4 in the Superdome. Its other victories have come in the first round of the 1999 NCAA tournament and the 1983 Sugar Bowl. Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B MONDAY, APRIL 7, 2003 It all comes down to this By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter NEW ORLEANS — It's set to be a battle of haves and have nots. Kansas coach Roy Williams and Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim have the credentials. They are the winningest active coaches in college basketball's Div. 1. Williams'.807 winning percentage ranks third of all time and first among active coaches, and Boeheim's .743 success rate is good enough for 15th of all time and second among those still coaching. They have their superstars. Syracuse freshman forward Carmelo Anthony scored 33 points and grabbed 14 rebounds in his team's semifinal victory against Texas. If he enters the NBA draft, Carmelo is projected to be selected in the first several picks. Kansas' Nick Collison had a 33-point performance against Duke in the semifinal of the West Regional and is also expected to be chosen early in the draft. Williams and Boeheim have both coached overachieving teams into tonight's NCAA title game. "I'd like to win it," Boeheim told reporters yesterday. "You're in the business, and the whole thing from when you start—when you're a player, when you're a coach—is to try to win this thing." The only thing the two coaches do not have in their combined 42 seasons is a national championship. It has been the only knock on either of the men throughout the years, but tonight one of them will finally know what it feels like to be a champion. Williams agreed that winning the title has been a dream, but he said too much has been made of the fact that neither he nor Boeheim has led a team to a championship. "I think Jimmy has even taken the criticism longer than I have," he said. "I think both of us feel good about the relationships that we have with our players and what we've done. I don't KANSAS vs. SYRACUSE KANSAS(30-7) Pno. Player. Ht. Yr. PPG RPG F 4. Nick Callison 6-9. Sr. 18.5 9.7 G 5. Keith Lantford 6-4. Ss. 15.8 4.9 G 10. Kirk Hinrich 6-3. Ss. 17.4 3.8 G 11. Aaron Miles 6-1. Ss. 9.1 3.2 F 42. Jeff Graves 6-9. Jr. 5.7 6.5 SYRACUSE (29-5) F 55 Moulaye Niang 6-10 Fr. 1.3 1.5 G 25 Michael Lee 6-3 So. 4.9 2.3 G 25 Bryant Nash 6-6 Jr. 3.0 2.5 Pn. Player. No. F 1. Hokin Warrick 6-8. Sc. 15.1 8.7 G 3. Gerry McNamara 6-2. Fr. 13.2 2.4 G 13. Kuch Duany 6-4. Sr. 13.0 3.6 F 15. Carmelo Anthony 6-8. Gr. 22.3 10.0 F 34. Jeremy McNeil 6-8. Jr. 3.4 4.1 Top Reserves F 5 Josh Pace 6-6 So. 4.2 2.5 G 14 Billy Edelin 6-4 Fr. 8.9 3.5 C 51 Craith Froud 7-0 So. 3.7 3.3 Opponent: Syracuse When: 8:18 Tonight Where: New Orleans TV: CBS Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM think he lays awake at night worrying about that. I don't think either of us is going to jump off the tallest building Monday night if we don't win." No matter which coach sheds the label as one of the best coaches never to win the big one, the two will still have one other thing in common: mutual respect. The pair have been friends and frequent golf partners since before Williams came to Kansas. Their shared interests have been a source many conversations and friendly gibes. "He's a really good, good golfer," Williams said. "It's a guy I do have a great deal of respect for, enjoy playing golf with, been with him a lot of occasions." Boeheim said his and Williams' golfing abilities had be overestimated. "Everybody thinks we're better than weare," he said. "He hits it left to right and I hit it right to left. That's about all you need to know. We play the same golf course, but not many of the same areas." KANSAS 44 KANSAS 4 Aaron Showalter/Kansan Jeff Graves, junior forward, and Nick Collison, senior forward, go after the rebound after a missed basket by Marquette. Kansas defeated Marquette 94-61 — Edited by Anne Mantey Ticket scalpers sell at top dollar By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter NEW ORLEANS — Two fans decked out in blue stood outside the Kansas men's basketball team's hotel in New Orleans on Saturday. The fans were attempting to sell their tickets for the Final Four but were having no luck. "They're not in the greatest section, but I want to get my money out of them," said the fan, who asked that his name not be used because it is illegal to resell tickets in New Orleans. Why would a fan dressed in blue want to sell his tickets? "We're actually Kentucky fans, but I figured the blue and the UK might help he said. Other fans were having no problem finding buyers for their tickets. Kansas students were instructed to pick up their tickets on the fourth floor of the Sheraton Hotel in New Orleans. As soon as they walked out, they were bombarded with scalpers. "I had five guys offer me a $1,000 for the tickets," said Jin Novak, Topeka senior. Novak decided to keep his tickets and said the scalpers couldn't offer him enough. Other students couldn't pass up the "I drove almost a 1,000 miles to get here. There is no way I'm missing this," Novak said. money. A group of students, who also chose to remain nameless, sold three tickets for $1,000 each. "We were planning to sell the tickets," said one of the students. "We're actually leaving on Sunday because we want to be in Lawrence for the title game." Wanting to be in Lawrence for the game is something that Novak said he considered, but being at the game was too great of an opportunity to pass up. "This is once in a lifetime," he said. Eric Nelson, 1992 Kansas graduate was at the Final Four in Atlanta last year and is in New Orleans this year. He advised students against selling tickets. "In the scheme of things, when you're 30 years-old and established, the $1,000 you make here is not going to mean much. You're going to want to say 'I was there.' "In the scheme of things, when you're 30 years-old and established, the $1,000 Eric Nelson 1992 Kansas graduate you make here is not going to mean much," Nelson said. "You're going to want to say 'I was there.'" — Edited by Erin Chapman Basketball's best bring in donations By Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Win or lose, the Kansas men's basketball team will earn $1,000 for the University of Kansas when it takes on Syracuse tonight in the NCAA national championship match-up. As with every college basketball game airing on CBS, near the end of the game, network announcers will select one player from each team as Chevrolet Player of the Game. Chevrolet donates a check for $1,000 in each player's name to his school's general scholarship fund. Players selected for the honor also receive a plaque. Campbell-Ewald, a Warren, Mich. advertising agency, handles all advertising and marketing for Chevrolet and is in charge of the Player of the Game program. Steven Majoros, Group Senior Vice President for Campbell-Ewald, said the program had distributed thousands of awards in the program's 32-year history. "The list of people who have won the award during the program's existence reads like a basketball and football Hall of Fame list," Majoros said. "Every top player — and a number of great college players who never went to the pros — have been recipients of the award." Tonight's game will mark the 11th time Kansas has appeared on CBS this season, including its five NCAA Tournament games. Jayhawks who have won Player of the Associate Athletics Director Doug Vance said checks received from Chevrolet go to the Athletics Department, which forwards them to the Endowment Office. Game honors this year include All-Americans Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich, Keith Langford and even reserve guard Michael Lee. The program began in 1971 with college football games and was expanded to include basketball in 1981. Today, Player of the Game awards are also distributed during college football games on ABC, as well as Notre Dame football games on NBC. During its 32-year history, the Player of the Game program has resulted in approximately $8 million in donations to schools. Majoros said schools in major conferences gain more from the program because of their greater television exposure. "But plenty of so-called 'smaller' schools benefit too," Majoros said. "Look at this year's NCAA tournament list and you'll see that IUPUI, Wagner and Sam Houston State all had Chevrolet Player of the Game winners this year." Vance said the benefits of Kansas appearing on CBS included exposure for the team and money for the general scholarship fund. "Our motivation is one of many things, and certainly that contributes to it," Vance said. "It's a sign that we're a successful program." — Edited by Brandon Gay SPORTS COMMENTARY Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Texas' Ford poor choice for top pick Chevrolet made a huge mistake Saturday night. When picking the national player of the year, it made a poor decision — it followed the dunces who selected the Naismith award. Don't get me wrong, Texas' T.J. Ford is a fantastic basketball player. Anyone watching a Texas game can see that the Longhorns' smallest calf is also their most important player. The media loves him, which could be part of the problem. But national player of the year? Please. He wasn't even the best player in his own conference. The Associated Press and the Big 12 coaches select both the All-Big 12 teams and the conference player of the year. The Associated Press picked Hollis Price of Oklahoma, and what a stellar choice it was. The slender sniper played at a level above what anyone expected. He lost his best scoring teammate, Aaron McGhee, to graduation, and nobody stepped up to take McGhee's place. SEE FLAHERTY ON PAGE 6B "I'd have left with them" Roy Williams on what he would have done if Kirk Hinrich and Nick Collison had left for the NBA before their senior season B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY Andy Samuelson asamuelson@kansan.com Collison Hinrich go for victory Kansas wouldn't be in New Orleans tonight without Keith Langford. Inside Sports The Jayhawks probably wouldn't have the opportunity for jubilation if the oft-criticized Aaron Miles wasn't running the show. If Jeff Graves hadn't shaped up, err, slimmed down, forget about him filling in when Wayne Simien went out with an injured shoulder. Michael Lee might be the best sixththman in America. Even Bryant Nash has had his moments this season. Good and bad. But make no mistake — this is Nick and Kirk's, or Kirk and Nick's (if you prefer) team. Without those two, Kansas wouldn't have one game left. And that game is why they're still at Kansas and not in the NBA, still playing for the dream instead of the pay. "That's why Nick and I came back — to accomplish this goal," Hinrich said of winning tonight's title game against Syracuse. They came back for tonight, but then came November — perhaps the worst month of Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich's lives, let alone basketball careers. Having shunned the riches of NBA, the two began their triumphant farewell tour. But a 3-3 start not only devastated Kansas fans, but personally peeved the pair of seniors. "That's the common thread — how competitive they are and how much they want their team to win," said Kansas coach Roy Williams of his dynamic duo. That's also why they won't let Kansas lose. Collison practically willed Kansas to victory with his 33-point, 19-rebound effort in Kansas' Sweet 16 victory against Duke when Hinrich scored just two points. Hinrich returned the favor, scoring 28 points as Kansas edged Arizona 78-75 in the West Regional final when the Wildcats' collapsing zone corralled Collison. "We're really a totally different team than we were in November," said Collison, who along with Hinrich were as solid as needed in the Jayhawks' spectacular stomp over Marquette on Saturday combining for 30 points and 16 rebounds. And tonight Collison and Hinrich won't cheat themselves out of claiming the one thing they came back for — the championship. Samuelson is a Wichita senior in journalism Tennis suffers loss to Colorado By Jonah Ballow jballow@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The ninth Big 12 Conference match for the No. 75-ranked Kansas tennis team ended in a 5-2 loss to the Colorado Buffaloes yesterday. "I knew this was going to be a tough match," coach Kilmery Waterman said. "We have to work on our doubles so that we can take the pressure off of our singles matches." The match against Colorado was scheduled to be played at the Robinson Courts, but the rain moved the match to Topeka's At No.1 doubles juniors Courtney Steinbock and Kristen Steinbock took a 6-4 lead, but lost to Lia Dimingo and Dominique Lemperle. Wood Valley Racquet Club. Kansas could only win one doubles match, which resulted in losing the doubles point. At the No. 2 doubles position, junior Emily Haylock and sophomore Paige Brown won a close match over Sarah Burrows and Jessica Vanderdys, 9-8. In singles play, the Jayhawks won two matches while the Buffaloes won four and clinched the victory. Freshman Christine Skoda defeated Kendra Strandemo 7-5, 6-3 at No.4 singles. Brown fought hard to earn a 6-2, 6-3 victory over Katherine Anne Lutgert in the No. 2 singles match-up. "I thought everybody fought really hard," Brown said. "I think when we lose the doubles point it really affects our mind set." The Jayhawks were supposed to play against the Tulsa Golden Hurricane on Saturday, but the match was canceled because of the weather and no available indoor facility. Next for the Jayhawks is a home match Saturday against the No. 39 ranked Kansas State Wildcats at the Robinson Courts. Edited by Erin Chapman Bourbon and basketball SOCIAL MY DINNER SWALLY MY WA Steve Gordon, Overland Park junior, and Bret Bates, Newton sophomore, celebrate on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. The Jayhawks defeated Marquette 94-61 and will play Syracuse tonight for the National Championship Title. Aaron Showalter/Kansan Free for All I find it pretty pathetic that a truck driver that spends six days a week on the road can report better statistics and better breakdowns of KU basketball games that he doesn't watch than our awesome journalism crew at the UDK. waffles, so go KU. I don't know why Al Boht and Roy Williams don't get along, but give Roy whatever he wants. waffles, so go KU. Syracuse reminds me of syrup, and I hate I was wondering why North Carolina can't find their own coach, why they have to try and steal our coach? I'd just like to let everyone know that Dave Letterman just said, "How' bout them Jayhawks?" 图 Al Bohl must be fired. Jayhawks 99, Terrapins 1 waffles, so go KU. Does anyone find it strange that there's a war going on and we're obsessing about basketball? behind the players.The team is not complete without her. behind the players.The team is not complete without her. So I hear classes are canceled if we win the basketball game. That's ridiculous. It's just like high school. All we need is a pep assembly to top it all off. --behind the players.The team is not complete without her. I don't like it when Roy Williams says that I'm not his grandson. behind the players.The team is not complete without her. I don't care what anyone says. Roy Williams is my grandpa. Yeah, I'm watching the Marquette game right now, and all I can say is, amazing Rock chalk, Jayhawk. 图 We're beating the you-know-what out of Marquette right now, and I guarantee you Dick Vitale has exploded somewhere and they're mopping him up right now. Go 'Hawks!' MONDAY, APRIL 7, 2003 behind the players.The team is not complete without her. --behind the players.The team is not complete without her. Marquette Golden Eagles? More like Marquette Golden Clowns. I'm watching the game, and I'm wondering why Shannon is not sitting on the bench behind the players.The team is not complete without her. vacancy at North Carolina? Did you see the cheerleader from Marquette crying? Go Jayhawks! I know a shock-and-awe campaign when I see one. KU! 图 vacancy at North Carolina? Kansas basketball is en fuego. If we win Monday, goal posts are going down. I repeat, goal posts are going down. Silly Eagles, championships are for Jayhawks. --vacancy at North Carolina? (thorns honking) I'm looking at my Bud Light can, and the colors are red and blue. Coincidence? I think not. vacancy at North Carolina? I'm on Bourbon Street, and I just married a Louisiana state trooper. I love it! vacancy at North Carolina? --vacancy at North Carolina? I have two words: suck Fyracuse. vacancy at North Carolina? vacancy at North Carolina? Forget about Lord Wad, let's make Roy Williams kung of KU. 图 I just wanted to thank the people who are cleaning up Mass. Street today. POLI kansan.com Will Roy Williams fill the coaching No, he stayed last time; he will stay this time. He will consider it after the tournament excitement dies down. No, North Carolina won't pursue him after he said no last time. - Yes, Nick and Kirk are gone; so is Roy. Log on to Kansan.com to cast your vote. LAST WEEKS POLL RESULTS Where would you rather be for Kansas' Final Four game? At the game in New Orleans — 552 votes for 50 percent In Lawrence watching in a bar or restaurant — 335 votes for 31 percent With a friend at a game viewing party—162 votes for 15 percent I'm not watching the game - 46 votes for 4 percent 1095 votes were cast This week in Kansas Athletics TODAY Men's basketball, NCAA Tournament championship game, 8 p.m., New Orleans Women's golf, Susie Bernax Maxwell Invitational, Norman, Okla. Men's golf, 57th Western Intercollegiate, Patasiemany Golf Club, Santa Cruz, Calif. TOMORROW Baseball vs Baker, 6 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Women's golf, Susie Maxwell Berning Invitational, Norman, Okla. Men's golf, 57th Western Intercollegiate, Pasatiempo Golf Club, Santa Cruz, Calif. WEDNESDAY Softball at Creighton, 5 and 7 p.m. Omaha. Neb. Baseball vs. Creighton, 6.p.m., Hoglund Ballpark THURSDAY Softball at Nebraska, 5 p.m., Lincoln, Neb. FRIDAY Baseball at Texas Tech, 7 p.m., Lubbock, Texas SATURDAY Tennis vs. Kansas State, noon, Robinson Tennis Courts Softball vs. Texas A&M, 2 p.m., Kansas softball field Soccer vs. Arkansas, 11 a.m., Tulsa, Okla. Soccer vs. Tulsa, 5 p.m., Tulsa, Okla. Rowing, Knecht Cup, Camden, N.J. Men's golf, The Intercollegiate 2003, UNC-Finley Golf Club, Chapel Hill, N.C. Track, McDonnell Invitational, Fayetteville, Ark. Baseball at Texas Tech, 2 p.m., Lubbock, Texas Meet the Author. Joint Eagles Robert C. Hagan Joint Eagles a suspense novel of nuclear terrorist threat against the United States Robert C. Hagan KU Graduate served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. THURS. April 10th 5:00 - 6:30pm 785-844-4341 oreedbooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 Jayhawks.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fri 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support stude 1969 Oread Books KU Psychology Club Wednesday,April 9th Fraser 537 at 6PM Career Workshop: What can you do with a degree in Psychology, and how can you build your resumé to do it? Ξ All are welcome! Ξ MONDAY,APRIL 7,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3P Soccer team wins despite weather By Shane Mettlen smettlen@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter AndySamuelson/Kansan The Kansas soccer team had more trouble with the frigid and wet weather yesterday than it did with Tulsa and Oral Roberts. The Jayhawks defeated Tulaa Golden Hurricane 1-0 in the first game of the Jayhawk Invitational at SuperTarget Field. They then pounded Oral Roberts 8-1 in the second game. Creighton was scheduled to take part in the tournament but canceled because of snow in Omaha. The Jayhawks enjoyed the victories, which improved their record to 3-2-2, but a handful of players suffered minor injuries because of the weather. "We're a little bit banged up, but we're all right," Kansas coach Mark Francis said. "When you play a couple of games in a day you're going to have some injuries." a great day for Kansas. The Jayhawks scored early in the game against Tulsa, but missed scoring opportunities the rest of the way. Aside from the injuries, it was "We created a lot of shots," Francis said. "We just didn't finish our chances very well." Fortunately for Kansas, its defense didn't allow Tulsa many opportunities to score. Freshman forward Caroline Smith dribbles past two Oral Roberts defenders for one of her four goals Saturday at Target Field. Kansas topped Oral Roberts 8-1 and also defeated Tulsa 1-0 in an earlier game yesterday. 21 2 The second game started out the same way for Kansas. The Jayhawks spent much of the first period attacking the Oral Roberts goal but failed to score. The Jayhawks then returned to action in the second half trailing 1-0, but drilled the Golden Eagles with eight consecutive goals, securing their most lopsided victory of the spring season. Freshman forward Caroline Smith scored four goals against Oral Roberts and led the Jayhawks to victory. "It all comes down to finishing. You have to finish your opportunities," Francis said. Tulaa again when it returns to action April 12. The Jayhawks will take on the Golden Hurri- Kansas will attempt to defeat Edited by Erin Chapman Warrick gives Syracuse a spark in tourney NEW ORLEANS — Whenever the Orangemen need a jolt, sophomore forward Hakim Warrick is usually there to provide it. The Associated Press "He's a tremendous player," head coach Jim Boeheim said yesterday as the Orangemen prepared for the national championship game against Kansas. "He can shoot it, he gets in the lane, he can rebound He's a challenge for anybody's defense." In five NCAA tournament games, Warrick is averaging 13.4 points and about six rebounds. "I'm finishing more plays that I would have been knocked down on last season," Warrick said. It has taken lots of work to reach this point. Warrick played high school at tiny Friends Central, a Quaker affiliated school in suburban Philadelphia. A late bloomer, he didn't draw a lot of attention from major colleges until Boeheim spotted him at a Nike camp in the summer before his senior year. (15) this year and more than doubled his rebound average (8.7), becoming a valuable go-to guy in the lane and clutch rebounder. Long hours in the weight room during the off-season helped boost Warrick's weight 20 pounds and increase his bench press by nearly 100 pounds. The results: He has nearly tripled his scoring Warrick's teammates have dubbed him "The Helicopter" because of his 7-foot arm span and 36-inch vertical leap, He's shooting a team-best 54.5 percent for one reason — he leads the Orangemen with 80 dunks, his signature move. Softball splits series against Texas Tech Fieorros' clutch hit gives team victory, home run record For the second straight weekend, the Kansas softball team split a two-game away series against a Big 12 foe — this time with Texas Tech. Clutch hitting helped the Jayhawks take the first game. With Kansas trailing 6-5 with two outs in the seventh inning, junior designated player Sandy Smith kept Kansas' offensive attack alive with a base hit. Smith finished the day going 2-for-2, with two walks and two RBI. After a close victory on Saturday afternoon, No. 23 Kansas (22-12 overall, 2-6 Big 12 conference couldn't shut down the Red Raiders (15-33, 2-8) twice as Tech went on to 8-4 victory yesterday Freshman third baseman Nettie Fierros followed her with a gamewinning home run, her fourth home run of the year. Fierros' blast carried more significance than another Kansas victory. The shot was the 33rd of the year for the team, breaking the school's old record of 32 held by last year's club. Before the rally in the seventh Kansas managed to take a solid 3-0 lead in the top of the first, led by junior center fielder Mel Wallach's two-run home run. The Red Raiders had many offensive showings of their own, namely a grand slam by junior designated player Elyssa Sigala in the fourth inning. After a shaky beginning, junior pitcher Kara Pierce found her rhythm and shut SATURDAY SATURDAY KANSAS 7- TEXAS TECH6 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Kansas 3 0 0 0 2 0 2 - 7 8 2 Texas Tech 3 0 0 4 0 2 0 - 8 7 3 SUNDAY KANSAS 4-TEXASTECH8 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E 6 Kansas 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 - 4 H 6 Texas Tech 0 0 0 4 1 1 X - 8 10 2 down the Red Raiders in the seventh, improving her overall record to 14-7. Yesterday's game turned out to be double trouble for Kansas. Texas Tech racked up five doubles in the game, three of them coming in the fourth inning, on its way to totaling 10 hits on the day. Kansas won 7-6 on Saturday and lost 8-4 yesterday, giving the team its second consecutive weekend series spilt against a Big 12 opponent. Tech freshman pitcher Erin Crawford held Kansas scoreless for four innings before four singles eventually led to four runs. Senior pitcher Kirsten Milhoan (8-5) took the loss for Kansas. Pierce pitched the final 1.1 for Kansas, allowing one run Kansas will visit Creighton at 5 p.m. Wednesday for a doubleheader. Steve Schmidt WE LOVE OUR KANSAN. KANSA Kansas tops Western MO big at RCA at Houghton Hallpark - 16 walkout spark ALVAMAR ALVAMAR 1800 Crossgate Dr. Lawrence, KS 785-842-1907 Student & Faculty Rates 18 Holes $18.00 9 Holes $11.00 See Campus Coupons Wednesdays and Fridays KU I.D. required To Do List Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County DO ENTRY Take a Study Break Add something to my resume. Be someone's friend. Make a difference Complete your list. Stop by or call today! 211 E. 8th St. 785-843-7359 Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU 3 EVERYTHING BUTICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass. GO HAWKS! GO HAWKS! TACO JOHN'S Come visit us at any of our following locations: 23rd & Haskell • 6th & Maine • 23rd & Ousdahl LIBRITY HALL 249-1012 CITY OF GOD (m) 6:45 8:30 ADAPTATION. (m) 7:00 9:40 QUIET AMERICAN (m) 4:15 only www.libertyhall.net We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts When beginning an exploration of unknown lands, challenges arise. Winds are unpredictable. Storms hit unexpectedly Uncertainty rules. Superstitions abound Why explore alone? USAC,a consortium of 27 U.S. universities has berths available for stout-hearted men and women. With programs in 19 countries and as many years of experience, no one is better equipped to help you reach your study abroad goals sur you'd l experienced hands. USAC Apply now! Spare or fill up qu help you reach your study abroad goals. When you're setting sail for ports-of-call unknown, be sure to ask yourself whether you'd like to go it alone, or join with USAC. Your gateway to the world. Your Gateway THE World Australia Chile • China • Czech Republic Costa Rica • Denmark • England France • Germany • Ghana • Ireland Israel • Italy • Malta • New Zealand • Scotland • Spain Sweden • Thailand University credit Scholarships available Language classes at all levels Month, summer, semester & yearlong programs Wide range of academic courses Internships Field trips & tours Small classes UNIVERSITY STUDIES ABROAD CONSORTIUM USAC HTTP://USAC.UNR.EDU*775-784-6569 Your Gateway TO THE WORLD Australia Chile • China • Czech Republic Costa Rica • Denmark • England France • Germany • Ghana • Ireland Israel • Italy • Malta • New Zealand • Scotland • Spain Sweden • Thailand Amy-Jill Levine Vanderbilt University April 6-8,2003 Lawrence and Topeka "The Bible and Sexuality" PETER G. HENDERSON April 7 • Brown Bag Lunch 11:30 am Burge Union, Iron Grid Room "Giving Birth to the Church:The Lost History of the Women Who Followed Jesus" April 7 • KU Department of Religious Studies Lecture 7:30 pm Kansas Union, Malott Room "Jews and Christians in Conversations: The Future of Inter-Faith Dialogue" April 8 * King Lecture at Washburn University 7:30 pm For event locations and times call 843-4933 or www.ecmku.org click on Theologian In Residence. --- 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 WEATHER TODAY 44 29 cloudy and cold TOMORROW 44 29 49 28 WEDNESDAY partly cloudy and cool 63 38 mostly sunny and warm MATT JACOBS, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE APARTMENT NUMBER9 by Kevin Gritzke, for The University Daily Kansai Nice kitty... OW! BITE KAG 92' BITE Did you just bite the cat? maybe... Nice kitty... OW! BITE KAG 82 BITE Did you just bite the cat? maybe... HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 7). This year you'll learn the value of playing by the rules. Learn them first, and well, to gain a hidden advantage. Then, make changes for the better. Before you can advance, you'll need to take care of business close to home. Don't cut corners. Do right, or it'll take even longer. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 5. Don't put a lot of extra stuff on your agenda for today. Give yourself a break. Just making ends meet will be difficult enough. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is an 8. It's time for a change, and you're liable to be the one who makes it happen. Stand up for basic values. Others are listening. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 6. Don't assume you're so smart that you can break the rules. Listen and learn so that you'll know what to expect. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 9. Your friends are behind you 100 per cent, and that's a wonderful feeling. However, don't goof off and forget to do your job. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 5. Stay in communication with the person in charge of the cash. The two of you need to keep a lid on everyone else's spending. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 9. You're finding out the inside story on a lot of different topics. The more questions you ask, the more secrets you'll learn. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 5. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is an 8. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 5. Others are making a lot of noise but not really saying anything. They're letting you know how much they know, and how much they don't. Continue to listen carefully and take notes. The debate is made even more interesting by the fact that sometimes your adversary is right. To show you're wise as well as smart, adopt the suggestions that work. You're still way too busy, but tomorrow should be better. Prepare to delegate, and you'll be even more efficient. Aquarius (Jan, 20-Feb, 18). Today is an 8. When you've settled on rules that work for you both, you'll find that life becomes a lot easier. You're building a structure to depend upon, so put in the time that's required. ruses (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 5. While juggling career and home life, ever wonder which side will win? Home life, of course. But it may take some fancy danc'in to get much free time at home during this busy week. Crossword ACROSS ACROSS 1 Christmas tune 1 Pronto letters 10 Sibilant signal 14 Popeye's girl 15 Compaq competitor 16 Marine salutation 17 Rescued 18 Product pitch 20 Develop 22 Side in a contest 23 Malden-name indicator 24 Exchanging letters 27 Bohemian 28 Agitate 31 Twirled 34 Hoople's oath 37 Israeli seaport 38 Actor Linden 39 Like some chairs 41 Dastardly 42 Once more 44 Canine cry 45 Mouth off 46 Signify 48 Mend 50 Posting area 56 Fat farm 58 Continental cash 59 Non-student local 60 Dilute 63 Condescend 64 Molecular component 65 First place? 66 Bob of the PGA 67 By way of, brief 68 Proofreader's cut 69 No longer fresh DOWN 1 Trig. function 2 San Antonio landmark 3 Hippo's haunt 4 Infested 5 Bookkeeper's book 6 Madison Ave. offerings 7 Pac. pact 8 Witty Woody 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | 17 | | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | | | 21 | | 22 | | | | 23 | | 24 | | | | | 25 | | | | | 26 | | | | | | | 27 | | | | | 28 | | | 29 | 30 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 31 | 32 | 33 | | 34 | | 35 | 36 | | 37 | | | | | 38 | | | 39 | | | | | 40 | | | 41 | | | 42 | | 43 | | 44 | | | | | 45 | | | | | 48 | | | | 47 | | | 48 | | 49 | | | | | | 50 | | | | 51 | 52 | | | | 53 | 54 | 55 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 56 | 57 | | 58 | | | | 59 | | | | | | | 60 | | 61 | | | | 62 | | 63 | | | | | | 64 | | | 65 | | | | 66 | | | | | | | 67 | | | 66 | | | | 69 | | | | | | $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. 9 Appeals 10 Touch lightly 11 "Lost Horizon" paradise 12 Lone 13 Youngster 19 Kate and Buffalo Bob 21 Perfume compound 25 Diminutive version 26 Long of "The Broken Hearts Club" 29 Sci-fi transportation 30 Dog feet 31 Roe source 32 Leaf 33 Mongolian capital 35 Stein filler 36 Indian metropolis 39 Half a buck's rack 40 Exhausted 04/04/03 Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. L I M B O S E T U P S H E A R E A S L A N K A L O W T O A S T M A S T E R A L E L E N T I R E L Y S E V E R L I M O G H E M A B A C O M P L A C E N C Y L A T C H R R E F R R A R E E Y R E I D I O T G N U S C O I L S O S T E A S E K U A L L L U M P U R S T S O L E G A R A L J O I S T S I G N E D U P A N D E M P I R E S T A T E I C E R O U T E O G L E S L E A S A T E D M O I S T 43 Chit 45 Last to finish 47 Dodged 49 Domiciles 51 Eat away 52 Drying cloth 53 Ekberg or Baker 54 Brightest star in Orion 55 Thick 56 Smack 57 Track 61 Outback nester 62 Opp. of SSW KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 Kansan Classified The Kansan will not knowingly accept, any advertisement for housed persons against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creature origin, nationality, disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept 厂 100s Announcements 120- Announcements Classified Policy H Drummer wanted to play for "Joe and the Carles" Only rockers need apply Call Joe, Josh or Pat 832-8784 or stop by at 501 Nlg Street. Marks EWELERS Ma Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair .817 Mass 843-4266 markinsc@wbell.net I 130-Entertainment Dance lessons; balroom, latin, and swing Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 311-227 advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law, 200s Employment Kansan Ads Work For You 205 - Help Wanted 1. 000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan www.greatcampjob.com Help Wanted - Camp counselors wanted for best summer camp in Midwest. Apply online www.midwestsummercamps.com ATTENTION UNDER GRADS Are you feeling overqualified and underpaid? If so, call 832-1833 and find out how you can gain real world experience and make $700 per week this summer. BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great call 1-844-600-0082 or 1422. Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-393-9855 ext. 311 BASS PLAYER CAMP TAKAJO for Boys, Naples, Maine TRIPP LAKE CAMP for girls! Poland, Maine. Picturesque lakefront locations, exceptional facilities. Mid-June thru mid- August. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, swimming, land sports, water sports, tripping, outdoor skirts, theatre arts, fine arts, music nature study, secre- tariat. Call Takajo at 800-250-8252. Call Tripp Lake at 800-997-4347. Or submit an application online at www.fakojo.com or www.tripplakecamp.com Wanted for top rated local cover dance ball. All styles: 785-794-3649 All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to approval by the 9EB which makes it illegal to advertise any property based on race, color, religion or 120 - Announcements F 205 - Help Wanted + + + + + Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 8/21-8/18, it isn't too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campwinadu.com or complete application in staff areas of www.campwinadu.com Cruise line entry level on board positions avail., great benefits. Seasonal/year rtd 941-329-6343. cruisecareers.com Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistants! Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon. 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Resp incl: Assisting patrons, produc multimedia, maint library records and materials, computer config troubleshooting and many special projects. Req. qual; excel customer service, computer & A/V equipment experience, excell, communication skills. $50.hr/15-25 hrs/wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For into call 884-4745, Deadline April 11, 2002. Hiring Teacher's Ad. 1-6, afternoons, Days may vary. Also hire any hours for fall. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 M Michigan; 841-2185. Hundreds of painter positions available No experience necessary, students well- comed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277 9787. www.collegejoer.com Interested in working with children and have a sense of humor? Raintree Montessori School, 4601 Clinton Parkway, located on 14 acres with pools, a pond and a pig named Wilbur has an opening for a classroom assistant in May (7:15-4:00, $21,000 VR), a full-time instructor for summer camp (degree required) and a late afternoon assistant (1:15-5:30, $8m/hr). now. Montessori certification not required. Experience and a sense of humor may however. Call 843-6800. Looking for experienced dancers to teach children in Gardner/Wellsville ages 3-18 913-864-6050 or 785-924-2150 MOVIE EXTRAS / MODES NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-249-0163, 1028 Safe Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. Shipping position open immediately. $6/hr 20 wres/hour. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and or resume with 3 references to EEL, P.O. Box 1304 Lawrence, KS 66044 EOE/AA Spring Break was awesome! STS America # 4 Student Tour Operator is now hanging on campus rep for 2003-4 1-608-449-848 www.stsamerica.org The Mass. Sr. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smokehouse) Youth Director Beth El Synagogue (Minneapolis, MN) is seeking a youth director. Responsible for programming and administration associated with the youth department (5th 12th grades). Bachelors degree and experience working with teenage youth required. Experience in a similar environment a plus. Staff supervisory/training skills, leadership training skills, and strong organizational and programming skills needed. Send resume to Search Committee. Attention: Richard Glassman, 710 Fourth Avenue South, Suite 500, Minneapolis, MN 55415, or rglassmanlaw@atb.com 120 - Announcements Fraternities • Sororities • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program it works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com F1 sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 205 - Help Wanted Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS' COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865- 0856 Doormen and weekend day bartender needed. apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 228a Iowa Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com $$$ Search news, sports sections, find high school athletics, send referrals, earn $100 per signed referral. Unlimited earnings More info (877) BISELL $$$ FedEx Ground After-Class workout. First-Class pay. Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 - Weekly paycheck - Tuition Assistance - $.25 raise every 90 days for a year - $100 new hire bonus - $ 10-11/hr starting pay - 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week - Need ability to load, unload, and sort packages. - paid vacations and holidays X 305 - For Sale 300s Merchandise --- S S S Cans from $500. Police Impound! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext. 4565. 360 - Miscellaneous $ $ $ $ CDs, games, and movies CHEAPI @ www.orbitused.com --- 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent Available Aug 10 small studio apt in renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window AC, antique tub. 7th and Ohio. No pets. $370.Call 841-1074. Find it, Sell it, Buy it in the Kansan Classifieds --- MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B A 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, PK, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WID hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1. BR kit for sublease, avail; June 1st; opt. lease for fall. Across from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month, water/ fresh paid. penns. Elizabeth. 843-6944. CLOSE TO CAMPUS, 3 BR, 3 BA town-houses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in-cloats, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patio, and security 900 BK, Arkansas 843-4090. 1712 OHIO Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt. DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site. 384 B2 BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 814- 5533 www apartmentsinlawne.com 2 BR/ 1 BA near campus. Available immediately or for summer! Call 913-219-4642 or 785-511-1166. 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169. 7 BR house, 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Call 505-0426 Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice remodel- 1: BR close to campus, quiet mature building. Gas, water are paid. No pets, no smoking. Starting $400,841-3192 Avail. Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C; G/10 & NB. Pet kits B/A: 841-714-107. Avg. Aug. Small 1 BR apt, in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi. Wood fixtures, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets. $450, Cali 841-1047. 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1:346 Ohio St. $415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block Michigan Call 843-409-800. Avail. August 1st. 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher. 831 Alabama $1100/month. Call 843-8540 Ex.21. THE LEGENDS L Est. 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & A BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY NOW LEASING May 2003 ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY COOLD FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPORTS / CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM / COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNLOWER BROADBAND / HIGH SPEED INTERN (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 405 - Apartments for Rent 1,2,3. & 8. BR apps avail, for summer ani fail. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU buir. laundry facility, Call 843-001-01 1-1 BR App. Next to Campus. Avail. Aug 1. 1348 Ohio. $490 per unit. Utilities paid. Call 550-0426 Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. **Features include:** Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 4th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841-5533 Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Briartone, Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. W/D hookup. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sone on 8th ST) Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom Townhomes - Garages; wd hookups * Microwave Ovens * Some with Fireplaces * On KU Bus Route Bus Route OPEN: • Swimming Pool MON - FRI Tennis Court 10-12 & 1-5 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. 205 - Help Wanted 1 & 2 Bedroom - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Model Open Daily! 1942 STEWART AVEN. www.firstmanagementinc.com --- Blue Mesa Management Inc Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ◆Washer & Dryer ◆Fully Equipped Kitchen ◆Serving Bar Call 840.9467 for an appointment 205 - Help Wanted Blue Mea Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 position will participate broadly in the general including representing the University in visits to secondary schools, community colleges and college fairs, conducting on-campus group information sessions, contacting prospective students in the recruiting region, and coordinating special recruiting programs. Extensive travel and some evening and weekend work required. - Salary: $25,000 * To apply submit a resume, cover letter and the names and phone number of three references to: Admissions Counselor Search Committee, c/o Office of Admissions & Scholarships, KU Visitor Center, 1502 Iowa Lawrence, KS 66045-7576 405 - Apartments for Rent HOLIDAY APARTMENTS Available in August, 1, 2 bdm. Closet to GCSB/port between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841- 1207 Great 3BR's 38R Apts, in nice house Close to KU and Downtown. Hrdw Firs, Free WID use. Off street parking. $630-773, 841-3633 Nearly new BBR triplecks in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935,1050, NO PETS. 841-5333. - The application priority deadline is April 25, 2003 but applications will continue to be accepted until the position is filled. Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample appletine, on-site laundry. Call 843-4909. - KU has an entry-level opening for an Admissions Counselor. This position will participate broadly in the general work of the Office, NICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT Canyon Court LOW LEVELS. 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Office of Admissions & Scholarships 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON-FRI 9-6 LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME Brand New Luxury Apartments HAPPY EO/AA Employer Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 842-3280 www.firstmanagement.com 1,2,3 Bedrooms Gym for Spring 2003 **Dryer** * Swimming Pool & Hot Tub * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Garages Available * High Speed Internet Connections * Security Systems Available * Small Pet Welcome 700 Comet Lane Some with fireplaces and Garages Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. $^{00}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 OPENHOUSE www.lawrenceapartments.com M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 - QUALIFICATIONS: Candidate must be able to effectively organize time and tasks, and be willing to travel by automobile or plane to any city or region assigned. Candidate should also be able to demonstrate strong oral and written communication skills and the ability to effectively work with diverse student population. A Bachelor's degree by the time of appointment is required. An understanding of the academic programs and services offered by the University of Kansas is preferred. 405 - Apartments for Rent - Salary: $25,000 405 - Apartments for Rent --- 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. New! 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo. plus deposit. Call 550-4148 3 BR apts, FP. skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances; W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. Pets: Call 785-748-9807 Apartments West Hills PARKWAY COMMONS 1,2,3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. August Available August 18: 641-6254 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 COMMONS - Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! VILLAGE SQUARE apartments close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefaxrun.com Now Leasing! 4 A Quiet, Relaxe Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 Now Leasing for Fall 2003 *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN Models Open Daily 1,2,&3 www.firstmanagementinc.com - *Teacher/Drivers* * *Dishwashers* * *Microwaves* * *Patios* * *Fireplaces* * *Celilingas 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway Managementinc.com very best up weeks! HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES 841-8468 6th & Iowa Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes Open House Monday-Friday 1:00-5:00 Bedroom Apartments - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom - Reasonable Rates 405 - Apartments for Rent - Digital Cable & Internet village@webserf.net Lorimar & Courtside Townhomes - Great Location Near Campus 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. ask about our bu luxplexes! For More Info: 785-841-7849 Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes - Washers/Dryers * Dishwashers * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Flacespaces * Ceiling Fans 4100 Clinton Parkway MAHOGAN SCHOOL Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship. Quality Apartments. Al Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apts. 727 Amidon. 938-3022 Available Aug small modern 2 BR apt in renovated older house. Wood floors, ceiling fans, central AC, DW, WD hook-ups, small fenced yard, declawed cats or dogs under 20 lbs and over 2 yrs old. With pet rent and deposit $650. 13th and Vermont. Call 841-1074. COLONY WOODS 1301 W 24th & Naismittz 842-5111 colony@kxks.com www.cologywoods.com 1 & 2 Bedrooms On KU Bus Route - 3HotTubs - Exercise Room - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - 1&2Bedrooms - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street HAWKER APARTMENTS AFFIANTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Alarm System ly Equipped Kitchen Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fireplace (atTuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs, basketball court, fitness center and gated entrance. Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com MASTERCRAFT WALKTO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes expired with you in mind Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass*841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 105 - Apartments for Rent SaveYour Money! Now signing 1Y RIs, starting May/June July Aug. No smoking pets. Extra nice, well kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appliances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & morel $405/m Spanish Coastal Apts. 841-6888 Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD, fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/operate, no pets. Subbase 1-6:7311 $850.760-5080. 410 - Condos For Rent שוויון 1921 Kentucky, 3 bedroom, $840. Central air, large fenced backyard, unfinished basement. Available June 1. 550-6414. 415 - Homes For Rent 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. W/D hookups. FP, vaulted ceiling, and garages small pet welcome. Call 842-3280. 3-4 BR Houses. Some close to KU HRdwd firs, Free W/D use. Off street parking. $685-$895 841-3633 4 Subleters needed, new 4 BR town- house, 3 BA, 2 car garage, WD, rent $132.50, lease through July 31, 816-5260 6421 or 6318-7585 or 620-340-3273. Available June or Aug 3 BR older house. 15th and New Hampshire. Wood floors, central AC, ceiling fans, DW, WD hook-ups, large closets, fenced yard, declawed cats, and dogs under 20 lbs. With pet rent and pet deposit. Discounted dramatically for June and July. Starting Aug. $1050; Bail 841-1074. 430 - Roommate Wanted Female for house ASAP $175+util. Cabie. CA, CH, W/D. Near campus & downtown. 1 block from KU bus stop. 856-5111. 2 keys Grade student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet. W/D and garage. No smoking pets. $300 +1 ulf Avail. Aug 42, 4540. 440 - Sublease Key House 2 BR's avail, after finals at Jefferson Commons for summer. May rent already paid for. Rent negotiable. Most utilities paid. W/D; cable. pool, weight room. furnished. Call Erik Hailey, 785-841-1797. 3. BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus, Garage, W/D, Central. air avail, mid-May Call Adam 830-8076. 40 MBA students need summer subleases for July. If interested e-mail italy03@ku.edu PERFECT SUBLEAF FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has private BA. 749-6060. Room for rent of 3 BR apt, in Tuck-away avail, for summer, quiet setting, pool. Call Jonathan asap at 218-3548. 办公桌 500s Services 505 - Professional Teacher job fair, West Port Senior Academy, KC MO. April 12th 9am, to noon. Call (816)-531-8050 ext.1102 TRAFFIC-DUTS-MIPS PERSONAL MAJOR Student介護Residence issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Stroke Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free initial Consultation 6B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS MONDAY,APRIL7,2003 Baseball dropstwo ofthree to No.11 Nebraska Dan Nelson/Kansan 10 By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Freshman shortstop Ritchie Price prepares to swing at a pitch as junior first baseman Ryan Baty warms up in the ondeck circle, Kansas won one game against Nebraska Saturday in the three-game series. The Kansas baseball team battled nationally ranked Nebraska this weekend and came away winning one of the three games in the series. The weekend had a rough start Friday night as the No. 11 Cornhuskers defeated Kansas 16-7. Senior Kevin Wheeler was the starting pitcher for Kansas but only lasted four innings, allowing eight runs on 11 hits. Wheeler was credited with the loss and his record dropped to 4-2. Offensively, Wheeler, an Omaha, Neb., native, got some redemption at the plate, going 3-for-5. Junior first baseman Ryan Baty continued his hot hitting in Big 12 Conference play, smashing his sixth home run of the season. The Cornhuskers were led by first baseman Matt Hopper, who went 3-for-4 with two RBI and his 11th home run of the season. In the second game of the series Saturday, the Jayhawks rebounded from their tough defeat the night before and won a dramatic 5-4 thriller. Junior Chris Smart got his third start of the season on the pitcher's mound and pitched five and two-thirds innings, allowing only one earned run. "He only allows one earned run in the six innings he is out there, and that allows us to get to Brandon Johnson," coach Ritch Price said. "The most positive thing about the weekend was Smart, and now we know he will be in our rotation." Kansas took the first lead of the game in the bottom of the second inning when junior right fielder Matt Trible led the inning with a walk, and then was sacrificed to second base on a bunt from senior left fielder Casey Spanish. After a strikeout to third baseman Travis Metcalf, senior catcher Sean Flynn recorded a two-out single to drive in Tribble. But Nebraska would not quit. The 'Huskers responded with three runs in the top of the sixth inning to even the game at four. In the bottom of the eighth inning, just one game after Metcalf hit a grand slam against Southwest Missouri State, the sophomore from Wamego ripped a home run, which would prove to be the difference maker, giving Kansas the 5-4 victory. After adding another run in the fourth after Nebraska scored one its own, Kansas scored two in the fifth to take a 4-1 lead. Baty led the inning with a double, followed by another double from Tribble. Spanish added yet another double that scored Tribble to give Kansas the lead. "I just went up there wanting to put the bat on the ball and put it in play," Metcalf said. "If you look to do that, hopefully good things will happen. It was a good win, and it helps us in the conference. We would have liked to take another one, but it helps us, though." The third and final game of the series also took place Saturday, with the teams deciding to play a doubleheader to avoid bad weather yesterday. The game was the total opposite of the first game as Nebraska dominated and came away with a 13-0 victory. Junior Ryan Knippschild started the game, only days after bruising his arm in a car accident. Knippschild managed to pitch four and two-thirds innings for Kansas, allowing nine runs. ously, that was not the normal Ryan Knippschild out there." "I was just proud of him that he went out there and competed for us today." Price said. "Obvi- The game was called after seven innings because the deficit versity at 6 p.m. tomorrow at Hoglund Ballpark. was larger than 10 runs. The Jayhawks managed only three hits and committed two errors. Kansas will host Baker Uni- - Edited by Ryan Wood Flaherty CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Everyone knew who would take the shots, and Price succeeded anyway. He knocked down huge shots in crunch time, played fantastic defense and filled the floor with his courage and tenacity. When the Sooners won, he willed them to it. When they lost, it was because Oklahoma would go through a scoring lapse because it only had one option. His Sooners won the Big 12 Tournament. Only a groin injury in the tournament kept him from dominating postseason play. The Big 12 coaches picked Nick Collison as player of the year. He scored an average of 18.5 points and had 9.7 rebounds per game. He was the best player on the best team in the regular season.At times,Collision simply refused to let his队 lose. He scored 24 points and snatched 23 rebounds against the Longhorns.He sent Duke packing with 33 points and 19 rebounds. Smooth and agile, he made the game look easy, and has the Jayhawks in the national championship for the first time since 1991 Shouldn't you have to be the best player in your conference to win national player of the year? Just think of all the conference players of the year who don't win national player. Out of the AP All-America team, four of the players won their conference player award. The one who didn't? Ford. Not that the award has to go to the Big 12 player of the year. Collison is worthy, but so are Xavier's David West and Marquette's Dwayne Wade. Wade fought his team to the Final Four and scored 19 against Kansas. West scored 47 points and grabbed 18 rebounds against conference rival Dayton. Any of these players deserve it—just don't pick the third best player in his own conference. Flaherty is a Lenexa junior in journalism. MASTERCRAFT APARTMENTS IT'S YOUR APARTMENT YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. A. S. FAMILY HOSPITAL MATRIX Campus Place APARTMENTS 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Open mon - fri 9AM - 5PM Apartments available for summer 2003 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft 4 bedroom/2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath fully equipped kitchens furnished and unfurnished apts. available gas, heat and water private balconies and patios off street parking 24 hour emergency maintenance On site manager SUNDANCE 7th & Florida 785. 841.5255 mon-fri 9AM - 6PM sat. 10 AM - 5 PM Now leasing for fall 2003 Studios 1BR, 2 BR, 3 BR w/2 baths & 4 BR w/2 baths Furnished Apt. Available on-site laundry facility Gas heat & water pool Fully equipped kitchens including on KU bus route microwaves On-site manager w/d in select Apts 24 hr. emergency Maintenance Private balconies & patios models open daily! 4 Tuesday April 8, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No.129 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN It's Over Kansas 78 - Syracuse 81 Kirk Hinrich Kansas Nick Collison Kansas Roy Williams Kansas Kirk Hinrich, Nick Collison and coach Roy Williams face the media as they come to grips with their championship game loss to Syracuse. This was Williams' second championship game loss. By Doyle Murphy ■ Photos by Aaron Showalter Defeat tough on players, coach NEW ORLEANS — Michael Lee sat motionless in his locker, a white shirt draped over his face. That is what it feels like to lose the national championship. Moments earlier, Lee, a sophomore guard, was alone in the corner of the court, his team trailing Syracuse 81-78. Kansas' best three-point shooter, senior guard Kirk Hinrich, was staring at three defenders, and then he looked at Lee. Lee caught the pass and saw a seemingly wide-open shot. What he didn't see was Syracuse sophomore guard Hakim Warrick's long arm slap his shot out of bounds. "He covered a lot of ground," Lee said, when he was finally ready to face reporters. "I thought I had time to turn and shoot, but it didn't turn out that way." Kansas got one more shot, an off-balance heave from Hinrich, but Kansas' best opportunity had clearly passed. Hinrich's shot never came close, and 3 points were suddenly the difference between wearing a championship T-shirt and using your own to hide the pain. After the game, Kansas coach Roy Williams struggled to put into words what was said by Lee's appearance. "This is one of those times," Williams told reporters, "that I feel so inadequate as a coach and so inadequate as a person because there's nothing I can say to change the way my kids feel, nothing that can change the way I feel." There was little solace in slicing a one-time 18-point lead to 2. That would be a "moral victory,"a consolation prize that still means you lost. "I've never been one to like moral victories," Williams said. "And I don't like this one." While Williams said he agonized for his team,he felt true joy for his long-time friend,Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim. "I told him, and I meant it as much as anything I've ever meant in my life," he said. "I was really happy for him.I hurt.I hurt for my team, but I was really happy for him." Like Williams, Boeheim has won consistently for years, but his place among the coaching greats was questioned because he had never won the game that mattered most. But with a team that was led by freshmen and began the season unranked, Boeheim finally captured the title that had eluded him for 27 years. Photo Gallery Photos from the championship game, which Kansas lost to Syracuse 81-78. SEE IT'S OVER ON PAGE 8A Mass. hysteria After Kansas' loss to Syracuse, fans look to the streets downtown and on campus. IB Daily Kansan EXTRA KU WINS TRA Daily Kausan EXTR A look back Jessica Tim,s sports editor talks about Kausan lessons learned throughout the season. Vs 4 3A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS The Inside Front TUESDAY,APRIL 8,2003 News briefs STATE School administrators ask about four-day school week SALINA — Interest in a four-day school week among school administrators looking for ways to save money is on the rise, according to a pair of superintendents whose districts already use the shorter week. Usually, Cheylin Superintendent David Zumbahlen gets about five calls each year from administrators wondering about the district's schedule which includes longer days to compensate for the shorter weeks. This year, at least 15 administrators have called Zumbahlen. Weskan Superintendent Dave DuBois, who was in his first year in the district, said he, just like Zumbahlen, had received several phone calls and e-mails inquiring about his district's four-day weeks. He guessed he had been contacted by at least a dozen districts from Kansas and Colorado. The interest prompted Weskan administrators to put together a packet to send to districts that asked about the short week, DuBois said. Most savings came from transportation reductions, Zumbahlen covers. The district of 176 students covers 688 square miles. Fewer school days also mean lower heating and cooling costs and smaller payroll for hourly work WORLD Disease kills again in China experts look for animal link GUANGZHOU, China—China reported another death from severe acute respiratory syndrome and revealed yesterday that fatalities in recent weeks have been more widespread than previously reported. In the country's south, international experts were researching whether the mystery disease might have come from animals on farms or in the wild. The country's death toll was 53, state television reported, citing the Health Ministry. That included 43 deaths in the southern province of Guangdong, where experts suspected severe acute respiratory syndrome originated, it said. More than 2,300 people have been sickened worldwide State television reported one SARS death each in the provinces of Shanxi in the north, Sichuan in the west and Hunan in central China — the first reported fatalities in those areas and an indication the disease was more widespread than previously acknowledged. China's government has faced mounting criticism at home and abroad that it has released information about SARS too slowly. WHO experts searching Guangdong for clues to how SARS spreads and why it kills it were studying whether it might have come from animals. U.S.forces enter Baghdad stay overnight for first time BAGHDAD, Iraq — More than 100 U.S. armored vehicles rumbled through downtown Baghdad with unstoppable force yesterday, seizing one of Saddam Hussein's opulent palaces, toppling a 40-foot statue of the Iraqi ruler and pushing his regime to the brink of irrelevance. Some Iraqi soldiers jumped into the Tigris River to flee the advancing Americans. More than a dozen others were captured and placed inside a hastily erected POW pen on the grounds of the bombed-out, blue-and-gold-domed New Presidential Palace. An estimated 600 to 1,000 Iraqi troops were killed during the operation, said Col. David Perkins."We had a lot of suicide attackers today," he said. "These guys are going to die in droves. They keep trying to ram the tanks with car bombs." Tank-killing A-10 Warthogs and pilotless drones provided air cover as Americans briefly surrounded another prominent symbol of Saddam's power, the Information Ministry, as well as the city's best-known hotel, the Al-Rashid. It was the third straight day the Army penetrated Saddam's seat of power. This time, though, there were plans to stay. Rather than withdrawing at night-fall, as units did over the weekend, members of the 2nd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division hunkered down for the night at the New Presidential Palace where Saddam once slept. The Associated Press NEWSAFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7 11:00. **News:** Leslie Torrez, Heather Hopper **Weather:** Matt McClaskey **Sports:** Liz Godfrey On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. kansan.com 907 Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to Don't have time to read today's paper. kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU KANSAS STATE TROOPER To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. John Nowak/Kansan Kansas Highway Patrol Vehicles time the back road behind Wescoe Hall. Security on campus was increased to prevent rioting on Jayhawk Boulevard. Phi Beta Delta International Honor Society will sponsor the international photography show "Picture the World" from 6 to 9 tonight at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont. Call 864-6161. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Ecumenical Christian Ministries and the Society of Open Minded Agnostics and Atheists will present "Religiously Incorrect," a religious discussion covering a wide range of topics, at 6:30 p.m. tonight on the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Call 812-1063. University Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in the ECM building,1204 Oread Ave. Contact Rick Clock at 841-3148. The Multicultural Resource Center will sponsor Tunnel of Oppression, an event to create awareness of different types of oppression and its effects on society, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in the basement at Hashinger Hall.Call 864-4530. The KU Karate Kobudo Club will practice from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight in the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will practice from 5:30 to 7 tonight in 207 Robinson. Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. The Men's Glee Club will perform at 7:30 p.m. tonight at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Call 864-3436. Ecumenical Christian Ministries is sponsoring a University Forum at noon tomorrow in the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Hall Center for the Humanities presents, "American Seminar" from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Hall Center. The Humanities and Western Civilization department presents the lecture, "The Israeli Peace Movement in Dark Times," at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. ON THE RECORD A 20-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took his Sony portable CD player and CDs between 11:30 p.m. Wednesday and 8:45 a.m. Thursday in the 3700 block of Clinton Parkway, according to reports. The items were valued at $470. A 20-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took his Toshiba laptop between 10 a.m. Tuesday and 3 a.m. Wednesday in the 1600 block of Edgehill Road, according to reports. The computer was valued at $2,700. A 23-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took CDs and a portfolio, valued at $1,475, between 10:30 p.m. Wednesday and 9:30 a.m. Thursday in the 2200 block of west 26th Street, according to reports. A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took her portable radio and CD player between 3 and 3:30 a.m. Saturday in the 1700 block of Ohio Street, according to reports. The items were valued at $300. A 21-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took her purse and its contents between 1 and 9 a.m. Saturday in the 1700 block of Vermont Street, according to reports. The loss was estimated at $150. A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took his silver Samsung cell phone between 9:25 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street, according to reports. The phone was valued at $100. Et Cetera 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS60045. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. The University Daily Kansas (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bi-weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 66045 filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Basketball & Hotdogs Diesel @hobbs Great season Hawks! hobbs. 700 Mass. Redefine your world. Peace Corps. Learn how you can make a difference. Tuesday, April 8: General information table 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Summerfield 7 p.m., Multicultural Resource Center (between Summerfield and Military Science Building) Info meeting and film show Questions? Contact Aline Hosy at peacecorps@ku.edu TRADE CORPS 1-800-424-8580 www.peacecorps.gov NEW YORK Grad Fest 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore Make your first step down the hill a "red carpet one" Featuring: - Custom Embossed Announcements from 99¢ • choose paper, typeface, print color, and special messages • 24-48 hr turnaround - Complete Regalia from $19.95 - Masters Regalia w/hood $42.90, Doctoral Regalia w/hood $49.90 - "Dad of a Grad"/"Mum of an Alumn" tees $14.95 - Diploma Frames from $99.95 - Free '03 graduation tshirt (with $50.00 order) - Online ordering @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com www.jayhawkbookstore.com • 1420 Crescent Rd • 843-3826 . 3A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 Debated drawslow turnout By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Presidential and vice-presidential candidates from Delta Force and KUnited faced off in an informal debate at noon yesterday to an empty Wescoe Beach. Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade didn't attend the debate because its candidates were in New Orleans to watch the men's basketball team play in the NCAA championship game because they said "it would be much more fun." With the game eight hours and 22 minutes later, even the candidates had basketball on the mind. Drew Thomas, Delta Force student body presidential candidate, suggested doing the Rock Chalk chant for an hour instead of debating. Catherine Bell. KUnited vicepresidential candidate, suggested singing the coalition theme songs to attract an audience instead. "If we sing it, they will come," she jokingly said. Most of the student questions some serious,some silly came from coalition members. Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner, asked what each coalition thought was the most important issue on each's platform. KUnited answered with its "Jayhawk Express" plan, a free on-campus bus route for students. Andy Knopp, KUnited student body presidential candidate said the route would stretch the student semester transportation fee of $18 even further. Delta Force members had a different opinion. "You know, buses are cool. Sure, everyone would like to get on a bus and get a free ride every now and again if it is indeed free, but sexual assault? That's huge," said Farakhi. For more Student Senate coverage, see page 6 and 7A. Farokhi said Delta Force's main issue was its plan to expand the sexual assault prevention program through the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. The planned expansion includes either making a full-time position or adding another part-time position to the sexual assault awareness program. The part-time hired position already makes organizational visits to educate students about assault and what they can do to prevent it. The one employee is not enough to educate the campus about sexual assault, Thomas said. ALEXANDRA ANDREWSON Lindsey Gold/Kansan Amy Cummins, graduate senator, asked what each coalition would do to eliminate biases in Student Senate. Good proposals failed because of the bill presenter's coalitions, she said. "We shouldn't see things as Delta Force or KUnited," Thomas said. "We should see things as good ideas or bad ideas for students and that should be the final call." Bell said biases weren't a problem for KUnited. She said that when the elections were over, KUnited disseminates and becomes Student Senate. Knopp also said his coalition was able to look at all sides of Andy Knopp, KUnited presidential candidate, speaks at yesterday's candidate debate on Wescoe Beach. Candidates for Delta Force and KUnited fielded questions from students in the hour-long session. issues and has in the past. "We don't have one common ideology or single mindset that hampers our ability to think independently for the students," he said. Coalitions were also asked to say something nice about the other coalition members. It took a while for someone to speak up. When they did talk, the candidates cited their past experiences of working together in Senate — and even before that. In high school, all of the candidates worked the Kansas debate circuit. Thomas and Bell cited all the good times spent talking about high school debate as a favorite topic. "We're dorks," Bell and Thomas said in unison. Edited by Leah Shaffer Day on the Hill cancellation due to costs, low turnout By Lauren Cristow Ibristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Student Union Activities has pulled the plug on this year's Day on the Hill music concert. This year's event was canceled after SUA officers decided at the beginning of last semester that they wanted funds to be more evenly distributed throughout the semester. SUA has sponsored the concert for 13 years. "Knowing the amount of work and the money that goes into Day on the Hill,it would practically mean not doing any fall programs," said Fallon Farokhi, SUA president. "Almost every day last semester there was an SUA program." Last year's event drew a total crowd of about 3,000 people, said Dawn Shew, SUA program advisor. SUA canceled this year's event because of the high cost of headlining bands and the low turnout in previous years. "There is a lot of pressure to bring in someone like Pearl Jam," she said. "But what people don't realize is how expensive it is to bring in major bands." Day on the Hill's budget is usually about $20,000 to $50,000, and major artists such as Nelly and Dave Matthews Band can cost more than $150,000. Shew said. "People don't realize that we got Pearl Jam on a fluke," Shew said. "We signed them before they had released 'Jeremy' and we paid them an insanely low amount of money." One of last year's Day on the Hill performers, Beau Jackson, Wichita senior, is not happy about the cancellation. Jackson is the former drummer for the band, Filibuster. "It reflects the general trend of the University to stop funding things that it feels is unnecessary." Jackson said. "It's unfortunate and ultimately the students lose out." Shew said she would like to see SUA is seeking funding, bands and a venue for next year's event, but is not sure if the tradition will continue. "The way we talk about Day on the Hill is like it's on life support and no one wants to pull the plug," said Dawn Shew, SUA program adviser. "But you have to ask yourself, what's the quality of the program?" the tradition continue but was worried about the funding situation. "It's a catch-22." Shew said. "Everyone loves the program, but the funding just isn't there." SUA is brainstorming ideas to allow for future Days on the Hill. Those ideas include looking for a major donor in excess of $30,000, holding a benefit concert where bands would donate their time, holding Day on the Hill inside Memorial Stadium and having the event at the Lied Center with smaller bands outside and the headliner on the Lied Center stage, Shew said. "The only problem with the Lied Center idea is that only about 2,000 people could see the headliner." Shew said. "But we're open to any and all ideas." Not all students are upset about this year's cancellation, but hope to see the tradition return in the future. "SUAs had so many other great events, I'm not going to hold it against them if they don't have Day on the Hill this year," said Amy Cummins, Lawrence graduate student. Edited by Melissa Hermreck Congrats on a Great Season! -Your Friends at Coke SDAV APRIL 2013 4A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or |goepfert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lishaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7687 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kanan.com RERUNS OF OUR LIVES There's a war going on and people are celebrating a BASKETBALL GAME. Dude, shut up. Neil Mulka and Emily Elmore for The University Daily Kansan ENDORSEMENTS Go to page 10A for Kansan editorial board endorsements of Student Senate candidates in today's "Voter's Guide 2003." The board reviewed surveys submitted by the candidates and voted by silent ballot to choose the best candidates for each Senate seat. Find the board's endorsements and read the candidates' survey responses for an informed decision. PERSPECTIVE Delta Force campaign to move dialogue into city, Legislature Do you enjoy fall break? Have you ever checked your e-mail on campus at one of the NEST terminals? Has the Off-Campus Living Resource Center helped your search for off-campus housing? Have you voted at the Daisy Hill voting site? You have seen the direct result of the work of Delta Force. Over the last seven years, we have worked to improve the lives of all students of the University. Delta Force meets year-round, gathering student concerns and looking for ways to build upon the stature of our fine University. Our commitment is as strong as ever, and we want to focus on making this institution even better. The first way to do that is through the institution of an online course evaluation system. Recently, University Council approved a resolution to further explore the idea of online course evaluations, but we want to move this project from research to reality. Students should be well informed on the courses they sign up for before they pay for them. GUEST COMMENTARY Delta Force also wants to make campus and adjacent areas safe for all students. Recent findings from the task force for the Commission on the Status of Women show that 47 percent of women surveyed limit their enrollment in night classes because of safety concerns. Areas adjacent to campus, which include, but are not limited to, the walk from the Memorial Stadium lot to GSP-Corbin Hall, the walk from IRP Hall to Emery Road, areas around Watkins and Miller Scholarship Halls and Daisy Hill, need to be addressed. Students pay $2 per semester for a campus safety fee. It's time to ensure that the fee works for the safety of all students. We are committed to working with the city and with the University to assure that safety is an issue, which requires action and not just campaign rhetoric. PATRICK & EMILY Fallon Farokhi and Drew Thomas opinion@tansan.com To truly solve the problem of safety, it is essential that we address We are committed to working with the city and with the University to assure that safety is an issue, which requires action and not just campaign rhetoric. the root of the problem. Last semester alone, there were more reported rapes of students on and off campus than in previous years. It is necessary to stem this tide by supporting the expansion of the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. There is one part-time employee who has to educate the entire student population on issues of sexual assault prevention. Unfortunately, one individual cannot address the concerns of sexual assault of 27,000 individual students. We want to make this a full-time position or add another part time position to this office. With support, this program can work to ensure that we address the element of safety. Looming tuition increases have also created much concern on our campus. Although these work to improve our University, they must be done responsibly. One avenue for that is the Tuition Advisory Council. But monitoring the flow of new tuition dollars does not alleviate the burden of the debt that it creates. Therefore, we would lobby the Kansas Legislature to pass a 10 percent cap on the amount that tuition can be raised within a given year. This is not a new idea, and many states are making the move to assure that state institutions are accessible to all. Among these are Colorado, Michigan, Virginia, Indiana, Ohio, Minnesota, Nebraska and Arizona, to name a few. We want Kansas to follow this lead. It is not only something that can be done; it's something that should be done to ensure everyone has access to a quality KU education. To make Lawrence friendlier to students, Delta Force will work to end discrimination against students in rental policy. Two years ago, the city commission voted for a measure to lock students out of "their neighborhoods." In a city that thrives on the existence of the University, it is hypocritical to treat us as "outsiders" or "commuters." Thus, we call for the reexamination of city ordinances 7323 and 7326 to ensure that law does not inherently discriminate against a large faction of the Lawrence population. We believe that with last week's election of three new city commissioners, we can advance this cause. Regardless of how you come down on the issues, vote tomorrow or Thursday. Vote for Referendum A, which would give freshmen true representation within Senate. Support Referendum B, which provides students an opportunity to use the resources of the United States Student Association, an organization that lobbies Congress for student concerns. Voting is essential to the strength of student voice in addressing administration, city commission, the Legislature and beyond. Every vote is essential legitimacy of a body that exists to benefit you, the students. Help make your University an even better place. Rock, chalk, Jayhawk; go KU. Thomas is a Hays senior in political science and international studies. Farakh is a Lawrence junior in elementary education. They are Delta Force candidates for president and vice president of Student Senate. PERSPECTIVE KUnited strives to implement relevant, attainable platforms Accountability. That is what KUnited brings to Student Senate. Every year, coalitions talk about what they intend to do the next year, but the first question students should be asking is, "What have you done for me this year?" GUEST COMMENTARY KUnited is a coalition in its second year running for election to Student Senate tomorrow and Thursday. We have no common ideology, just a common commitment to serving the student body. We offer experience, with 22 returning senators, and diversity, with more than one-fifth of the coalition coming from multicultural backgrounds. We can also show results, having followed through on every promise of last year's platform. Our ideas are tangible and relevant to the student body. Every issue on this year's platform will directly benefit KU students. KUnited has been busy this year finding ways to put money back in students' pockets. We recognize that protesting tuition increases has failed in the past, and that the University is committed to the five-year plan for tuition increases that is currently in place. Catherine is the only student serving on the Planning and Resources Committee, which advises the provost on how to spend tuition enhancement dollars. This year, we successfully lobbied for a 50-cent wage increase for all student hourly positions on campus. Next year, we will incorporate an online book exchange with online enrollment, which could save you $200 per semester. This would more than offset the tuition increase. Furthermore, we will not raise any student fees without sending the proposal to an online campus vote, so that you will have a chance to "Have a Say Before You Pay." PETER & EMILY Did you know you pay $32 per year for KU on Wheels buses? If Andy Knopp and Catherine Bell opinion.com/hansan.com As you look at the platforms of each coalition, ask yourself, "Are these realistic ideas? Are these issues really saying anything? Or are the candidates just promising to 'look into something' or 'lobby for something?' you don't have a bus pass, you're getting only some bad fumes for your money. KUinited will establish the "Jayhawk Express," a free on-campus bus route that will run a figure eight around campus, taking you to the Union, Jayhawk Boulevard, JRP Hall, up the hill and to the new Recreation Center. It will be free to any student who shows a KUID. KUnited is a coalition of actions, not words. While other coalitions talk about bringing online course evaluations to the University, KUnited has been working through SenEx and University Council to make these evaluations happen this spring. Our resolution passed, and thanks to the efforts of KUnited, you will be able to view other students' online course evaluations by next fall. Campus safety is another important issue for us. As chairman of the Campus Safety Board, Andy coordinated Campus Safety Week, handing out hot chocolate and surveys on Wescoe Beach in December, identifying safety concerns of students. During his time as chairman, the board has funded more than $90,000 in lighting projects, which includes four new blue emergency phones. KUnited has worked and will continue to work to better light this campus. But lighting alone will not make students feel safe. KUnited will implement "JayWalk." a service similar to SafeRide. Any time a student feels uncomfortable walking around on campus at night, be it home from the library or just to their car, the student could call JayWalk. Two volunteers, one male and one female, would come to escort them. As you look at the platforms of each coalition, ask yourself, "Are these realistic ideas? Are these issues really saying anything? Or are the candidates just promising to 'look into something' or 'lobby for something?'" Students need to critically evaluate the promises and claims being made and decide whether they are truly reliable. As coalitions talk about their accomplishments, ask yourself if these individuals have actually affected these changes or whether they are simply riding on the shoulders of student leaders from long ago. Our accomplishments over the past year are evidence of our ability to deliver on our promises. A new Multicultural Resource Center, online course evaluations, more parking lots opened at 5 p.m. instead of 7:30 p.m., and the largest voter registration drive in University history are all proof that KUnited is putting actions behind our words. We are confident that our issues are not only relevant to students,but they represent tangible goals we can finish next year. We hope that you agree and will show it tomorrow or Thursday by voting KUnited. Knopp is a Manhattan junior in accounting and business administration. Bell is a Coffeyville junior in political science and communication studies. They are the KUnited candidates for president and vice president of Student Senate. Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com A hypothetical question: If you had to pee really bad and you were driving in your car, and a squirrel ran out in front of the road, would you hit the brakes knowing you could piss your pants, or would you take the squirrel out? I'm so normal I don't even have white suburban angst. 图 The Corbin Complex Director should be fired for letting people reserve our spots. She can give me my $180 back for my parking pass, too. Somebody took my laundry out of the dryer, and I guess before they put their in, they left their panties in my laundry. So I have your panties if you're missing them. They're blue, size small. Michael Moore's weight doesn't have anything to do with capitalism. Capitalists are people who aren't lazy who are out making a bunch of money, so you're idea's a little flowed. I went to high school in Coffeyville, and Catherine Bell is a rock star. I go to Mizou, but she's student body president at KU, I'll transfer there. Ben McCarthy, lighten up. 展 I am the real vodka-drinking. Russian warrior. The girl in the apartment above me is playing KU band music, and that would be fine except for the fact that it is 7:15 in the morning. B What the cheese, Kansan, repeating the crossword puzzle from Friday in Monday's paper? Now what am I supposed to do in class? Yo, Ben McCarthy,you're stupid for putting your picture in the paper. 面 I walk into class on Monday morning, and what to my horror do I find but a reprint of Friday's crossword puzzle billed as new. Oh no! Ben McCarthy, don't let the door hit you on the way out. This is to the person who was complaining about Catherine Bell's crap in high school. I will personally fill out your admissions paper to Mizzou, because you need to go where all the other Ben McCarthy should transfer to Mizzou so he can worry about academics instead of the basketball team. sucky people live. Catherine Bell rocks, and if you can't see that, transfer. I just wanted to say that I went to Coffeyville High School too, and Catherine Bell rocks my socks off. If Hemenway doesn't cancel school after we win the national championship, I'm taking me and my riders over to his house. TUESDAY,APRIL 8,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Referendums for freshman, University representation Freshmen voice critical for democracy By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer In just two days, Delta Force freshmen/sophomore candidates rounded up more than 1,000 signatures for a petition to put freshman representation on the ballot as Referendum 1. "It's about direct democracy, basically," said Kevin McKenzie, Association of University Residence Halls' senator and Delta Force candidate. Almost 600 students signed the petition outside of Mrs. Es. Megan Becker, McPherson freshman, signed the petition in an English class. "We should have a voice," Becker said. "We're not given the opportunity to say what we want because we're looked down upon." The referendum would try to give the freshmen class a voice, according to Becker. In the referendum, which can be viewed at http://www.ku.edu/-election, only first-year undergraduate students could vote in an online October poll to elect five freshmen senators. The new seats would not take away freshmen/sophomore positions elected this spring; it would add five seats to the 80 already in Student Senate. "There are concerns that Senate is too large now, but at the same time, we want to have some power in Senate," McKenzie said. McKenzie was the only voting freshman senator in Senate last semester besides Chris Entwhis- tle, Queers and Allies senator. Both positions were appointed. Three more freshmen became replacement senators at the beginning of this semester. McKenzie has brought three different proposals to Senate to give freshmen representation. The proposals either failed in committees or were amended not to include freshmen in the bills. Jenny Ternes opposed the proposed bills. As a Nunemaker senator, she said she was doing her job to represent both sophomores and freshmen. Andy Knopp, business senator and KUnited student body presidential candidate, said earlier proposals of freshmen representation were thrown together. "I think freshmen representa tion is great," he said. "You just have to do it right." Even though freshmen representation is not on the Delta Force handbill, Drew Thomas, Delta Force student body presidential candidate, said it was one of coalition's larger concerns. Direct freshmen representation makes sense, he said. "One of the ways that we can make sure that the freshmen who go to this University are represented is to have freshmen representing freshmen," he said. McKenzie echoed his sentiments. "Freshmen are an important part of this University," McKenzie said. "Our voices must be heard." Edited by Melissa Hermreck Referendums Student Senate These two referendums will appear as below on the ballot tomorrow and Thursday: [Handwritten Markdown] These two referendums will appear as below on the ballot tomorrow and Thursday: [Handwritten Markdown] Referendum 1 A STUDENT INITIATIVE TO ADD FIRST YEAR REPRESENTATION TO STUDENT SENATE This initiative will accomplish the goal of allowing first year students to have a direct voice in the governance of their campus through electing first year student senators in October Online Elections. Student Senate Rules and Regulations shall be amended as follows: ADD: 6.5.1 F Administer an online election in October for five first year student senators, for which only first year undergraduate students can vote. ADD: 2.1.2.1 Five first year student senators, who must be newly enrolled in the fall semester, will be elected in October via online election open only to newly enrolled Referendum2 undergraduate students. REFERENCES A STUDENT INITIATIVE TO ADD A 50 CENT STUDENT FEE TO FUND UNIVERSITY MEMBERSHIP TO THE UNITED STATES STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION PURPOSE: Should a 50 cent per semester student fee be enacted to fund university membership to the United States Students' Association (USSA)? The Fee will not be assessed during summer term. USSA is the oldest nation-wide student association that as a multi-identity, multi-issue grassroots organization, organizes and advocates on issues impacting all student communities. The membership provides student access to legislative research, national Students to vote on fee for membership into United States Student Organization conferences, multiculturalism consultation and representation on a federal level. By Cate Batchelder catchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Student Senate Rules and Regulations shall be amended to reflect this fee. The USSA is oldest nationwide student association in the country that is the only recognized student voice in Congress, said Jo'ie Taylor, USSA president. Students can vote on Referendum 2 tomorrow and Thursday on whether to institute a mandatory 50 cent per semester student fee, which would give the University membership in the United States Student Association. Taxation without representation won't be happening at the University of Kansas. "We believe that all the universities should have a voice at our table in order to have a voice at the bigger table," she said. The referendum states that membership would mean access to legislative research, national conferences, multiculturalism consultation and national representation. The referendum was presented to Student Senate on Feb. 26 by the Student Legislative Awareness Board. After hearing about the referendum, Ryan Faulconer, finance committee member, went to the USSA Web site, www.usstudents.org, and found a 40-page list of issues it fights each year as determined by its membership. Faulconer said he agreed with most of USSA's stance but the rest of the student body might not. The list might be too long, he said. "By fighting for so much, you may hurt the student cause at the same time." Faulconer said. In an e-mail to other Senate members, Faulconer pointed out USSA issues, like intellectual colonialism, the national drinking age and its view on the North Korean famine. Focusing lobbying efforts on higher education matters, like the tuition increases, is a realistic approach to finding results, he said. Jeff Allmon, community affairs director for SLAB, said the variety of issues supported by USSA was one of its benefits. "USSA would be a great way to bring in diversity and connect that to every student at KU," he said. The USSA has a voice on higher education issues on Capitol Hill with members of Congress looking to USSA for the student opinion, Taylor said. Also in question is the constitutionality of whether a university can have a mandatory student fee on a referendum to pay for lobbying efforts. The Supreme Court case Southworth vs. Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System addressed the issue at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Although the referendum was withdrawn, the Supreme Court decided student fees could be used for political speech. Brian Thomas, University Affairs committee member, said constitutionality of the referendum was a murky subject. USSA has merits, he said, but no one outside Senate knew what they were. Adam Klaus, USSA training coordinator, will be on campus tonight through Friday morning to take questions from students and talk to organizations about the association. — Edited by Molly Gise Tournament Sale L/C Lawrence Athletic Club will reduce its enrollment fee by $1 for every point KU scored in its last tournament game. *Some Restrictions Apply* Offer Expires April 9,2003 LAC North 3201 Mesa Way 785.842.4966 LAC South 2108 W.27th St. 785.331.2288 Go 'Hawks! LAC East 1202 E.23rd St. (behind Kantronics) 785.841.8200 GACQUIN NATIONAL CHAMPION Now Leasing for Fall Now Leasing for Fall 2003! Po Washer/ Updated Fi Cable Li In Ameni 2511 West 31st Street JEFFERSON COMMONS C JEFFERSON COMMONS unique student apartments Home is where your FRIENDS are. Individual Leases Pool Plaza and Jacuzzi Washer/Dryer in Every Apartment Updated Fitness Center Cable with HBO, MTV and ESPN Lighted Basketball Court Internet Access Amenities, Rents and Incentives are subject to change. 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Rickf PLACE Same as it Ever Was... 623 VERMONT 749-5067 I TUESDAY,APRIL8.2003 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 KUnited candidates ride on platform of free campus bus By Cote Batschelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The "Jayhawk Express" rides high at the top of the red, KUnited handbills. If elected, KUnited says all students can ride free. "It makes sense," said Catherine Bell, KUnited vice-presidential candidate. "If students pay $32 for a campus transportation fee, then they should be able to ride one bus route for free." A "free" bus route would require a transportation fee increase of about $15. It is now set at $18. KU on Wheels might also have to modify an off-campus route, said Eric Braun, transportation board chairman. The Jayhawk Express route would travel from Memorial Stadium to campus locations such as JRP Hall and the new recreation center. The route would essentially create another Park and Ride system by using the lot at the stadium. Bell and Knopp, KUnited student body presidential candidates, said the program could eventually be subsidized by the Park and Ride program from the Parking Department. When students buy $130 Park and Ride passes, KU on Wheels sends $50 of the fee to the Parking Department. The increase in sales of those passes has caused KU on Wheels to lose money because fewer students buy the normal KU UNITED yearly $120 bus passes KU on Wheels lost $40,000 this year but has a reserve account of $400,000. The transportation board met yesterday to vote on bus routes for next year. The board didn't see KUnited's bus proposal. Bell, transportation board member, said her coalition hadn't proposed the route because it wanted to gauge the students' reactionsfirst. "If students vote for a change, it's as simple as that," he said. Knopp said the results from the elections would determine what should be done. Because the Jayhawk Express is on the KUnited platform, electing Knopp and Bell would mandate them to follow through with the coalition's causes. Tim Akright, transportation board coordinator, said anything "I mean, we dropped the JRP route last November," he said. "It's whatever the board wants to do." could happen. Some off-campus routes don't reach peak efficiency and could be moved around to compensate for the Jayhawk Express, he said. "The maps don't go to the printers for a couple months," he said. Edited by Lindsay Hanson Class teaches understanding of stereotypes against women Psychology course encourages equality between genders By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansas staff writer University of Kansas men that take the Psychology of Women class for an easy 'A' or to meet women may learn a thing or two about stereotypes and opportunity. "Psychology of Women" is offered every semester in an attempt to further the movement for women's equality and understanding. There are seven men taking the class this semester, which is about average according to Zoe Peterson, graduate teaching assistant, and the teacher this semester. She said men took it for a variety of reasons. Most are psychology majors, some are male feminists and some just go wanting a debate. Peterson teaches the class this "I've heard more from people that haven't taken it," she said. "Most of them joke about using it to meet women." semester, but Charlene Muehlenhard has taught it since she came to the University in 1988. She said the purpose of the class was to encourage critical thinking about stereotypical gender roles. "There are a lot of myths and misinformation out there that this course can help shatter," Muehlenhard said. "A lot of the things people think they know turn out to be false." Muehlenhard said the class was started at the University, which has one of the oldest women's study programs in the country, because all of the psychological theories before the second wave of feminism in the late 1960s and 70s were based on men. The class examines those theories critically and compares it to modern data. Peterson said it was important formen to not be intimidated, and to sign up because gender role stereotypes were harmful to men and women. "Of course it's helpful for women because they are the ones disadvantaged by these stereotypes," she said. "But challenging these ideas gives men a range of options in life." "There are a lot of myths and misinformation out there that this course can help shatter." Charlene Muehlenhard course instructor Chris Shaw, Fargo, N.D., junior, took the class because he is a psychology major and it seemed intriguing. "Everyone should take a women's studies class," he said. "I saw some ways I was biased against women that I had never thought about. You really don't know what you're missing." The class will be offered again next semester from 9:30 a.m. to 10:50 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays and will be taught by Muchlenhard. There are no plans to start a "Psychology of Men" class, said Greg Simpson. Department of Psychology chairperson. He said they would consider starting such a class if a faculty member was interested in teaching it and it fit into the curriculum. Edited by Melissa Hermreck THE WOODS A smaller, quiet community edn Work - Spacious 2 bdmr. units * Washer/ Dryer or hook-ups avail * Dishwasher and disposal * Central Air, gas heat * On-site mgmt./ maintenance * On KU bus route * Swimming pool * Sorry, no pets please * Affordable rent and deposit 630 Michigan • 749-7279 KANSAN everyday Dear Coach Willi COLLEGE PARK COMMUNITIES College Park-Naismith Hall The exceptional affordable choice in private student housing Congratulations 'Hawks! NAISEMITH HALL Our features and amenities are unmatched - Private baths in each suite - Excellent campus location - Furnished and carpeted suites - Swimming pool & fitness center - Resident assistant staff - On-site computer center - Full time housekeeping staff Call or stop by for more information! 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 1-800-888-4658 www.collegepark.org 785-843-8559 - Free tutors 9:43 CONGRATULATIONS 'HAWKS ON A GREAT SEASON! ABE&JAKE'S LANDING DENNIS L. CHEVY ABE&JAKE'S LANDING Coming Events... The New Granada No Lessons with guests Javier Mendoza and City Limits Saturday, April 5 • After the Game Tone Loc Wednesday, April 9 Books Room • 12 hrs saturday, april 12 pomeroy. Pat Green Wednesday April 16 ANYTHING BUT JOEY and ULTIMATE ENERGY Saturday, April 19 with special guest Kev Doorg/pm • Al Ajos 9 Granada The New Granada ANYTHING BUT JOEY and ULTIMATE FANEgger Saturday, April 19 Millennium Square, Keys Dockside 7pm • All Ages ULTIMATE FACEBOOK TUESDAY,APRIL 8,2003 --- NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Campus crime dwindling, continuing a five-year-trend Despite decrease campus safety still of concern By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Part of the responsibility for keeping campus safe falls on the University of Kansas community, said Ralph Oliver, director of the KU Public Safety Office. The community has been doing its part, according to figures released by the office last week which showed the number of reported criminal offenses in 2002 dropped for the fifth consecutive year. The total number of criminal offenses reported for 2002 was 807, which is a 10 percent decline from 2001, with 897 total criminal offenses reported. Ten of the offenses reported occurred outside the jurisdiction of the KU Public Safety Office. Crime statistics decreased despite the loss of three positions at the office. Oliver said the office had to cut a police officer, a security officer and a dispatcher from its staff. Of the reported crimes, less than one percent were violent crimes, which are defined by the FBI as murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault. The office received reports of one rape and two aggravated assaults in 2002. The number of auto burglaries increased by seven percent, from 73 in 2001 to 79 in 2002, and the reports of criminal damage or vandalism rose eight percent, from 166 to 180. Overall, the 807 total offenses for 2002 represent a decline in crime, which has decreased by 45 percent from 1,479 total offenses in 1997. Oliver said increased lighting that had been installed on campus in recent years helped officers and the community detect suspicious activity at night. But a survey of 523 female students conducted last spring and released last week showed 46 percent of the women surveyed said lighting on campus was inadequate, and 47 percent limited their evening classes because of safety concerns. The survey was conducted to understand female students' perceptions of their roles at the University. It was also meant to pinpoint areas of concern. Lauren Karp, Buffalo Grove, Ill., junior, was glad to hear crime statistics were decreasing. But Karp said she still thought campus needed more lighting, especially between Wescoe and Budig halls. "If you come up to the library or something, it's just dangerous," she said. Andy Knopp, Manhattan junior and chairman of the Campus Safety Advisory Board, said the University added four blue emergency lights last year. "I don't think lighting will be adequate until you can walk anywhere on campus without being in the dark," Knopp said. "But I think the current fee that goes toward lighting improvements is being spent wisely." Crime statistics include all criminal offenses reported to KU's Lawrence campus. - Edited Todd Rapp Student learns funeral trade By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Despite facing death every day at work, Ryan McGilley always seems to have a smile on his face. McGilley, a fifth-year-senior from Cleveland, clocks in at 30 hours per week at McGilley Memorial Chapel in Kansas City, Mo., a family-run funeral home established in 1899. As an apprentice to a funeral director, he observes the process of making arrangements with families, coordinates motorcycle escorts, orders flower arrangements and washes the limousines and hearses. Although McGilley isn't involved in the embalming process, he's isn't opposed to painting a few fingernails when needed. Working alongside his father, Jim McGilley III, Ryan is the fifth generation of McGilleys to work at the funeral home. Although he has no qualms dressing and handling the "I wouldn't go near dead people for quite a while." Ryan McGilley Cleveland senior deceased, McGilley has not always been comfortable around the dead. When he was 5 years old, his older brother tricked him into going into the embalming room. "I wouldn't go near dead people for quite a while," McGilley said. "I still remember exactly what happened." Because he takes his job seriously, McGilley rarely lets his emotions show during ceremonies. But sometimes he can't help but let go of his professionalism. "It's the 42-year-old, mother-of-three funerals that really get to me," he said. "I've cried at funerals that I've worked. I don't work suicide funerals — especially when they were my age. No amount of desensitizing can prepare me for that." Not every funeral that McGilley has worked has been depressing. On one occasion, the friends and family of a deceased man celebrated his life by chugging beers in the parking lot of the funeral home. "When your drinking buddy dies, what do you do?" McGilley said. Customers of the funeral home haven't had funeral requests that McGilley thought was unusual, but he plans to go out with a bang when the day comes Jimmy Buffet style. "I want people to enjoy margaritas, and I want them wearing sunglasses and Hawaiian shirts," he said. Because he works with family members, McGilley occasionally experiences bickering at work. Despite nicknaming his son "Trouble," Jim McGilley is proud to work alongside his son. "One of the most heart-rendering things was having him go into the family business," the elder McGilley said. PRAYER FOR THE BLESSED LIVING OF HIS SACRED BODY. Edited by Lindsay Hanson Ryan McGilley, Cleveland senior, works as an apprentice to a funeral director at McGilley Memorial Chapel in Kansas City, Mo. McGilley is the fifth generation of his family to work at the home, which was established in 1899. John Nowak/Kansan Unusual winter storm hits northwest Kansas ATWOOD — A winter storm dumped about a half foot of snow this weekend in parts of northwest Kansas. Between 6 and 8 inches of snow piled up in Rawlins County. The ground was still covered yesterday morning. Snow fell briefly in much of northwest Kansas, though little stuck to the ground. Sheriff's offices in northwest Kansas did not report any injury accidents caused by the surprise storm, although one driver did roll a vehicle in Cheyenne County. In Hays, the precipitation was limited to mostly rain, and the Kansas State University Agricultural Research Center south of town logged. 19 of an inch of moisture this weekend. The total for the year is 2.81 inches. Cold temperatures were expected to stick around for another day. The National Weather Service in Dodge City issued a freeze warning for last night and this morning for southwest Kansas and a few counties in northwest Kansas. The Associated Press Welcome home, Jayhawks! Office of the Chancellor Congratulations to you and the Jayhawk basketball family on another amazing season. The Jayhawk tradition of excellence continues to be a source of great pride to the KU community. You are all wonderful ambassadors for the University of Kansas on and off the court. You have demonstrated the ideals of hard work good sportsmanship and respect. We also are proud that your graduation rate is the best among the Final Four teams—and your minority graduation rate was in the top three of the Sweet 16 teams (and the best among the public universities). On behalf of Jayhawk fans everywhere, I salute you for your hard work and terrific success. Robert Henry Strong Hall * 1450 Jayhawk Blvd., Room 250 * Lawrence, KS 66045-7535 * (785) 864-3131 * Fax: (785) 864-4120 Main Campus, Lawrence Medical Center, Kansas City and Wichita * Edwards Campus, Overland Park We are proud of you! KU The University of Kansas 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 MADISON WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP Aaron Showalter/Kansan Top: Kansas fans hang their heads after Hinrich's last shot misses the rim. Right: Kansas forward Nick Collison watches helplessly as Kansas falls to Syracuse. Collison fouled out of the game in the final minutes Heart BREAKER MILAN Aaron Showalter/Kansan Free-throw shooting, fouls plague Jayhawks CONTINUED FROM 1A "As I said before the tournament," Boeheim said in a postgame press conference, "I want to win this thing. I'm tremendously happy." Boeheim might have been tremendously disappointed if it weren't for the play of two freshmen, guard Gerry McNamara and forward Carmelo Anthony. Boeheim must have been asked a thousand times how his freshman-led team would handle the experienced Jayhawks. Nothing he said could have answered the question better than the performances of McNamara and Anthony in the 81-78 Syracuse victory. The pair scored 31 points before halftime, looking as if they had done it a million times. Not only were the two unintimidated, at times it looked like they were trying to instill fear in the older lajwhawks. When Kansas junior forward Jeff Graves tried to take the ball from Anthony's hands after a play, Anthony glared at Graves and "You try to make a free throw. You miss,you make,there's nothing you can do." Nick Collison Kansas senior forward moved so the two were chest to chest. Moments later, Anthony was whistled for an intentional foul when he clubbed sophomore forward Keith Langford. While Anthony was getting up close and personal with the Jayhawks, McNamara was doing his damage from more than 20 feet away. He hit six three-point shots, all in the first half, and finished the game with 18 points. Anthony scored 20 points and 10 rebounds, removing any thought that the Orangemen might suffer from first-time jitters. The supposedly inexperienced Syracuse team pulled another veteran move on Kansas — it hit free throws. It didn't make all of them, 10-of-17, but it hit enough to keep Kansas from winning with a 12-of-30 performance from the line. KANSAS - SYRACUSE KANSAS (30-8) **Player** Min. FGM - FTM - ATP - Rep. A Kelth Langford 23 7-8 0-1 19 2 0 Kirk Murray 26 8-14 6-12 18 2 4 Nick Collison 40 8-14 0-0 19 21 3 Jake Graves 37 8-13 0-0 19 21 3 Aaron Miles 24 8-14 0-2 15 3 1 Matthew Newman 23 2-8 1-5 1 1 1 Bryan Nash 5 0-2 1-5 1 1 0 Team 0 0-2 1-5 1 1 0 **Totals** 200 31-71 12-30 78 52 13 SYRACUSE (D9-5) **Player** Min. FGM - FTM - ATP - Rep. A Carmelo Anthony 37 7-6 3-4 20 10 7 Hakim Wajid 31 7-4 3-4 10 12 7 Billy Munck 21 4-6 4-2 14 12 7 Jenny McNeil 13 4-6 1-2 11 4 10 Gary McMahanna 13 0-1 0-0 0 0 1 Craig Forfitt 14 8-13 0-1 10 8 1 Team 24 3-4 0-1 18 3 0 2 **Totals** 200 36-63 10-17 81 36 13 Senior forward Nick Collison scored 19 points and collected 21 rebounds, but his 3-of-10 free throw shooting jumped off the stat sheet. "You try to make a free-throw," Collison said. "You miss, you make, there's nothing you can do." He was right. Just a few minutes removed from his college career, there was nothing more Collison could do. Edited by Andrew Ward IT’S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. Tanglewood 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished studios, 1 and 2 bdrm apartment homes. Hanover Place 14th and Mass. (785) 841-172-0460 Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 705-1220 Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! Models open daily. Tanglewood Tanglewood Hanover Place TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A 17 INRACUSE 1 KANSAS 25 KANSAS 30-8 Dat | Opponent | Score | | :--- | :--- | ---: | | 11/19/02 | vs. Holy Cross^ | W8-157 | | 11/23/02 | vs. UNC-Greensboro^ | W10-66 | | 11/27/02 | vs. North Carolina^ | L8-73 | | 12/04/02 | Central Missouri St. | W9-77 | | 12/07/02 | vs. Oregon^ | W8-78 | | 12/11/02 | at Tulsa | W8-78 | | 12/14/02 | empires State | W11-61 | | 12/17/02 | UDC | W7-70 | | 12/28/02 | vs. California** | W8-97 | | 10/03/02 | UC-Achieve | W10-50 | | 10/06/02 | at Iowa State | W8-54 | | 10/11/03 | Nebraska | W9-25 | | 10/15/03 | Wyoming | W8-70 | | 10/18/03 | Kansas State | W8-64 | | 10/22/03 | at Colorado | W6-59 | | 10/25/03 | Arizona | L8-74 | | 10/27/03 | tenns. State | W9-87 | | 10/29/03 | at Nebraska | W8-51 | | 10/30/03 | Missouri | W7-60 | | 10/38/03 | at Kansas State | W9-25 | | 10/11/04 | at Baylor | W8-59 | | 10/19/03 | Iowa State | W7-51 | | 10/23/03 | Colorado | W9-87 | | 10/23/03 | Oklahoma | L8-74 | | 10/29/03 | Texas A&M | W9-45 | | 10/30/03 | North Dakota State | W7-61 | | 10/33/03 | at Texas Tech | W8-56 | | 10/39/03 | at Missouri | W8-74 | | 10/14/04 | vs. Iowa State# | W8-74 | | 10/20/04 | vs. Utah State# | L8-63 | | 10/23/04 | vs. Arizona State# | W8-61 | | 10/27/04 | vs. Duke State# | W8-65 | | 10/29/04 | vs. Oklahoma# | W8-75 | | 04/05/04 | vs. Marquette# | W9-41 | | 04/05/04 | vs. Syracuse# | L8-78 | SINACOT 13 Above: Coach Roy Williams shows his unhappiness with an Aaron Miles' offensive play. Miles struggled offensively in last night's game, scoring only 2 points. A sophomore, Miles has made a trip to the Final Four in each of his two years at Kansas. Top right: Sophomore Michael Lee fights for a rebound. Lee had a breakthrough sophomore season and became the sixth man on the Kansas squad. Bottom right: Nick Collison takes on Syracuse's freshman standout Carmelo Anthony in the tip off of last night's title game. Aaron Showalter/Kansar - Prescaion NIT, New York City * Portland, Deargon ** Pete Newell Challenge, Oakland, Calif. Big 12 Tournament, Dallas, Texas NCAA Tournament Game Faces: A valiant effort falls short on the hardwood FedEx Ground IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Preload 1:30 AM-7:30 AM Sunrise 2:30 AM-7:30 AM Night Midnight-5 AM Other shifts available - Weekly paycheck - Tuition Assistance - $.25 raise every 90 days for a year - 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week - $ 10-11/hr starting pay - paid vacations and holidays - Need ability to load, unload, and sort packages. - $ 100 new hire bonus FedEx Ground FedEx Ground After-Class workout. First-Class pay. Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 NO COVER! BEFORE 10 PM KU’s Newest & Hottest Dance Club & Bar Now Open Wednesdays Wednesday: $2 Anything $3 Doubles Thursday: $1.75 Pints $1.50 Any Shot Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Smirnoff Vodka Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $4 Pitchers LAST CALL WHISKEY Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Smirnoff Vodka Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $1 Pitchers LAST CALL WHISKEY 21 to Enter Doors open at 8pm 729 New Hampshire (Across from Borders) 838-4623 10A= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 OAKLAND BIRD Student Senate Elections Voter's Guide 2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lahaffer@kansan.com Jenna Goopeft and Justin Henning managing editors: 864-4854 or jgoopeft@kansan.com and jhenneng@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Makolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 884-7687 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7668 or mfisher@kansan.com Editor's note: The University Daily Kansan editorial board surveyed all candidates running for Student Senate. The candidates were asked to give their years in school, majors, positions sought, coalition affiliation, leadership experience and University involvement. Candidates also responded to the following questions: How would you best represent your question? How would you change Student Senate? Candidates who did not return surveys are listed by name only, and candidates who did not have a picture taken are not pictured. The 8-member editorial board voted along with Kansan editor Kristi Henderson and Kansan opinion editor Amanda Sears. Kansan associate opinion editor Lindsay Hanson did not vote because she also works as a Kansan copy editor. The board used the survey responses as a guide to endorse a candidate for each available seat. KEY TO CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENTS ★ KUnited Candidate Delta Force Candidate O Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade Candidate Independent Candidate Independent Candidate - √ Endorsed by the editorial board ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN DESIGN 2 SEATS Clarisa Diaz ☑ Sophomore in architecture ■ KU chapter of the American Institute of Architecture Students, Architecture Student Council PENGELARAAN SURVIVAL PADA LEBAR BERUMAH I will work hard to represent my constituents with dedication and professionalism. Two of the major issues I will work on are a student memorial in honor of students who have died during their years at KU and constant architecture student representation on the board reviewing campus improvements and buildings. As a Lawrence native, I can provide some student perspective on University-related issues that affect the greater community of Lawrence. Hannah Franko Freshman in architecture Resident Assistant in the coming academic year, Student Senate Committee member In what is shaping up to be a close election, Delta Force candidates Drew Thomas and Fallon Farokhi have secured the endorsement of the Kansan editorial board. After meeting with candidates last week and hearing their presentations of the issues, the editorial board determined that the proven willingness to look for solutions beyond the typical constraints of student government place Thomas and Farokhi in the best position to serve the University of Kansas. If elected I would represent the needs of my constituents by directly asking them what needed to be done to improve their program. I want to take their views and Go with the Force for Senate Along with concrete plans and a more realistic focus, Delta Force's platforms emphasized a more effective and less constrained approach to change on campus. In a strikingly non-confrontational debate among Delta Force, KUnited and Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade, the board reached the conclusion that the differences among the coalitions were less about proposals and more about implementation. The board was particularly intrigued by the possibility of a reorganization and revitalization of sexual assault prevention resources on campus with modifications to the existing infrastructure on campus. This was coupled with a push to improve lighting around campus on city as well as University property. The board thought Delta Force emphasized an approach that would cooperate with city and community entities and was substantially more brazen in tone than any attempted by KUnited. We thought that wider focus was necessary to make these proposals possible. KUnited's platform, although similar in many ways to Delta Force, differed in key areas. KUnited's focus on the Multicultural Resource Center was used as the cornerstone of the coalition's push for diversity. The plans include relocating the MRC to the Kansas Union and spending almost $5 million on improvements. Beyond these simple outlines, the true purpose and process of this revitalization remained unclear. P. A. M. C. Drew Thomas Delta Force Presidential candidate Praveen K. Mishra Andy Knopp KUnited Presidential candidate PETER SALZMAN PETER HENDERSON Andy Foertsch Lord Wads Presidential candidate KING Catherine Bell KUInsted Vice Presidential candidate Brett Wadsworth Lord Wads Vice Presidential candidate Similarly, the newest KUinited initiative, a free, on-campus bus route, appeared to be plagued by problems ranging from the possibility of increased student fees to the use of money previously secured for Fallon Farokhi Delta Force Vice Presidential candidate negotiating transportation contracts. These fears were not availed by the promise of a free ride between the Kansas Union and Budig Hall. Perhaps what is lost in the daily campaigning for Senate elections is the understanding that Student Senate has more than $13 million at its discretion. The editorial board echoes Lord Wads when he decries the recent pitiful voter turnout in student elections. With that in mind, it's crucial that, regardless of where you stand on the issues, you take a stand and get out to vote. Other KUnited platforms, however, found a warmer reception. The have a "say before you pay" initiative, which would force a campus-wide referendum on any student fee increases, was applauded. Points of stasis between the two coalitions however, remain difficult to find, making the decision of the editorial board premised, perhaps disproportionately, on methods rather than platforms. The board's selection seemed to be underwritten by a Delta Force commitment to campus that surpasses that of KUnited. The board was particularly impressed by Delta Force's year-round meetings, contrasted with KUnited's coalition meetings, which reconvened in January. Furthermore, despite a success rate of only one presidential victory in seven years of existence, the coalition has achieved considerable success. The board was impressed by the level of dedication and achievement that Delta Force had achieved despite not having the visibility of the presidential office. As for the third party, Lord Wads, the board, while aware of the group's intent to attract attention to the elections to increase voter participation, was unable to find any workable platforms to support. opinions to Student Senate and not just assume what they would like. I want to enforce the concept of discussing bills based on logic, fact and the wishes of those represented, not personal opinion. NicholasLawler ✔ Sophiomore im architecture Incumbent Student Senate member for two years. Architecture Student Council A. C. G. vice president, American Institute of Architecture Students member, Board of Class Officers sophomore class secretary, KU Ambassador, Interfraternity Council blood drive chairman. Delta Chi president, Interfraternity Council judicial board, Architecture senator 2001 to 2002, University Affairs Committee member, Campus Safety Advisory Board member, Architecture Student Council member, AIAS member. By taking the architecture students concerns to the school and University administration, I wish to accomplish goals that benefit the daily lives of students. I hope to achieve better educational access to computer-based design programs, student representation on a campus building advisory committee and funding for lecture series with the School of Architecture. By seeking cooperative funding for lectures, sitting on school advisory boards and consistent communication with students and faculty. I would hope to encourage bipartisan legislation and I will promote and provide information about Student Senate via e-mail and face-to-face contact to hear the views of the students. Tony Treu Through active participation, some things are not always done, in my experiences with it. Junior in architecture Mike Warner . BUSINESS Josh Kaplan ✔ 2 SEATS Junior in business administration. Incumbent I would act as a liaison between student groups in the B-school and Senate by visiting their meetings and helping them get funding. I would also meet regularly with administrators. Deltu Sigma Pi Business Fraternity, fund-raising chairman and president; Senate University Affairs Committee, vice chair; off-campus senator; Off-Campus Living Resource Center Board Member I would make an effort to provide different viewpoints, but would try really hard to bridge the gaps currently in place. Katie Crnkovich ✩ ■ Vice president of risk management for Panhellenic. Risk Management officer, KUJH-TV and KJHK radio. Leadership is my passion, so I have always stepped up to leadership opportunities. Junior in business Not only am I enthusiastic, entertaining and energetic. I am also serious about the well-being aspects of KU. I have a strong desire to serve as a business senator and set a positive example to other students at KU. I will have to admit I am definitely an overachiever. I will spend endless hours on a project until I know it has value or is complete to my satisfaction. Melissa Menke Junior in accounting Rowing team member for two years I would encourage students to pay attention to the issues that are being considered PETER KNAPPER by the Senate and make myself available for them to voice their opinion. I also want them to feel free to bring new ideas to me about how to improve KU. I would try to make the issues that are being discussed more publicized and make it easier for students to bring their ideas to us. EDUCATION 2 SEATS David Hagan ✔ Senior in chemistry and education incumbent Member of University Student Senate, University Affairs Committee, Hilltop Child Development Center board member, instructor in the department of chemistry Understanding the unique demands on the students in the School of Education. I will work to address key issues such as limited parking at JRP Hall, continuing the bus route servicing JRP, as well as working with the School of Education administration to offer alternatives for required undergraduate classes offered at the Edwards Campus. I would mandate that the elected senators keep their constituents updated of the various committees and events associated with Student Senate. Christine McEchron ✩ Junior in sports science Alpha Chi Omega philanthropy chair, crimson crew, two years; Initiative for minority student development --- on-campus research assistant If elected to Student Senate, I am prepared to cut back my other involvements on campus and devote myself to this position. I would represent my constituents by becoming active in the School of Education and by taking the time to hear and understand every opinion voiced to me. As a first year candidate, I have the ability to bring a fresh perspective and new ideas to the table. ENGINEERING Jason Boots ★ 3 SEATS Freshman in mechanical engineering Newly elected ASHC vice president; Engineering Student Council freshman secretary ('02-'03) 1980 K. K. Amini co-social chairman (2003); member of ASHC social roundtable (2003); ASCH Leadership Development program (2002); K.K. Amini community service chairman (2003); Student Senate University Affairs Committee member ('02-'03); Committee member of the year nominee (2003) Student Senate committees are open to all students, yet some committees only have eight or nine members. It is important that we increase awareness of this opportunity for student input. We already have a lot of great ideas for the engineering school, including: a new project building, working for labs that are open longer and accountability for engineering tuition increases. It is also important to continually seek input from our constituency. This can be done by continuing organization visits after election and taking personal surveys. Sophomore in chemical engineering Incumbent Marci Deuth ✩ American Institute of chemical engineers member (Community Service chairwoman); Engineering Student Council member; KU engineering ambassador; Project Discovery camp counselor (KU's summer engineering camp for high school girls); the chancellor's student awards selection committee member; Blueprints Leadership Conference attendee; Student Heath Advisory Board Member; University Affairs Committee member; KU media dinner student representative; Mentors in the Lives of Kids weekly volunteer; E-Club volunteer; engineering expo volunteer; Student Legislative Awareness Board volunteer; Lambda Sigma sophomore honor society member; KU summer band member; Chi Omega sorority member, philanthropy co-chairwoman I am involved in a variety on engineering organizations, and as a senator this year. I have developed a working relationship with engineering students and the dean, allowing me to establish the engineering platform for this year, such as working for the construction of a student projects building and differential engineering tuition accountability. I will continue to work hard on projects that are important to KU students and will try to ensure that Senate is both approachable and accountable. Alexandra N. Gibson I would make sure to get actual feedback from the engineering students. If my job is to voice the opinion of the students, what better way to do it than to hear their voices? My door is always open, my cell phone's always on. Watkins Hall All Scholarship Hall Council (ASHC) representative; ASHC Homecoming coordinator I would like to get more people involved; I believe this would better represent the student body. Kyle Johnson ★ Junior in chemical engineering Incumbent Parking Commission; attended Engineering Student Council meetings, informed constituents on a regular basis of University events, news, etc.; University Council (2002-2003); Engineering Student Council (2000-2003); president of Your Elected Leaders Lending out Wheels; Student Senate finance committee member (2000-2002), chairman (2002-2003); American Institute of Chemical Engineers (2000-2003); founder of Student Book Exchange; tuition advisory committee CONTINUED ON PAGE 11A TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 OPINION THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 11A KEY TO CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENTS ★ (United Candidate Delta Force Candidate - Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade Candidate Independent Candidate √ Endorsed by the editorial board CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10A I currently attend Engineering Student Council meetings, talk to engineering students on a regular basis about initiatives and policies that affect them, and maintain a working relationship with the dean of engineering. KUnited Engineers will ensure accountability with increased engineering tuition ($15/credit hour) and support building an engineering student projects building. I am a proven effective leader in Student Senate and will continue to work on projects and service that benefit all KU students. Ryan Mills ▲✔ sophomore in electrical engineering Sophomore in electrical engineering University Affairs Committee member; Delta Force, KU Academic Team Students for Peace Dennis Baxter I believe I could best represent the engineering students by frequently contacting professors to learn of any issues that have been voiced to them. From there, I could gather student opinions on the topic and take whatever actions were needed through Student Senate. I will work to give students a greater understanding of the undertaking of Senate to make it a more viable resource for student issues. Sam Polise 2 SEATS FINE ARTS Tom Reid ✅ Tom Reid Junior in environmental studies, Spanish and Latin American studies Marching Jay- hawks, University Band, Chamber Choir, Men's Glee C Club, Vocal Jazz Ensembles, and KU Men's Consort, University Theatre's production of the Bartered Bride, student senator, a member of Theta Chi fraternity, Pi Mu Alpha Sinfonia music chair and alumni secretary, ESSA/Environs, Latin American Solidarity, Owl Society social chairperson, National Society of Collegiate Scholars, volunteer with the G.R.O.W. Project, Boys and Girls Club and have helped with the Jubilee Cafe and other local programs The most important thing is to be in touch. As a music person I'm not in Marvin Hall and the Art and Design building as much as a senator. I have made an effort to talk to students and faculty, have meetings specifically regarding establishing a photography major. I particularly don't like the divisions in senate concerning coalitions. That might get me in trouble, but I think those kinds of divisions are counterproductive. Emily Miller ▲✓ Sophomore in textile design Yvonne University Scholar Margaret Amin Scholarship Hall programming and new woman chair I represent fine arts because I care about fine arts and its students, about hearing their concerns and voicing them to Senate and making realistic campus changes. I have been known to speak my mind, loudly, about issues I care about, whether speaking for change or speaking against negativity. I bring a new personality to Senate, a bold, flavorful, 'for real' style voice to represent fine arts and Delta Force. Eager to speak up. Evan Billings Secretary of the University Guild of Carillonneurs, marching band, Kappa Kappa Psl member Freshman in music education Being a music major. I fully understand the needs specifically associated with fine arts majors. It is about time that the voice from Murphy Hall is heard. Delta Force has an excellent fine arts ticket representing both art and design with Emily Miller and music and dance. By working with finance, I will be more open and friendly to organizations seeking funding from Senate having experienced the finance committee myself. Emily Black ★ Freshman in art history PAMELA TAYLOR Student Legislative Awareness Board outreach coordinator, finance committee member, Legal Services for Students advisory board member I would best represent my constituents by listening to all fine arts students' opinions and suggestions to improve the school. In Senate I would promote the arts to create awareness on campus. I would also work with the new dean of fine arts to voice the student opinions. I would promote diversity, bring a fresh view and opinion to committees and senate while also promoting the arts. JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATIONS 2 SEATS Stephanie LeClaire ★ Sophomore in journalism - Delta Delta Delta sorority: chapter correspondent, PanHellenic Representative; Lambda Sigm- Yvette Sophomore Honor Society: history; GAMMA (Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol); Natural Ties; NSCS (National Society of Collegiate Scholars); Rock Chalk Revue cast member; The Alcohol Summit; SALAD (Seeking Alliances through Leadership and Diversity) program; Pre-Journalism Club If elected, I will serve as a link between journalism students and faculty. The other KUnited candidates and I have come up with ideas such as a journalism student council, an electronic newsletter with news and opportunities in the J-school and other ways journalism students' concerns could be voiced more clearly. I would like to inform students of the progress Senate is making throughout the year to let them know what Senate is doing to improve their University. Andrea Hughey ★ Teaching assistant for Journalism 101, Vice president of public relations for Pre-Journalism Club, New Junior in strategic communications Incumbent P The Journalism School is comprised of students in News/Information, Magazine, and Strategic Communications. All have diverse needs and goals. KUnited plans to implement a Journalism Student Council to bridge the gap among journalism students and provide awareness of each area's concerns while fostering a mutual respect among students and faculty. member educator at Chi Omega sorority, Greek Endeavor appointed officer for Panhellenic Association In order to create a more informed campus, I would like more publicity of the topics discussed in Student Senate prior to the actual meeting. PETER M. CHEUNG Jennifer Wilson Zeta Tau Alpha Vice President (coordinator of committees), American Business Women's Association, LeaderShape Junior in strategic communications graduate, St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, At St. Louis University: Student Alumni Association Vice-President, Honor's Program, Campus Ministry, Resident Advisor Zeta Tau Alpha Vice I would actively dialogue with my peers in the J-School about their concerns within the school and the University. I would also make it a priority to find an effective way to communicate Senate The Kansan editorial board also voted to endorse responses to the two referendum issues on the Student Senate ballot. Eight members of the editorial board, the Kansan editor and the opinion editor voted. Lind-say Hanson, associate opinion editor, did not vote. freshman representation This initiative will accomplish the goal of allowing freshmen to have a direct voice in the governance of their campus through five freshman senators online in October. Only first year undergraduate students can vote and candidates must be newly enrolled in the fall semester. Should five seats be created solely for freshman representation? United States Student Association membership Should a 50 cent per semester student fee be enacted to fund university membership to the United States Students' Association? The fee will not be assessed during the summer term. USSA is the oldest nationwide student association that organizes and advocates on issues impacting all student communities. The membership provides student access to legislative research, national conferences. multiculturalism consultation and representation on a federal level. happenings to my constituents so they can be active in student government and be aware of Senate business that concerns them. I would increase the channels of communication between the Student Senate and the University community so that Senate becomes more reflective of the entire campus. I would best represent my constituents by maintaining a close and open relationship with the organizations and media journalism students are involved in. By being a visible and active participant in the school I would be aware of the concerns and opinions of the students and represent them effectively. Sophomore in strategic communications A. Shannon Cline I would change Senate by creating and supporting legislation that is truly student focused. I would also work to empower students to change the world. Justin Holler Program coordinator for the Center for Community Outreach, site leader and participant with the . PA alternative breaks program, All Scholarship Hall Council representative for Miller Scholarship Hall, member of the Alcohol Education Workshop, participant in the 2003 LeaderShape institute LAWSCHOOL Muneer Ahmad ★ Graduate student in law 2 SEATS I will listen to their concerns and attempt to get what they want through any means necessary. I will help cut out a A. I will help cut out a lot of the nonsense and pettiness in Senate and focus on overarching issues that affect the University as a whole. Carl Folsom first-year law student Carl Folsom Kansas Legislature intern for two years, worked in U.S. Rep. Dennis Moore's Lawrence office, U.S. Sen. John McCain's 2000 presidential campaign volunteer, founding member of "Citizens Against Homelessness," Oliver Hall senator, Association of University Residence Halls member. My No.1 priority would be to improve the daily lives of law students. This includes getting a crosswalk put in between Green Hall and the parking garage. I would also focus on securing funds for important law school groups such as HALSA, BALSA and Women-in-Law. These are very important groups that need someone working in their interest. I will work across coalition lines to make KU more accessible to all students. With a large university such as this, many students can fall through the cracks. Rachel Monger James Owen ✔ √ Second-year law student Incumbent Current graduate school senator, graduate and professional affairs chairman for two years, executive director of the Graduate and Professional Association, CGPAI for two years, chairman of Graduate Executive Committee. The same way I have been; by making decisions that are in their best interest and then informing them of what I've done. That's how a democratic republic works, not by talking about things and setting up subcommittees. I've also placed numerous law students on University-wide boards. I will continue to do this. I would abolish coalitions. They are too distracting. I also believe the committee system needs to be condensed. I wouldalso pursue the type of programming we focused on this year. PHARMACY YES NO √ YES NO √ Kelli Stadalman 2 SEATS Served on GSP- First-year pharmacy student Corbin Hall judicial committee, Spring 2001; member of KU Navigators, Fall 2000 present; member of Academy o Student Pharma cists, Fall 2002 present I will best represent my constituents by being an effective relay between my colleagues in the School of Pharmacy and my fellow senators. I will listen to students' ideas and do my best to present them to the Senate, and also be active in informing by constituents about what is going on in the Student Senate. I would change Student Senate by being a "fresh face" — one that brings new ideas and opinions in an effort to positively change the University. John Kolhoff ★ John Worden ✅ Second-year pharmacy student I would take any suggestions that my constituents have and express them to the Student Senate body. NCPA officer, ASP officer, Kappa Psi officer. I would encourage more students to join the University Affairs committee, and other organizations to improve their edu- 2 SEATS SOCIAL WELFARE Katie Borniger Junior in social welfare Volunteer jobs, such as tutoring grade school children and assisting people learning English, volunteers at a local grade school and works as an emergency substitute teacher for Lawrence Public Schools. My overall goal is to be a fair and honest representative to my peers in the school of social welfare. One particular issue I am concerned with is the severe loss of funding our school is facing due to recent events. Online advising and more parking spaces are also issues I'd like to address. I would encourage much more awareness of all the wonderful demonstrations of diversity this school has to offer. Lindsay Eplee ▲√ Sophomore in social welfare Co-coordinator of 'Hawks for Health program under the Center for Community Outreach, member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority, Alternative Spring Break participant and site leader, Kansas Asia scholar, Bachelor's in Social Welfare club member, Wellness Committee member. Communication. I would represent the social welfare student by hearing and enacting what policies they are interested in. I will do this through the Bachelor of Social Welfare club e-mail, meeting, and classes. Being a junior next year, I will have more time to dedicate than a senior would with a practicum requirement. By communicating with the students to let them know more about the activities of Student Senate and to get more input from the students. Lindsey Ortiz ★ Junior in social welfare furior in his oratory ■ Duties chairman in my sorority, greek ambassador, manager position at my place of employment. Overall, I want to represent my peers' needs and wants in the school of social welfare. Some of the issues I already plan to address are online advising, the Jayhawk Express and the threat of budget cuts. By being part of Student Senate, my main focus is my peers in the school of social welfare. However, I would also broaden my focus to all KU students because of my concerns for the entire University. Junior in social welfare Junior in social welfare Bachelor's in Social Welfare Christina Peter By listening to what social welfare students have to say and ideas of change to better improve the school. Also, to help inform them of what is going that could be important to their education. Ultimately, I would be changing it by just being on the Senate for social welfare, because we do not have anyone to represent our school or students right now. 1 SEAT Lase Ajayi ★ RESIDENTIAL Incumbent Junior in psychology and pre-medicine 2002-03 CLAS Selenator; mentor and tutor for the StEp program (a branch of 'Hawk link'); 'Hawk nights committee member; Watkins Scholarship Hall vice president; KU ambassador; member of the Multicultural Affairs Committee. Most of the residents on campus do not even know they have a residential senator or what one is, and I plan to change that. I will attend floor/house meetings and be more accessible to them. I would be a direct liaison among the residents and housing and ensure that their voices are heard. Every student needs to realize that anyone can get involved in Student Senate. I would like more non-senators to join committees and come to the actual meetings and participate. ✓ Jessica Herman Junior in journalism and sociology Resident assistant in McCollum Hall, conference assistant in Hashinger, Academic Resource Center assistant in Hashinger. Alternative Winter 1973 Break, member of the Kansas/Asia scholars program, member of the Honors Program, member of the sociology honors society. In order to best represent my constituents, I would act as a liaison between several groups including the Student Senate, the department of student housing and the residents living on campus. By doing this, I think I could best represent those students in residence life. Specifically, I will work hard on issues that directly affect residents, like the sexual prevention program expansion and on-and off-campus safety. The safety of KU's residents should be a number one priority and I believe that by focusing on these issues, this can happen. CONTINUED ON PAGE 12A R 12A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION TUESDAY,APRIL 8,2003 KEY TO CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENTS ★ KUnited Candidate Delta Force Candidate Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade Candidate Independent Candidate Endorsed by the editorial board . √ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11A OFF-CAMPUS 5 SEATS Jayme A. Aschemeyer junior in human biology and psychology Resident tant; Gamma; Young PLEASE SEND ME THE MARKETING SUMMARY. Assis- Delta KU Democrats; Kansas Legislative Intern; Monarch Watch Lab Assistant; Douglas County Hospice Program; Pre-Medicine Club; Webmaster-DG; EMT-B trained Being off campus for the past three years has given me perspective on the issues of my constituency from costs of living to transportation and parking as well as local government concerns. Approaching these topics knowingly and with an open mind will allow me to be an effective senator. I would initiate an out-of-state student caucus to specifically address those constituency concerns and spread general awareness of Student Senate on campus. Kit Brauer ✔ Junior in political science ran for student body vice-president with Delta Force last year two year student senator; University council member; service learning office co-director. I will work to continually improve the off-campus living resource center. I will use my experience as a senator and finance committee member to continuously stand up for the rights of students who are currently grossly under-represented. I would continue working to pass the reapportionment bill which I submitted during this year, attempting to implement proportional representation. Amanda Flott Jeanette Ehmke Junior in political science and American studies President of Students for Peace; co-director of Concerned Active and Aware Students of CCO; Student Rights I am a graduate of the University of Missouri. I study English and Philosophy in the Department of Languages and Literature. I am also a member of the International Society for Ethical Computational Biology (ISICB). Committee; Chair of Students on the Board of Regents task force; Executive board of Young Democrats; Alternative Spring Break site leader; Leadershape graduate; Commission on the Status of Women. I would best represent my constituents in several ways. First, I live off campus. I deal with landlords, tenant ordinances, cooking my own meals and cleaning up after myself. Additionally, I think the main issue I can represent my constituents on is the housing ordinance in Lawrence which allows only three nonrelated members to live together. It also provided the city the legal right to search properties in order to guarantee compliance. This is a violation of students' rights to privacy. I plan on working with the city to find a fair way to enforce the law. Senate needs to be more representative of the entire student body. I plan on assisting other senators with a reappointment plan. I also plan on making senate more welcoming to student groups by letting them know where we can help. Molly Hess ▲√ Junior in elementary/middle education Member of Student Union Activities for 3 years, currently vicepresident of adminis- 10 tative affairs, SUA representative to the Hawk Nights committee for two years I have lived off campus for two years. Therefore, I have first-hand knowledge of landlord/tenant agreements, limited yellow parking spaces, and the responsibility of paying bills. I would represent off-campus students by voicing my knowledge about the things listed above. - I would like to make Senate a more welcoming place for students to come and voice their opinions to the committees. If elected, I will sit on the finance committee where I can bring new life to the current stagnant committee. Aaron Jacobs Aaron Jacobs Junior in political science and philosophy Incumbent I have been very involved at KU through my work within Student Senate working with countless organizations. I have also been involved in countless student/community organizations working toward a better University and Lawrence. 1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 I have lived off campus my three years at the University, paying my bills, working with landlords while learning what issues directly affect students who live on their own. Senate should directly represent the student body proportionally, while representing their constituency directly. Too often senators represent their own self-interests, instead of the University community. David Marker Sophomore in political science University Affairs committee , Finance Committee, Two year mentorship with Kit Braver, Disciple of the Tao of Steve BRUNO LUCE I will only support policy that is in the best interest of the students. This includes fiscal responsibility in making sure that students' money is used in the most efficient way possible. I will work to keep our tuition at an affordable level. Pass a re-apportionment bill so that students are better represented. Hoang Nguyen ★ Patrick Quinn furior in cognitive psychology and biochemistry President of KU Chess Club. University Affairs Committee PETER BELCHER member, Pre-law Society member, Volunteer firefighter for Wakara火警 Fire Dept., LeaderShape attendee I would best represent off-campus students by working to establish a free on-campus bus route that stops by Memorial Stadium parking spaces, expand Park and Ride, decrease parking spaces restricted until 7:30 p.m. lobby to repeal restrictive housing ordinances, and continue to promote and expand the off-campus resource center. I would work to make Student Senate initiatives more visible and to make senators more accessible to students. Brooke Robinson ✔ Graduate student in law Traffic court attorney Alumni Relations Student/Faculty Lauren Salvini Committee member, Women in Law member, Sport and Entertainment Law Society member As a non-traditional graduate student, I am the best representative for off-campus students. I fully understand the trials, tribulations and concerns of KU's off-campus constituency. Furthermore, I have a moderate, level-headed view of how Senate should be conducted. I want to bring a positive, hard-working and non-patrician attitude to Senate and, if elected, I would be honored to serve the students of KU. I believe the Senate should be more connected to the student body. If the Senate would examine issues that are important to students, then those students would be more apt to learn and be informed about Senate. Sean Tucker Sean Tucker Sophomore in German and environmental science A. Congress-Bundestag US Ambassador Jubilee Cafe volunteer; Hixon fellow; Klianis Interna Working towards a 'greener KU'; more/better recycling (indoor/outdoor receptacles); energy conservation to reduce student fees; environmental correspondence with KU activists. tional. Tablet of Honor recipient. I want to incorporate outside opinions and ideas by working with other organizations and individual students. I would like to build an environmental committee to inform the campus of new recycling opportunities. NON-TRADITIONAL 4 3 SEATS Will Bohne ★ Melinda L. Bretthauer Junior in chemistry N.Y.C. Junior in chemistry High school student council four years, vice president of graduating class, mother of "bouncy four-year-old boy" √ - I believe I am the only parent running for a nontraditional senate seat. I think it is important for the parent-students at KU to be represented by a parent-student! (The only way to represent one is to be one.) I have also commuted to school and understand marriage. I would foster a professional and responsible Student Senate Will Kubie ✔ Freshman in architectural engineering ■ K-Mart manager and construction coordinator for five years; lead youth groups; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints young single adult representative. I plan to create a forum through which my constituents can contact me directly, lend me their concerns, and then take those concerns to the senate. I will also make sure that the needs of those who do not "traditionally" attend KU are represented in every facet on the student government. I make the statement that I will endeavor to represent fairly, equally, and righteously throughout my term on student senate if elected. - Seeing as how I have no experience with Student Senate, I cannot answer that question directly. I will tell you this though. I will push to get bills processed quickly and efficiently, keep debates pertinent and to the point. Time is of the essence, especially as a student, and as a part of the perilous times that we exist in today. We cannot afford to waste it, and I work to make sure that the senate does not do so. Sam Pierron Paul L. Van Cleave ✩ Jayceess President, Board of Director, state district director. Have owned my own business worked as a traffic Junior in sociology PETER BURROWS ✩ ✓ GRADUATE coordinator for a large corporation with a multi-million dollar budget and supervisor positions both in corporate world and not-for-profit. Run for city council. Attend many of the non-traditional brown bag lunches with Laura Morgan, Non-traditional director. By talking with them to see what their concerns are and getting their opinion on ways to improve the University in ways that the Senate can accomplish. Supporting the current KUunited platform that can be worked in the coming year to accomplish their goals. To work toward a non-traditional scholarship fund for non-traditional students. To work with the other senators to show a united front and work for the good of the school and leave personal agendas behind. Roksana Alavi 10 SEATS Graduate student in philosophy Incumbent I have learned so much about the students' need and the best way to approach those issues. I think my experience as a senator would help in greatly in the coming year, if I am elected again. Some of the issues that I intend to be involved with are student safety, increase in Sexual Assault Prevention, and increase in budget for graduate student's travel money to attend conferences when presenting papers. Saymi Cruz ★ Ravi DeSilva ✔ Second-year graduate student in anthropology KU resident assistant, Oliver Hall Jan. 2002 May 2002 and Templin Hall Aug. 2002 YOUR TEXT HERE present, KU Adams Challenge Course facilitator Aug. 2001-present, KU Graduate Students in Anthropology member I believe that I hold a unique perspective on the needs of KU students from undergraduates through graduate students because of my varied experiences at the University. This bridging can be very beneficial in accomplishing goals that benefit a holistic view of campus. My goal is not to change Student Senate. Rather, it is to accomplish positive changes through effective Senate actions. Amanda Harrington Incumbent Third-year graduate student in microbiology I have and will continue to make sure that the graduate student perspective is considered in the decision making process here at KU. This year, for example, I worked with the Parking Department to achieve some resolution to the need for parking for graduate student researchers during men's basketball games. This year as a Graduate Student Senator I have served as a member of the Graduate and Professional Affairs Committee, as a member of University Council and as a member of the Task Force Concerning Female Student Needs. I have also been a cofounding member and president of the KU Chapter of the American Society for Microbiology and an active participant in my Graduate Student Organization. I would like to see more diverse participation in Student Senate by using continued advertising about how to get involved. Belinda Hinojos ✔️ Graduate student in counseling psychology - Signa Lamda Gamma president and vice president. Delta Alpha membe P. R. two years, Hispanic American Leadership Organization board, created and co-hosted radio show on KJHK, Grad assistant in Office of Multicultural Affairs, coordinator of STEP program, graduate advisor for DPET, grad representative for CRREMS, president of Latino Graduate Student Association, president of Sigma Lamda Gamma Alumni Association. I would work hard to bring graduate concerns to the table. I understand that it is a large group, but I will do my best to work for and represent everyone. I would especially like to bring diversity and multicultural issues regarding grad school to people's attention. I would like to have the opportunity to work hard and try to unite all the senators in working together to represent the students as best as possible. Bob Hirth ✔ Graduate student in business Truman State Rugby Club treasurer, Graduate Business Council finance director, Big Brothers Big Sisters participant. Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program participant, crew leader and trainer for various companies. I think I would best represent my constituents because as a J.D./M.B.A. student I understand that most graduate students have time commitments and responsibilities outside of their rigorous Polling locations Strong Hall Wescoe Hall Burge Union Kansas Union Mrs. E's Haworth Hall GSP Hall Oliver Hall --- - 手写 Elections are tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Results will be announced at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Parlor Room of the Kansas Union and in Friday's The University Daily Kansan. I think the best way to improve Student Senate would be to increase student awareness of issues, thereby increasing student involvement and lowering apathy. class schedules. Graduate students have families and jobs and don't have the time or inclination to fight a system that doesn't work for them. I want to help streamline the system and make it easier to manage, so graduate students won't have to fight it. Bradley Hoff Shaylisa Hurte ✔ Third-year Ph.D. student in political science POLS 110 graduate teaching assistant; Political Science Graduate Student Association treasurer, chairwoman of the social committee, department's representative to Student Senate's Graduate Affairs Committee, member of the Campus Fee Review Committee, Panhellenic adviser for Zeta Tau Alpha. - I will listen to graduate student concerns and strive to defend resources such as professional journals and other research materials against cuts. As a member of GTAC, I support efforts to secure higher wages and benefits for GTAs and wish to explore a service that provides police screened escorts to students walking along on campus at night. I will work hard to ascertain and represent the diverse interests of graduate students at KU. ate Mentorship Awards Committee. Senate Library committee, Dean of Libraries search committee, Watson Reconfiguration Task Force, SLAB graduate representative; "lobbyist," accompany for KU Men's Glee Club, KC Concert Choir, KU women's choreal, GTA Slavic department, volunteer Kansas International Museum Toneka Graduate senator for three years, Graduate Ex. Vice Chair Gradu- Graduate student in Slavic Ph.D. program Incumbent Michael D. Johnson ▲ ✓ ■ I will continue to voice my opinion (and that of others when I am informed of concerns and problems) on committees on which I serve-especially by informing grad representatives through our meetings of the GPA. I welcome any input from other grads about issues that concern us. I am always reachable through e-mail or in my Wescoe office. As I wrote last year, "Silence can be deadly." I'm glad to see that the body will be more open to debate from now on. Too many times in past years votes were taken without hearing any opposing speeches. I think Senate needs to formulate "the big picture" — we must act for future constituents, not just ourselves. Hopefully, the animosity which exists between greeks and non-greeks will someday end! . Cornelius Minor ✔ Second-year graduate (M.A.) student in American studies Graduate Teaching Assistant American Studies/Sociology 110: The American People, Project Manager, Project on the History of Black Writing, Member Graduate Teaching Assistant Coalition (GTAC), Co-host VOICE ACTIVATED Community Talk Show-KJHK (90.7 FM) Lawrence, Co-Chairman American Studies Association of Graduate Students, Student Representative American Studies Faculty Steering Committee. Administrator Black Graduate Student Association CONTINUED ON PAGE 13A --- TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 OPINION KEY TO CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 13A ★ KUnited Candidate . Delta Force Candidate . Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade Candidate ✓ Independent Candidate Endorsed by the editorial board CONTINUED FROM12A I've worked actively with several University offices to take a more active role in making sure that students have access to information and to opportunities that will serve to enhance their experiences here. I will represent by heightening that level of involvement. Minority recruitment, graduate student advocacy and greater communication among graduate students, departments and the University are all active points on my agenda. If the KU mainstream is undergraduate, then I speak from the margins. I hope to bring that voice to the Senate. What uniquely qualifies me, though, is that my work outside of the Senate puts me in direct daily contact with my constituency, so that my voice is not only unique. It is accountable and sincere, and the greatest change is always on the other side of sincerity. DavidMitchell ▲✔ Second-year graduate student Graduate Senator, 2002-2003; Founder, Elections Reform Task Force, 2002; Elections Commissioner, 2001- A. J. R. H. 2002; Finance Committee member, 2002-2003; Delta Force Activist Group, 1997-2003; Columnist, The University Daily Kansan, 2001; Student Rep, Committee for Undergraduate Studies and Advising, CLAS, 1998-2000; Rights Committee member, 1997-1999; KU ACLU, 1997-1999; KU Young Democrats, 1997-1999; Students FIRST foundation, 2000 I would like to improve off-campus safety, improve rental equity, improve access and spending at the Hilltop Daycare Center and provide apportioned living group representation in Student Senate. My strength lies in experience. Not many candidates can claim six years of public service in and out of Student Senate to this community.I helped reform the elections process at KU and implementing online voting.For graduate students specifically, I feel I represent them since I live off-campus, work full-time think progressively,and am committed to public service. Seung Eun Oh ▲ John Paden ▲✔ Graduate student in electrical engineering Incumbent JEEE chair and vice chairman I will continue to support resolutions that help GTAC reach its goals. Other issues that affect all students that I believe need to be addressed are the banning of commercial solicitation on campus, joining the city and University bus systems and increasing access to recycling — more ubiquitous distribution of recycling bins. I will work toward increasing student access to Student Senate by working toward a complete online voting system and supporting freshman senator representation. Hugo A. Vera ▲✔ Second-year graduate student in fine arts and education Grad Exec Board, GPA, GTAC fine arts liaison, Student Senate Finance Board, President and co-founder of KU Choral Society, Men's Glee Club conductor, KU Opera Theater, GTA, KU Chamber Choir I honestly believe that the University does not truly understand what GTAs and graduate students contribute to the University and the city. I would make Senate and KU aware of this. Being a person of color is also something that allows me to look around and realize that KU does not work hard enough in recruiting grad students of color. There is a lot of talk of what to do but I am yet to see any real action. Talk is cheap and being cheap is something to minority recruitment that KU and student cannot afford. I will hopefully have more action with this issue and less words. By making people in Senate stop taking themselves so damn seriously and make them aware that being part of the senate is not a resume builder. It is there to help students and the community to make it better. Nothing more, nothing less. UNIOR/SENIOR CLAS 14 SEATS Steven P. Adam . Cribb Altman ✩ Junior in Spanish and business administration Alternative Breaks; Beta Theta Pi social chair and executive IRELAND committee; Inter-fraternity Council formal recruitment counselor; Rock Chalk Revue stage crew and cast member; Lambda Sigma Honor Society; Greek Environmental Board; Honors program; study abroad I feel it is very important to go out and meet the people that you are representing rather than calling and e-mailing them. This relationship with your constituents enables the students to confide in you. I will make every possible effort to meet the varied demands of liberal arts students. Student Senate should open up to include more students' suggestions outside of Senate. This is the student's university and everyone's views should be heard. Robin Anderson Senior in political science and English President of KU Young Democrats; Student Rights committee; Delta Force Nunemaker candidate; Dole Internship participant; congressional intern for Dennis Moore Upperclassmen need senators who will fight blatantly large tuition increases at all levels of the bureaucracy so we can all finish school without adding to already large loan debts. The University also needs to be held accountable for where our money is going. It's the only way to maintain KU's educational integrity. I would be realistic, not overly dramatic, and I wouldn't pretend I was more important than any other student at KU. That'd be a change. Benjamin Bammes Junior in physics, math and computer engineering Campus Christians member; management and operation of a personal business; physics research YOU ARE HERE TO LEARN Good representation involves knowing the opinions of students along with fully knowing how each proposal and resolution affects my constituency. I will always discuss Senate proposals with my peers and I will always make sure I understand each problem or proposal so I can always do what's best for KU. I want to ensure that students are informed and active in KU politics. I also want to ensure that Senate funds diverse events and causes. ← Part-time manager at a liquor store By being honest, I will not promise to do a lot and then not do much. If I don't make lots of promises, I can focus more on doing things that are attainable, rather than the usual 'I'm going to do so much crap.' Drew Baranowski Junior in English Part-time manager at a liquor store By bringing a fresh approach. I don't have any prior political involvement so I can resist falling into typical patterns. member; Multicultural affairs associate senator; intramural basketball; Christ Community Church small groups member Bethany Baxter Junior in political science and international studies I think a key way to represent constituents is by keeping them informed. I think that, by doing this, I will become aware of their views and concerns on issues through the feedback received. This awareness will allow me to make decisions in alignment with the opinions of my constituents. Multicultural affairs committee I will strive to make it a more appealing organization to those who are not senators. I think Senate is an important group on campus and I will work to ensure that it is an organization that is friendly and embraces all students. I would like to see Student Senate focus more on issues that affect students' everyday lives. Shannon Bell Junior in political science Incumbent University Affairs committee member; associate senator; Panhellenic senator; member and philanthropy chair of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority; member of the Panhellenic Judicial Board; Rock Chalk Revue cast member; Campus Safety Advisory Board member I would represent my constituents best in addressing safety and transportation needs that affect students on a daily basis through the Campus Safety Advisory Board. I enjoy interacting with my constituents and taking their thoughts and opinions with me to Senate meetings. Bobby Birhiray Junior in human biology I would encourage more student participation on committees and boards of Student Senate. PETER GRANT Black Student Union; equal opportunity fund committee; finance committee; Student Senate finance committee finance committee; Kansas football team My experiences in Student Senate will help me become a good student senator. I am educated on the issues and I am playing a part in the solution. I can change Student Senate by being me.I think Student Senate has been trying to make Senate more diverse with quality students. Kelli Brandt Junior in women's studies Commission on the Status of Women task force; Delta Force Activist Organization; Alternative Breaks participant I am a female student in the largest school who has lived on and off campus and has worked in student housing. Because of this, I have a broad view and understanding of student needs and life at KU. Through my involvement with the Commission on the Status of Women task force, I have become aware of the need for increased safety awareness as well as sexual assault prevention at KU. Since women make up half the population at this University, I think it is crucial that these needs be understood and met. I don't think one senator alone can change very much,but a group of people with common goals can create a lot of change for the betterment of the University. - LeaderShape participant and on-site coordinator; All Scholarship Hall Council Executive board; ASHC National Communication Coordinator; Miller Hall Judicial Board and Service Chair; ASHC Leadership Development Program; Blueprints registration co-coordinator, Student Leadership Institute; Raymond Nichols league of student leaders, HAWKLink guide; HAWKLink/stEp tutor and mentor; NSO Advisory Board; former Zeta Tau Alpha secretary Amanda Boyer ✔ unior in genetics By focusing on both the broad concerns of upperclassmen in CLAS and the more specific issues, I think I would serve these students interests and be a fair, unbiased representative of their concerns. I would work to make CLAS juniors and seniors aware of any issues pertaining to both their college and the University as a whole. I would make every effort to keep overall constituents best interests at the forefront of decision making, while also remaining open-minded and conscious of individual situations. I would simply keep my constituents interests at the forefront and leave any personal agendas out of the process and I would work to make myself accessible not only to my constituents but to the student body as a whole. Ashley Dosien CLAS rep 2000-2001 Jeff Dunlap ✔ junior in political science and sociology ★√ Incumbent Finance committee member; Nune-maker senator; Parking Commission member; Transportation Board member; Delta Upsilon vice president of public relations; National Society of Collegiate Scholars member. I will represent my constituents best by continuing to work on specific projects that result in tangible campus improvements that benefit CLAS students. Specifically, I will continue to work on increasing the amount of parking available to students after 5 p.m., promote the construction of a new MRC, which is critical to creating a diverse student body, as well as other projects. I will actively communicate with the CLAS administration and lobby for student concerns. I would work to incorporate the yellow bike program into Student Senate and continue to encourage responsible fiscal policy. Mark A. Dupree ✔ Junior in political science Incumbent Second-term president of Black Student Union; President of Big 12 Black Student Government; senator, University Student Senate; Alpha Phi Alpha treasurer; Inspirational Gospel Voice I will represent students on this campus with loyalty and trust. I have come to the realization that, with hard work and dedication, one will find motivation to assist himself and others in reaching their goals in education. So it is my belief that I can bring a true sense of diversity to the students which is beyond color and culture, but about life. I will not profess that I can change Senate, but I will profess that I can bring a sense of awareness to the problems and issues that we, as a student body, have been ignoring and blinded from for years. This awareness will force students to make change rather than I, as a democracy —as one community as one campus and as one KU. Alicia Ellingson Senior in English, Spanish and strategic communications Incumbent CLAS senator; member of the Multicultural Affairs Committee; participant in Lysistrata Project, MRC, U.S. Diversity Requirement and SLAB; Douthart Hall president; All Scholarship Hall Council Executive Board First, increase outreach through more organization visits and printing fliers with senators' contact information to distribute around campus and to advisers. Second, work on issues including multicultural recruitment and retention, the MRC, creating a U.S. Diversity requirement and offering online advising sessions. Require senators to attend five to six organizations' meetings. With 80 senators, we could share ideas and get feedback from all 400+ campus organizations. T. Brett Gilmore ● Anna D. Gregory Junior in political science and history Communications director Student Senate; organizer of "Bring Justin Home" campaign after 9/11; organizer of Rally for Higher Education and information campaign to lobby for reasonable tuition; Diversity Peer Education Team member; Transportation Advisory Board member; Student Rights Committee vice chair and member After three years of Senate, I've learned that the most important work isn't done in meetings. The work outside of meetings — the projects, the brainstorming, the phone calls and visits — make the difference. I will be where my constituents are and include them in the real work of Senate. Leo Khayet ★ Junior in political science and international business LeaderShape Institute; Blueprints Leadership Conference 25 year Leadership Conference; Board of Class Officers; Resident Assistant at Jayhawk Towers; RA/ Proctor Council; Hillel; KU Israel Alliance Student Senate should focus more acutely on how to expand and develop the University's excellent academic reputation while retaining efficient and responsible student services. A student senator is, in my estimation, a steward of the interests of his constituency. I will work diligently to allow my constituency to have greater control of their tuition dollars. Specifically, students should be more involved in the organization of University programming. ✓ Junior in political science Tyler Rand Longpine ▲ ✔ junior campus senator; off-campus living resource center board member; University Affairs committee member; co-founder of Students for Peace Instead of service outreach hours in the remote Senate office, I would push for Senate to table on Wescoe Beach and the Kansas Union. Lobby more often. Often, Student Senate shies away from parking issues. The parking department has turned parking into a three-ring circus, and I will work toward bridging the gap between Senate and the parking department. Recognizing that the preponderance of Junior-Senior CLAS students live off-campus, I will continue to work with the off-campus living resource center. Change current outreach requirements so senators are required to seek out their constituencies and thus are able to better represent them. Senate reaportionment as it applies to living situation, is another internal Senate matter big on my list. 💠✓ Scott McKenzie ▲✔ - Doozie Martin Senior in French and political science Senior in environmental studies, American studies and philosophy with minor in peace studies Incumbent Philosophy club vice president; coordinator for Environs; Proctor council executive board; All University Residence Hall executive board; student senator; SUA executive board. I would continue to make sure the doors of democracy are as wide as possible formy constituents and all students. My constituents are diverse, so I hope to talk to many people to find their feelings. Hopefully these efforts will allow Senate to reflect the students. ✖️ ✓ I would make senate a tool and a resource for all students at the University. I want to make it easier for students to be involved with Senate and its processes. Amanda Meglemre Student rights committee member; committee secretary; Senate finance committee member; All Scholarship Hall Council senator; CONTINUED ON PAGE 14A wno you can vote for A student may cast votes for President and Vice-President, as well as for the following senate seats: Any academic division in which the student is currently enrolled (not just admitted). Residential: students living in the following residential areas operated under the auspices of the Department of Student Housing: residence halls, scholarship halls, Stouffer Neighborhood, Sunflower Apartments and Jayhawker Towers Apartments. Off-campus students: students who are not residential students (including those who are residents of a fraternity) Non-traditional (if the student is non-traditional). . --- 14A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION KEY TO CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENTS KUnited Candidate ★ △ Delta Force Candidate - Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of th Crusade Candidate √ Endorsed by the editorial board Independent Candidate - CONTINUED FROM PAGE 13A Douthart Scholarship Hall executive board; Hall president; Student Environmental Advisory Board committee member CLAS seats are very difficult positions to act as delegate of the constituency. A CLAS senator can best work for the constituents by writing bills when organizations request and by thinking of students first.Many senators seem to think first and foremost of their own (or their collusions') agenda.A true senator should ignore personal and coalition interests when they undermine what is best for the students. If I could, if I had the votes to make it happen, I would prefer a proportional representation system. The current system favors two political coalitions and decreases the chances of new ideas and new people in Senate. Changing elections to proportional representation would create a more representative group of ideologies in student government. Phil Mitchell ✔️ Senior in secondary education Survey research center shift supervisor intramural basket ball. A main reason I have YUANHENG decided to run for Senate is that I represent a section of the student body whose voices are not heard: the average, broke underclassman. The interests of this group have been ignored because we often feel we lack the time and ability to create significant change. I want Student Senate to become a better representation of students' needs and interests and will vote to keep fees and tuition as affordable as possible. 50 Brandt Pangborn J. Tanner Rapelye Nick Reddell Ashlee Reid Senior in communications studies CLAS college assembly board member: former president of Young Life Crew I will represent my constituents by being their voice to the Student Senate. I will work as hard as I can to voice their concerns, opinions and suggestions to make their experience at KU the best. I would make Student Senate more visible to the students. I would also make Senate more open to students. Keval Shah ★ Junior in microbiology and premedicine Member of International Student Ambassadors' Program; member of the Press Mohammed A. Yusuf ber of the Pre-medicine Club I am aware of the issues that some of the members of my constituency face and I think I'd do a good job solving these, as I'd be representing both my constituents and international students. Try to involve and address more issues pertaining to international students at the University, overall helping to increase the diversity. Blake Shuart ★ Junior in English incumbent JOHN BUSHMAN Assistant treasurer CLAS senator; President of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity; Interfraternity Council ic relations chairman of the homecoming steering committee; Teachers assistant for COMS 201 "Introduction to Leadership" The best way to represent your constituency is simply to stop being selforiented and vote on behalf of the body of students not personal opinion. Aside from voting representatively, you should have regular meetings with deans, administration and concerned students. vice president for public relations; Pub You must enforce change through a proactive voice and active involvement. Far too many senators are only heard from during the three weeks of campaign work. Shannon Snapp △√ Junior in Spanish and psychology Currently off campus senator; vicepresident for KU Habitat for Humanity; Diversity peer education team member; multicultural affairs committee member; student health advisory board; offcampus living resource center board Because CLAS is extremely large. I would do my best to break down those barriers in order to hear the opinions of the students. This would be done with weekly organization visits that would inform students about how their money is being spent and also to get their feedback on any changes they would like to see implemented. By bringing a prospective that is representative of many facets such as the needs of low-income students, minorities and four-year plus students. All of these qualities, plus my hard work, determination and commitment, would allow me to accomplish positive change on campus. Blake Swenson Junior in political science Pursuing Leadership minor through COMS department; applicant for Elections Commissions As a first-time candidate, I think I can bring new ideas and great ambition. The issues that this coalition and I hold dear to our hearts are ones that are important to every student in CLAS. As a vocal leader, I would be sure to be a fair and active voice for my constituents. 1 plan to be involved in politics for the rest of my life and have always thought people needed to be informed about their world. I want to find a way to have the students possess a greater interest in Student Senate. Brian Thomas Brian Thomas Junior in political science Communications Director for Center for Community Outreach; Alternative Winter Break participant; University Affairs Committee Secretary; Off-Campus Living Resource Center Board member; Search Committee for Student Technology Coordinator; Fee Review Committee Member; Leader of "Save KU Info" student group; Co-Editor of the Disorientation Guide; Member of Delta Force Activist Organization There is honestly no way to represent all juniors and seniors in college of liberal arts and sciences. Anybody that thinks they can is either delusional or a liar. I'm just going to vote against stupid, self-agradizing crap. I'd do my best to keep résumé-building idiots away from power. I will answer any questions you may have about the image. Steve Vockrill Junior in political science and journalism From my participation in athletics, my association with the fraternity and sorority community while maintaining no affiliation, to participation with the newspaper, I see many different students living many different ways of life. This would help me represent my constituents in that I can draw from many students' views on many different subjects to set a diverse input in my decisions as student senator. Steve Vockrodt ✩ Cross-country team member; truck team member; The University Daily Kansan university Interfraternity Council president; IFC vice president for recruitment; LeaderShape graduate; Lambda Chi Alpha Impact leadership; Delegate to 2002 Lambda Chi writer and columnist Egan Waggoner ✔ This University is constantly becoming a more expensive place to attend. I would focus on making KU an affordable place for everyone. Junior in pre-pharmacy Alpha National Conference: KU ambassador; fraternity educator for Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity; finance committee member; Rock Chalk Revue 2003 cast member; Recruitment Services Advisory Board 10 I would hold regular forums with Dean Wilcox, poll my constituents before I vote on issues and be a proactive voice throughout the whole year. I would maximize the student voice by voting on behalf of my constituents rather than voting upon my own personal beliefs and opinions. John P. Waller Travis Weller Junior in sociology Incumbent Travis Weller O 10.00 Orientation assistant; Student Rights Committee chair; cofounder of Men Can Stop Rape. I want to make sure that all students are safe at KU. I will pursue this goal by working to expand the sexual assault prevention and education program at the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and by coordinating with the city of Lawrence to improve lighting in student neighborhoods off-campus. I want committees to have more power. Student Senate committees are a way for all students to have power, not just student senators. Andrew Wymore ★ junior in political science and communications Vice president of interfraternity council, 2003 lecture series chairman, University Affairs committee member, Recreation center planning committee member, community service chairman and alumni relations chairman of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. I would hold an open forum meeting along with all junior/senior CLAS senators where students could air their complaints and requests for the term. I would like to see Student Senate focus more on issues that affect students' everyday lives. Tyler Young junior in political science Boy Scouts patrol leader, junior assistant scoutmaster, Eagle Scout; President and Vice President of Venture NORTH KOREA - I will try to be aware of policies and issues that affect my constituents. When new bills are presented on issues brought to light, I will get opinions on my constituents to get a feel for what they feel on the matter. Crew; Delta Force member; Students for Peace member, Senate finance subcommittee member; GSP/Corbin and Hashinger balls desk assistant and security monitor I don't have any plans to change Student Senate, but if problems arise or concerns are brought up, I would, if necessary, advocate change. Sophomore in political science and communication studies Vice president of Hashinger/ Elsworth hall govt. FRESHMAN/SOPHOMORE CLAS 14 seats Ellsworth hall gov P Cardinal ✩ ✓ ernment, resident assistant in McColum Hall, desk manager in McColum Hall, KL theater participant. Hall, KU theater participant Jessica With my experience working with freshman/sophomore class as an RA and as vice president of Hashinger/Ellsworth I have made valuable connections to the students and also heard what they want done to better their school for themselves. I plan to keep my ears open and listen to the people and what they say. 1 would bring valuable unique experience to the Senate that would better represent constituents with what they want and need changed. Alison W. President of Hashinger Hall Government; Participated in K-LIP, on Ellsworth anthropology Christianity Freshman im anthropology Christenberry Being the same age as my constituents. I feel that I recognize the issues facing freshmen and sophomores. I will vote bipartisan and will listen to what makes sense. community standards board I will use logic to help Student Senate go with the changing times. Anna Clovis ★ Sophomore in Spanish and journal ism Senate executive secretary; Big XII Student Government and Leadership Conference delegate; Senate; Finance Committee, Homecoming Steering Committee; Alternative Spring Break Site Leader; KU Ambassador; Alpha Chi Omega Executive Committee I would focus on active communication of issues and tangible results. Through my involvement on campus and experience with Senate, I have the abilities necessary to educate freshman and sophomore CLAS students on Senate and how to improve their years at KU through Senate initiatives. It needs to be less about the technicalities and more about working for the students. I'm ready to represent student concerns and get results. Greyson Clymer Freshman in bust ness Board of Class Officers freshmen class president, research volunteer at KU exercise physiology lab, Jubilee Cafe volunteer CITY OF NEW YORK I believe that being involved in Student Senate carries the responsibility of being a voice for the KU student body as a whole. Listening to both the needs and wishes of the KU student I hope to bring about positive change that will have an impact on those currently at KU and those who will follow. I would try to implement some of the platform issues that KUunited brings to the student body. Furthermore, I would try to find more ways to seek out the true needs of KU students. Kelly Gibbons Sophomore in communications Student ambassador through the people to people program. My first semester at KU music mentor, UU versity Affairs committee member - I would represent my constituents by doing the best job I can. I would vote for issues that have a strong effect on my constituents. While I think many reps don't do the work they were elected to do, I would listen to what my constituents wanted to be done. Becky Harpstrite △ Sophomore in art history Graphic designer for SUA, volunteer for the Center for Community Outreach, member of Students --- Online teacher evaluations, better lighting on campus, making sure everyone knows that the force is with them. - Increase awareness of how we help the student body Jack Henry-Rhoads ✔ ✓ TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 opnomore in business University Affair Senate Committee member,social chair for Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall Bob W. To make sure Senate represents freshman and sophomores in the CLAS I will work for freshman representation, yearlong recruitment for committees, and a complete revision of senator outreach requirements to ensure senators visit specific halls and organizations to make certain that senators are visible and accountable. Jake Hills ★ First I would work to make Senate more visible and accountable to the students and also to reduce the partisan politics which hurt Senate's performance. Freshman undecided Incumbent Campus Safety Advisory Board member, University Affairs Committee member, Numemaker senator, member of Theta Chi fraternity Anne Iverson I feel that the current Student Senate is a very enjoyable atmosphere. And I would work to keep it this way. I would best represent my constituents by listening to their needs and reacting to them, whether that is writing legislation or attending meetings for them, or volunteering. I will always be there for my constituents with an open mind. Incumbent Freshman in Spanish and pre-social welfare Nunemaker (freshman/sophomore) senator, member of I will be back soon. Men Can Stop Rape, Student Senate Student Rights Committee vice-chairwoman and member. Get Out the Vote student vote drive, Online Course Evaluations Subcommittee member, stood on Student Rules and Regulations Subcommittee, member of Delta Force Activist organization. Having served the Freshman/Sophomore CLAS constituency diligently this year I intend to further issues specifically concerning freshman/sophomores, while continuing to work for the benefit of the entire student body. Because both senators and teachers should be held accountable, I am currently working on freshman representation and online course evaluations. - Senate should strive to be more available to constituents, more active, and more culturally sensitive. Student Senate should not consist of resume builders; it should consist of agents of positive change. Arthur Jones ★ Tausha Jackson Freshman unde cided Freshman in elementary education Officer on Junior Jubilee Café volunteer, University Affairs Committee attendee and active on floor in Templin Hall. 10 I can best represent my constituents by staying involved and never assuming what they want, but rather continuing to ask my constituents what they need. In order to be effective, I must reach beyond the groups and organizations that I am aware of now and listen and pay attention to those that are crying for help. It is not my views that need to be represented, but rather those without a voice. Marynell Jones ★ I believe Student Senate needs students who are in touch with reality I believe that I bring a different perspective of that, which is necessary to maintain and improve the representative nature of Student Senate. Officer on junior Greek Council; copresident on my floor; active in Campus Crusade; KU ambassador; member of Kappa Alpha Theta I have lived in the dorms and understand the issues facing them, such as parking and safety. I also have discussed issues with students in every aspect of the freshman/sophomore constituent. I am open to discussion about all issues facing my area. I plan to change Student Senate by bringing in a louder voice for freshmen and sophomores and helping their issues to be heard. Molly Kocour ✔ Freshman in political science and communications - Parliamentarian for Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, communications coordinator for SLAB, Student Senate lobbyist to Topeka central University Affairs committee meet In order to ensure fair representation, I would assure that incoming freshman would be well-informed about their CONTINUED ON PAGE 15A 2 TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 OPINION THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 15A KEY TO CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENTS ★ KUnited Candidate Delta Force Candidate . Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade Candidate - Independent Candidate √ Endorsed by the editorial board CONTINUED FROM PAGE 14A place in the University by visiting residence halls and speaking with resident assistants, sophomores would be made aware of the issues with the help of utilizing the power and advice of the Freshman/Sophomore Advising Center. I would make the general student population more aware of the power, importance and influence of the senators and open committees which determine the course of KU's future. Elizabeth Knop Freshman in social welfare Member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority I would best represent my constituents by finding out what they think PETER KIDDY needs to be changed on or about campus. I would take their suggestions back to Senate and work with members to figure out a solution. I would want my constituents to know that their suggestions count. I would offer new outlooks on the issues brought to Senate and work on uniting Student Senate with the student body to improve campus. Jennifer Lyon Freshman in prebusiness Member of Kappa Delta sorority, member of Student Senate Finance Committee Through being in a 10 Senate Committee my freshman year. I can now take my past experience and all that I've learned with the help of Senate members to help my fellow students. I can help them learn about many organizations and programs that they would never have known about. Student Senate is such a great organization, I want KU students to know what exactly Senate does and how it affects their everyday lives. Kevin McKenzie ✓ Freshman in political science and American studies AURH student senator, Library Board member, organized effort to get referendum A on the ballot I would represent my constituents by actively listening to their concerns. Currently Senate does not do enough outreach, ensuring that they are accessible to their constituents. Specifically, I would work to bring more recycling and ecological awareness to campus. I would work to alleviate parking problems, possibly with prioritized parking. Should referendum A fail, I will continue to fight for direct representation for first-year students. In the event referendum A passes I will work to make Senate more open and relevant to the student body. Christie Moses ▲ ✔ V rreshman in CLAS Secretary of the Student Rights Committee; chair for the Online Course Evaluations Subcommittee working to estab lish student evaluations of courses: KU Debate squad, Amnesty International and Students for Peace; volunteer at the Lawrence Humane Society. - Freshman/Sophomore CLAS is supposed to represent freshmen and sophomores; however, many people serving now are in their junior year. If elected, I will be serving during my sophomore year, meaning I will be going through the same experiences as my constituents. I have also been serving this constituency by working on Referendum A. I don't want to change Student Senate; I want to change KU through Senate. I will work to achieve course evaluations and Daisy Hill safety. Steve Munch ✩ Freshman, unde-ided Student Rights associate senator; Senate Outreach Board; Campus Safety Advisory Board; ASHC Leadership develop A. ment program; ASHC Social Roundtable. I'll also be serving as an orientation assistant this summer and as proctor of K.K Amini Scholarship Hall next semester. I'd be accessible to my constituents and open to their opinions. If elected, open forums, surveys, and other outreach efforts could help myself and other FR-SO CLAS senators stay in tune with the interests and stances of our constituents. Past that it's just a matter of thinking things through and doing the right thing. I'd work to bolster student interest and participation in what we do. Student Senate is powerless and its work irrelevant if it does not have support and input from the student body. Freshman undecided Ethan Nuss ▲ ✓ Co-Chairman of Online Course Evaluations Subcommittee, served on Student Rules and Regs Review Subcommittee, Students for Peace, Men Can Stop Rape, Student Rights Committee Member, Delta Force Activist organization, Codirector of my high school debate team PETER BOWT Student Senate should be more in touch with students.I plan to make the KU info shack an active display of senator contact information, legislation updates, organization meeting times and a suggestion box. I will continue my efforts with freshman representation and online course evaluations. I will work for bipartisanship to enact policies that directly affect students. I will also support responsible delegation of student fees. Dan Peters ▲ ✔ Sophomore in geography and broadcast journalism KU Ambassador, student telecounselor for the Office of Admissions and Scholarships, grader and test proctor for geography department ALEXANDER GILBERT I would represent my constituents by working to make the needs and wants of our student body a reality. Individually, I strongly advocate an implementation of meal plans at the Kansas Union and Wescoe Beach, improved availability of student parking and additional computer labs on campus. I hope to increase students' awareness of the power Student Senate holds to improve our educational experience while advocating change and increased opportunities for students. Kristan Seibel √ Freshman in political science and international studies Member of the KU Young Democrats, member of the Global Futures International Business Group, member of the KU Honors Program, high school debate president for two years, intern for Congressman Dennis Moore in Kansas City, Kan... office, member KU ballroom dance club, student assistant in the School of Fine Arts dean's office, 4-H leadership roles (secretary, president, vice President, treasurer) Students' concerns do not end when they leave the campus. Several issues like tuition, housing and safety not only involve the University's policies, but local, state and national governments. I will work through Student Senate to lobby and help solve problems at all levels, truly representing students' needs. I would want all students to feel directly connected to Student Senate actions by providing students with suggestion/feedback boxes at central locations on campus. Brandon Snook Sophomore in voice performance and composition musical/ opera, The Magic Flute, member of two KU choirs and elected positions in eight organizations since high school — Lead roles in KU's I will be a good helper. I am not on a power trip. However, I feel that there are issues that many students have right now that are not being heard. I will work hard to have my constituents' opinions heard, not just my own. I love KU and I want everybody to be happy that they came here! two as president. I would change Student Senate by raising the bar a little bit and make the Senate more available to all students, all the time, not just during election time. Kyle Stearns Freshman in communications with a minor in leadership Student Senate com mittee member involved in creating a freshman advisory council through Senate, member of Templin Hall Executive government and active in AURH ■ If elected I would first push the issues that I am currently campaigning of with Delta Force and the issues that deal most directly with my constituents. I would also strive to speak and reach out to as many members of my constituency as possible by making my name known and surveying students of their problems and concerns. I would always keep my eye on anything that I can improve through Senate for my constituents. The first change I would push for in Student Senate is cut through the bureaucracy and to make Senate more easily accessible to all students. I would also promote more student involvement in all aspects of Senate. Nick Sterner ✩ Freshman in psychology University Affairs committee member; fund raising coordinator for the Student Legislative Awareness Board; University Senate associate YUANDAO senator; recreation board member; new recreation center planning committee board member; lobbyist at state and national level for the needs of students My goal is to get to know as many of my constituents as possible and be available to all ideas. My biggest goal is to work on subjects that are relative and positive for the campus and students. I want to represent students on a greater level in the state and, hopefully, help KU as a whole One of my goals is to promote unity in Senate. I think one of the more important goals should be to work harder to promote KU in the state and support KU and all its students. Jana Szatkowski ✩ Sophomore in journalism Incumbent Nunemaker senator, member of the Panhellenic Association Judicial Board, member of the University Affairs Committee, co-coordinator for Mentors in the Lives of Kids, member of Chi Omega sorority, KU ambassador and vice president of Junior Greek Council. Incumbent Understanding the issues that the freshmen/sophomore CLAS students face is the most important factor in trying to help with their concerns. I feel that i am involved or have been involved in diverse organizations where i have learned and can learn more from the KU students I want to see Student Senate improve its outreach to all KU students, and inform them of the involvement possibilities that Senate offers. Jenny Ternes ✔ Sophomore in political science Incumbent Incumbent Student Academic Services Board; vice president of member development in Alpha Campus Delta sorority Junior Greek Council; University Affairs committee member; Nunemaker senator; Mentors in the Lives of Kids volunteer constituents is to be open minded and active in different aspects of the University. I also believe that when a senator is first elected they need to access the needs and concerns of their constituents and work to fulfill those needs. I believe the best way to represent my I believe Student Senate needs to continue to be open to the student body and their concerns. By continuing organization visits all year, I believe we can stay in tune with all students' needs. Peter "Pookie" Thornhill - Collins Wade ✔ Junior in political science Black Student Union Representative, NAACP political chairman, Hawklink program/STEP. Student Senate senator at Kansas City Kansas Community College. Student Senate Body President at KCKCC, African American Student Union Treasurer at KCKCC I would best present my constituents with the MRC and Campus Safety. To be the voice for the freshmen/sophomores to keep them up to date on the issues on KU campuses. Another thing I would push for is diversity issues, education program for the student who can't pay for class and other issues that have a great affect on our student body. If I could change it, I would get more minority involvement on KU campus. I would push the issues of bringing the minority and the minority communities together so we as human beings will learn more about each other's culture and background. SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com.If you have general questions or comments, email the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: The Kansan will run as many submissions as possible that conform to these guidelines. Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com - These are the platforms each of the coalitions are running on. The platforms are as reported in the March 10 The University Daily Kansan. 踊 Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Stauffer-Flint Delta Force Expanding the sexual assault awareness program in the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center by adding another part-time employee or a full-time employee in order to inform more living organizations and student groups about sexual assaults. Placing more blue emergency lights and phones place in areas near where campus ends and off-campus begins. Guard against tuition increasing by more than 10 percent each year by lobbying in Topeka. Change city ordinances 7323 and 7326. 7323 limits certain residential zones to allowing no more than three unrelated people to live together. 7326 allows dwelling searches. Allow students to view comments and evaluations online of teachers before enrolling. KUnited Create the Jayhawk Express a free bus route that would travel between the new recreation center and the Memorial Stadium parking lot. Continue efforts to build a new Multicultural Resource Center and add a paid executive position in Student Senate to ensure long-term commitment to cultural awareness. Off-set tuition increases. Let students vote online on whether to increase student fees. Make sure tuition increase money is used for student benefit. Expand the book exchange and incorporate it into online enrollment. Make advising and tutoring services available online. Lord Wads Get better student seats at basketball games. Create classrooms for smokers and non-smokers. Encourage instructors to share their passions, not just textbooks, with their students. Expand funds for SafeRide and a new bus route to stop drinking students from driving. Allow beer at football and basketball games. > 16A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 ational pionship INSIDE Full coverage from Kemper to campus See pages 10, 11 and 12 TODAY All classes canceled 1 p.m. pep rally In Allen Field House E UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Ycd. 98, No. 123 (UAPS 650 640) amps! will overcome the NCAA National Basketball Championship by 60 points. Oklahoma will reach its seventh national title in Kansas City. leads o title ] KUWI EXTRA Daily Kans Daily Kans KU WI EXTRA Daily Kansa 48th Year, No. 118 LAWRENCE, KANAB Thursday PART BOW: (front) Dean Kelly Kenny Dueller Johnny Thompson Dan Amberman Dan Smith Jack Rodgers Allen Kailer PART BOW: Anson Squire at Dye Drewport og" Allen mary tory ns By Henry D. blackson bobin kamm KANSAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1970 LANGARO 20 LANGARO 21 LANGARO 17 LANGARO 23 LANGARO 19 LANGARO 41 LANGARO 18 LANGARO 26 LANGARO 8 LANGARO 34 LANGARO 14 LANGARO 35 LANGARO 26 LANGARO 18 LANGARO 33 awkers Jar St. John's. Kansas was the first NCAA championship bid high alert as the daybreak rolled over St. John's of Brooklyn 10 to 43 in the tournament finals at Scottsdale. The win sends Kansas into the Olympics playoff to Kansas City Saturday. Controlled by and held by the Kansas Athletic Conference, the Kansas team is on the road against Iowa State and Oklahoma State. We are confident as he continued to bear the Kansas Labor force from the NCAA, two teams three times in his career, three times for the college football team, four times for the college basketball team. But he was unsuccessful at all of those. He was unsuccessful in his high school years, unsuccessful in his college years, and unsuccessful in his professional life. he half hooting and shag about his girls. The bank flow he gave and gave free throws for public. He attempted to atk invulnerable by drawing back four moves must be given which is exacted upon on the outside it should UITTLEMENTANUMBER OF THE BURGUNDY WORKS, UNDER THE LEASE OF THE EASTERN CITY OF BROOKLYN. BOROUGH, N.Y. AUGUST 12, 1865. WILLIS HUNT, MILTON, MA., with a staff, who was a teacher for many years in the local school system, and was born in Brooklyn on August 12, 1865. Classic Games Classic Coach Neil Mulka/Kansan celebration party firecrackers and streets I almost too had won. But, instead, the jayhawks, I ended with "I am only point. I do just Minneapolis, MN Mid Ive sat down 11:20 p.m. I think about the range of through my bed I stayed up 5 columns out and we won. I had inpating a long n had my buddy n need that the n I had takem sure this night w It was a hell of a night. Not only as a diehard Kansas basketball fan, but also as a journalist. Every staffer at the Kansan, sports fan or not, was hoping to be a part of a paper like those you see on this page. A news front that would go down in Kansas basketball history along with Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich. We all realized no one would know the faces or even the names of the people behind the issue, but we would know. We would remember the work that went into a newspaper that would show up on posters and T-shirts everywhere. At The University Daily Kansan, we started wondering "what if" about a month ago. But it wasn't until last Saturday, when the Jayhawks took revenge on Arizona, that we began to plan. Don't get us wrong, we had a backup plan. We didn't want to jinx our beloved 'Hawks by only planning for a championship. First, there was the lesson in journalism. The design, the angles they took on stories, the way they described the atmosphere and excellent uses of headlines. Things only a proud journalism-dork, like myself and my Kansan colleagues, would enjoy. As we prepared for this issue we looked at the pages you see here for ideas and inspiration. But after about an hour at the Spencer Research Library we all took away so much more. I thought I knew just about everything there was to know. But as I thumbed through the pages of the March 27, 1952, and April 6, 1988, issues of the Kansan, I saw just how much I didn't know. before the game I sat down in But most important, I thought, was the history lesson in Kansas basketball tradition. SPORTS COMMENTARY Jessica Tims Jessica Tims jtims@konsen.com the newsroom believing, win or lose, I would be content with what I had gained from this experience. There were only 500 students that ran to 9th and Massachusetts streets after the game in 1952. Phone lines were jammed after the game in 1988. But I was wrong. As the Kansan staff huddled around the television waiting for a "One Shining Moment" montage, Roy Williams taught 25 student journalists something that no instructor ever could. When asked about the coaching vacancy in North Carolina, minutes after the heart-breaking loss, Williams reacted on impulse. As Bonnie Bernstein asked about his interest level in the job, the entire staff booed. As fans, we knew it was wrong, as journalists, we knew why she had to do it. The tension mounted after she pressed the question. "I could give a shit about North Carolina right now," Williams snapped. "I've got 15 kids in that locker room that I love." Williams apologized for the comment in the post game press conference, saying that mentor Dean Smith would have been hurt by his use of "blankety-blank." But he didn't need to apologize. The man made his point, the only way he could to get the media off his back. He even gave fair justifications for his comments. "The guy in your ear who told you you have to ask that question — as a journalist, that's fine, but as a human being, that's not very nice, because that's not very sensitive," he said, "and I got to think in tough times that people should be more sensitive." Williams showed everyone not only journalists, that compassion goes a long way. He may not have won the championship, but he gained respect from all of those viewing. It was respect for speaking his mind and teaching us all a lesson in humanity. No matter how it ended, or how our last headline read, on behalf of the entire Kansan staff, I want to thank coach Roy Williams. He and his team gave us the best season of our lives, both on the court and in the newsroom. It was a pleasure to cover and learn from such a dynamic team and amazing coach. Time is an Arma senior in journalism. She is the Kansan sports editor Kansan staffers remember the 1988 Kansas Championship team on 5B What will you remember most about last night's game? E-mail your story to jtims@kansan.com 4 A tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 2003 SO CLOSE Jayhawks fall short Kansas was 12 for 30 from the free-throw line,the lowest ever in a championship game for a team with at least 20 attempts. The 18 missed free-throws matched the most ever in a title game. Nick Collison's 21 rebounds are the second-most in a championship game, and the most in 47 years. It is also the most in an NCAA tournament game this year. Syracuse's 53 points are the most ever in a first half of a championship game, third-most in any half. The teams's combined 95 points are the most in a first half of a championship game, third-most in any half. Keith Langford went 18 of 23 (78.3 percent) from the field in Kansas's two Final Four games making him fourth-best in Final Four history. KANSAS Kansas' Jeff Graves and Nick Collison battle for the ball against a Syracuse player. Despite their efforts, the Jayhawks still lost by 3 points. Aaron Showalter/Kansan Boisterous or silent, fans reveal emotions By Henry C. Jackson and Erin Ohm cijackson@kansan.com and eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writers The fans on Massachusetts Street said the Jayhawks were supposed to win. Yet, in the depair of last night's defeat celebration prevailed. Students set off firecrackers and rode through the streets. It almost looked as if the Jayhawks had won. "I can only make animal noises at this point; it's just pain," said Seth Ribane, Minneapolis, Minn., sophomore, said But, instead of resounding support for the Jayhawks, the most popular cheer ended with "you Syracuse." Mass St. sad, rowdy BURLEY Brandon Baker/Kansan Matt Gonzales, Overland Park resident, rides in the back of a friend's pickup truck down Massachusetts Street after the Jayhawks lost to Syracuse. SEE MASS ON PAGE 8B Kansan staff reports Campus was eerily quiet after the University of Kansas men's basketball team lost to Syracuse 81-78 in the NCAA championship game. Just three days ago, Jayhawk Boulevard was filled with about 5,000 screaming Jayhawk fans. Not last night. Only a few dejected fans walked down campus' main drag muttering softly to themselves or crying. "No one cares about second place," lae Smith, Emporia senior, said. But for the most part, the students filed down the boulevard silently. Campus subdued The Campanile still played the fight song even after the loss and a few sad firecrackers sounded in the distance. SEE CAMPUS ON PAGE 9B CITY OF NY Eric Braem/Kansan Police officers on Wescoe Beach talk amongst one another. Rowdy fans they expected did not show up. Midnight reflections on wrenching, emotional ride I've sat down at the computer and it's 11:20 p.m. I think about what I've seen tonight and the range of emotions that have gone through my body. I stayed up 'Sunday night writing two columns — one for if we lost and one for if we won. I had left my car at home, anticipating a long night of partying ahead. I had my buddy Derek Bernay's number on speed dial (he goes to Syracuse). I had taken every precaution to make sure this night was one to remember. Freshman point guard Gerry McNamara had hit six three-pointers in the first half — it's going to be OK. Nick Collison will find a way to win in his last game in a Jayhawk uniform — it's going to be OK. We have a few seconds left, and Kirk Hinrich will get an open look, I know it — it's going to be OK. It has to be. I kept telling myself, as the Orangemen built a monumental lead in the first half that it would be OK. Once again, as it happened with Michigan in 1993, I was let down on a — it's going to be OK. It has to be. SPORTS COMMENTARY Ryan Greene rgreeen@kansan.com OF ORIGIN COMMENTARY lonely Monday night in early April. I sat in room 105 in Stauffer-Flint Hall, and as I saw Kirk Hinrich's final prayer sail past the basket on the enormous screen, I cupped my face with my hands, almost in tears. I looked up and could see the small television in my basement as I did 10 years ago, wiping my eyes with my oversized Michigan forward Chris Webber jersey. Of course, in the heartbreaking minutes following the Syracuse triumph, the expected happened. Derek called me, allowing me to hear the riots going on around him. Everyone in the Kansan newsroom, sports fan or not, was silent. Those in the newsroom who were diehard Jayhawk faithful talked with their fathers on the phone, trying to figure out what they had just witnessed. If you've made it this far into my weekly column, you can see that it's pretty unorganized. It's basically me putting down what I'm feeling on a computer screen. SEE GREENE ON PAGE 4B "I could give a shit about North Carolina right now. I've got 13 kids in that locker room that I love." 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Roy Williams Inside Sports SPORTS COMMENTARY OFICIO COMMERCIAI Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Free throws key statistic in close game The closer you get to achieving a goal, the more it hurts when you don't get it. When that goal is within your grasp, and the only thing stopping you from getting it is you, that's when it hurts the most. That's the feeling the 2003 Kansas men's basketball team will have to live with when it looks back on its devastating loss to Syracuse in last night's NCAA Championship game. When Roy Williams reflects on his latest shot to win the ultimate prize, he won't remember Syracuse's tough 2-3 zone defense. He won't remember the match-up problems the Jayhawks had with Syracuse's nearly unstoppable freshman forward, Carmelo Anthony. He won't even remember the Jayhawks' inability to get their fast break going in the opening 20 minutes. Despite all those problems, the 'Hawks persevered and gave themselves a real shot to win. What Williams will remember are two numbers: 12 and 30. Kansas shot 30 free throws against the Orangemen. It made 12 of them. That's 40 percent, roughly the free-throw percentage of your average one-armed beggar. If Kansas had made a terrible 53 percent of those 30 free throws, they would be bringing a trophy home to Lawrence with a 1-point victory. Ine Jayhawks lost the national championship game solely because of their free-throw shooting. There's no worse way to lose. Why? A basketball team has complete control over its free-throw shooting. The opposition can't stop you from making your free throws; it watches helplessly as you get a clear look at a 15-foot shot. Free throws are supposed to be "free" points. But Williams watched helplessly as the team's inexcusable free-throw shooting cost him a national championship. That absolutely sucks. Even worse, the Jayhawks can't learn anything from this loss. Teams practice free throws constantly. They shoot them at the end of practice, so players get the feel of shooting them when they're tired. But in the games, you make them or you don't. When you don't, it's nobody's fault but your own. But this may hurt more than all of those. Despite its tremendous effort in the title game, Syracuse didn't win the 2003 National Championship. Kansas lost it. I've sat through every disappointing tournament loss in the Roy Williams era: the 1997 loss to Arizona, Rhode Island in 1998, UTEP in 1992, the list goes on. Berlin is a Leawood senior in journalism Free forAll Yeah, Grandma is already drunk already at the Syracuse University party in Shawnee, Kansas. Why is there a Syracuse party in Kansas? That is like the biggest loser party ever. There were like six people there, Grandma's drunk, there are two kids, a dog, and a TV from 1952. They're weird, Rock Chalk, Rock Chalk. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Hi, I'm a Syracuse fan and I'm at a party in Shawnee and Grandma... yeah, Grandma's drunk. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Yeah, I'm a KU fan but my Grandma went to Syracuse and Grandma . . put the vodka down. Grandma, grandma . . put your on, put your top back on! Oh dear Lord. I gotta go. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Thirty seconds until tip-off, nearly two hours until a victory, we're on the way to a Final Four. Let's go Jayhawks. I just wanna give a big shoutout to the guy wearing the KUnited shirt and the national championship. Go Jayhawks. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. 丽 So I'm watching the Final Four and it's halftime and we're not doing very well in championship game and I think we need to get Lil Bow Wow in there with magical Michael Jordan sneakers to really help us out. That would really pull us through. Roy Williams for President served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. --served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Hi, somebody needs to poke that Carmelo dude in the butt. I hate him served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Hey, I think the problem with Ben McCarthy's article is that he's a loser and he wishes he was a basketball player, because obviously he will never, ever get any girl to like him. KU has a basketball team? served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Ummmm, yeah, so Mrs. Chancellor Bob canceled class for Tuesday tomorrow 'cause she and Chancellor Bob are at the Final Four. So they won't be at class tomorrow. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Gerry McNamara thinks he's Billy badass. He needs to calm down with those three's. Go' Hawks. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Hinrich, Collison, Williams, I love you. Pull this out. TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 Whether we win or lose Monday night, Tuesday this entire city of Lawrence will be subjected to one city wide hangover. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. I would just like to say, and I think I'm speaking for the entire campus, Hin-rich you are the biggest tropper ever. Graves, I'll make love to you if you make this free throw. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Rock Chalk Jayhawk, screw KU. --served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. I just got done watching the national title game and all I want to say is thank you for a great season Hawks, thank you for your leadership, thank you for everything you've done for us. We will always remember you. Nick and Kirk, I am so sorry you didn't win. I really thought you could and I really think you deserved it and I am so sorry it didn't happen, but I love you guys. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. OK, so life is definitely not fair. But the KU team did a great job there. It happens sometimes. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. I was wondering where all the people got the blue and red leis and the red, yellow, and blue beads, and I really wanted some. Guess what? I got 'em after the game, I found them in the trash can. Hey, we're number two, and that ain't bad. Oh well, second place is better than Mizzou place. Oh, and Carmelo sucks. 2 Hey, win or lose, I love Roy Williams. Muah. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. OK, we just lost the championship. say we need a day of grieving and Tuesday's and Wednesday's classes should be canceled. Oh, ok, two days of grieving, but what KU student can count? served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Even though they lost, I said it before and I'm saying it now: I'd sleep with all of them. Go KU. 图 Roy Williams sucks I find it funny how when we talk crap on KU, all you guy's can talk about it K-State basketball. We never claimed we're good. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. The KU basketball team choked again. What do know? The University of Kansas is one stellar program especially when their all-star Nick Collison fouls out and proceeds to allow them to lose the game, national championship that is, and really get blown out by freshmen and sophomores. Congratulations, KU. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Rock, Chalk, Choke Hawks, KU served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. So Roy, I don't even want you to go to North Carolina. YEAAHHHHHH. --served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Roy's leaving. Get ready, Roy is leaving for North Carolina. 器 Roy Williams doesn't even deserved to be contacted by North Carolina. So I'm just curious. Did KU pay buy the ticket for Roy to go to North Carolina, or did he have to buy it out of his own pocket. 图 So KU had a chance at a national championship tonight, and what did they do? Oh wait, a minute, what they always do. Choke. 图 All I gotta say is that after watching Roy speak after the game, he is my guy. He是我的 guy. I pray to Allah Roy. Hey, now that Collison and Hinrich are gone, you can look forward to football. So, I don't give shit about North Carolina right now, end quote, Roy Williams. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Oh my God, did Roy just say 'I don't give a bleep about North Carolina'? Excert for the bleep. 图 served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Hey, if Roy decides to go to North Carolina, he better dye his hair one color instead of having it half brown. half gray. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Hey, they might not have won the national championship,but their cheerleaders are hot. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Man, Carmelo Anthony is one stud of a basketball player. Too bad he doesn't play for KU. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Roy Williams, I love you. I love you so much. Your home is with us, and we love you no matter what. God bless you. Was that a tear in Collison's eye? 图 图 All I got to say is thank you, thank you Kirk for the greatest years of my life. Oh man, I was really hoping that KU would win. Too bad that they suck. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. I have to say that Syracuse sucks and Carmelo Anthony needs to go to the NBA and Roy need to not go to North Carolina. Hey, this is for my basketball players and I just want to tell you guys not to be sad for a second. We're really proud of you guys. Go 'Hawks. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. NCAA gonna win the championship this year. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. So we don't have what it takes to win the Big 12 Championship and we don't have what it takes to win the national championship either. Honestly, anyone who loses to North Carolina doesn't deserve to win a national championship. That's why KU did not succeed. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. I guess KU just didn't put on their pimp juice. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. So I guess we just didn't have the pimp juice that was needed to win the national championship. Go Orangemen. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Syracuse University rocks. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Go Wildcats. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. served in the Nuclear Navy, followed by a career in nuclear engineering and safety. He retired from management st Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant in 1996. Hi, this is Robin and we still love the Jayhawks and we still love Roy Williams. Right guys? WOOOOOOOOOOOOOO. MORE SPORTS FREE FOR ALL ON P. 10B POLL Will Roy Williams kansan.com fill the coaching vacancy at North Carolina? No. he stayed last time; he will stay this time. He will consider it after the tourna ment excitement dies down No, North Carolina won't pursue him after he said no last time. Yes, Nick and Kirk are gone; so is Roy. Log on to Kansan.com to cast your vote. KANSAS BASKETBALL Final Four ratings down despite viewing increase NEW ORLEANS — Final Four victories by Kansas and Syracuse drew overnight ratings that were down from last year's semifinals broadcast. Kansas' 94-61 victory over Marquette received a 6.8 overnight rating and a 13 percent share, down 30 percent from the 9.7-19 for last year's Final Four opener in which Indiana defeated Oklahoma. Syracuse's 95-84 victory over Texas drew an 8.6-14, down 25 percent from the 11.5-20 for last year's Maryland victory over Kansas. The network said ratings were down about 22 percent for the entire NCAA tournament. Last year's NCAA tournament had no war coverage to compete with and overnight ratings showed cable viewing was up 24 percent over last year for the period covering Saturday's two semifinal games. Overnight ratings measure the 53 largest TV markets in the United States, covering about 65 percent of the country. National ratings will be available later this week.Each national rating point represents nearly 1.06 million TV homes. The Associated Press Fans can welcome 'Hawks with celebration, parade Kansas coach Roy Williams and his team will be welcomed home in a community celebration at 5:30 tonight. Allen Fieldhouse's doors will open at 4:30 p.m. The program will include the KU pep band and dance team and KU mascots cheerleaders. The KU student group Random Harmony will sing the alma mater to conclude the program. The event is free and open to the public. On Thursday the team will be honored with a parade through downtown Lawrence. The men's basketball players and coaches will be featured in a 4 p.m. parade beginning at Seventh and Massachusetts streets. The parade will move south along Massachusetts Street to South Park near 11th Street. The teams will ride in convertibles accompanied by floats, a fire truck and the pep band. The parade is being organized by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Kansan staff report Jayhawk CAFE CONGRATULATIONS ON A GREAT SEASON, 'HAWKS!!! LAWRENCE 843-9273 It can only happen at The Hawk! Meet the Author. Joint Eagles Rohheet C. Hagan Joint Eagles a suspense novel of nuclear terrorist threat against the United States KU Graduate Robert C. Hagan THURS. April 10th 5:00-6:30pm 1 785-864-4431 oreedbooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 Jayhawka.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fri 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support stude 1969 Oread Books TUESDAY,APRIL 8.2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Baseball to give reserves experience By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Baseball coach Ritch Price is used to beautiful and sunny weather on a consistent basis, being from California. It's been a rude awakening trying to schedule games with the inconsistent Midwest weather, and it became a problem again this week. The Jayhawks were originally supposed to play yesterday in Macomb, Ill. against Western Illinois, and then Creighton University was scheduled to come to Kansas on Wednesday for a night game. Neither game will happen in its original time slot. The Creighton game has been canceled, and the Jayhawks will now travel to Western Illinois for a doubleheader with the Leathernecks starting at noon on Thursday. Instead of hosting Creighton, Kansas will now play Baker University at 1 p.m. today. Earlier this year, Kansas downed Baker 11-2 on March 25. "I have a lot of respect for the coaches in the Midwest that get their teams to prepare properly with the inconsistent weather." Price said. "It has been a real nightmare with the scheduling and the weather is just not cooperating at all." The game against Baker will give Price an opportunity to play some reserves who do not usually get to play in conference games. Junior Kyle Kilgo will get the start at third base and junior Jake Kauzlarich will start behind the plate. Price has also named his pitching starter for today. Freshman Don Czyz will get the start on the mound. Price also expects senior Ryan Jakubov and freshman Eric Peterson to pitch a few innings. "Hopefully this will provide an opportunity for some guys that do not normally get to play to get some valuable innings," Price said. "Czyz will start for us, and this is an important start for him to gain some confidence in himself." Czyz has appeared in 11 games this season but has started only once. The freshman from Overland Park is 1-1 on the season with a 5.48 ERA. Peterson has appeared in 10 games while Jakubov has pitched in seven games. Jakubov's 4.50 ERA is the lowest among the three pitchers. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan KU Edited by Brandon Gay Senior pitcher Ryan Jakubov is expected to play a few innings when the University of Kansas hosts Baker at 1 p.m. today. Jakubov holds the team's lowest ERA with 4.50. Coach's mother has stroke during game NEW ORLEANS — The mother of Marquette basketball coach Tom Crean had a stroke while watching the Golden Eagles' semifinal game against Kansas at the Superdome. The Associated Press Marjorie Crean, 64, was listed in good condition yesterday at the Medical Center of Louisiana- Charity Hospital, where she was taken Saturday night after complaining of tingling and weakness in her arms during Marquette's 94-61 loss. "She's trying to get better. Hopefully she's going to be discharged today so we can take her home," the coach said. "It's going to be a process. It's going to take some time for her to recover." C re a n learned of his mother's illness after his post game interview. He said he has spent most of his time "I literally walked off the podium from the press conference and a minute and a half later I was in a police car going to the hospital," Crean said. EAGLE since then with his mother and hasn't had a chance to reflect on Marquette's first trip to the Final Four in 26 years or the bitter loss to the Jayhawks. "So, it's been a whirlwind of emotions since 5:07 Saturday night." kansan.com HIPAA ... It's Official! We've always protected your confidential information. s Official! Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act makes it official. Look for more details on our website www.ku.edu/~shs and when you visit Student Health Services at Watkins Memorial Health Center. color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - B West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) Party in Paradise KILLER NIGHTLY SPECIALS PREMIUM BAR: Choose from a wide selection of beers and wines LIVE MUSIC FROM HIP HOP TO JAZZ PLAY IT NOW SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts NEW HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 6:30AM-2:00AM SUNDAY 8:00AM-11:00PM YOU KNOW US FOR OUR BREAKFAST. NOW TRY US FOR OUR DINNER FRESH SEAFOOD SPECIALS Paradise Café Good real food. Real good times. Paradise Cafe & Bakery 728 Massachusetts GOOD REAL FOOD right next door to Creation Station "We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!" LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTIC INC. AAA Approved Auto Repair TECH-NET Professional Auto Services 842-8665 Mon - Fri 7:30-5:30 2858 Four Wheel Drive Lawrence, KS www.lawrenceautodiag.com Danny Fox, owner Dr. F. - complete engine repair .alignments VISA BCCNVER - quick lube service *starters clutch . transmission - radiator - brakes - *electrical - a/c service · computer diagnostic · fuel injection service · exhaust · c-v joints · batteries · tune-ups · struts and shocks Congratulations on a great season! new martini list appetizers new wine list entertainment live The Lounge at Paisanos RISTORANTE open until 2 am • 2112 W. 25 St. open until 2 am • 2112 W 25 St. Want to Help us Repair People's Lungs and Lives? C Contact Respiratory Care Education at KU Medical Center 913.588.4630 or inquire@kumc.edu by e-mail See Freshman Sophomore Advising Center for information and advising 4B = THEUNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 Caught celebrating too much for the game? JJ Call Legal Services for Students for free advice. Congrats Hawks on a great season Legal Services Legal Services for Students Rm 148 Burge ~ 864-5665 ~ Jo Hardesty, Director Officers get help patrolling city By Lauren Beatty and Michelle Burhenn lbeatty@kansan.com and mburhenn@kansan.com Kansas senior staff writers Students on Massachusetts Street last night encountered police officers every hundred feet. Police officers from five different jurisdictions were busy patrolling the streets of Lawrence to help monitor the crowds and keep unruly fans from getting out of control. Sgt. Mike Pattrick of the Lawrence Police Department said the city received help from the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, KU Public Safety Office, Ottawa Police Department and the Kansas Highway Patrol. Before the game last night, officers said they expected a "big. happy crowd" if the Jayhawks won or lost. Firecrackers, honking and loud group cheers still echoed down Massachusetts Street even after the Jayhawks' defeat, but officers had made only two arrests at about midnight. Patrick said. He said the main difference between Saturday's crowd and the people gathered downtown last night was a decrease in the number of people on foot because of the cold weather. All additional officers who came to help maintain order were under the direction of the Lawrence Police, Patrick said. He could not give an estimate for the number of officers on patrol or the size of the crowd downtown. Although Ottawa, a city of about 12,000 directly south of Lawrence, rarely sees the kind of chaos that hit Lawrence last night, Capt. Ron Puterbaugh said his officers relied on their training and took orders from the KU Public Safety office. "We're here at the request of the University," he said. "We do what they ask. We follow their directions and handle everything the way they want it handled." Jim Weaver, executive officer at the Overland Park Police administration, said members of the explosive ordinance demolition team, or the bomb squad, were at the University last night at the request of the KU Public Safety Office. He also would not reveal how many members of the bomb squad were on campus for safety reasons. Lawrence-Douglas County Fire and Medical was on hand as well last night to deal with any medical or fire-related problems, such as the few dumpster fires that occurred in downtown alleys on Saturday. Firecrackers were set off, but no fires were reported in the few hours after the game. Deputy Chief Mark Bradford said yesterday before the game he hoped for a crowd similar to Saturday's because the thousands of fans were fairly well-behaved. Bradford said off-duty personnel were asked to help along the Massachusetts Street corridor last night. Despite the late-night shifts, Harmon said the officers still had time to be fans and keep up with the score. Patrick said the final score was broadcast on the radio to all officers. —Kansan staff writer Erin Ohm contributed to this story. CONGRATULATIONS ON A GREAT SEASON! Edited by Jason Elliott SET'EM UP JACK'S LAWRENCE'S FINEST SPORTS BAR menu • 5-100" big screen tv's • ntn trivia Set'em Up Jack's Cold Beer * Good Food DAILY SPECIALS: BIG MONDAY: 1/2 PRICE BURGERS $2.50 DOMESTIC BIG BEERS SUPER TUESDAY: 50+ TACOS $2.00 CORONAS $2.50 MARGARITAS WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY: 30€ WINGS $2.00 DOMESTIC LONGNECKS THURSDAY: $2.00 GUINNESS, IMPORT & MICRO BREW PINTS 1800 E.23RD ST.IN THE 10 MARKETPLACE Greene CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Right now, I really don't care, because it's hard to follow a style outline when you're battling so many things in your head. However, there's only so long that you can dwell on things like this. Today, when I come back to the newsroom, everything will be back to normal, with my editors constantly whining to me about deadlines and such. I guess maybe I should actually get to the portion of this column that's about the game and end the suspense. I have been badgered and scorched in the Free For All in the past couple of weeks because I wrote an innocent column about Duke, Everyone was under the impression that I'm a Duke fan, but it was pretty middle-of-the-road. Plain and simple, I just love sports, and talking about events other than what happens here in Lawrence. So, take that into consideration when I say what I've learned from this season and this game in particular. I have seen the future of basket-ball, and I like it lot. Hakeem Warrick and Carmelo Anthony have never failed to impress me this season. They are long, athletic and versatile — the type of player today's game sees more often. I enjoyed watching both of them play, except for when it was against Kansas. I will continue to get on my knees and pray that on that night in late June, my Chicago Bulls will announce their selection of Anthony in the NBA draft. And if there is one burning memory of last night's game that I'll never forget, it will be Hakeem Warrick making the greatest defensive play I have ever seen, all but securing a national championship for Svacuse. Roy Williams took a page from Walter Payton's book — Never Die Easy It was the title of the late Chicago Bears' running back's biography, but that is the best slogan for this season's Kansas basketball team. Roy never gave up on his team or on the season. When Jeff Graves showed up 40 pounds overweight, they never gave up. When they lost three tough games at the season's start, they never gave up. When they were stuck in the NCAA Tournament's toughest bracket, they never gave up. If we all take one lesson away from this season's team, it's that you can never say it's over until it really is over. Only in Kansas, my friend Only in Kansas, would I wait outside of Jefferson's at 10 on a Saturday morning to watch a KU game that night. Only in Kansas, would 5,000 fans wait to greet their team back home from a victory in the West Regional at 4 a.m. And only in Kansas, can you truly say this is the home of the game of basketball. Well, it's time to go home and get ready for class in the morning. Until next week, I leave you with these three messages: I still want to marry Bonnie Bernstein, vote for Andy Knopp, and Rock Chalk Jayhawk Screw the 'Cuse. I'm leaving, and it's 12:11 a.m. Peace. Greene is a Vernon Hills, Ill., junior in journalism AWESOME SEASON JAYHAWKS It's BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL awrence, KS 1105 Mass. Lawrence, KS THE HAWKS ROCK! AWESOME SEASON JAYHAWKS BROTHERS Est.1967 BAR & GRILL MALT DRY THE HAWKS ROCK! CONGRATULATIONS ON A GREAT SEASON. FROM EVERYONE AT BROTHERS YOU SAW THE HAWKS WORK IT HERE WE LOOK FORWARD TO NEXT YEAR! "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Kansanstaff remembers 1988 game The Kansan staff looked back on the last NCAA Championship won by Kansas. Below are some of the stories staff members chose to tell. The Jaf Hawks may not have won last night's game, but we want to hear your stories about that game. Where were you? What happened? What made it a night you will remember? Selected memories will be printed in the Kansan sports section through the end of the week. If you would like to share your memory, e-mail sports editor Jessica Tims at tims@kansan.com I remember sitting in the dugout after baseball practice in the cool, Las Vegas, desert air. I was pondering the meaning of life, what my career plans were and why girls had cooties. What can I say? I was a 7-year-old, future third-generation Jayhawk. My second-generation KU alum father had neglected to pick me up. He was too busy watching the 'Hawks take it to the Sooners. I spoke to him about that memory yesterday, and he asked me if I understood now. Yeah Dad. I do. Rock Chalk Jayhawk. — Copy editor Todd Rapp Where was I on April 4, 1988? YOU ARE NOT THE SAME AS A CUSTOMER. Hill Campus editor Sarah Hill For the first half of the champion s h i p game, I was in the basement of my house in Great Bend, watching my Dad pace back and forth in front of the TV, pausing occasionally to express his extreme frustration with the officiating. "What are those refs doing?" he would exclaim. "Can't they see what's happening?" At halftime, my mom decided it was time for her little eighty- year-old to go to bed. Pleas to my father fell on deafears. PETER SCHMIDT "I can't believe this!" he kept saying. "I think we're going to win!" Jackson I spent the second half of the game crouched at the top of the stairs, listening to the television commentary (played at top volume) and more from Dad. I don't think I'll ever forgive my mother. Growing up in New Jersey, far away from Lawrence's windy sidewalks, "Danny and the Miracles" still managed to captivate a future Jayhawk. In fact 1988 is the first national championship game I remember. Specifically I remember my father, a Marquette graduate, turned to me and said "Danny Manning, he's something special." A few minutes later, he turned to his six-year-old son and said "He'll be something special in the NBA; watch him." Danny Manning didn't have the NBA career anybody thought he would, but the image of his smiling face stayed with me. When I left for school in the fall of 2000 I PLEASE CONTACT ME WITH ANY QUESTIONS. game." Tims reminded my dad of Manningand the 1988 game. "Right," he said. "Well, let's hope they've got another Danny Manning for you." Dad, I think we've got 13 of them. — Kansan staff writer Henry C. Jackson My parents had a work party to go to that night, so I was sent to Grandma's house where my aunts were watching a "big, important I remember jumping up and down doing cheers I made up about the jayhawks. I remember my aunts, both elementary --- Carr school teachers, excited because they got to wear KU shirts and jeans to work the next day. But my best memory was of Danny Manning's amazing show. That was the first Kansas basketball game I ever watched. The first time I ever understood the importance of "Rock Chalk," a phrase my dad said often. I still get chills watching highlights of that game and my heart races just reading about that game. That night I knew I wanted to be a Jayhawk. I don't think I have ever thanked my grandma and aunts for the best night of baby-sitting ever. That night, as corny as it sounds, really did mold me and lead me on the path that I'm on now. Thanks girls, love ya' always. —Edited by Amber Byarlay Liquor sales spike with championships By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Two items many students hold dear were affected by the NCAA Championship: liquor stores and cellular phones. Liquor stores saw an increase in traffic over the course of the day as students prepared to watch the game at various locations. "We didn't stock up on anything extra, we just acted as if it were a holiday," said Courtney Kimple, Ellinwood senior. "The busiest time was about an hour to an hour and a half before game time." Kimple is an employee at Cork & Barrel Wine and Spirits, 2000 W. 23rd St. Other area liquor stores including Alvin's Wine & Spirits, 905 Iowa St., and Myers Retail Liquor, 902 W. 23rd St., experienced brisk sales prior to game time, said store representatives. "I think we ordered some extra kegs," said Eric Gasper, Hoxie senior and employee at Alvin's. "I came in around 5 p.m. and the store was packed until the game started." Some students using cell phones during and after the game, experienced problems connecting telephone calls. "I kept trying to call my friend in Lawrence at halftime and it kept telling me my call couldn't be completed," said Angela Lappe, Orlando, Florida resident. "I finally got through after like trying 10 times." Lappe was trying to call Jennifer Finn, Hutchinson senior on her Verizon cell phone. "I didn't think there would be problem during halftime," Lappe said. "After the game, I got right through to her." - Edited by Jason Elliott CONGRATS 'HAWKS ON A GREAT SEASON University Book Shop 23RD & NAISMITH 785.749.5206 WWW.KUBOOKS.COM GET ANY 2 T-SHIRTS FOR $20 GOOD ON TEES REGULARLY PRICED $18.95 OR LESS. THIS OFFER IS NOT TO BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER PLEASE. OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 18, 2003 6B = THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 Nashville Star contestant and University of Kansas alumna Amy Chappell showed her love of KU basketball Saturday night on national television. After Chappell's performance on the USA network Saturday night, the television camera panned to her and she mouthed the words, "Rock, Chalk Jayhawk!" said Chappell's stepfather, Kip Emmerich. "She is definitely a KU Jayhawk basketball fan," Emmerich said. Chappell is a singer and songwriter in Nashville, Tenn. and is currently living in a Real World-type environment with other contestants on the reality television show, Nashville Star. The Jayhawk's journey through the NCAA tournament has already been immortalized in a song being played on the airways. The song called "Battle of Roy" humorously describes the team's performance and who they played to get to the Final Four Tournament in New Orleans. "In the second week of April I took a little trip down the Mississippi for the National Championship. I took Nick and Kirk and the whole dad gum team to the frickin' Final Four in New Orleans," claims one verse of the song, sung to a rock-a-billy boat. The classic rock station, 99.7 KY, in Kansas City, has been playing the song on the air. students chuckled as they listened to the song for the first time yesterday afternoon on Wescoe Beach. "it's no 'Super Bowl Shuffle,' but it's a quality song," said Drew Thomas, Hays senior. The song contains imitations of Williams, but it doesn't fool students and true fans. "I respect Roy Williams way too much to believe that that's him," said Amanda Boyer, Amarillo, Tex., sophomore. The Lawrence Journal-World was asked last week by police to remove the paper dispensers throughout Downtown and Campus. The city feared that the large metal objects would turn into tools for vandals during and after the chaos of last night's game. The Journal-World did not want to take a chance that the dispensers themselves could be destroyed. "We figured we would be better safe than sorry, since they are about $400 apiece," said Joe Lewis, circulation manager for the Journal-World. At the end of the first half of the game, one fan passed out in the stands of Memorial Stadium and was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for possible alcohol poisoning. Police and paramedics were unable to comment about the incident because of the fan's age. Anger, disappointment and sadness were felt on Daisy Hill after the Jayhawk's loss last night. The cold silence was broken be a few random car horn honks as students walked back to their residence halls from parking lots "The last few minutes everyone was at the edge of their seats," said Jenny Graber, Aurora sophomore and Lewis Hall resident. and congregated near the front doors of the their buildings. Graber described the mood after the buzzer sounded as anger. "Everyone is pissed off," she said. "They are slamming the coach, slamming the way we played." Other students were more optimistic about the Jayhawks performance. "I'm disappointed but they fought until the end," said Tamara Martinez, Santiago, Spain graduate student and Jayhawker Towers resident. A helicopter hovered overhead and tension built inside with every Jayhawk bucket, but the prayers and pleadings of all the fans on Massachusetts Street couldn't bring KU victory on Monday night. But as disappointed as KU fans were, it wasn't hard to find the silver lining in a season with such ominous clouds. "It hurts to be a 'Hawks fan sometimes,' said Brendan Goss, a junior in communications from Chicago, soon after KU fell to Syracuse. "But this is nothing compared to being a Bears fan." while the loss left many pensive 'Hawks fans longing for a few more free throws, or a few more minutes in the close game with Syracuse, others took time to revel in what was by all accounts an unprecedented run through the tournament. "When we beat Duke and Arizona I said, 'This is better than winning the national championship,' " said Greg Alison a 1999-grad from Kansas City, with tears in his eyes. Minutes later KU fans who stuck around to watch the festivities unfold on TV were treated to the rare treat of Kansas coach Roy Williams speaking his mind about the North Carolina coaching vacancy, leading some fans to irrational exuberance. "He said, 'I don't give a (crap) about the North Carolina job right now," said Mike Vanderslice. Stillwater, OK. "If that's true, I don't care about that game right now!" Fans at Old Chicago, 2329 Iowa St. were silent as the reality of last night's loss sunk in. "I thought that last shot was going to go in," said Sean Gleason, 2002 graduate. Kent Jewett, manager of Old Chicago, said more than 500 people were at the bar and grill last night for the game. Fans brought their own chairs when the bar ran out of seats. Others stood on booths cheering and later consoling one another. Gleason and his friend Tim Newman showed up at 11:30 yesterday morning to await the game. Newman, Topeka graduate student, said he was proud of the team but was frustrated with some of the plays. "We would've won if our free throws were on," Newman said. "But it's been awesome getting this far." LIBERTY HALL 64d Mass 7:49 1912 CITY OF GOD (m) 4:00 6:45 9:30 ADAPTATION. (m) 7:00 9:40 QUIET AMERICAN (m) 4:16 only 2 admissions for the price of 1 on Tues. 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Back Bikini and Brazilian Wax JODA & FRIEND 3009 W, 6TH 8541-0317 Salon Di Marco & Dan Soo Ge Dany Spen BRAZILIAN & BIKINI WAXING TRI- DIMENSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS TEXTURIZED HAIRCUTS FULL BODY WAXING (MEN WELCOME) EYEBROW & LASH TINTING 7 8 5 - 8 4 3 - 0 0 4 4 733 MASS LAWRENCE I TUESDAY,APRIL8.2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B Bulls general manager resigns for health reasons The Associated Press DEERFIELD, Ill. — Jerry Krause was certain he did the right thing, breaking up one Chicago Bulls dynasty to build the foundation for the next. Even as the losses mounted and frustrations grew, he always believed the Bulls would be champions again and that he'd be vindicated. It could still happen — but Krause won't be around to see it. Citing health reasons, the Bulls' general manager suddenly resigned yesterday, one week before the season ends. Krause, 64, left the Bulls' practice facility after telling the team and didn't elaborate on his health problems. But he's been bothered by a variety of ailments in recent years and has had a bad back all season. "The whole thing is sad," guard Jamal Crawford said. "People criticize him a lot for different things ... but he had a vision. And we want to continue that vision. "We're all saddened that he won't be there to share it with us," Crawford added. "But this is something he started and hopefully we can continue on with it." There is still plenty of work to be done. Stocked with young talent, the Bulls have shown promise this year. But they're still only 27-50 going into Tuesday night's game against Indiana, and will finish with a losing record for the fifth straight season. Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf said he plans to hire someone within the next month, giving the new GM time to evaluate the current roster before the draft and free agency. Among the possibilities are former players B.J. Armstrong and John Paxson, both of whom still have ties to the team. Armstrong is a special assistant to Krause, and Paxson is the team's radio analyst. And what about Michael Jordan? Jordan says he is going back to the front office after his third — and he swears final — retirement, but he doesn't have a deal with the Washington Wizards yet. Whoever the new GM is, he'll inherit a roster full of promise. "I think we're headed back in the right direction," coach Bill Cartwright said. "Was there an appropriate time to (break up the championship team)? I don't know. But I do know that right now we definitely have a nice foundation to head back to a championship." The Bulls could win another six titles, though, and Krause would still be burdened with the blame for dismantling the championship team and forcing Jordan out of Chicago. Jordan was already in Chicago when Krause became GM in 1985, but it was Krause who found the pieces that formed a dynasty. His most brilliant move was in 1987, when he maneuvered with Seattle for the draft rights to Scotte Pippen. Krause also drafted Horace Grant and signed Toni Kukoc, a Croatian star who was a key player on the final three championship teams. He also gambled big by trading for the mercurial Dennis Rodman, whose many eccentricities threatened to outweigh his physical skills. All of the moves paid off as Chicago won six titles from 1991-98, setting an NBA record with 72 victories in the 1995-96 season. Krause was named the league's executive of the year twice. "He brought with him a vision of how to build a champion, and he proceeded to create one of the most dominant champions of all time," Reinsdorf said. "No basketball fan in America can begin to imagine the world champion Chicago Bulls without his imprint. There would not have been a coach Phil Jackson. There would not have been Scottie Pippen, Bill Cartwright, Dennis Rodman, or a host of others who wore Bulls uniforms during those championship seasons." But Krause's people skills weren't always the best, and he alienated Jackson, Jordan and Pippen — often over who should get credit for the championships. When Jackson left and Jordan retired before the lockout-shortened season of 1999, Krause dismantled the team. "It's a tough decision, and it's anybody's guess," Cartwright said. "My take on it is that those guys weren't coming back, anyway. ... I think that those changes had to be made and you have to go by somebody's word that they're leaving." Krause gave away virtually any talent the Bulls had, hoping to avoid a long rebuilding process. He planned to stockpile top draft picks and give the cash he was saving to big-name free agents. But the free agents didn't come, and the losses mounted. Krause then switched course, deciding that the Bulls' future lay with high schoolers Eddy Curry and Chandler. Tim Floyd, Krause's handpicked successor to Jackson, got so frustrated he didn't thank Kraue publicly when he resigned in December 2001. Judge turns down request to protest outside Masters The Associated Press AUGUSTA, Ga. — On the first day of Masters week, there was more action in court than on the course. In two separate rulings yesterday, a federal judge turned down Martha Burk's request to protest outside the front gate of Augusta National Golf Club. She wants the club to admit its first female member. Meanwhile, heavy thunderstorms forced the club to postpone a valuable day of practice for the tournament, which begins Thursday. The gates never opened to fans, either, the first time that's happened during Masters week since 1983. Rich Beem, winner of the PGA Championship, was eager to play the course after qualifying for his first Masters. His day ended after about a half-hour on the soggy practice range. "I wanted to get out early," Beem said. "It's frustrating, but that's how it goes." Burk is planning to protest Augusta National's all-male membership during the third round of the tournament Saturday. Burk, who heads the National Council of Women's Organizations, wanted to post 24 demonstrators outside the front gate of Augusta National and 200 more across the street. But Sheriff Ronald Strength, who has broad authority over public protests, told Burk and other groups the only place they can protest legally is a 5.1-acre site nearly a half-mile from the gate. Strength said there's too much traffic along Washington Road, which runs in front of the club, to ensure safe protests. ACLU lawyers challenged the ordinance, saying it gives the sheriff too much power to approve or deny protests and dictate their location. U. S. District Judge Dudley H. Bowen Jr. sided with the city. "The ordinance does not discriminate against a particular viewpoint or limit speech to certain subject matters," he wrote in a 17-page decision. In a second ruling, Bowen said the sheriff acted properly to enforce the ordinance. The judge called the area outside Augusta National "profoundly congested" during the Masters and said allowing protesters to congregate outside the gate presents "a realistic, plausible, even probable potential for some accidental injury." "Obviously, we're disappointed with the ruling," said Gerry Weber, legal director of Georgia ACLU, which filed the suit on Burk's behalf. Augusta National maintained that it had no interest in the court case. "As we have said all along, any demonstrations that take place outside our grounds are a matter solely for local authorities," club spokesman Glenn Greenspan said. The sheriff's office has approved protest permits for nine groups. Burk and the Rev. Jesse Jackson plan to demonstrate against the all-male membership. Two groups have received permits to protest against Burk. Another group plans to protest against Jackson. A one-man faction of the Ku Klux Klan, who lists Tiger Woods as his favorite golfer, will support Augusta National's rights to private membership. Another man wants to demonstrate in support of President Bush's war policy. Then there's Deke Wiggins and his "People Against Ridiculous Protests." Their permit has been approved, too. Scott Hoch, comfortably dry in the locker room as rain soaked the course, wasn't concerned about what's going on outside the course. "We're concerned with how we're going to play here," he said. The few players who hung around the clubhouse chatted about the rain, the course and the war in Iraq. On the big screen in the grill room, CNN was showing images of the war. "We're thinking and worrying about our people in Iraq," Hoch said. "Even the golf tournament is minuscule compared to that." The sight of American troops under fire in Iraq has cast a somber pall over the Masters, Hoch said. "This is just a game," he said. "Over there, they're playing for their lives." Woods, who will try to become the first player to win three straight Masters, did not show up Monday. Still, it was a good day for him because of all the rain. mark. AVON Job Opportunity For Fall 2003 Are you a beauty junkie? Are your friends even bigger beauty junkies? Are you looking for ways to make extra cash and learn new marketing skills? Then it's time for you to meet mark , the hot new beauty line from Aven created especially for today's young women. We are looking for two young, outgoing, female students to represent mark on your campus. 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Hawk's Nest TUESDAY, APRIL 8 -Muslim Women in America Dr. Saadia Malik 11:30-1pm, Alderson -Picture the World 6-9pm, Auditorium Lawrence Public Library WEDNESDAY, APRIL -Salza Workshop WEDNESDAY -Salsa Workshop 6-7:30pm, Ballroom THURSDAY, APRIL 10 Fashion Show & Dance 3pm, 4th Floor Lobby Firsthand Experience in Iraq Prof. Scott Harding 6-7pm Big 12 Rm Office of Study Abroad -World 13xsp 12-5pm, Ballroom Center of the World 10pm-2am $5 admission FRIDAY, APRIL 11 World Trade Applied English Course International Student and Scholar Services Offered Railway Airline Coca-Cola SATURDAY, APRIL 12 -KU Soccer Mania 9am-5pm, Robinson Field $5 per team -Festival of Nations 7pm, Woodruff Auditorium All events are free and in the Kansas Union unless otherwise stated ISA . Administrative Staff Positions (May 2003-April 2004): Two Co-Directors (20 hours/week,paid) Financial Director (15 hours/week,paid) Communications Director (15 hours/week,paid) 2003-04 CCO Staff Applications Are Out! the Center. For Community Outreach is now accepting applications for student positions for the 2003-04 school year. Two volunteer co-coordinator positions for each of the following programs: Community Resources Engaging in the Arts Through Education (CREATE), Concerned, Active & Aware Students (CAAS), Environmental Action to Revitalize the Heartland (EARTH), GROW Community Garden Project, Hawks for Health, Helping Unite Generations (HUG). Into the Streets Week, The Jubilee Cafe, Lifeline, Mentors In The Lives of Kids (MILK), Music Mentors, Natural Ties, Students Tutoring for Literacy (STL) Applications are available at 405 Kansas Union. For more information stop by or call (785) 884-4073 All Applications Due On April 11th. 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If you're directionally impaired For more info check out our website www.pluggedonline.com grand opening: APRIL 23 LEMDEA 87th St, Plains 135 438 OVERLAND PARK 14 BB = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MASS TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 Mass Street enthusiastic despite defeat KU Brandon Baker/Kansan After the Jayhawks lost to Syracuse Monday night people continued to cruise down Massachusetts Street in the back of slow moving vehicles. Mass CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B "I don't want to cause destruction, but I don't want to be good either. I'm left in a paradox." Yet for the most part, students limited their activities to drinking and lamenting another championship opportunity slipping away. Students talked on their cell phones, more than one crying into the telephone. Beer only slightly edged tears for the most common liquid spilled last night. Brandon Baker/Monsan Braving the cold, thousands of students poured onto Massachusetts Street after the game, most yelling and screaming their hate for Syracuse. "I'm never drinking orange juice again," yelled one student as he ran down the street. "It reminds me of those punks." "It's melancholy," said Miles Kim, Olathe sophomore. "I think most of us are just drinking our sorrows away tonight." Cars, much like after Saturday night's victory against Marquette were backed up to 14th street on Massachusetts Street. But instead of the constant parade of fans Saturday night, most eventually headed for home. Emma Stone, Des Moines. Iowa, freshman, said the outcome of the game didn't affect her support of the Jayhawks. "I'm just a little disappointed, but they played hard through it all. It looks like everyone handled it pretty well," she said. The loyalty of Jayhawk fans BAR A CARTER Eric Braem/Kansar proved to be more important than the loss of the NCAA Championship. Up and down Massachusetts Street, echoes of cheers both supportive to the 'Hawks and deriding to the Orangemen could be clearly heard. A window of a parked car was cracked after Kansas' loss to Syracuse. The car was located near Kinko's Copies, 911 Massachusetts St. Fans gather outside it's Brothers Bar & Grill, 1105 Massachusetts St., for an opportunity to get into the bar before the game. One KU student, who wanted to be identified as "Daws,"ran up and down the street in front of Fatso's weaving in and out of cars, screaming the anti-Syracuse chant at passing drivers and reaching out a hand for a high-fives. "We played hard and gave it our all, but we missed our free throws and were insane bastards," he said. tarts. He said. Horns honked and people exchanged high-fives, but police restrained zealous fans from marching down the middle of the street as they had on Saturday. The atmosphere seemed to be one of resigned celebration. The biting cold of the night didn't keep any KU fans from driving or walking downtown to share the mixed feelings of disappointment and celebration. Lines for student favorites such as It's Brothers and Louise's Downtown wrapped around the corner of their respective blocks, while even watering holes less favored by students, such as Harbor Lights had long lines. Worries about drunken belligerence caused Quinton's to stop admitting entrance at 12:30 a.m., nearly an hour and a half before the bars typical last call time. "Students are more calm than I thought," said Taylor Vaughn, Chicago junior and a bouncer at Quinton's, who had to explain to several people the bar had reached its capacity. "People are starting to get into fights, so we've got to keep it calm." Police, many recruited from neighboring towns such as Ottawa, were stationed in groups of two or three throughout downtown. Most stood back and watched the scenes unfold, occa- ply with open container laws. "Most people are upset by the loss and they're letting of some steam with some verbal stuff, but most people are well behaved," said Lawrence police Sgt. Rick Nickle. "So far, so good." David Hall, Wichita junior, rode in the back of a pickup truck down Massachusetts Street to celebrate Kansas' progress to the championship game. "If not for our free throws, we would've won," Hall said. A passenger in the back of another truck echoed Earl Kansas's thoughts, saying that Kansas was Kan., freshman at Johnson County Community College who will attend KU next year, said, "It was a great game, a hard-fought game. They're still my team, still my University." Students were intent on celebrating Kansas' journey to the championship game despite its loss of the NCAA title and were pleased with the Jayhawks' performance and effort. Ribneck looked to next year to make another run at the title. 'Keep the faith,' he said. Edited by Leah Shaffer KU Psychology Club Wednesday,April 9th Fraser 537 at 6PM Career Workshop: What can you do with a degree in Psychology,and how can you build your resumeto do it? ΞΡ All are welcome! 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STREET DELI DAILY SPECIALS 5 FM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 INC THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 METROPOLITAN UNION FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT - Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 -$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis -$2.00 Wells EVERY NIGHT 1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 Fat Tire pints for $2.00 TOMMY HALL 941 MASSACHUSETTS · 842-6565 1 1 TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 CAMPUS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 9B Fans on campus keep emotions in check Campus CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Campus was covered with police officers but they had little to do. The drive behind Wescow and Stauffer-Flint halls was filled with stationary police vehicles while sirens wailed in the background of the empty campus. One policeman stood on top of Wescoe Hall above the KUnited banner watching the lack of activity on campus. At 10:55 p.m., cars were driving through campus despite the original plan to close campus to drive-thru traffic. By 11:30 p.m., most of the police officers and their cars were gone from campus. "I think everyone might still be in shock," one police officer said. Rusty Gill, security officer, said he came to campus at 7:00 a.m and hadn't been home since. Gill said he brought a sandwich with him because he wasn't allowed to leave campus for dinner. He listened to the game on his truck radio in the cold weather and after having been on duty for 16 hours Gill said the loss was disappointing. "Since I had to work we might as well had them win." Gill said. Lindsay Kincaid, May 2002 graduate, was one of the few people slowly walking through campus. She studied abroad in Queenstown, New Zealand and was forced to come home because she got pneumonia. Kincaid said if there was ever a time to have to come home it was now. But, when the final second of the game clicked down and KU lost the chance at the national title she said she was heartbroken. "I was really upset that we lost, but the team gave it all they had," she said. "I'm still proud of them." One group of four students walked to Wescoe after watching the game at a friend's apartment. "It was a great season but it wasn't meant to be," Jason Gill, Junction city senior, said. Some of the fans walking through campus came from Memorial Stadium where the MegaCision played CBS's broadcast of the game. Hudding under blankets and guzzling hot chocolate were popular ways of keeping warm for the approximately 1,200 gathered at the stadium. "You're not a real fan if you can't brave the cold," Becky Yauer, Marvillesville junior, said. The stadium was a good venue to watch the game at, Richard Johnson, dean of students, said. "It was nice being around other Jayhawks," he said. "I think it's cool that people braved the cold and staved here." Johnson, who also watched Saturday night's game at the stadium, said that there were more students at the stadium last night. Despite the cold, Shane Carter, Kansas City high school student, sported red and blue body paint on his bare chest. Fans at the stadium came from all over, including Sean Butler, a 1998 KU graduate from London. "They were doing so well we had to come back," he said. Another alumna who was here in 1988,when KU won the national title for the second time, didn't mind having to wear her parka while watching the game. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime experience," Sally Riggs, Lawrence resident, said. "I was in school in '88, so it has special meaning." Although fans watched the game in the football stadium, the atmosphere seemed more like Allen Fieldhouse. Fans cheered and chanted along with the band. No matter the score, the band played on and "Let's go Jayhawks!" was screamed throughout the stadium until the end. "I liked being out here to support the team," he said. "But it's really frustrating we lost." And in the end, it was worth braving the cold, despite the outcome, Michael Seely, Wichita freshman, said. Many families found the stadium a safer environment in which to watch the game than bawdy, drunken Massachusetts Street. WINNING IS EVERYTHING IF YOU WANT TO REALIZE Lawrence resident Elizabeth Mayfield took her young sons to the stadium to watch the game. "It would have been more fun had it gone the other way," she said. Mayfield and her family still had fun throughout the game and were glad they came. One of her little Jayhawk fans held back tears as he put the game into perspective. Eric Braem/Kansan Down the street from Jayhawk Boulevard, around the campus-area bars, the crowds were slightly more rowdy. "It's been really calm here," Officer Robert Neff said. Police officers monitored the crowd as staff workers at the Wheel, 507 W.14th Street, wheeled big-screen televisions out of the back porch of the bar. Two friends helped a third, Kevin Will, limp home. Will injured his leg while he watched the game at the Hawk. 1340 Ohio Street. "They know we're still winners and we're going to have a good time." Wilson said. Will said he spent $150 at the Hawk last night. "I was cheering so hard, I was jumping up and down, I hurt my ankle on the dart board," Will Frankfurt, Germany, junior, said. Neff and two other police officers were assigned to watch 14th and Ohio streets area. Neff said if the area stayed clam, he and his fellow officers would relocate to After the basketball game ended, business at the Hawk died down, only to pick up again 15 minutes later, said Josh Wilson, Salina junior and doorman for the Hawk. Top: Fans gather on Wescoe Beach rallying in support of Kansas despite its narrow defeat. downtown. Dustin Honeyman, Lawrence sophomore, sat with a friend in the near-empty back porch. Honeyman said he would continue to drink at bars despite the loss. "Now instead of drinking for a victory, I'm drinking for my sorrows." Honevman said. Not all KU basketball fans were in poor spirits. Joe Walberg, Shawne resident and Patrick Burger, Lawrence sophomore, jogged down 14th Street chanting "We're number two! We're number two!" the chanting duo was proud of the way the basketball team played in the tournament. "Being number two is still a pretty big deal," Burger said. "We did better than 63 other teams." Jessica Palimenio, Nikki Overfelt, Cal Creek, Kelley Weiss and Jessica Hood contributed to this story. Edited by Leah Shaffer Jayhawk Boulevard is silent and empty as few fans remain on campus. John Nowak/Kansan Couch Potato Video Way to Go Hawks! Congratulations on a winning season! from the winning team at Lawrence's favorite video rental store 1800 E. 23rd • 842-3400 WHIT CYCLE GO KU ***let your car shine! DRIVE THRU CARWASHES WITH BLOWER DRYERS 3 LOCATIONS: 6TH AND FLORIDA 9TH AND IOWA 1500 E. 23RD PHILLIPS 66 Kicks 66 Winston $2.99/pack $28.99/carton Camels $3.25/pack $28.99/carton Mariboro $3.44/pack $28.99/carton Try the Iced Alexander "Cold coffee with spicy milk chocolate." La Prima Tazza Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! FARMING CO. 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE Celebrating 50 years! JONNYN'S TAVERN 1953 2003 FIFTY YEARS ESTABLISHED 1874 Now serving New York Italian Style Pizzas Handmade/Homemade Call ahead for Pizzas 842-0377 16”1 Topping $10 $2 Slices Serving 'till 1am on Friday and Saturdays 2003 Serving 'till 1am on Friday and Saturdays ASIAN FESTIVAL PRESENTED BY ASIAN AMERICAN STUDENT UNION MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18, 2003 MONDAY: DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCOE) TUESDAY: HENNA TATTOOS (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) AASU APPRECIATION RECEPTION (6PM AT KANSAS ROOM, KANSAS UNION) WEDNESDAY: "HERE AND NOW" PERFORMANCE (7:30PM AT WOODDRUD AUDITORIUM) THURSDAY: JAPANESE CALLIGRAPHY AND ORIGAMI (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) PROFESSOR POK CHI LAU BOOK SIGNING (5-6:30PM AT OREAD BOOK, KANSAS UNION) FRIDAY: "TAI CHI" DEMONSTRATION (11-1 AM WESCOE) SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 2003 a TASTE OF ASIA FOOD: 5:30PM AT ECM PERFORMANCES: 7:30 BALLROOM, KANSAS UNION STUDENT SENATE We Buy, Sell & Trade USED & NEW Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts 1. Seated on the floor, sit with knees bent and hands resting on the back of your knees. 2. Sit up slightly to keep your back straight. 3. Use ski poles to help you maintain balance. 4. Keep your arms straight and keep your weight evenly distributed between both legs. 5. Look forward and move slowly towards the camera. 10B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS Best Care Chem TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 GO HAWKS! GO HAWKS! TACO JOHN'S Come visit us at any of our following locations: 23rd & Haskell • 6th & Maine • 23rd & Ousdahl LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five $1.50 wells LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners SCHOONERS . COCKMAILS . DIGARS . POOL 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE The Fun is a Click Away Optional Campus Fees is now integrated with Online Enrollment. Sign up for Options during online enrollment. Optional Campus Fees Sign Up Instructions: 1 Sign In enroll & pay 1 Sign In enroll & pay 2 Click Enroll and Pay 3 Click Learner Services 4 Click Academics or Finances 5 Click KU Optional Fees 6 Select your Options 7 Click yellow Save button "*DO NOT CLICK ON BACK ARROW IN WEB BROWSE*" SLAB, BOCO, Tradition Keepers, Jayhawker Yearbook KU on Wheels, All Sports Combo, All-Arts Package, Parking, Career Services, SUA Movie Card, Park & Ride www.ku.edu/~options FINAL FOUR POSTER DIVISION I MEN'S BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT NCAA FINAL FOUR New Orleans 24" x 36" Only $10^{.00} NCAA Final Four New or Leans EXCLUSIVELY AT FRAMEWOODS 819 Mass. 842-4900 Free forAll CONTINUED FROM P.2B So I got to thinking during the basketball game, and I realized that K-State was beating KU at the end of the first half. So that means that K-State could have won the national championship for the first half of the game. I would just like to say we beer-bonged Dwayne Anthony at halftime.That's why we only lost by three. Thank you, Rock Chalk. is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. Go 'Cuse. Hey, ahhhh, you know, I understand everything about KU losing but, you know, trashing Lawrence is not the answer. We got to give KU props for a great season but trashing Lawrence is not the answer. Not the answer. Thank you. is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. 图 I don't care what anybody says, Nick and Kirk are two great All Americans and they've meant so much to KU. Congratulations on four great years and thank you Nick and Kirk. is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. Kirk Hinrich and Collison, no matter what did you guys did tonight, you did a good job and appreciate your four years of being here. You guys are Gods. is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. 图 All right, I'm just, you know, I understand that we lost, but classes tomorrow should be canceled. Everything is way too sad here in Lawrence. We got people peeling out, we got people that are going to be destroying stuff. It's just pandimonoum and as much as I want this to be an academic institution as well as anybody, it's time to cancel class. It's time for anybody to just, you know, recuperate from this loss and we'll go back to class Wednesday. Yeah, I just heard Roy Williams say the sh-word on TV and I hope you stay in Kansas because this is your home. --is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. We just wanted to call and tell Roy Williams that we think you are a really great coach and we appreciated everything you've done and you really showed you true colors when you stood up to the reporter after the game. And no matter what happens, we think you'll always be our Jayhawk. is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. Once again, Quin Snyder and Norm Stewart have won as many national championships as Roy Williams. Thank you. Bye. is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. Once again, Roy Williams can't win the big one. is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. Dear, Nick and Kirk. We love you. Miss you. These past four years have rocked, and don't get down because you are two of the best players in the world. Love always, KU. I just wanted to tell all the guys good job tonight. Second is better than third, fourth, fifth or sixth and so on. Good job, guys. Bye. for treacherous conditions on roadways. Seven university teachers and administrators from China were killed when their van went out of control on a slick highway in central Pennsylvania. I would just like to say Kirk Hinrich and Nick Collison deserved their national championship and Carmelo Anthony stole it away from them. If Rov Williams goes to North Carolina, I will seriously cry and drink my sorrows away. for treacherous conditions on roadways. Seven university teachers and administrators from China were killed when their van went out of control on a slick highway in central Pennsylvania. If Roy Williams goes to North Carolina, I am going with him. for treacherous conditions on roadways. Seven university teachers and administrators from China were killed when their van went out of control on a slick highway in central Pennsylvania. Yeah, no saggy boobs for drunk Grandma running down the street. Syracuse won so she's getting her boobs done. for treacherous conditions on roadways. Seven university teachers and administrators from China were killed when their van went out of control on a slick highway in central Pennsylvania. You know what? We didn't win, it's because Sarah wasn't with us. We may have lost tonight, but I'm still very proud of our team. The entire Kansas team and especially our seniors, Nick and Kirk. We love you. Thank you so much for the four years you've given us. Winter weather delays baseball games The Associated Press NEW YORK - A reprise of winter dumped several inches of snow on the Midwest and East Coast, slickening roadways, postponing baseball games and frustrating fans of spring from Nebraska to New Jersey. "I love the cold weather, but I've had enough," said accountant John Gontaryki as he waited for a bus on a slush-coated Manhattan sidewalk Monday. "There's a time and a place for everything, and this has been too much." More than a foot of snow fell in parts of Nebraska and southern Minnesota, and points in New Jersey were hit with 6 to 8 inches. By Monday night, the snow had turned to ice drizzle in New York City, but not before four inches had accumulated in Central Park. Slush and freezing rain made "I thought we were supposed to have April showers. What happened to that?" said Randy Krominga, a custodian at an Iowa welcome center just south of the Minnesota line, where snow was blown by wind gusting to 50 mph. The storm also was blamed for two traffic deaths in Nebraska and two in Wisconsin, while dozens of accidents were reported in New Jersey. The storm started when cold, northern air collided with wet weather filtering out of the Gulf of Mexico. Snowfall began in Nebraska on Saturday, and the storm crept steadily eastward until it reached New York City on Monday. The snowfall three weeks after the official start of spring buried tulips, daffodils and cherry tree blossoms. Hardest hit were recently planted flowering shrubs or trees. The confusing weather wasn't lost on Diane Frasier, of Long Beach, N.Y., who noted, "There's watermelon in the supermarket, and there's snow on the ground. You don't see that too often, right?" 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All boxed chocolates with nuts 30% off! 23rd & Nalemth 785.830-8603 Hours: Mon-Sat 9:00-8:00 pm Sun 12:00-6:00pm Offer good at the Lawrence location only through April 12, 2003 1 1 TUESDAY,APRIL 8,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 11B Heard on By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Mass. Street Kansan staff writer What was the turning point of the national championship game? "It was those free throws that screwed us up." Naveen Nelapui, Hyderbad, India, graduate student PETER HUNTLEY "Free throws. All those free throws." Chris Lockard, Overland Park freshman "They came out shooting the lights out,and we came out scared." Jimmy Dwyer, Overland Park freshman "Nobody stepped up. It's as simple as that." Cory Fuller, Ottawa senior. "We didn't have it from the tip. Against Marquette we came out swinging, and we didn't this time." Brendan Donnelly, St. Louis freshman PETER "When Keith Langford fouled out, we lost one of our key perimeter players." Kolley O'Brien. Overland Park junior Kelley O'Brien, Overland Park junior "Losing was pretty intense. There was so much emotion." Erica Harper, Lawrence sophomore 1 "There were two turning points: the charging call on Aaron Miles and the phantom foul that took Langford out of the game." Brian Devine, Olathe sophomore "When Graves missed his free throws, that was the turning point." Ledell Young, Topeka, fall 2002 graduate Syracuse celebrates first championship The Associated Press SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Words like "destiny" and "due" were thrown around by Syracuse fans who watched the NCAA championship on jumbo television screens inside the Carrier Dome last night. After the Orangemen defeated Kansas 81-78 for the first national title in school history, the jubilant crowd of 11,068 could finally shout the words they'd been waiting to deliver: "We're No. 1!" The fans delighted at the smiles of star freshman Carmelo Anthony, who had 20 points,10 rebounds and seven assists to lead the Orangemen and was named the Final Four's Most Outstanding Player. "Can you believe it! Can you believe it! Carmelo couldn't be denied!" yelled Mike Sorvillo, a Syracuse sophomore from Long Island. "It's been an exciting year. They played like a team of destiny," said Corinne Shutack, a junior from Philadelphia. A spring snowstorm and subfreezing temperatures couldn't keep fans from gathering under the Carrier Dome's Teflon top. Dressed in orange and blue, they filled three levels of the arena. They began screaming with Syracuse's first basket and never let up. Outside the arena, celebrations were energetic but orderly. On campus, the city's block-long entertainment district was packed with about 5,000 cheering fans. Some were swinging from trees, leading a chorus of chants. Police in riot gear stood nearby to keep everything under control. After the game, a stream of fans emptied from the Carrier Dome, heading off to the center of campus and again chanting "We're No. 1!" Car horns could be heard honking everywhere while students emptied out of dorms and houses, adding to the moving mass of people. Syracuse University spokesman Kevin Morrow said the school will host a tribute for the team Thursday night in the dome. Keuka College students Dave Bove and Joe Petrosino and a dozen friends drove nearly 90 minutes to watch the game in the dome. "We knew it would be a historic night, so we wanted to be with a lot of people," Bove said. John McGivney of Fulton, N.Y., brought his four teenage sons last night. McGivney and his oldest son saw the Orangemen win the East region a week earlier in Albany. "I was here in 1996 to watch Syracuse. I went home pretty depressed," McGivney said of that year's loss to Kentucky in the Tile game. "This is a much better feeling." Phog Allen's son dies Thursday at age 83 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bob Allen, an all-conference player at the University of Kansas in the early 1940s and the son of coach Phog Allen, died Thursday. He was 83. Allen was a three-time letterman for the Jayhawks and a two-time All-Big Six Conference selection, in 1940 and 1941. Playing center, Allen scored a team-high 13 points in the championship game of the 1940 NCAA tournament, which Kansas lost to Indiana 60-42. He was named to the all- tournament team, and still has the distinction of being the only player to lead his team in scoring in an NCAA title game while playing for his father. After college, Bob Allen became a doctor at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, where he also became chairman of the department of surgery and president of the surgical staff. The Associated Press Matador Café LUNCH BUFFET FL Serving Lawrence for almost 50 years. FRIDAY ONLY 11:30-2:00 $6.75 all you can eat OPEN FOR DINNER Tues - Sat 5:00-9:30 446 Locust St. 841-3837 warranty for almost 50 v CONGRATULATIONS ON A GREAT SEASON! services available: let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location the only address you need to know. WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) 1520 wescoe - copies - large format print - printing from disk or electronic file - resume printing - full color printing - thesis and dissertation printing - uv lamination of large format prints - large selection of papers FORALLYOUR PRINTINGAND BINDING NEEDS 864-3354 open 7am-10pm please stop by or call us for more information about our services - transparencies WE LOVE OUR KANSAN. KANSA Kansas tops Western Michigan in Lat Headland Ballypark, 9 to 18 S Speak Your Mind Speak Your Mind Online poll weekly at kansan.com LEXY GETS GOOD GRADES. SHE STUDIES EVERY NIGHT FOR SEVERAL HOURS. LEXY LIKES TO SAVE A FEW LIVES BEFORE SHE STUDIES. LEXY ALWAYS GETS A'S. 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Great selection of Perennials and Herbs PENDLETON'S RAW VALLEY PENDLETON'S KAW VALLEY COUNTRY MARKET 1446 E. 1850 Rd. Lawrence, KS 66046 843-1409 www.pendletons.com www.pendleton.com 10 12B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY, APRIL 8,2003 Carmelo Anthony key to victory over Jayhawks The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — There's a lot more to Carmelo Anthony's game than the raw numbers on the Syracuse side of the boxscore. The freshman with NBA talent scored 20 points, had 10 rebounds and seven assists last night in the 81-78 victory over Kansas that gave the Orangemen their first national championship But coach Jim Boeheim said Anthony's contribution went beyond that. "I thought the key is that Carmelo is hard to guard," Boeheim said. "He got (Keith) Langford in foul trouble. Everyone who's played him gets in foul trouble. There's no way to guard him unless you do" Langford, who was hurting Syracuse on offense, eventually fouled out of the game, leaving Kansas with one less option as the game wound down. Playing with what seemed to be a permanent smile on his face — even while pawing at his aching back — Anthony scored 20 points, had 10 rebounds and seven assists. The performance helped him earn the honor of Most Outstanding Player in the Final Four. He got banged up a bit,but that was nothing new,he said. "I paid a physical toll the whole tournament," he said. "The whole season, everybody's been beating me up. Coach told me to tough it up." That was easy for him to do. He is a tough kid from the hard streets of Baltimore, a neighborhood he calls "The Pharmacy" because of all the drugs. His mother was determined that he go to college and if this was a one- year stopover on the road to the NBA, Anthony stamped it as a season Syracuse would never forget. "I enjoyed every moment," he said. "I had a fun year on and off the court. I don't regret coming to college." Never more than the moments after the game when he wore the net around his neck, beaming at the championship he had been so instrumental in achieving. "All my hard work, everything I did in the gym from preseason, all of it just paid off tonight," he said. He was instrumental in delivering the victory. When Kansas sliced what had been an 18-point deficit down to three, Anthony nailed a crucial 3 pointer that settled things down and helped the Orangemen rebuild the lead to 10 points. In the final minutes with the game in the balance,he became a 6-foot-8 point guard, trusted to bring the ball down the court. Anthony had seven assists in the first half, a career best for the player widely recognized as the best freshman in the country. And if he decides to turn pro now, he almost certainly would be a topthree pick in the NBA draft, perhaps even challenging high school hotshot LeBron James for the No.1 slot. This was not exactly the way Boeheim thought the kid with the headbund and braided hair style would work out. "He wasn't a top 40 player when I recruited him." Boeheim said. "He was 170 pounds." But Anthony showed up on campus at a hefty 220 pounds and became an impact player immediately. Boeheim plugged him into the starting lineup and Anthony responded. His first basket of the season was a spectacular dunk against Memphis in the season opener and he ran off 15 straight points in that game. Things only got better after that. Anthony averaged 22 points and 9.8 rebounds per game and he was the mainstay of the Orange offense. Even when he didn't score, he was a factor. In the first half of the round of 16 game against Auburn, he was scoreless but found his teammates often enough for Syracuse to build a 10-point lead. Then he scored 18 points in the second half and finished as the game's high scorer anyway. When he finished off Oklahoma in the East Regional championship, he was excited about going to the Final Four. "This is my first Final Four," he said. "I hope it's not my last." Boeheim, well aware of all the NBA talk, quickly endorsed that idea. In the national semifinals against Texas, he scored 11 straight points and finished with a career-high 33. That set the stage for the championship game. When it was over, Anthony was jubilant. "I've never had a feeling like this," he said. "This is the best feeling I've ever had in my life." Asked what he thought it meant to Boeheim to win a national championship in his third try after 27 years on the job, Anthony said, "I know he's happy. Tonight, he's probably the happiest man on Earth." And if he puts off the NBA for another year, the coach will be even happier. Third time's a charm for Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Jim Boeheim finally got those four seconds back. And they were about the sweetest four seconds of his life. Sixteen years after Keith Smart's baseline jumper with :04 left gave Bobby Knight's Indiana Hoosiers a 74-73 victory over the Orangemen in the national championship game. Boeheim guided Syracuse to a heartstopping 81-78 victory last night over Kansas to win that elusive first national title on the third try. "I'm happy, but I'm happy for all those fans," Boeheim said, a championship cap hiding his balding head, and his 4-year-old son, Jim Jr., in his arms. "They packed the Carrier Dome, they follow us all over the country. They've been with us. "I'm just glad we won it for (Derrick Coleman), Rony Seikaly, Sherman Douglas, all those guys (on the 1987 team). Our kids had great heart. We played the best first half we could play, then we just hung on." When the final horn sounded, Boeheim's trademark scowl turned into a wide grin. He raised his arms in triumph, having validated his insistence on using a 2-3 zone defense — a defense of which he is the master and which most coaches disdain. Then he walked over and shook the hand of Jayhawks coach Roy Williams, who lost his second title game in 12 years. "I told him the same thing Bob Knight told me in 1987." Boehme said. "You'll be back some day." Exhausted after the biggest triumph of his career. Boeheim wanted to leave the court and let his players soak in the moment. His wife thought otherwise. "He said, 'Let's go home,' " Juli Boeheim said. "I said, 'No.' " Boeheim's resume now is crammed with 653 victories, 22nd all-time, and his.742 winning percentage is third among active Division I coaches. He's the longest-tenured coach at the same school, having coached the Orangemen for 27 years. Not bad for a walk-on who had to talk his way onto the team when he arrived at Syracuse in 1962. By the time he was a senior, he was starting in the backcourt alongside Hall of Famer Dave Bing. After four years of minorleague basketball, he returned to the Syracuse bench as a graduate assistant in 1969 and has been there ever since. He was appointed head coach in 1976 with a first contract that paid him $28,000. "It's the only thing I know," he said after the Orangemen eliminated Auburn in the East Regional semifinals. "I don't like change. I've gone to the same barber since I was 17. I'm comfortable where I'm comfortable." It was Syracuse's third trip to the title game under Boeheim;the Orangemen also lost to Kentucky 76-67 in 1996. This may have been his best coaching job ever. Older, wiser and more mellow than ever with three young children at home, Boeheim molded a team that started two freshmen and two sophomores into a winner. "I've never had a feeling like this," said freshman forward Carmelo Anthony, voted Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four. "This is the best feeling I've ever had in my life." Despite guiding the Orangemen to an 11-1 record at the start of the season, Boeheim managed to incorporate freshman guard Billy Edelin into the lineup. That decision he called the hardest in his career because it meant the lone senior on the team, Kueth Duany, would lose minutes. That Edelin even stayed with the program is a testament to the way Boeheim runs it. He has had Bernie Fine as his top assistant for his entire time at Syracuse. Mike Hopkins, another assistant, was a team captain for Boeheim in the early 1990s. Edelin endured a one-year suspension by the university and a 12-game NCAA suspension at the start of the season, then became a key reserve for the team in the tournament. "We all went through a lot," Edelin said. "Everybody doubted us. It feels great to come out on top." OH, $#^%! WHERE HAVE ALL THE UDKS GONE? MISSED YOUR COPY OF THE NEWSPAPER? WE’VE PRINTED OUT 7,000 EXTRA COPIES AND THEY’RE ON SALE RIGHT NOW FOR $2 AT THE CLASSIFIED OFFICE OF STAUFFER-FLINT HALL. HURRY AND GET YOUR COPY NOW! LEASE. LEASE. TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 13B UConn women try to repeat as champs The Associated Press ATLANTA — Tennessee's Pat Summitt is the stern disciplinarian with an icy glare, yet her players consider her a surrogate mother. Connecticut's Geno Auriemma is the ultimate agitator, a wise-cracking needler who enjoys zinging friend and foe alike. Who else would call Summitt's program the "Evil Empire?" Different personalities to be sure, but two intensely competitive coaches with the same goal. Their teams meet tonight to decide the national championship in women's basketball, the latest installment of the sport's hottest rivalry. Tennessee (33-4) has six titles but none since 1998. Connecticut (36-1) has won two of the last three championships and three overall. "Strictly from good theater, you couldn't ask for a better match-up." Auriemma said. That theater extends to the coaching rivalry. Both insist they don't dislike each other. They even chatted for 15 minutes or so yesterday when they crossed paths in the Georgia Dome. But friends? Hardly. Summitt invited Villanova coach Harry Perretta and his team — the only one to beat Connecticut this season — to her house for a cookout before the Mideast Regional in Knoxville. The East Tennessee mountains would turn into flatland before Auriemma secured such an invite. "We're not talking on the phone every week," Summitt said. "As a matter of fact, we don't talk on the phone. But I would just say that you have a great rivalry and certainly a coach that I respect tremendously." Auriemma caused a stir when he needled Perretta, one of his good friends, over his relationship with Summitt, saying the Villanova coach had "dumped me for the Evil Empire." Hey, Auriemma pleaded, lighten up. He was just having fun. "I live in Connecticut and I'm a Red Sox fan," Auriemma said. "If you talk about Tennessee, they are the Yankees and Pat is George Steinbrenner. We make fun of it." "There is nothing evil about them — unless you live in Connecticut. Her program speaks for itself and her reputation certainly speaks for itself. Throwing snowballs is part of what you do in a tournament. We are just throwing a couple of snowballs at each other." Summitt's reaction to how she was characterized? "Well. I have been called a lot worse in mv career," she said. That's the thing about Auriemma. It's hard to tell sometimes when he's joking and when he's serious. Junior guard Morgan Valley said she didn't get it straight until her third season with the Huskies. "He would say stuff and I would cry." Valley said. "That's the one thing you never want to do. You never want to let him see you cry. Then you get adjusted to him and realize he does it to everybody." Added guard Maria Conlon: "You just have to take a lot of that lightly. When he's not digging you or not saying anything about you, that's when you should be worried." This is the third NCAA title game between the coaches; Connecticut won the others, in 1995 and 2000. The Huskies beat Oklahoma last year and are 3-0 in national finals. Doherty about next job: It's all fit for me The Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Matt Doherty wanted to leave his mark on North Carolina basketball. This is not what he intended. Doherty believes he made major mistakes by changing items from assistant coaches, to office computer equipment, to the lobby entrance when he took over the storied program three years ago. In the end, those changes contributed to Doherty losing his job, as several factions — including some of his players — turned on him in the final moments before his resignation Tuesday. "It's a very political job, and that I was naive toward — not that it was political — but to the degree that it was," Doherty said in a 30-minute telephone interview with The Associated Press. Doherty did have one ally who was loyal to the end Ford,who apparently called athletic director Dick Baddour hours before Doherty stepped down to see if Doherty could salvage his job. Doherty has also heard twice from Kansas coach Roy Williams. Williams had his Jayhawks in the national title game last night, but had had to fend off questions about a possible return to coach the Tar Heels. "I told him I'm sorry this happened at this time and I didn't know why they couldn't have waited a week," Doherty said. "And I told him no matter what he decides I'm behind him 100 percent." So what's next for Doherty? He hasn't ruled out getting back into coaching soon. He also may try broadcasting. "It's all fit for me," Doherty said when asked about future jobs. "There are places that are at a major level that are great jobs and there are jobs you can turn into great jobs. That could be exciting too. Look at Ben Howland, he turned Pitt into a great job. The timing was right. That was happened at Notre Dame. Where is there kind of a sleeping giant? That would be a pretty neat opportunity." Doherty said he would even return to coaching as an assistant. "I would love an opportunity to work for an established head coach. I've learned in the Carolina system,I've been in that system for a long time now and I think it would pretty neat to learn another system and then maybe take the best of both.Maybe I could add something to someone else's staff." Celebrate this great season with FABULOUS FRIDAY FLOWERS from Englewood Florist. ENGLEWOOD FLORIST "What the masses really matter!" @ ENGLEWOOD FLORIST 123 CENTRAL AVENUE LAWRENCE, KANASA 1101 Massachusetts 841-2999 Each Friday something different always $5.99 Hours: Monththru Fri 8:00-1:00 Sat 9:00-12:00 Also visit us at www.jayhawkflowers.com "It is the right of every pregnant woman to give birth, and the right of every child." 24 hours 1-800-550-4900 FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL PREGNANT? THINK YOU MIGHT BE? LET US HELP YOU. Birthright 204 W. 13th ~ 843-4821 10% OFF ANY ORDER WITH KU ID FOR THE REST OF THE SEMESTER. Culver's 2111 W. 33RD STREET 856.1000 EXPIRES MAY 8, 2003 Culver's Graham Plumbing Supply Hard to find repair parts Antique fixtures (bought and sold) 0 .7827 7609 P Ravt 1138 Graham Plumbing Supply SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SPRING BIKE SALE APRIL 5-13, 2003 Bicycle ride HURRY IN FOR THE BEST SELECTION! FUJI RDFII RDFII D 17 804 Massachusetts St. Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000 Vital Organ "To play in this room is just unbelievable." — Geoffrey Ward KU Doctoral Student in Church Music and Organ Performance Organist Geoffrey Ward was eager to earn his doctorate at KU. To learn from James Higdon, internationally known Bales Teaching Professor in Organ. To perform in the renowned Bales Organ Recital Hall. KU First: Invest in Excellence made it possible. Donations to KU First, the University's $500 million fund-raising campaign, funded Dr. Higdon's distinguished professorship, enabling KU to attract top students like Ward. ku first INVEST IN EXCELLENCE kansan.com www.pipelineproductions.com RISE AGAINST WEDNESDAY APRIL 9TH James Horner ALL www.pipelineproductions.com WEDNESDAY APRIL 9TH RISE AGAINST Bottleneck Heroes ALL AGES pisbald ALL AGES SHOW CAVE IN THURSDAY, APRIL 10TH BOTTLENECH WITH THE DAMN PERSONAL TUESDAY APRIL 15TH TOOTS AND !MAYTALS WITH THE YARDS APPEAREN AT THE DENTVENECE 737 NEW HAMPSHIRE LAWRENCE, KS ICHAWTVEEN.COM ICHAWTVEEN.COM www.pipelineproductions.com RISE AGAINST 9TH WEDNESDAY APRIL 19TH Bottleneck John Hewson ALL AGES pisebold ALL AGES SNOW CAVE IN THURSDAY, APRIL 10TH @ BOTTLENECK WITH THE DAMN PERSONALS TUESDAY APRIL 15TH TOOTS AND IMAYTALS REQUIRED IN THE YARDS APPEaring AT THE BOTTLENECK 737 NEW HAMPSHIRE LAWRENCE, KS CRASH TIME FOR FINE LIVE FRIDAY, APRIL 11TH people the Billions the Autumn State Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS three DAYS $3 SUNDAY, APRIL 12TH THE MOONEY SUZUKI LORDERMILK THE MOTORCYCLE TREE COMING SOON TO @ BOTTLENECK 737 NEW HAMPSHIRE LAWRENCE, KS SATURDAY, APRIL 12TH SON VENEZUELA FRIDAY, APRIL 18TH FULL FEATURE WITH GRASSHOPPER TAKEOVER AND 7TH WAVE SATURDAY, APRIL 19TH FRIDAY, APRIL 11TH the people the Billions the Autumn State $3 Ball Court FRIDAY, APRIL 11TH the people the Billions the Autumn State TREEE BANDY $3 Battlecock 735 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS SUNDAY, APRIL 29TH THE MOONEY SUZUKI LOUDERMILK THE SEALED SHOP CALLING SKIP SOON TO APRIL 19TH CONNER GETAWAY DRIVER CAPSULES AND APRIL SWITCH APRIL 22ND & 23RD FARMER'S BALL TUESDAY, APRIL 29TH CROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED APRIL 9TH FROM 9 AM TO 8 PM GET OUT THE VOTE APRIL 10TH FROM 9 AM TO 4 PM STRONG HALL WESCOE HALL BURGE/KANSAS UNIONS MRS. E'S HAWORTH HALL GSP HALL OLIVER HALL 中 --- 14B - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 TODAY TOMORROW THURSDAY 45 24 58 24 70 40 cold partly cloudy warm TODAY 45 24 cold TOMORROW 58 24 partly cloudy THURSDAY 70 40 warm — BRANDI GUNTER, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE MASKED AVENGERS by Matt Sevcik & Max Kreutxer, for The University Daily Kansan WHOLESALE CARPETS For the last time, I sell Carpets. WHOLESALE CARPETS For the last time, I sell Carpets. HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 8) Learn as much as you can (and as soon as possible) about a domestic project you're contemplating. The more you've practiced in advance, the easier the hard part will be. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is an 8. The task ahead isn't easy. But once you get the time issue worked out, the money won't be much of a problem. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. Do a little more research before making your decision. You're apt to discover an option you hadn't considered. Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is a7. Don't get so busy with extracurricular activities that you forget the bottom line. Make sure to do the job and make sure you get paid for it. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a7. You're stronger now, but not strong enough to take on City Hall. Continue to gather the support and the facts you need to reinforce your position. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. You might start to feel some pressure if a project isn't complete. This could get you stirred up to do something new, and that's good. There's not a moment to waste. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sep. 22). Today is a 6. A person who was rather bossy may start acting more like a friend. Don't get too relaxed. It looks like there's still a problem to be solved. Libra (Sept.23-Oct.22). Today is a 7. This day starts out fine, but you could end up with a headache. Somebody's apt to tell you what to do, and though you'll be nice, you hate that. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 7. You may have to tippe around to avoid a person with a hot temper, but don't worry. You have good people who love you very much Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 7. You may have had enough intellectual exercise to last you a day or two. You wouldn't want to give a cramp in your brain. How about an easygoing evening with comfort food and a snuggle? Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 6. There's a sense of competition in the air that can be very motivating. Make sure everyone understands the rules, and you'll set performance records. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 7. Once you've established your goals, it's time to get down to work. As you start building momentum, you'll find that the project takes on a life of its own. Stay in charge. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 7. You don't have to be logical to win the argument. You have other forces working in your favor. Have faith and hang in there. Crossword ACROSS 5 Desensitized 9 Blue shoe material? 14 Sandwich cookie 15 Caspian feeder 16 Pester 17 Indigenous people of Japan 18 Division word 19 Ride the air currents 20 Indian seaport 22 Bullflighter 24 Hammer type 26 Like new 27 Blocker 31 Duplicity 35 Asset 36 Kinship group 38 Specter 39 Writer Fleming 40 Blushes 42 Understand 43 Group with a common ancestry 45 Father 46 Hit on the head 47 Legislative body 49 Bibbed trousers 51 Furrows 53 Revise text 54 London barhopper's journey 58 Gym cupboard 62 Vidalia, e.g. 63 Palliate 65 Patriot Nathan 66 Spanish diacritical mark 67 Author Kingsley 68 Building wings 69 Spirited horse 70 Knocks 71 Do some ushering DOWN 1 Rich soil 2 Operatic melody 3 Transmit 4 Origins 5 Pest 6 Vase with a base 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | 22 | | 23 | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | | 24 | | 25 | 26 | | | | | | 27 | 28 | 29 | | | | 30 | 31 | | | 32 | 33 | 34 | | 35 | | | | 36 | | | 37 | 38 | | | | | | 39 | | | 40 | | | | 41 | | | 42 | | | | 43 | | | 44 | | 45 | | | | 46 | | | | | 47 | | | | 48 | 49 | | | 50 | | | | | | | 51 | | 52 | 53 | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | 54 | 55 | 56 | | | 57 | 58 | | | 59 | 60 | 61 | | 62 | | | | | 63 | 64 | | | 65 | | | | | 66 | | | | | 67 | | | | 68 | | | | | 69 | | | | | 70 | | | | 71 | | | | $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 7 Actor Damon 8 Flourish 9 Wisdom 10 Release a catch 11 Oklahoma city 12 Extinct bird 13 One watching 21 Pub order 23 Divested 25 Pipeline joints 27 Roasting rods 28 Irish county 29 Altercation 30 Disk-jockey's medium 32 Stand for art 33 Perfect 34 Adolescents 34 Audacity 40 Came back 41 Unnecessary 44 Checkout-counter reading? 46 Lots 48 Seventh Greel letter 04/08/03 E T C H F O L D F A R E S P O L O A L O E A V E R T I D A S T I L L C A P R A C O M E S T O L I F E R O T A T E O T O L E S P A U N C A U G H T H O N E D E R R E E T H E R A P T L Y A L I M O O R E H E I D I S E A U S A G E E N M E S H E S R O D S P U R G E D D I P W A N U N M E D I C A T E D A D D U P E R O S W A L E P R I M O L I M O L I M N S E D A N S E E N S L O T Solutions to yesterday's puzzle 50 __ Grande 52 Make a solemn promise 54 Lobster traps 55 Component piece 56 Peevishness 57 Tibetan Buddhist monk 59 Crinkly cabbage 60 Singer Fitzgerald 61 Musical interval 64 Drink slowly Advertise your website on Kansan.com kansan.com Not getting hit on enough? ALTERNATIVE Now accepting applications for Spring 2003 Weekend Breaks Weekend Sites Topeka Kansas City April 11-12 May 2-3 Volunteer with drug and alcohol rehabilitation or families with children with disabilities Hand Symbol STUDENT University of Kansas SENATE Alternative Breaks 428 Kansas Union aweb@ukans.edu www.ku.edu/~albreaks Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housekeeping against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion or citizenship. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept 1 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements A Drummer wanted to play for 'Joe and the Cassidy'. Only rockers need apply. Call Joe, Josh or Pat 832-8784 or stop by 501 Nikl Street. the tofu's just right! Come on in ... 9TH & IOWA - OPEN 7AM-10PM GOVERNMENTAL HERCANTILLA COOPERATION THE MERC! NATURAL FOOD GROCERY Marks EWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Classified Policy Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swell.net 130 - Entertainment Dance lessons; balletroom, latin, and swing Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receceptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-2227 --- Men and Women 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted --- 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampjobs.com MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163. ex102 advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law, advertising in a newspaper is subject to federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which requires preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, After School teacher 205 - Help Wanted ATTENTION UNDER GRADS Ages 6-9, April and May, Mon-Fri. 30- 50, Wed. 10:30-5:00, Start now. Must have licensed care experience and 3 ed. courses. Sunshine Acres. 842-2232 Are you feeling overqualified and under- paid? If so, call 832-1833 and find out how you can gain real world experience and make $700 per week this summer. SUMMER IN CHICAGO! Wanted for top rated local cover dance band All Styles 785-749-3494. BASS PLAYER Childcare and light housekeeping for suburban Chicago families. Responsible, non-smoker. Call Northfield Nannies. (847) 501-5354. BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours. great call: 810-608-0062 ext 1422. Seasonal Employment City of Lawrence Tennis instructors needed in Parks & Recreation 15-30 hrs wkly beginning first of June. Requires knowledge of basic elements of US Tennis Assoc & Nnl Jr Tennis League programs, & expr teaching children 4-18 yrs of age as well as adults. Prefer CPR yrs and first aid cert. To apply for this & many other Parks & Recreation summer positions, contact City Hall, Personnel 6 E 6th, Lawrence KS 65044 (786) 832-3231 personelle@lc.lawrence.ks.us www.LawrenceCityJobs.org EOE M/F/D snipping position open immediately. $8/hr, 20 wr/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and or resume with 3 references to EEL, P.O. Box 1304Lawrence, KS 66044 EOE/AA Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554. 120 - Announcements sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. F 205 - Help Wanted 205 - Help Wanted Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistants! Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon: 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Resp. incl: Assisting patrons, produc multimedia, maint, library records and materials. computer config troubleshooting and many special projects. Reg. quals: excel. customer service, computer & A/V equipment experience, excel. communication skills. $8.50/hr. 15-25 hrs/wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For info call 864-4785. Deadline April 11, 2002. Hundreds of painter positions available No experience necessary, students well- womed and encouraged Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787 www.collegeperon.com Hiring Teacher's Aid. 1-6 afternoons. Days may vary. Also hire any hours for fall. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N Michigan, 841-2185. Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531. LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at the girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature, sports, challenge course, dance and drama). Early June - mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Call 303-778-0109 x281 or rfondn@gsmhc.com RECRUITER Fortune 500 company is seeking an individual with strong work ethic, goal driven, derives satisfaction from business development, desire to be community involved and most of all enthusiastic. The qualified individual will coordinate recruitment and make staffing decisions. Duties will include interviewing, testing, training and communicating with customers. Requires a strong people oriented personality, attention to detail and the ability to multi-task. College degree required. Please send resume to Manpower, 211 E. 8th St., Lawrence, KS 68044, EOE 1 120 - Announcements Fraternities • Sororites • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program! It works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com A TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 15B 205 - Help Wanted + + + + + + Cruise line entry level on-board positions avail., great benefits. Seasonal/year 941-369-6434. www.cruisecareers.com Doormen and weekend day bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 Iowa. Experienced gymnastic instructors needed. Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children preferred. Call TernTa 913-469-5854. Full time summer maintenance technician needed for large apartment community. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Apply at 1301 West 24th and Naismith. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865-0856. Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It's not too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campwinadu.com or complete application in staff area of www.campwinadu.com Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Help wanted: Seeking self-motivated person for PT receptionist at Lawrence Airport. Phones, customer service, bookkeeping & cleaning. Requires knowledge of Microsoft Word & Excel. 1 to 2 evenings per week and 2 to 3 weeksends per month for year round. Pick up application BAM-4PM at the airport. 1930 Airport Road. Direct questions to Jance at 842-4000. Safe Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. The Mass. St. Deli is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Deli or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). X 305 - For Sale 300s Merchandise S Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Hendas, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext. 4565. HOMESTEAK MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus; fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 643-4000. 1.3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. Available August 1st 841-6254 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quit setting, swimming KU bus rte, laundry facility Call B43-0011. 1-1 BR Apt. Next to Campus. Avail. Aug 1. 1346 Ohio. $490 per month. Utilities paid. Call 550-0426 2 BR/ 1 BA near campus. Available immediately or for summer! Call 913-219-4642 or 785-500-1116. 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 3 BR apts, FP. skylights. 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Call 785-748-9807 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. New! 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo. plus deposit. Call 550-4148 3BR Apts. In nice house. Close to KU and Downtown. Hrdwd Firs, Free W/use. Off street parking: $690-673, 841-3633 7 BR house. 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown. $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Call 550-4526 405 - Apartments for Rent Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. W/D hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 748-4788 CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex $870, 900 Block Maryland Call 843-4090. CLOSE TO CAMPUS, 3 BR, 3 BA town houses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen wi microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 BK, Arkansas 843-4090. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Bath ($35 month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of Naiasmith & Qusdahl 841-5533 Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR tripleplex in 3 great locations available. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, PETS.81-5533 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample laundry, on-site laundry. Call 834-4909. Moving to Wichita? Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship, Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295 Amidon Place Apts. 727 Amidon. 838-8302 Save Your Money! Now signing YR,LEASE starting May June/July Aug. No smoking pets, Extra nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- cances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/mo. Saints Christian Catrill 841-6888 1 BR apt for sublease, avail. 19th; opt. lease for tail. Access from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month, water/trashpaid. pep患儿. Elizabeth. 843-6944 Blue Maca Management Inc Apartment & Town Home Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments *675-$695* ◆Washer & Dryer ◆Fully Equipped Kitchen ◆Serving Bar Call 840.9467 for an appointment 405 - Apartments for Rent Blue Meadow Management, Inc. Entery at an Affordable Price 405 - Apartments for Rent 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 A Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450.2R - $535. Water paid. High-speed Internet not available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday Call 641-3800. Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice-removed 1: BR close to campus, quiet matte building. Gas, water are paid. No pets, smoking. Start $400,841-3192 Avail, Aug. 1, large newer 384 BR apt, DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site, 3BR 2 BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS. PLEASE George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 5339 www.appartmentsinlawrence.com 1712 OHIO VILLAGE SQUARE apartments West Hills Apartments 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 THE LEGENDS L village@webserf.net GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM COMPLETE & CRAFT ROOM SUNFLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET ALL INCLUDEV UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO MASSLES) WASHER AND DRYER IN UNITE ENTITY BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPED FITNESS CENTER FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 call us at www.berlert.net NOW LEASING May 2003 *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo.leases avail. (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIYING Open House Monday - Friday 1:00-5:00 FOX RUN 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefayrun.com NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. 405 - Apartments for Rent Lorimar & Courtside - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom - Reasonable Rates made look up special - Digital Cable & Internet - Great Location Near Campus Lorimar Townhomes 1,2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes - Washer/Dryers * Dishwasher * Microwave * Pantos * Fireplaces * Ceiling Fans 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 talk about nurse by lupusexe! - Washer/Dryers * Dishwasher * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Fireplaces * Ceiling Fans Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes 405 - Apartments for Rent Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you 4100 Clinton Parkway For More Info: 785-841-7849 Avail. Auv. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated old house! 1300 bld. Vermont, Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique tub. No pets. $440; mo. Call 841-1074. Avail, Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated, older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C 10th & NY Rental $520, CBA 841-1074. Avail. Aug. Small 1 BR apt, in renovated older house, 8th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets. $450. Call 841-1074. 3 BR apts, 1/1 2 BA, PV. skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WID hook up vnice. Very no smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call: 785-748-9807 Available in August, 1, 2 bcm. Close to GSP/Corbis between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841- 1207 Now Leasing for Fall 2003 HIGHPOINTE - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom ·Washer/Dryer ·Fireplace ·Swimming Pool ·Fitness Center ·Basketball Court ·Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 www.firstmanagementinc.com CHASE COURT 6th & Iowa 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - 1 & 2 Bedroom Now leasing for fall 2003 - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer - swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Model Open Daily! - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVENUE www.firstmanagementinc.com 1942 STEWART AVE. 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5117 colony@ikks.com colony.woodswoods.com COLONY WOODS 12 1&2Bedrooms - OnKU Bus Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - 3 Hot Tubs * Exercise Room - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Tuckaway Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street 2600 w 6th Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Biving... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood 4241 Briarwood Dr Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equiped Kitchen Fireplace (atTuckaway/Harper) Fully Equipped Kitchen Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs,basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 405 - Apartments for Rent www.tuckawaymgmt.com East Village Avail. August 1st. 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher. 831 Alabama. $110/month. Catch 843-8540 Ext. 21. 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus, 1346 Ohio St. $145 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 Town home 3 bedroom. 2 bath. W/D, fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/opener, no pets. Sublease 6-1/731 $550. 766-5080 PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt.Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1. 2. 3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane 700 Comet Lane Now Leasing for Spring 2003 Brand New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing for Spring 2003 • 1, 2, 3 Bdmr • Washer/Dryer • Swimming Pool & Hot Tub • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Garages Available • High Speed Internet Connections • Security Systems Available • Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 MASTERCRAFT WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. + Campus Place 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 + Hanover Place 14th & Mass*841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 + Regents Court 19th & Mass·749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida841-5255 Tanglewood 0th & Arkansas*749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790.00 savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPENHOUSE www.lawrenceapartments.com 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 ٢٠٤٣ 410 - Condos For Rent M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 Very nice condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer: Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Ei at 841-4470. 415 - Homes For Rent 3-4 BR Houses. Some close to KU. Hrdwd firs, Free W/D use. Off street parking. $685-$895 841-3633 1921 Kentucky. 3 bedroom, $840. Central air, large fenced backyard, unfinished basement. Available June 1.560-6414. 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. WD hookups, FP, vaulted ceiling, and garages small pet welcome. Call 842-3280. 430 - Roommate Wanted 4. Subleasers needed, new 4 BR townhouse, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $121.50, lease through July 31, 816-520-6421 or 618-575-3850 or 630-340-2373. Avail. Aug. Cute 3 BR, renovated older house. 15th & New Hampshire. Wood floors, CA, ceiling fans. DW, W/D hookups. lg closets. tenned yard. Declawed cats and dogs under 20 lbs and over 2 years old with pet rent and perdeposit. $1,050/mo. Call 841-1074. Female for house ASAP $175+util. Cable, CA, CH, W/D. New campus & downtown 1 near Kub bus stop 856-5511. Grade student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + /1 ulit. Avail A84-4254. Mature roommate wanted for 3 BD/nice house/W/D/C/garage. Avail. NOW. $375+utl. No smoking. Call 766-7010. 440 - Sublease Home 1 bedroom apartment. 16th & Tennessee. Available May 1st. Rent negotiable. Call Kristen at 393-1549. 3 BR Townhouse. BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage, WD, Central avail, mid-May Call Adam 830-8076. Female roommate wanting to share a nice 3 BR town home in west Lawrence, Avail- able May 1 - Aug 1. $275 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Julie at 933-2606. PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA 749-6060. Room for rent of 3 BR apt, in Tuck-away avail, for summer, quiet setting, pool. Call Jonathan asap at 218-3548. Sublease 1 BR apt. next to campus. $480 + utilities Call Jason@i931-558-3938. Summer sublease. 308 W. 16th Street. 4 BR. 2 BA. Good landlord. Nice front porch. Call 785-979-9617 or 785-331-6778. Offering $100 cash for signing sublease! Find it, sell it buy it in the Kansan Classified --- 500s Services 505 - Professional --- Term Paper Editing! Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 866-693-EDIT 510 - Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Montesson learning centers plus; broad criculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233 大 16B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY,APRIL8,2003 Hard-fought game ends with Roy in a bittersweet moment NCAA CAA. NC Aaron Showalter/Kansan Kansas coach Roy Williams wipes a tear from his eye as he address reporters in a post game press conference. After Syracuse's victory, Williams became the winningest coach in NCAA tournament history without championship ring. He replaced Orangemen coach Jim Boeheim on the list. Last night's game was Williams second title game as the leader of a Division I basketball team. KANSAS Junior forward Jeff Graves is blocked by a Syracuse defender as he reaches for the hoop after an offensive rebound. Aaron Showalter/Kansan 2003 NCAA NATIONAL FOUR KANSAS 42 103 NCAA UETTE Kansas senior Nick Collison grabs one of 21 rebounds in his last game in a Kansas uniform. Aaron Showalter/Kansan CONGRATULATIONS HAWKS! ON A LEGENDARY SEASON THE LEGENDS LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING Lawrence's newest student community L THE LEGENDS www.thelegends4u.com (785) 856-KU4U (785) 856-5848 4101 WEST 24TH PLACE (Airport from the Arlington Country Club) LAWRENCE KANSAY 68017 A Wednesday April 9,2003 Vol.113.Issue No.130 Today's weather 56° Tonight:25° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com KANSAN Al Bohl sounds off on media, relationship with Roy Williams p. 8B A hero's welcome home Fans pack pep rally, cheer returning team A somber men's basketball team makes its way onto James Naismith Court in front of 8,000 supportive fans after its trip to the Final Four. The team's mood changed to happy and receptive after master of ceremonies and radio announcer M. Falkenstein introduced the speakers. By Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Even in defeat, members of the Kansas men's basketball team are considered conquering heroes on their campus. The Jayhawks' heartbreaking loss to Syracuse in the NCAA Championship game seemed forgotten yesterday as an enthusiastic crowd of about 8,000 fans greeted the team for a pep rally at Allen Fieldhouse. Kansas basketball radio announcer Max Falkenstein emceed the rally, which lasted about 20 minutes. Falkenstein's introduction of coach Roy Williams brought both the crowd and the seated row of players and coaches to its feet. Williams initially remained seated, then finally stood to acknowledge the cheering. He took his seat again, then was forced to get to his feet once more as the ovation continued. Williams told the crowd he always had faith and confidence in his team, even during a shaky beginning to the season. He made reference to an Associated Press article he kept after Kansas' 3-3 start, which said the Jayhawks were the biggest disappointment in college basketball. "We've had some bumps and bruises along the way; we've had some obstacles," Williams said. "But this is the most satisfying year that I've ever had as a college coach." Williams also drew an ovation when he said the Kansas program had the highest graduation rate of any team in the Final Four both last year and 2003. He did not say whether he planned to stay at Kansas. Various reports have linked Williams to the vacant coaching position at his alma mater, North Carolina. Chancellor Robert Hemenway spoke SEE PEP RALLY ON PAGE 8A CARL BROWN MCA Eric Braem/Kansan Thad Holcombe, campus pastor for Ecumenical Christian Ministries, asks a panel of representatives from different religious beliefs about the separation of church and state. The Society of Open-Minded Atheists and Agnostics co-sponsored "Religiously Incorrect" yesterday at the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Religious panel gathers to discuss moral issues By Jessica Hood jhood@kansan.com Kansas staff writer The program was sponsored by Society of Open-Minded Atheists and Agnostics and Ecumenical Christian Ministries. It was held at the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Twenty-one people Representatives of the Jewish, Muslim, Christian and humanists beliefs came together last night for "Religiously Incorrect." The panel consisted of Jo Ann Mooney, a humanism representative. Garry Stewart, a Muslim representative. Mark Brown, a Christian representative and Mark Boekstal, a Jewish representative from the Netherlands. Thad Holcombe, campus pastor for ECM, served as moderator. attended the event. The program operated similar to the TV show, Politically Incorrect. SEE PANEL ON PAGE 8A VOTETODAY Polling sites will be open today and students can vote online from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. The Budig STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Hall and Kansas Union computer labs will be open today until 10 p.m. Thursday polls will be open from 9 a.m.to4 p.m. Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner, will announce the election results at the Parlor Room in the Kansas Union at 6:30 p.m. KUJH and KJHK will air the results. Students need to bring their KU online IDs, passwords and KUID numbers to vote. POLLING SITES Strong Hall Wescoe Hall Burge Union Kansas Union Area by Summerfield and Malott balls Mrs. E's Oliver Hall Budig Hall computer lab Wagnon computer lab at Summerfield Hall Learned Hall computer lab Learned Hall computer lab Source: Elections Code Minimal damage downtown but hours of cleanup needed By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Though it may be hard to believe, the men's basketball loss on Monday night could have been beneficial for the appearance of Lawrence's downtown area. Basketball fans' depressed demeanors may have kept them from acts of vandalism and unruly behavior that could have caused damage to local businesses. "We had zero damages. We had more damages last week after they won," said Gregory Mann, general manager of Quinton's Bar & Deli. 615 Massachusetts St. Mann said he and his staff were worried about damage to the restaurant by fans before the game, but appreciated the behavior of fans afterward. The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department helped reduce these damages by cleaning up downtown yesterday morning. Fifty staff workers from the department started cleaning at 7 a.m.yesterday. They swept, shoved and picked up empty cups, broken bottles and food. The cleanup crew received assistance from the street department's street sweepers. The cleaning took about four hours, Mark Hecker, superintendent of parks and maintenance, said. He said the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department expected the cleanup to take most of the day. "We had zero damages. We had more damages last week after they won." Gregory Mann Gregory Mann general manager of Quinton's Bar & Deli, 615 Massachusetts St. Sarah Fayman, owner of Sarah's Fabrics, 925 Massachusetts St., saw little damage or trash surrounding her store yesterday morning. She said there was about the same amount of trash yesterday morning as there was Sunday morning following the basketball victory over Marquette. "I believed people were going to use good judgment and they did," Fayman said. Though vandalism was minimal, the Lawrence-Douglas County Fire and Medical did see dumpster fires in the downtown area. "At no time was there any damages outside of the dumpsters, no one was injured and they were quickly extinguished," said Mark Bradford, deputy chief. Bradford said the four to five fires were started by individuals, but officials didn't investigate. Fire and Medical did have to treat a number of injuries in the area, some due to partying activities, Bradford said. Edited by Erin Chapman --- 2A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 2003 News briefs CORRECTIONS Yesterday's The University Daily Kansan contained an error. In the article, "Boisterous or silent, fans reveal emotions," Seth Ribnick and Taylor Vaughan's names were misspelled. Harbour Lights also was misspelled. Yesterday's The University Daily Kansan contained an error. The article "KUnited candidates ride on platform of free campus bus," stated a "free" campus bus route would require a transportation fee increase of about $15. Eric Braun, transportation board chairman, said the $15 fee would be needed if all buses were free, not just one. CAMPUS Prospective vice provost to visit campus this week The fifth and last finalist for the position of vice provost of the Office of Student Success at the University of Kansas will be on campus tomorrow and Friday to interview and participate in open forums. Melvin Cleveland Terrell, vice president for student affairs at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago will be featured in an open student forum from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, senior vice provost, recommended students attend the forum to add input. "Since this is the chief student affairs officer, I would really like student input on the hiring," McCluskey-Fawcett said. "It's important for their voices to be heard and see how the candidate responds to that." After the forum, each student and faculty member will receive an evaluation form that the search committee will review. McCluskey-Fawcett hopes to make a recommendation to the provost and the chancellor by the end of next week. "It's certainly the most important hire I'll be doing this year," McCluskey-Fawcett said. "We had five excellent candidates. It's going to be a very hard choice." —Amy Potter Students gather signatures in support of professor STATE University of Kansas students are collecting signatures in support of a professor accused of using obscene material in an undergraduate course on human sexuality. Hundreds of signatures have been collected, said Jen Hein, a senior in the class who is helping organize the effort. Sen. Susan Wagle made the accusation against Professor Dennis Dailey on March 27. She persuaded fellow senators to adopt an amendment to the state budget bill that would eliminate funding for an academic unit that displays obscene videos in an undergraduate human-sexuality class. A University spokesman has said that could mean the loss of the $3.1 million budget for the school of social welfare. Hein said students have asked to meet with Gov. Kathleen Sebelius. The governor has the authority to strike the amendment from the bill, which is what the students want. The Legislature adjourned Friday and is not scheduled to return for a short wrap-up session until April 30. WORLD Three journalists killed in Iraqi hotel bombing BAGHDAD,Iraq—A U.S. tank shell hit a hotel where hundreds of journalists were staying,and a U.S. bomb landed on the office of an Arab television network in the capital yesterday, killing a total of three journalists and wounding three others. A statement from U.S. Central Command in Doha, Oatar, said U.S. forces fired on the Palestine Hotel after troops received "significant" enemy fire from the 18-story hotel just off Firdos Square along the Tigris River. Journalists who were standing on balconies of the hotel taking pictures said they witnessed no signs of firing from the hotel before seeing the tank open fire from a bridge a little more than half a mile away. The tank shell hit balconies on the 14th and 15th floors of the hotel, spraying glass and shrapnel into a corner suite used by Reuters. - The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. News: Curtis Dixon and Joy Larson Weather: Tim Bush Sports: Brian Bruce GO 7 JOHN On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9 Then again at 6 p.m kansan.com Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to Don't have time to read today's paper need to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU JAMES ROBERTS To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Jegen McDermott/Kansan Melech David Kanter, KU graduate and Leawood resident, and Hillel Porath of the Torah Mitzion Kollel in Kansas City sing Jewish music by Shilomo Carlebach on Wescoe Beach. The two are working to strengthen Judaism in Kansas City. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Catherine Weaver will give a lecture on "Reinventing the World Bank" as part of the University Forum series at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Call 843-4933. Brown Bag Classics will present KU Sax Quartets at 12:30 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3436. Hall Center for the Humanities will present "Improvising Interdisciplinarity: A Multi-vocal Conversation in Jazz Studies" from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the Hall Center conference room.Call 864-4798. Neve Gordon of Ben-Gurion Uri versity in Israel will give a lecture on "The Israeli Peace Movement in Dark Times" at 4 p.m. today at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3011. The Multicultural Resource Center will present Tunnel of Oppression, an event to create awareness of different types of oppression and its effects on society, from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. today in the basement of Hashinger Hall.Call 864-4530. Psi Chi will hold a career workshop for psychology majors at 6 tonight at room 547 in Fraser Hall. Phi Beta Delta Society for International Scholars will hold an awards ceremony and international potluck dinner from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. tonight in St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Call 864-6161. The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 7 to 8:30 tonight at room 207 in Robinson Center. Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. Latin American Solidarity will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 tonight at ECM, 124 Oread Ave. Contact Rebekah Moses at 812-1994. The KU Wind Ensemble will perform at 7:30 tonight in the Lied Center. Tickets are $5 for students, $7 general admission. Call 864-ARTS. ON THE RECORD A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took her Sony personal digital assistant and some cash between 6:30 p.m. and 10 p.m.Saturday in the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street, according to reports. The loss was estimated at $365. Et Cetera 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. A 19-year-old KU student told A 19-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged an exterior window of his residence between 10:15 p.m. and 10:19 p.m. Saturday in the 2000 block of University Drive, according to reports. Damage was estimated at $200. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4567) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. Lawrence police that someone damaged the dashboard of his 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee and took his Pioneer compact disc stereo between 9 p.m. Saturday and noon Sunday in the 1500 block of Louisiana Street, according to reports. The loss was estimated at $350. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Bldv, Lawrence, KS 66045 filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com ECSTASY, PASSION AND OBSSESSION, ALL ROLLED INTO ONE. Chipotle GOURMET BURRITOS. TRUE LOVE. 9TH & MASS ECSTASY, PASSION AND OBSESSION, ALL ROLLED INTO ONE. SION Chipotle Chipotle GOURMET BURRITOS. TRUE LOVE. 9TH & MASS "Take 5"...five minutes for 5% off on Fall '03 Books Economics 101 Preorder and Save an extra 5% B.S. Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill or click and save @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com LIBERTY HALL 644 Madis 743-1912 CITY OF GOD (p) 4:00 6:45 9:30 ADAPTATION. (p) 7:00 9:40 QUIET AMERICAN (p) 4:15 only $1 Free Draws on Wednesdays Charms Jayhawk & Powercat Charms KC ITALIAN LINK BRACELETS - UKR Gold * Stainless Steel * Semi-Precious Stones * Greek Letters The Etc. Shop 928 Massachusetts * (785) 843-0611 DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Wads'planto exitelection fails By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer During the entire race for student body president, Lord Wads and his 12 Knights of the Crusade hinted at a surprise — a grand finale. "We had the surprise set, and then the Final Four came up and we had to go to New Orleans," Brett Wadsworth, Lord Wads vice-presidential candidate, said. This elusive surprise was to drop out of the race at an informal debate Monday and endorse a "real" coalition, Delta Force or KUnited. But Wadsworth and presidential running mate, Andy Foertsch, missed the debate for the basketball game. "When KU started winning, we couldn't focus our energies on the campaign anymore or school for that matter," Wadsworth said. "We had the surprise set, and then the Final Four came up and we had to go to New Orleans." Brett Wadsworth Lord Wads vice-presidential candidate Wadswsorth and Foertsch said they always had planned to drop out. Well, voting day has arrived and now the big surprise is that they're still on the ballot. No one may be more surprised than the other coalition candidates. "I thought he was just going to joust Andy or me for the nod," said Drew Thomas, Delta Force presidential candidate, in talking about the surprise and the possible endorsement. Before this week's big campaign push, Wadsworth said he had the two coalitions worried that Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade would take away votes from the other coalitions. From the get-go, the coalition's intentions were to bring awareness to the election and have a little fun at the same time. The campaign would also serve as a last hurrah for Wadsworth and his knights before they graduated, Wadsworth said. Taking away votes from other coalitions wasn't part of the platform. "It's not like we're Nader," Wadsworth said. Andy Knopp, KUnited presidential candidate, said he thought the Lord Wads coalition completed its objective of raising awareness to the elections. There's no way of knowing whether it would take away votes from other coalitions, he said. "I just think students are For an expense report breakdown for each of this year's coaltions, see page 8A going to make an independent decision and elect the best person for the job," Knopp said. After hearing the other coalitions' platforms, Wadsworth said both had merits. He said that by choosing to endorse one side, however, his voters might choose one coalition because of him and the stupid acts he's done. "It's wrong to sway people just because I'm a funny person," he said. Dropping out of the race could have also meant that his voters might not go to the polls at all, he said. "The reasons for dropping out just aren't good enough," Wadsworth said. "It's out of our hands now." Edited by Jason Elliott Elections commission fines Senate candidates At an elections commission hearing last night, two candidates for Student Senate were fined for not completing candidate workshops. One candidate, Peter Thornhill of Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade, waived his priva- cy rights. The other candidate, from KUnited, kept his right to a private hearing. All candidates for Student Senate seats must complete one of two workshops or an online quiz, according the Elections Code. Candidates must get 100 percent on the quiz and have unlimited attempts at attaining it. Joe White, elections commissioner, said the commission gave the candidates ample time to finish. White said he didn't think the commission should have tolerance for candidates who couldn't figure out the code rules. He wanted the candidates to "Why would you want a candidate who can't follow simple rules?" he said. be removed from the Senate race. The commission voted to allow the candidates to run. Thornhill was fined $30. The KUnited candidate was fined $15. Cate Batchelder Commission plans to study lot times By Jessica Hood jhood@kansan.com kansan staff writer The commission decided to wait until next year when more detailed research could be done. The Parking Commission stood by its earlier decision not to expand student parking in the lots between the Military Science Building and the Multicultural Resource Center and between Malott and Haworth halls. Currently the lots, numbered 35 and 37, are restricted until 7:30 p.m. Last month Kyle Johnson, parking commission member, proposed that 48 spaces in the lots be restricted until 5 p.m. so students could park in the designated spaces earlier. After the March 25 meeting, the parking department looked at the lots at 5:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. to better understand parking usage there. The commission also gained information on lot 17 directly behind Summerfield Hall. But the research did not convince the commission to expand the time that parking is available to students in these lots. At yesterday's meeting, the commission discussed the expansion and decided to conduct more research on the lots. "It would be a big mistake to Commission member Johnson proposed a compromise that would include changing Lot 17 to be restricted until 7:30 p.m. for faculty and staff and have half the spaces in lots 55 and 37 restricted until 7:30 p.m. for faculty and staff and the other half available at 5 p.m. for students. reverse the decision based on six more nights of data," Allen Ford, parking commission chairman, said. In lot 37 there would be 20 spots for students and 20 spots for faculty and staff, Johnson said. In lot 35, the exact number of the division is yet to be determined. These changes would affect spots that do not have other restrictions on them. "We can get a good sense of demand by restricting a certain number to students and faculty," Johnson said. Jeff Dunlap, a parking commission member, supported Johnson's new proposal because it would allow the area to be more easily patrolled. "It's only 20 spots to patrol making it easier to assign tickets," Dunlap said. Ford said the commission needed to make a well-developed plan about obtaining data to reconsider the proposal. Edited by Amber Byarlay 2003 ASIAN FESTIVAL MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18, 2003 PRESENTED BY ASIAN AMERICAN STUDENT UNION MONDAY: THIRD FRIDAY TUESDAY: DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCOE) TUESDAY: HENNA TATTOOS (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) TUESDAY: AASU APPRECIATION RECEPTION (6PM AT KANSAS ROOM, KANSAS UNION) WEDNESDAY: "HERE AND NOW" PERFORMANCE (7:30PM AT WOODDRUFF AUDITORIUM) THURSDAY: JAPANESE CALLIGRAPHY AND ORIGAMI (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) PROFESSOR POK CHI LAU BOOK SIGNING (5-6:30PM AT OREAD BOOK, KANSAS UNION) TAICHI) DEMONSTRATION (11-1FONT AT WESCOE) SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 200 TASTE OF ASIA FOOD: 5:30P AT ECM PERFORMANCES: 7:30 BALLROOM, KANSAS UNION a STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF NANASI SENATE INC. LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. AWESOME SEASON JAYHAWKS C BROTHERS Est.1967 BAR & GRILL BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass. T Lawrence, KS THE HAWKS ROCK! CONGRATULATIONS ON A GREAT SEASON. FROM EVERYONE AT BROTHERS YOU SAW THE HAWKS WORK IT HERE WE LOOK FORWARD TO NEXT YEAR! "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION WEDNESDAY, APRIL9, 2003 TALK TO US Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khendareon@kansan.com Jenna Goepeff and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepeff@kansan.com and jenning@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-494 or opinion/kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 844-765-3200 malcolmgibson.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Matt Fisher Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Just vote! Do you or don't you? Vote, that is. Well, as a KU student, you know that you probably should vote in Student Senate elections, as you probably know you should exercise three times per week, eat plenty of vegetables, do your homework in a timely manner and not smoke or drink excessively. Still, most students don't; only 3,960 students — 15 percent of University students — voted for student body presidential and vice-presidential candidates last year. This statistic is extremely and unfortunately low. Now that students can vote today and tomorrow online at the Kyou student portal,students.ku.edu,at the eight polling sites on campus,it is easier than ever to participate in on-campus life But we can't force you. We can decry the ever-present student apathy on campus and then list logical steps to increase student involvement and awareness. While commending those who are taking active roles on and off campus, we can attempt to rally students to immediate action, declaring that it's not too late to take a stance and make a difference. Most significantly, Senate is in charge of almost $14 million annually. which is the accumulation of student fees, and distributes it to student organizations and campus groups such as KU on Wheels, the Center for Community Outreach and Black Student Union. Yet, ultimately you have to decide whether you want to have a voice in how your campus operates. Major campus decisions are made by the students who show up at the polls, and the results of this election will impact every student, not just a select few. In this way, senators have the power to change campus, for better or for worse. Let them know what you think and what you care about by voting for those issues you feel passionately about. Senate candidates have said that they wanted a safer campus, a greener campus and a more diverse and aware campus. They are adamant about financial issues, including tuition increases, student fees and student wages. It's not too late to find out more; information about each candidate and coalition was published in yesterday's edition of The University Daily Kansan. We have students campaigning for election because they genuinely want to make the KU community better for all of us, not just for those who happen to vote. Cast your vote today or tomorrow for people who, in your eyes, will make it happen — those who are able to translate their amazing, innovative and necessary visions into reality. When we as students demand follow-through,we will start seeing action. Then, pay attention. Only you can make sure that your views are represented in the coming year. Just do it. You'll be glad you did. Lauren Stewart for the editorial board STINSON'S VIEW "I could give a shit about North Carolina right now. I've got thirteen kids in that locker room that I love." STINSON THE UNIVERSITY ANNIE KAHAN © 2003 THANKS FOR THE GREAT SEASON ROY STINGIN THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KAUAN © 2003 Zach Stinson for The University Daily Kansan Basketball brings 'Hawks together PERSPECTIVI When I awoke Monday,it didn't take three hits on the snooze bar to get out of bed.I was pumped. I arrived at work for a 7 a.m. flight brief. The flight was canceled because of weather, but when the briefer asked whether anyone had anything to add, I replied, "Rock Chalk Jayhawk, GO KU!" The same scene played out at 2 p.m. during another meeting. It seemed to be my answer for everything. Living in southern Maryland, the nearest gathering place for KU fans is in Washington, D.C., 90 minutes away. My job is nice because I keep my own hours as long as I get everything done. So I went home at 3 p.m., changed into my "Beak'em" shirt and put on my old spirit squad jacket and a Jayhawk ball cap. I packed my digital camera and KU flag. The bar was virtually empty except for a local alumni rep who had already brought stand-up Jayhawks, stickers, pom-poms and a flag of his own. Together, we staked out territory for all the KU fans who would soon pack the place. We managed to divvy up some coats and bags to mark six tables, leaving an equal amount for Syracuse. Did I mention that this sports bar was also the The anger that welled inside me remained through the game, even though he and I shared a "heart-to-heart" discussion. To resolve the situation and avoid hostilities, I took our Jayhawk and the two chairs we had marked and left him the table and two remaining chairs. I was not getting into a fight over this. Kansas and Syracuse fans streamed in. We were outnumbered 3-to-1, but at least we were together in one area. We were getting along smoothly, until one Syracuse fan deliberately knocked over one of our Jayhawks — twice. Once the game started, the atmosphere was incredible. Both sides were shouting, screaming, pumping fists and cheering. The energy was explosive, and aside from some boos from the Syracuse fans, everyone was respectful. central hub for Syracuse fans inside the beltway? During halftime, long faces and worried looks were prevalent. I made the rounds to rejuvenate every Kansas fan. Positive energy began to flow and surge. Like a dynamo, it spun up and crescendoed as Kansas pulled to within 3 points in the second half. For two hours, politics, race and favorite breakfast cereals vanished at points of contention between KU fans. Then and there, we were Jayhawks. Our fire burned a fierce crimson and blue, and that's all that mattered. Time waned, and spirits remained high. Throats were hoarse, fists pumped repeatedly, and so many throughout the night got the crowd roaring "Let's go Jayhaws" and "De-fense." It was a microcosm of Allen Fieldhouse. When the game ended, I saw no tears, no despair. Disappointment was everywhere, but it wasn't overwhelming. I shook the hands of every Syracuse fan in the room, looked them in the eyes and congratulated them. And what about Mr. "Heart-to-heart?" We exchanged a congratulatory hug, and bygones were long forgotten. As we were leaving, my eyes welled with tears, not of sadness, but of infinite pride and joy for my alma mater. Championships are ephemeral; Jayhawks are forever. And so it shall be. I shall never, for a moment, be a fairweather fan. The privilege of cheering for Kansan is monumental joy and eternal grace; and not even death can take that away. Armen Kurdian, University of Kansas alumnus Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com Dude, we just saw KUnited coalition members chalking on the sidewalks after the loss to Syracuse. Do you know what that means? That means we lost to Syracuse and all they could think about was furthering their political careers. You know Monday night's a sad night when everyone's too depressed to pull the fire alarm at McCollum. Has anyone else noticed that all the flatware at E's has "Syracuse" printed on the bottom? Coincidence? You decide. --card copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Staffer-Flint The KUnited people are standing out on Wescoe Beach freezing to death. I'm voting for them. - SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS KUnited? More like K-Boo-nited. The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Basketball brings in funding Ben. You're a good writer, but I think you're overreacting. If they close campus for a day or two because our team makes the Final Four, something that rarely happens, it's OK. Why don't you just enjoy the basketball team with the rest of the school? Or if you don't want to do that, just study at home for one night. Just because people are into sports, fraternities, etc., doesn't mean they don't care about school. I graduated from the journalism school at the University of Kansas last May with a 3.3 grade point average, and I still made it to most of the men's basketball and football games. The University is an excellent academic institution and our basketball team has some of the highest graduation rates among men's hoops programs in the country. Because we're not Harvard or Stanford universities, it's not easy to get academic attention when you are a state institution in the middle of the country. We want to take any positive publicity we can get. When's the last time thousands of people gathered to watch a kid take a math test? When the hoops team makes it to the Final Four, the school gets money, and a lot of that money goes into academics. If you are so fed up with colleges such as the University of Kansas not being "academic enough" for you, why didn't you go to a college like Harvard or Princeton? If you're as into academics as you say you are, which I highly doubt, you'll get a great job and have the last laugh. Regardless, stop whining and let the rest of us enjoy this great basketball program. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK! Michael Sudhalter, class of 2002 Priorities still in order It was quite depressing to read Ben McCarthy's dismal account of how the University of Kansas has gone from a place of academics to a basketball Tower of Babel. The news Friday that U.S. News & World Report ranks 22 of our graduate programs in the top 25 for public schools and some in the top 10 for all universities must somehow prove that we don't care about academics any longer, too. It's sad to see that someone thinks a bit of caution (because of careless fanatics who will pervert the excitement of the basketball team's success and go overboard) is a reason we should believe that the chancellor and most everyone is trying to extinguish academics at the University. Sure, we shouldn't go overboard. We always need to be careful of what the priorities are, but to say that the "subculture of serious academic effort" is being snuffed out is a wholesale distortion of the situation. That Kansas coach Roy Williams consistently produces great teams with great academics in often difficult subjects underscores that, while we may be an institution that has a deep-seeded love of athletics, we appreciate that the reason we're here is to get a degree and better ourselves. I work hard for good grades, too. Mr. McCarthy, many times burning the midnight oil. I enjoy athletics and celebrating our victories in both. The basketball players and other fans also work hard for their grades. Much more so than can be said for other institutions that have terrible academic records for their athletes. Did I watch the game and enjoy myself? Certainly. Did I study and do work after the game? I'd better if I hope to pass and spend only one more year here: a half-decade will be plenty. If Mr. McCarthy "walks out," that's fine. We have a great University, and although we do have our problems, it would be his loss. Part of college life is learning to balance your activities and leisure with academics and learn to be a better person through both. If people see no purpose or benefit in those activities outside academics, they're missing out on most of life's practical lessons. One of these lessons is how to look reasonably at a situation: The chancellor isn't involved in some hush-hush conspiracy to destroy academics — that's just silly. I'm glad he and the University are supporting our desire to celebrate the successes of Roy's Boys and trying to keep us safe, too, so we can enjoy ourselves and then return to our studies. Rock Chalk. lan Andrew Palko, Annapolis, Md., senior in chemical engineering Dailey promotes 'Kansas values' As a KU alum, I am deeply appalled that the tate is considering defunding the University of Kansas' social welfare program because of the content of Dennis Dailey's "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life" course. Dailey's purpose for teaching the course, he announces the very first day of class, is to keep couples together. The marriage failure rate in this country is 50 percent. Dailey announces over and over throughout the class his intentions are to change that and keep couples together. I can think of nothing more in step with Christian values, American values or Kansas values. I have benefited tremendously from the insight Dailey provides in his course. Dailey is a 30-year KU icon, has won many teaching awards and is beloved by thousands of current students and alumni. I am one of them. Any comment can be misconstrued as inappropriate when taken out of context, and having taken Dailey's course, I'm am completely convinced that this is what has occurred in recent incidences. Rather than attempt to defund an honest, highly educational course that thousands of KU students have benefited from, I believe the offended student ought to issue a formal complaint with the University through the appropriate channels. I was never, nor had I ever, ever witnessed sexual harassment of female students by Dennis Daley. On the contrary, Dailey's course attempts to understand the psychology and motivations behind those who are driven to sexually abuse and degrade. His course exists to halt sexual harassment and abuse, not perpetuate it. I wholeheartedly believe there are thousands of other students who have taken his course who can attest to this perspective as well. I strongly urge the state not to cut funding from Dailey's course or KUs school of social welfare. Anna Wagner, KU Alumna WEDNESDAY,APRIL9,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Sorority house relocation delayed By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan writer The Alpha Gamma Delta sorority house will not be built next to the Sigma Mu fraternity house without a traffic study and more discussion with neighbors, the Lawrence City Commission decided last week. Angie Carr, coordinator of Student Organization of Leadership and Development, has said the sorority wanted to move to be closer to campus. members of the sorority went to the commission meeting expecting the site plan for the house near Emery Road to be approved, said chapter president Katie Hardacre. Instead, vocal opposition from their future neighbors caused commissioners to defer voting on the site plan for three weeks. Peggy Hilpman, Lawrence resident who lives near the Sigma Nu house, said noise and trash problems concerned her most "Many nights out of the year, the noise starts up, and by midnight the windows in their house were vibrating to the base sounds from the music that comes off the hill," Hilpman said. "The students that live up there stand out on the cul-de-sac area and on the back porch of the fraternity behind their house screaming, shouting and throwing bottles into the woods." According to the Alpha Gamma Delta national office, no alcohol is allowed in its chapter houses. Because the Lawrence chapter hasn't moved to the neighborhood yet, it would be hard to pin the current problems on the AGD house, 2005 Stewart Ave., Hardacre said. "It did seem like they were including us with a stereotype they already had of the Greek community," said Hardacre, Overland Park junior. "We've never had any problems at our current location," she said. "If anything we'll help with the noise and trash problems they already have." In addition to the noise and trash generated by the fraternities in the area, Hilpman's concerns centered around water run-off and increased parking on Avalon Road. The project's designers had those concerns in mind when putting the site plan together, said Darron Ammann of Bartlett and West Engineers. To alleviate those problems the group included a water retention pond in its plans, along with parking spaces for each resident in the proposed house's lot. "From a design standpoint many issues were considered," Ammann said. "We didn't just decide on this building the first time we sat down." The design team did its best to consider all the potential problems, Ammann said, even going so far as to hold a meeting for public comment, but only two neighbors showed up. A traffic study and more meetings might satisfy some of the neighbors concerns, but it wouldn't necessarily address all the problems facing those families living around fraternity and sorority houses, said commissioner David Dunfield. Despite those efforts and a recommendation for the site's approval by the planning commission, city commissioners decided to defer voting until a traffic study could be completed and the site designers could hold another public meeting. "We're not going to solve the issues of college students' use of our streets in the vicinity of the University with this project," he said, "whether they approve it or not." Saddam's status unknown after bombing Edited by Julie Jantzer The Associated Press WASHINGTON — For U.S. leaders, the latest air strike aimed at Saddam Hussein has returned the Iraqi president to the limbo he had occupied after the first bombs nearly three weeks ago. Officials just don't know whether he is alive or dead. After videotapes were aired last week in which Saddam seemed to refer to wartime events, officials said he probably had survived the March 20 strike aimed at killing him. Then on Monday, U.S. intelligence learned that Saddam and sons were possibly going to attend a meeting with Iraqi intelligence officials in a building in the al-Mansour neighborhood of western Baghdad. The site was in the same general part of Baghdad where Iraqi television had shown Saddam being mobbed by supporters on Friday, said one U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity. The intelligence information was passed to U.S. Central Command, which directed a B-1B bomber to the site. Forty-five minutes later, it dropped four bombs. Three houses were destroyed. It was unclear who was within, and whether there were any survivors. Yesterday, Iraqi rescue workers recovered bodies from the debris with a bulldozer. The body of a child and part of a young woman were pulled from the site. Iraqi security around the site was light, raising questions about whether anyone important had been inside. Two of the bombs dropped were designed to penetrate underground tunnels. Officials said they had no specific information that there were underground facilities at the site. The bombs were apparently dropped in case there were. Psychology club seeking members By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Although about 1,000 students major in psychology at the University of Kansas, only two dozen or so consistently attend psychology club meetings. The University of Kansas Chapter of Psi Chi and the KU Psychology Club will meet today at 6 p.m.at room 537 in Fraser Hall to draw more students to the club. The club is looking for new members who are psychology majors, perspective psychology majors or anyone interested in psychology. Psi Chi is a national psychology honor society; however, not all members of the club are in the honor society. The meeting will include a presentation by Gail Rooney, director of University Career and Employment Services, to discuss alternative career options for psychology majors and how to translate the skills learned when getting a degree into job skills. The meeting should last about an hour and people are free to come and go as they please. Stacy Greenbaum, president of the psychology club said Rooney's speech would offer a different perspective on psychology careers because she had a psychology background but worked in career services Greenbaum said the goal of the organization was to share information about psychology to KU students, including the more than 1,000 declared majors. The club helps members with career development and tries to create a sense of community. "We talk about volunteer experiences and getting involved in research early on," Michael Vitevitch, psychology club and honor society adviser, said. "We want to have activities broad enough so that freshmen and sophomores can come in and get early advise." Vitevitch said he didn't know the exact number of people in the psychology club, but he said about 24 people attended each meeting. Greenbaum said a major problem with the club had been lack of publicity. "The reaction we get is usually I wish I would have known about it," she said. This will be the last meeting before the ice cream social on April 30 at room 547 in Fraser Hall. At that meeting, club members will elect next year's officers. - Edited by Amber Byarlay APRIL 9TH FROM 9 AM TO 8 PM APRIL 10TH FROM 9 AM TO 4 PM STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE GET OUTTHE VOTE APRIL 9TH FROM 9 AM TO 8 PM APRIL 10TH FROM 9 AM TO 4 PM do you feel a longing for more in your life? IS GOD CALLING YOU? do you radiate joy? THE SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH OF WICHITA do you long to follow in the footsteps of Jesus? STRONG HALL WESCOE HALL BURGE/KANSAS UNIONS MRS. E'S Here’s one way to help you find out. Perhaps you’re one of the rare women being called by God to follow in the footsteps of Jesus. But you’re wondering, “how can I truly know if I’ve been called?” This free CD-ROM from the Sisters of St. Joseph may help you find out. To request yours, visit www.csjwichita.org or call our Vocation Director, Sr. Ann Letourneau, at 316-689-4030. You’ll be eternally grateful you did. does love your out of your smile? HAWORTH HALL GSP HALL OLIVER HALL Over 10 Toppings to choose from!! .357 Special Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping $5 medium 1 topping $7 large 1 topping Open 7 days a week Dine-in or Carry-Out only RUBY'S HAZZHA 749-0055 704 Mass. A professional development series for 2003 grads April 17th 5:00 - 6:30 pm Multicultural Resource Center Professionalism Promotion or Demotion • learn from media images what NOT to do on the job • six steps to success • tough topics discussion April 15th 3:00 - 4:30 pm Better Late than Jobless • resumes • interviewing • basic job search April 23rd 3:30 - 5:00 pm 149 Burge Union free registration at www.ku.edu/~uces 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT WEDNESDAY,APRIL9,2003 Libraries Speed Reading Weight Lifting Enlightenment Learning is all about discovering new meaning in the world around us. Enrich your learning experience by using the nation's most honored newspaper and The New York Times Knowledge Network. At nytimes.com/college students have free access to our online archive—which dates back three years—and can receive e-mail alerts based on specific areas of interest. Also, advance your job search through links to jobmarket.com. For more information, and to order a subscription to The Times at student rates, visit nytimes.com/college or call 1-888-698-2655. The New York Times KNOWLEDGE NETWORK INSPIREING THOUGHT 4 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 74 Religious leaders deal with different stances on war By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer By Cal Creek The war with Iraq has produced a number of concerns and actions from area religious organizations and leaders. Some offer services that address the war directly, others have not faced problems or concerns from students. "We hope that this war never started in the first place," said Moussa Elbayoumy, director of the board for the Islamic Center of Lawrence. "Now we hope it stops immediately." The Islamic Center of Lawrence doesn't support the war in Iraq in any way. In a press release issued as war with Iraq began, the center said, "We believe this war is illegal, unnecessary, unjustified and not in the long term interest of the U.S. or world at large." They have also asked the Lawrence Police Department and Lawrence schools to be on alert for any hate crimes committed against Muslims. At this time no hate crimes have been reported. Elbayouny has asked all Muslims in the community to express their opinions on the war and to enlighten their classmates, neighbors and friends to rely on other sources than just American media because the media might not be providing all perspectives Hesaid several peace groups in Lawrence, in addition to Web sites and international TV stations, provided varied points of view both about the background of the war and latest information. First Baptist Church reacted immediately to the war with a prayer service, said the Rev. Marcus McFaul of the First Baptist Church. The Baptist church has also included the war in its weekly Sunday prayers. McFaul said although members of his congregation held a "We'll pray for everyone who finds themselves in danger," he said, "It also includes innocent Iraqi women and children as well as our own soldiers." variety of opinions about the war the church had to address it. McFaul said that the Baptist church had not released a policy statement on the war as did the Catholic Church, but his church did support the pursuit of peace. "You want people to realize peace making and peace and justice are a part of the Christian process," he said. The St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Centerwould also like to see a quick and peaceful resolution to the war, the Rev. Vince Krische said. "I would hope that we would be able to not deliberately kill anyone," Krische said. Krische said this would include not killing Saddam Hussein, and he didn't support any efforts to go in and kill him. The Catholic center had a prayer service at the beginning of the war. Since the war started, a number of concerned students have come in to seek counseling, especially those with family in the military. Krische said concerned students should call or just stop in to talk to someone. As for a solution, Krische had only one answer. "The only thing I know is just pray," he said. The Jewish organization on campus has taken a much less active role during the war than other campus religious organizations. Director Jay Lewis said the organization, Hillel, had no plans for special services. Students weren't asking for programs or spiritual counseling, and Hillel itself had no official stance on the war, Lewis said. Edited by Anne Mantel Students study local religions By Cal Creek ccreeek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Throughout the semester, a group of graduate and undergraduate students have studied the diversity of religions in Douglas County. The 11 students are part of a class called "Contours of Religion in Douglas County." taught by Religious Studies professor Tim Miller. "The goal is simply to compile the most comprehensive picture we can of organized religion in Douglas County," Miller said. The class visited about 200 religious organizations. Each student in the class visited three organizations a week, said Andrew Mitchell, Topeka graduate student. The students asked a variety of questions to try to ascertain certain characteristics, such as membership, attendance numbers and congregation history. Jessica Proctor, Lawrence junior, said the reaction she received as an interviewer varied from organization to organization. Some groups would hug her as soon as they met, but others were more conservative. Kellie Harmon, Lawrence graduate student, said it had been an eye-opening experience. "Its interesting to see all the different religious traditions," Harmon said. The class sees its short-term goal as getting a glimpse of what religious groups are in the county, Harmon said. On a more long-term range. Miller said, he wants the information to be available for comparative use in 10 to 20 years. Miller said he wanted to do the study because no one had this kind of information on record. "We've never had comprehensive information of this kind,"Miller said. He said national religious surveys compared the religious beliefs of about 1,500 people. Miller said to extrapolate generalizations about religions in America from these surveys could've been a mistake because they didn't provide a look at a lot of the smaller organizations. As the photographer for the class, Mitchell takes pictures of meeting places for each religious organization the class visits. He photographs everything from traditional churches to movie theaters to personal homes where religious services meet. The class will continue to compile the information into the summer. Once all the information has been collected, Miller will turn it over to the state historical society. Miller said the information from the completed project would be available some time in the fall. Edited by Anne Mantey Audiotape urges Muslim action The Associated Press ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — An audiotape purportedly from Osama bin Laden exhorted Muslims to rise up against Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and other governments it claimed were "agents of America" and called for suicide attacks against U.S. and British interests to "avenge the innocent children" of Iraq. The 27-minute tape quoted extensively from the Muslim holy book, the Quran, and said jihad, or holy war, was the "only solution to all the problems." The tape was obtained Monday by The Associated Press from an Algerian national, known as Adil, who said he had slipped across the border from Afghanistan, where the tape was apparently recorded. There was no way immediately to confirm that the voice on the tape was that of the Al Qaeda chief. But it was translated by an Arabic-speaking Afghan who met with the terrorist mastermind years ago and said he believed the voice seemed to be bin Laden's. There also was no clear indication of when the tape was made. although it makes references to the war in Iraq and the leaders who launched it. President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair. "You should avenge the innocent children who have been assassinated in Iraq. Be united against Bush and Blair and defeat them with suicide attacks so that you may be successful before Allah," the voice urged. "Oh Muslim brothers, let us promise to devote our lives to martyrdom in the way of Allah. America has attacked Iraq and soon will also attack Iran, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Sudan. You should be aware that non-Muslims cannot bear the existence of Muslims and want to capture their resources and destroy them." The voice purported to be bin Laden's urges the faithful to attack governments in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. "All of them have been imposed upon you and jihad (holy war) against them is your duty," said the tape, handed to AP in the remote northwestern region of Pakistan. The only other individual iden tified by name on the tape was Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai. "One of the slaves of America is Karzai in Afghanistan because he supported non-Muslims over Muslims. Pakistan, Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi are also agents of America." Bin Laden, the top suspect behind the Sept. 11 attacks, has been in hiding since a U.S.-led coalition ousted the Taliban regime that gave him protection in Afghanistan. The cassette tape made repeated promises of heaven for those who carried out suicide attacks. "I ask the Muslim women to join jihad by providing food to mujahedeen (holy warriors.) Elders should pray for us. I am proud of those martyrs who sacrificed their lives for the sake of Islam. "Do not be afraid of their tanks and armored personnel carriers. These are artificial things," the voice said. "If you started suicide attacks, you will see the fear of Americans all over the world. Those people who cannot join forces in jihad should give financial help to those mujaheeden who are fighting against U.S. aggression." [Smiling face] Dean Hashimoto, A.B., M.S., M.D., J.D., M.O.H., and now, finally, IRA. As a man who's devoted his life to the pursuit of knowledge, Dean Hashimoto wasn't going to pick a retirement plan without first doing his homework. That's why he chose an IRA from us, the people with over 80 years' experience managing portfolios for the world's sharpest minds. After discovering that our IRAs offer a variety of investment choices and low expenses, he decided to add one to his resume. A wise choice, by a very wise man. Log on for ideas, advice, and results. 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COMMERCE IS EASY. OFF CAMP US Baskin Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream Store Jayhawk Bookstore Johnny's Tavern La Tasca Mexican Cafe Lawrence Family Care Lawrence Memorial Hospital Business Office Lawrence Memorial Hospital Gift Shop Lawrence OB GYX Marx Salon Randall's Formal Wear The Bike Shop The Custard Cup The Library KU Card Student 6017 4303 0127 8967 JAY HAWK ID: 000000 The University of Kansas Student moved 07/19/2001 ON CAMPUS Academic Computing Cashier's Compiroller's Office Hawk Shop - Kansas & Burge Unions Jay Bowl - Kansas Union M. Bookstore- Kansas & Burge Union Lied Center Parking Recreation Services - Room 201 Registrar's Office School of Business - Study Abroad Italy Student Housing Student Union Business Office ST A Office - Kansas Union Telecommunications Watkins Health Center & Pharmacy Wheat Wayers - Kansas Union Call, click, or come by * 864-5846 * www.commercebank.com Commerce Bank Manhattan 11701 Commerce Bank A 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 2003 IT’S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. Regents Court Now Leasing! Models open daily. Orchard Corners Eric Braem/Kansan MONTANA Kansas coach Roy Williams acknowledges a fan's sign reading "Roy Williams is our biological father" before his speech yesterday in Allen Fieldhouse. Pep rally CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A after Williams. Hemenway credited Williams with building the Kansas program into "a winning basketball family both on the court and off the court." Three players spoke at the rally; senior All-Americans Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich, and sophomore Aaron Miles. "The things we went through, we came together and made a great run," Collison said. "It's something I'll never forget." Both Hinrich and Collison received loud, extended ovations during their last appearance as Kansas players in front of an Allen Fieldhouse audience. As Miles closed his speech, he offered a promise to fans looking forward to the 2003-2004 season. "We going to work our ass off this summer," he said. - Edited by Leah Shaffer Panel CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Panelists discussed topics ranging from the separation of church and state to moral problems facing America. The panel later answered questions from audience members. "I think this is what the University is all about, getting people together to discuss," Holcombe said. Holcombe reminded the audience that the panelists could not represent all of their belief group. Gay marriage brought out diverse viewpoints. Boekstal, the Jewish representative, said gay marriage should be legal because marriage was a legal contract. If two people want to enter into a legal contract together, they should be allowed to do so, he said. For the Christian perspective, Brown said he was against gay marriage. It would not solve the problems homosexuals currently face, he said. It is important to ensure the rights of gays and also ensure the fabric of our culture and legal gay marriage won't do that, he said. According to Islam, it is forbidden, Stewart said. In a true Islamic government, gay marriage wouldn't be legal or blessed, he said. "You have personal choice and no one should dictate that," she said. Ingi House, Topeka junior, said she enjoyed the different perspectives brought by the panelists. "I really liked the Jewish representative being from another country," she said. "It gave the talk an interesting flavor." —Edited by Jason Elliott COALITION AND INDEPENDENT PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT PRE-ELECTION ACTIVITY EXPENSE REPORT Coalitions and independent candidates reported these estimated costs to the Elections Commission through April 7. TOTAL EXPENSES Coalitions Delta Force: $2,973.26 KUnited: $1,187.68 Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade: $700 independent Kit Brauer: none Ashley Meglemre: none FUNDS RECEIVED Coalitions - Delta Force: $3,088.92 - KUnited: $1,300 - Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade: $950 Independent Kit Brauer; none Ashley Meglemre: none Independent candidates Tony Trev and David Marker did not turn in reports. As a result, they will receive minor offenses, Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner, said. Source: Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner A Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY SCHOOL COMMENTARY PETER PARKER Ryan Wood rwood@kansan.com She’s optimistic about the future 'Hawk athletic facilities need improvement It's sickening to see Kansas athletics playing catch-up so often so often. Men's basketball aside, the Athletics Department is currently in a in state of shambles. The teams, overall, are bad, but the facilities that many of them use are worse—even with $6 million being donated by two filthy-rich alumni in the last few years. When generous efforts come to assist the mismanaged department, it's certainly welcomed, but never enough. Los Angeles native Dana Anderson gave $4 million for construction of a new strength and conditioning center, which was completed last month. It looks wonderful, and the athletes are drooling over how nice it is. It replaced Shaffer-Holland Strength Center, barely more adequate than the weight room at the junior high school I attended. Then, last fall, a Kansas City businesswoman named Cheryl Womack donated $2 million for the construction of a new softball complex. It will replace Jayhawk Field, the current "complex" that may easily be the most embarrassing venue in the Big 12 Conference. How embarrassing? Softball fans have to use a port-o-potty. The concession stand is a trailer. The concourse is carpeted with rocks. The media headquarters is an old white tent. Q A By Ryan Greene The eyesores of the field go on and on. Who let it get so bad? Women's basketball coach Marian Washington instructs the team during a game.Washington will remain at Kansas to coach for her 31st season. The trend in Division I athletics is a stadium-style softball complex that's actually a comfortable environment for fans. Every school in the Big 12, except Iowa State and Kansas, have one. Thanks to Womack's deep pockets and devotion toward women's athletics, the Jayhawks, playing catch-up as usual as usual, will finally play on a home field they can have a little pride in. they can have a nice position A Bohl, athletics director and softball groupie, no doubt feels a sense of accomplishment in getting his girls a new place to play. Fresno State, where Bohl was in charge from 1996-2001, profited greatly from his national champion softball team. As nice as the new stadium is for Kansas softball, I hope, if Bohl is still around in a month, that he notices other glaring problems that need fixed. SEE WOOD ON PAGE 3B Now that the dust has settled from Marian Washington's 30th season as the Kansas women's basketball coach, The University Daily Kansan's Ryan Greene sat down with Washington to discuss the past season,the upcoming season and Washington's individual future at Kansas. Ryan Greene: Your record does not indicate how much the team developed since last year. Talk about how the Marian Washington: I think the last game of the season, well, our last win of the season, really showed the progress more than anything. I really felt Leila (Mengüc) was a player that has played and started on and off for me in the past, but I thought she really stepped up this year in terms of her leadership. I saw Tamara (Ransburg) take a good step forward. Got some good performance from Aquanita (Burras). But the bottom line was that we needed to have all of them forming for us to have some wins, and we got three wins out of the conference. But I thought we were in a position to have gotten more. I just saw them grow in understanding the game better. RG: You and the team seemed pretty upbeat after a tough loss to Texas in the second round of the Big 12 Tournament. How big was that first round win against Iowa State as a catapult into the off-season and next year? MW: I think it was major because it showed a lot of mental toughness as well as a team performance on both ends of the floor. And I think that's what they had to keep in mind. I really told the team I wanted them to focus on that game against Iowa State. Last year they went to the tournament, we were close at their place, and then they blew us out here, so we had every reason not to have gone into that game with a lot of confidence. And yet they came out and they played with confidence. RG: With nine new players on your roster and five of them in the top seven on your depth chart, did the team come together as a whole as quickly as you would have liked? MW: I think the one area that I struggled with most was the lack of, I don't want to say, lack of leadership because we had Leila, but we just didn't have enough. To see them finally begin to talk and understand and encourage each other with certain areas of the game, whether it was in our work ethic on the court, a lot more of them stepped up, and I thought that was important. Did it take longer? Yeah, a lot longer than I had hoped, but I thought that one area really could have helped up us more if we had a little bit more experience. RG: Who do you see from this year's newcomers as a leader next season? Who from that group had the most emotional impact on the team this year? MW: Tamara. She has that natural inclination. When you're looking for good leaders, you can go one of two ways. You can force it on somebody and teach them how to lead, or you spot one or two who has that natural leadership ability. I think Tamara really has it and I hope she will be very responsible, because she can help. Players respect her. RG: When you look back on this season. SEE WASHINGTON ON PAGE 3B Fans speculate about Williams' next step By Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The clock showed 6:31 p.m., nearly 40 minutes after the pep rally welcoming home the second place Kansas Jayhawks ended, but the presence of coach Roy Williams resulted in a crowd of autograph seekers in Allen Fieldhouse. The Overland Park native made it to the front of the crowd and softly tapped Williams on the shoulder. Kansas alum Rick Jenkins knew it was his time to be heard. An exhausted Williams turned, looked him in the eye and slightly raised his hand. "Whatever's good for you and your family, coach," Jenkins said. What is good for Williams and his family will soon be the topic of the college basketball world. "Thank you," he said. With the resignation of North Carolina's Matt Doherty last week, speculation has been surrounding Williams and his possible return to coach at his alma mater. While Williams will not yet comment on the matter, Jayhawk fans at the pep rally were cautiously optimistic that Williams would remain at Kansas. "I think he's going to stay." Kansas alum Bob Sailler said. "I think if he goes to North Carolina, he's going to be in the shadow of Dean Smith, and when he's here, he's creating his own dynasty." At one point in the pep rally, the crowd of 8.000 fans gave Williams a standing ovation. Later, his team followed suit, as all 13 members stood and paid tribute to their mentor. "I'm a little less secure this time about him saying than I was last time because of the comments that he's made about how he's changed his life goal of winning a championship to being able to coach his grandchildren." Sneegas said. Ten-year-old Jacob Beck of Eudora said this could be a deciding factor in Williams' decision. Some fans are less optimistic. Marvie Sneegas, who spent eight years at the University of Kansas, said the decision would be tougher for Williams this time around. "He's going to stay because he likes the kids at KU," Beck said. Pleas for Williams to stay have come from as high up as the Kansas Capitol. Governor Kathleen Sebelius, in a released "I think he's going to stay. I think if he goes to North Carolina,he's going to be in the shadow of Dean Smith, and when he's here, he's creating his own dynasty." Bob Sailer Kansas alumnus statement, expressed her wishes for the coach to remain at Kansas. "Roy Williams represents what's best about coaching in America. It's no wonder that any team would be thrilled to have him as a leader." Sebelius said. "As an alumni, as governor and a huge KU basketball fan, I will do whatever I can to keep him here." As for Jenkins, he doesn't want his one message to the coach to go unheard. "We just have to let him do what's good for him and his family," Jenkins said. "If it's best for him to go, I'm sure we'll do the best we can here. He owes us nothing more than he's given us." Edited by Erin Chapman KANSAS 10 Kansan file photo Kansas coach Roy Williams and senior guard Kirk Hinrich talk on the sideline during a game. Spaculation has surrounded Williams about a possible return to coach at North Carolina, his alma mater. i spoote I'm going to have a key to all the doors in this building right here and I'm going to lock them all and we're all going to make sure that Roy doesn't get out of this building." --- Al Bohl, University of Kansas athletics director 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Inside Sports SPORTS COMMENTARY Job came first for journalist after big game This wasn't the way the script was written. Or maybe it just wasn't the script we wanted. But as fans we all have to get over it. And as a journalist I had to get over it. Quick. Then things came back to life. There were some tears, lots of muttering and a loud cheer when a rare expletive escaped Roy Williams' lips on national television. But as the last scenes of the college basketball season blurred into a "One Shining Moment" video package, I picked up my tape recorder and put on my coat. It was time to go to work. After Kansas fell to Syracuse Monday night The University Daily Kansan's newsroom, as the rest of Lawrence and, presumably, the rest of Kansas, went momentarily quiet. My assignment was simple: Go out and get reaction quotes, my editors said, and do it quickly. Maybe being forced into service was therapy. The scene on Massachusetts Street, my assignment for the night, reminded me of a party held after a funeral. Lot's of coulda-woulda-shouldas, lots of drinking and even more cursing. But like a funeral, there were some smiles, too. And as I marched through the cold jitting down notes for a reaction story and grabbing quotes where I could, I began my recovery. After all, it was a tremendous ride. Of the many who flocked to Massachusetts Street, the words of one student, riding in the back of a pickup truck, wearing a beer-stained Final Four T-shirt and shouting into a bullhorn, struck me. "We went further than we expected, and it was a great season," he yelled as the masses hollered in approval. If the first part of his personal public service announcement didn't strike a chord with the crowd as it had with me, the second part probably did. "Let's all get very,very drunk now," he said. As a journalist I've been blessed to play a role in the Kansan's coverage of this year's tournament run. I have an opportunity to do interviews with people I wouldn't otherwise meet and cover news that otherwise wouldn't fall into my lap. There's a lot of melancholy, certainly, but as a fan and a journalist I was there. And sometimes that's enough. Jackson is a Long Valley, N.J., junior in journalism. He is the Kansan multicultural reporter. JAYHAWKS IN THE PROS By Ryan Greene rgreene@kansan.com Kansun sportswriter With the NBA regular season in full swing, each week The University Daily Kansas will bring updates on all of your favorite former Jayhawks. If there are any former Jayhawks we haven't included, email requests to rgreece@kansan.com. Paul Pierce — Boston Celtics WEDNESDAY, APRIL9, 2003 The Celtics are certainly struggling to The Celtics are cert the regular season finish line, but they seem to have a stronghold on the Eastern Conference's sixth seed for the playoffs. Pierce has fought through a COSTON CELTICS sprained right wrist this week to help Boston keep its head above water. Pierce hurt his wrist while scoring 28 points in April 2 victory against Miami but didn't show it while scoring 40 points two nights later in a 93-92 loss to Sacramento. Then in another tight loss on Sunday to Washington, Pierce was impressive again, scoring 56 points. Drew Gooden — Orlando Magic After missing five games with a sprained big toe, Gooden returned to help Tracy McGrady and the Magic stay in the Eastern Conference playoff picture. Gooden played in all Magic four of Orlando's games last week, averaging 9.5 points and 4.5 rebounds per game. Gooden's week was highlighted by a 19-point performance an April 1 118-105 loss at San Antonio. Jacque Vaughn — Orlando Magic Two observations from Vaughn's season: He is the starting point guard by default; and he may be one of the league's most inconsistent performers. Vaughn MAGIC and Darrell Armstrong have split the starting duties all year, and Vaughn is having a tough time putting up big numbers on a regular basis. He had a rough time this week except for 16 points in Saturday's loss at Dallas.The Magic has lost four straight games, but consistent play from Vaughn and a healthy Drew Gooden may help in the next couple weeks. Raaf LaFrentz — Dallas Mavericks DAYTONA DRAGRICKS Coach Don Nelson has rewarded LaFrentz with more playing time in light of his stronger performances as of late. As Dallas went 2-1 last week, LaFrentz posted 11 points in each of the victories. The Mavericks are still half of a game ahead of San Antonio for first place in the Western Conference. The Kings are remaining hot and showing their depth as they keep moving up the Western Conference standings. Pollard is still producing good numbers off the bench, including 15 points and a season-high 16 rebounds in an April 1 victory against Indiana. Scot Pollard — Sacramento Kings MICHAEL JACKSON KINGS Ostertag is suddenly a regular force inside for Utah. The Jazz is about to make its way back to the playoffs behind veterans Karl Malone and John Stockton, but performances such as Ostertag's as of late will prove huge in the postseason. After pulling down 10 rebounds in Sunday's loss at JAZZ Greg Ostertag — Utah Jazz PISTONS BASKETBALL Danny Manning — Detroit Pistons Manning had his most notable Seattle, Ostertag has had double-digits in rebounds in four of his past five games. Manning had a moment of the season when getting in a scuffle with San Antonio's Kevin Willis in Sunday's loss. As the Pistons head toward the playoffs, Manning will most likely begin to see more minutes as center Ben Wallace hurt his knee when colliding with teammate Tayshaun Prince Sunday. Manning's only production of note were two points and two assists in an April 1 victory at Toronto, then five points in the San Antonio loss. Hinrich and Collison are true champions basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. Hancock entered the 1994 NBA draft, and was selected in the second round (38th overall) by the Charlotte Hornets. The forward spent three seasons in the NBA with the Charlotte Hornets, Atlanta Hawks, Phoenix Suns, Milwaukee Bucks and San Antonio Spurs. After his NBA run, Hancock moved onto the Fort Wayne Fury of the Continental Basketball Association and then came back to Kansas, playing with the Dodge City Legend of the United States Basketball League and the Gary Steelheads of the CBA. READER'S REQUEST Down with journalists. Roy Williams for president. — Edited by Amber Byarlay 面 Hancock played one season in Lawrence after transferring from Garden City Community College, but is still remembered for his high-flying, above the rim style. In the 1992-1993 season, Hancock averaged 7.5 points and 4.5 rebounds per game as the Jayhawks marched to the Final Four in New Orleans. After his junior season, Hancock skipped his senior campaign to play a year of professional ball in the French League, averaging 17.4 points per game. Free forAll Darrin Hancock, Forward, 1992-1993 I used to think I was a nerd, then I read Ben McCarthy's column on athletics. Get a life, dude. Hey, Ben McCarthy, cool your jets. This is a basketball school. It's what we do here, if you don't like it, go to Mizzou. They never win anything there. Roy, if you lost a thousand championship games, the University of Kansas would still love you. basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. I just want to say that this is the first XU basketball game I've ever watched, and I've just become a lifelong fan, and I'm in love with Roy Williams. --basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. I'm a 20-year-old guy that's been crying like a baby. I love you, 'Hawks. basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. I'm on Mass. Street, and I just want to say that I think it's a class act that there are so many people down here even after a loss. I love you, KU. Kirk, Nick, thanks for playing your hearts out, bros. We love you. basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. I got nothing but love for that basketball team, nothing but love. --basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. I said brt, it's cold in here. There ain't no Jayhawks in the atmosphere. --basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. Kirk and Nick, Roy, we love you guys. Great season.' Hawks 2004, Kirk and Nick, we'll never forget you guys. basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. I just want to say that the University of Kansas Jayhawks are still the best team in the nation. We have the best seniors and the best coach. I'd like to thank Roy Williams and the KU basketball team for being such a class act. You are a great example to college basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. basketball and the students here at KU. Thank you for your dedication and hard work on and off the court. You are truly champions. Thank you for a great year. --- So I'm from K-State, and I also am severely disappointed. Take heart, KU, there is always next year. So I told people Syracuse was scary, and did anyone listen? Nope. Screw the Orangemen and the candy bar they rode in on. 图 Hey, am I the only one who ever noticed that in NCAA March Madness, the video game, that Graves is white? I would just like to say that I hate Carmelo Anthony and Syracuse more than I hate Texas and T.J. Ford. 图 I'm on Ninth and Kentucky, parked and drinking my sorrows away. I really hate Carmelo Anthony and Gerry McNamara and Syracuse, and the fact that their mascot is an orange. - Four words: make a free throw. POLL Will Roy Williams fill the coach- kansan.com ing vacancy at North Carolina? No, he stayed last time; he will stay this time. He will consider it after the tournament excitement dies down. Yes, Nick and Kirk are gone; so is Roy. No, North Carolina won't pursue him after he said no last time. Log on to Kansan.com to cast your vote TOMORROW Kansas Athletics Calendar Coffell at Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb., 5 p.m. FRIDAY Baseball at Western Illinois, Macomb, Ill., doubleheader, noon Softball at Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb., 5 p.m. Baseball at Texas Tech, Lubbock, Texas, 7 p.m. SATURDAY Men's golf at the Intercollegiate 2003, Santa Cruz, CA, all day Track at McDonnell Invitational, Fayst- teville, Ark., all day Tennis vs. K-State, Robinson tennis courts, noon Football Spring Scrimage, Memorial Stadium 1 o.m. casebuff at Texas Tech, Lubbock, Texas, 2 p.m. Rowing at Knecht Cup, Camden, N.J., all day SUNDAY Rowing at Knecht Cup, Camden, N.J., all day Men's golf at The Intercollegiate, Santa Cruz, Calif., all day Softball vsTexas A&M,Jayhawk Field 1.0 m Baseball at Texas Tech, Lubbock, Texas, 1, p.m. NBA Jordan not interested in manager's position CLEVELAND Michael Jordan helped build the Chicago Bulls into NBA champions once before. He doesn't seem to be in any hurry to try to do it again. Jordan said yesterday that he had no interest now in replacing Jerry Krause, who unexpectedly resigned as Chicago's general manager because of health problems. "Washington is where I started and where I want to finish," Jordan said. "It's unfortunate about Jerry. Obviously, his health is the most important thing." Jordan plans to retire at the end of this season, and has indicated he will return to the Wizards' front office. However, he is not contractually bound to Washington, and the GM opening in Chicago has led to more speculation Jordan will return to the Bulls. His family still lives in Chicago. SUA student union activities presenta... Craig Karges at fantastic display of illusion, the paranormal, and extraordinary phenomena FREE! 04-10-03 7:00pm the amazing mentalist! hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 $$ FREE : BROWN BAG CLASSICS 12:30 - 1:00PM MOST WEDNESDAYS KANSAS UNION Make your lunch a classic. Please join the School of Fine Arts for free noon-time performances. Just bring your lunch because the drinks are on the Kansas Union. School of Fine Arts KU TODAY'S PERFORMER: KU SAX QUARTETS (ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, 4TH FLOOR) I WEDNESDAY, APRIL9, 2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Washington CONTINUED FROM PAGE 18 what is the most memorable moment you have of this team? MW: It was probably the last game against Iowa State, and I say that because we could have easily folded. I mean, my gosh, I had every reason going into our home game with Iowa State to expect a win because we had played so well against them at their place. It was a tremendous disappointment to have not performed as well, so going into the tournament, it was important seeing how well they were going to rebound from it. I'll remember that. RG: Lauren Ervin and Sharita Smith are highly touted recruits coming in next year. How do you think they'll adapt to Division 1 play? MW: They're going to have that many more players with a lot of experience to be able to help them. I felt a lot of our freshmen were just feeling their way through, even though we had Leila and Blair (Waltz), it just wasn't as easy for them. Now you have a host of them who can help out in different ways. RG: Al Bohl announced that you would be back for a 31st season. Was there a time in the past year or two in which you thought your job was in serious jeopardy? Did you expect to be back next year? MW: I felt that we were making some headway. I think if a coach can't recruit, there's no way, no matter who you are, whether it's Pat Summit (Tennessee) or whomever, you're only going to be as good as the talent you've got. I think that bringing coach (Tim) Eatman back has helped. When Lauren Ervin said she was coming here, it was a major step forward. I've always felt that I'm my own worst critic, and if I truly felt within my heart that I couldn't get this thing turned around, then I wouldn't have any hesitation. I don't necessarily have anything to prove, but I am not someone who gives up, so I had to take some time and make sure I was doing things for the right reasons. I think I'd like to bring this program back to where it's been. I only hope that we'll get the same kind of attention when these kids start performing the way I know we will. We have had so many great years, and if we had had maybe a little more attention given to our program, a little more respect, I don't think we'd necessarily be as deep in the hole as we found ourselves. It's amazing what having the big fan-base can do for you. We're talking about getting a nod in the tournament. You look at our tournament positions in the number of years that we made the NCAA Tournament, we've had a hard challenge, but it was always based on whether we could turn the numbers out. Look at Kansas State and the crowd they're getting, look at the six years it took for them and look at the crowd they had prior. Maybe all of this is to bring this thing around to Kansas to be responsible for all of our programs in the way of support; we have to have it. I think the media has to help us too. I'll take all of this attention as long as we have it when things are more positive. RG: Would you like to retire as the coach at Kansas? How much longer would you like to coach? MW: Yes, of course. If I was a new coach, people would expect a new coach to get it done in a four-year period. This is unique, it happens. I think as long as I have a passion and as long as I feel that I can get the job done, I know when it time. I've not had a lot of time to myself, but I've always enjoyed my players and I've always taken a lot of pride in the University of Kansas. I've always felt that this was basketball. Going into homes and talking to them about what basketball means to this community, this University, I mean if people feel I do a decent job in those home visits, it is about selling the University of Kansas, the program, how well this University supports it, and I've always felt that there is room for both. Whether it's going to be during my time here or it'll happen maybe later, but I know that one day there's going to be a similar following as I see now with Duke's men and women, and now Oklahoma, where both their programs are strong. For whatever reason, it seems here, you're either going to support one or the other, and I don't think that has to be, I think there's room for both. If there was 20,000 more seats permitted in Allen Fieldhouse, Roy would get 20,000 more people there, but there isn't. So there's a lot more people out there who love the sport, and we just have to try to get them in here. RG: How long do you feel it will take for this team to be back in the Top 25 or the NCAA Tournament? can finish up the recruiting and the depth that we feel we'll be adding, that's my immediate goal, to simply get back to competing, and being in the hunt. I think everything else will take care of itself. I think that next year will be a much better year. RG: We can see you and your staff really brought out something special and formed a bond among this team. What has this year's team taught you as a coach? MW: I feel we've got to get this team so we can compete well in this conference, and I think that then takes care of itself. I feel that if we MW: I think not to give up. I knew that all season, it was a real concern of theirs as to what was going to happen with me, and I decided I wasn't going to talk about it. I don't know if it would have helped if I had talked about it, but just listening to their comments after everything was over with, asking me how I was doing, and I knew really what they were asking, and I try to just stay very positive because I didn't want them to worry so much. I think they reinforced how important it is for me to continue to fight. RG: If you had to sum up this year's team and the season as whole in just one word, what would it be? MW: It's been a long time since I've had so many young players, and with this next recruiting class, we're talking about players who will be together for the next three years. When I think about the future of this group, it's going to be very good. In the men's game you talk about whether it's Duke or even North Carolina, I mean, my gosh, you think about their future. That's how I see this team here, they're going to have a good future. Let's say Promise. I'm very comfortable with that. Wood CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B With the extermination of Jayhawk Field, the ugly problem is only half done. Next door to Jayhawk Field is SuperTarget Field, another pathetic attempt at a Division I facility. Much like Jayhawk Field, the soccer team's home lacks much to be proud of. A concession stand trailer, port-o-potties and gravel concourse are just some of the hideous luxuries Kansas has supplied its soccer fans. Many of the players on the team played on nicer fields in high school, putting coach Mark Francis in quite a pickle. What the heck can Francis tell these recruits when they go visit what could be their future home field? As a former college athlete, I can attest to this — the playing field matters to a lot of recruits. If Francis is in a recruiting war with Texas, Texas A&M, Nebraska, Missouri — hell, almost any school in America — he's probably forced to mask the facility his team plays at and take recruits to a basketball game or something. But honestly, I don't think soccer is high on Bohl's priority list. In an interview with him last year, he seemed to blow off the pathetic home of the 'Hawks, instead reminding me that Fresno State was doing great when he left there. "At Fresno State, we were bringing in $300,000 a year in softball," he said, although I didn't ask. "We were top 10 in baseball attendance," he continued. Finally getting to my question, he gave a vague, predictable response: "We're looking at our soccer complex." soccer not just soccer. Baseball's Hoglund Ballpark isn't bad, but only 250 of the 2,500 seats are actually the comfortable chairs with backs, with the other 90 percent being cheap metal strips of bleachers. The track teams have no locker rooms. The poor tennis team travels 30 minutes for home matches during indoor season. The list goes on. Something's got to be done to make the facilities respectable at Kansas. Recruit rich kids. Kiss more donor butt. Buy a few Powerball tickets every week. Anything that might stop Kansas athletes from longing for better facilities when they hit the road. The softball stadium is a plus. The new strength center is a big plus. But the work is hardly done. Some of the facilities at Kansas, compared to other Big 12 venues, are downright embarrassing. The athletes can't possibly like it, and the fans don't like it. "If you put fans in a comfortable environment, they're going to enjoy it," said Texas soccer coach Chris Petrucelli, whose team plays in front of crowds four times those of Kansas'. "It's one thing to get them there, it's another to get them back." Petrucelli is dead on. Does anyone at Kansas realize this? Wood is a Lee's Summit, Mo., senior in journalism. Domestic LAWRENCE "We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!" & Foreign AUTOMOTIVE Complete DIAGNOSTICS 842-8665 Car Care 2858 Four Wheel Dr. QUAKER LIFE CEREAL 1 69 EA. 15 OZ BOX PRICES GOOD APRIL 9 THRU APRIL 15, 2003 THURSDAY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ LB. FRIDAY SPECIAL JALAPENOS 78¢ LB. BEEF BRIKET WITH PORK 99¢ LB. FRESH LEAN PORK STEAK Economy PAR 88¢ LB. PORK TENDERLOON 298¢ LB. FRYER LEG QUARTERS 10 lb. bag 25¢ LB. BONELESS BEEF K.C. STRIP STEAK Economy PAR 468¢ LB. JUMBO AVOCADOS 68¢ LB. BONELESS SIRLOIN PORK CHOPS Economy PAR 138¢ LB. BONELESS BEEF CHARCOAL STEAK Economy PAR 168¢ LB. SEEDLESS WATERBELLOW 29¢ LB. RED RIKE CALIFORNIA STRAWBERRIES 1/2 FLAT APPROX. 5 LBS. 648¢ EA. NAVEL ORANGES 10 lb. bag 299¢ EA. ICE CREAM 388¢ EA. YUKON GOLD POTATOES 20 lb. 228¢ EA. DOLE SPECIAL SALAD BLENDS 8-12 oz. bag 148¢ EA. EXTRAIT 98¢ EA. YELLOW SWEET CORN FULL EARS 3/89¢ EA. RED SEEDLESS GRAPES 98¢ LB. LASAGNA 96 oz. economy pack 798¢ EA. DOUBLE 4NG PRINTS BIG SIZE FOR 6.99 LEASE FURNITURE ROBERT'S FRUT DRINK 1 GALLON 77¢ EA. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES Open 24 Hours Everyday 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS KANSAN.COM NEWS NEWS The Fun is a Click Away Optional Campus Fees is now integrated with Online Enrollment. Sign up for Options during online enrollment. Optional Campus Fees Sign Up Instructions: 1 Sign In enroll & pay 5 Click No Optional P 6 Select your Options 4 Click Academics or Finances 2 Click Enroll and Pay E1 3 Click Learner Services 5 Click KU Optional Fees 6 Select your Options El Matador Café LUNCH BUFFET FRIDAY ONLY 11:30-2:00 $6.75 all you can eat OPEN FOR DINNER Tues- Sat 5:00- 9:30 446 Locust St. 841-3837 Serving Lawrence for almost 50 years. 7 Click yellow Save button *DO NOT CLICK ON BACK ARROW IN WEB BROWSER* SLAB, BOCO, Tradition Keepers, Jayhawk Yearbook, KU on Wheels, All Sports Combo, All-Arts Package, Parking, Career Services, SUA Movie Card, Park & Ride www.ku.edu/~options HIPAA ... It's Official! We've always protected your confidential information. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act makes it official. Look for more details on our website www.ku.edu/~shs and when you visit Student Health Services at Watkins Memorial Health Center. values to $6.00 MASS. STREET DELI INC. 941 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 AM - 9 PM SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY 11 AM - 9 PM THURSDAY - SATURDAY All 1/3 lb. charbroiled burger platters only $3.95 values to $6.00 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • CIGARS • POOL 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE 8 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL9, 2003 'Hawks begin comeback Usually, there's not much to say about an 11-18 record. At most colleges, a mark of 17- 44 over a two-year span would result in the hiring of a new coach to instill some long-needed enthusiasm. SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY That's not the case for the Kansas women's basketball team. Ryan Greene rereeene@kansan.com Over the course of a tumultuous season, the young Jayhawks formed a cohesive unit to finish the season strong. The team was made up of seven newcomers, forcing freshmen into a premature starting roles and younger returning players into positions of power on the floor. Optimism was abundant early in the season, when Kansas started out 5-0. The early winning streak was capped by an 83-45 slashing of Texas Southern — a game in which all 12 players to suit up scored. All was good at the time, as the Jayhawks even received a few votes in the Top-25 polls. After the hot start came a 3-3 finish to the nonconference season and then another tough conference stretch. The Big 12 Conference was especially tough this year, sending five teams to the NCAA tournament and two more to the WNIT. a home game against No. 4 Kansas State. The Wildcats blew the roof off Allen Fieldhouse with an 88-49 victory. After the K-State debacle, the Jayhawks lost their next two games against Iowa State and Oklahoma State by a total of six points. After two more conference defeats, the Jayhawks headed on the road to Texas A&M with a 9-9 overall record, and an 0-5 mark in conference play. In College Station, Texas, the young Jayhawk squad played with nothing to lose, and a 65-57 victory snapped the program's 23-game Big 12 losing streak. The conference schedule was something to be feared. It was because of the talent the Jayhawks would face and because most members of the team had not been tested against conference opponents. The Jayhawks relied on junior guard Leila Menguç and sophomore guard Blair Waltz for leadership and to tell the team's newcomers what to expect. The conference season could not have had a tougher start, with The Jayhawks kept the momentum going four days later with another conference victory; a 67-64 thriller against Nebraska. The Nebraska victory was a shining example that the team's newcomers were beginning to play like seasoned veterans, especially after sophomore guard Aquanita Burras' late free throws sealed the victory. Following the second consecutive victory, the Jayhawks fell victim to a brutal schedule. Seven of the team's final nine conference games would come against teams bound for the postseason. The only victory from there on out came in the rematch with Nebraska, but in that stretch came two losses to Missouri and another beating from Kansas State. Heading to the Big 12 tournament, Kansas seemed demoralized. A 25-point loss in the regular season finale to Iowa State led to a rematch with the Cyclones in the tournament's first round. Instead of laying down for Iowa State, Kansas came out in Dallas and made its best collaborative effort as a team this season. The Jayhawks stunned the Cyclones, 63-60. Freshman forward Crystal Kemp had 21 points and 11 rebounds in the effort, and no matter what happened in the second round against top-seeded Texas, the Jayhawks had their emotional high to take into the offseason. 22 The next day, Kansas' season was ended by the Longhorns, with an 87-56 loss. The loss hurt in more ways than one. Not only did the Jayhawks get dominated by a Final Four-bound Texas team but Mengtüç went down late in the game with a torn ACL. The season ended with a rough afternoon in Dallas, but as the saying goes, every cloud has its silver lining. These days around the women's basketball office in Allen Fieldhouse, there is nothing but optimism heading into the summer. Kansan file photo The team is hoping to be completely healthy for next season. Menguc, along with freshman guard Erica Hallman have had successful knee surgeries in order to return to top form next year. Freshman forward Tamara Ransburg makes a move to the basket against Missouri on Feb. 15, a game that Kansas lost 61-55. The women's basketball team faced a tough conference schedule and finished with an 11-18 overall record, a vast improvement over the 2001-2002 season. Coach Marian Washington has a top-notch recruiting class coming in, with versatile forward Lauren Ervin from Inglewood, Calif., and point guard Sharita Smith from Dallas. More than anything, the team's first-year players from last season will all be considered veterans now and expected to step up as leaders. Washington now heads into her 31st season as coach, also the final year of her contract, with optimism. In 2001-2002, her team was bad. In 2002-2003, her team was better. Hopefully, in 2003-2004, her team can once again be considered dangerous. Greene is a Vernon Hills, IL., junior in journalism. 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts THURSDAYS $1.50 U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea-- EVERYTHING! $2.00 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! ALL WEEKEND $2.00 DOMESTIC TAPS $2.50 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! LIVE MUSIC! Tomorrow Night! Ryan Imming April 18th Distance to Empty every Saturday! DJ MARLON & friends NOT, FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE!! at the walk-up window! open 7pm M-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS LAWRENCE 1016 Mass. Summer at KU in KC Undergraduate Program Going home to KC this summer? The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. Enroll Today! Call (913) 897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu Summer Semester begins June 3 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 THURSDAYS $150 U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea-- EVERYTHING! $200 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! ALL WEEKEND $200 DOMESTIC TAPS $250 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! LIVE MUSIC! Tomorrow Night! Ryan Inning April 18th Distance to Empty every Saturday! DJ MARLON & friends NOT. FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE!! at the walk-up window! open 7pm M-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS 1016 Mass. NO COVER! BEFORE 10 PM KU’s Newest & Hottest Dance Club & Bar Now Open Wednesdays Wednesday: $2 Anything $3 Doubles Thursday: $1.75 Pints $1.50 Any Shot Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Smirnoff Vodka Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $3 Pitcher Summer at KU in KC Undergraduate Program Going home to KC this summer? The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. Enroll Today! Call (913) 897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu Summer Semester begins June 3 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 21 to Enter Doors open at 8pm 729 New Hampshire (Across from Borders) 838-4623 FATS'S LAWRENCE'S 1016 Mass. KU Edwards Campus Celebrating 10 years in Greater Kansas City NO COVER! BEFORE 10 PM KU’s Newest & Hottest Dance Club & Bar Now Open Wednesdays S Wednesday: $2 Anything $3 Doubles P Thursday: $1.75 Pints $1.50 Any Shot C Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Smirnoff Vodka A Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $4 Pitchers WHISKEY WEDNESDAY,APRIL9,2003 KANSAS BASKETBALL THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Experience from rough season to benefit next year Young players grow to improve future of women's basketball By Ryan Greene rgreene@kansan.com Kansas sportswriter After going 5-25 overall and 0-16 in the Big 12 Conference in 2001, it was safe to say that changes needed to be made when the Kansas women's basketball team prepared for the 2002-2003 season. After five seniors graduated, coach Marian Washington brought in a crew of nine newcomers. The number of fresh faces dwindled to seven, as Sereeta Jones left the team during the season, and Alicia Rhymes was forced to sit all year with a knee injury. It was safe to say that changes needed to be made to the Kansas women's basketball team for the 2002-2003 season.The new players would be thrust into prominent roles and learn from observing on the bench and in practice. Some of the new players would be thrusted into prominent roles early on, while others would do their learning by observing on the bench and in practice. Either way, all nine contributed to the season in some way, shape or form, and they are all helping to build towards what could be a landmark season in Kansas women's basketball. Aquanita Burras — Sophomore Guard 10.5 ppg, 4.8 rpg, 2.6 spg NAMILIA HOPKINS Burras' first season at Kansas, following her transfer from Central Arizona Community College, saw her assume a leadership role early in the year. At the start of the season, Burras earned MVP honors at the Holiday Inn Jayhawk Classic. From then on, Burras progressed as a player. Half way through the season, the sophomore saw extended time at the point guard spot in order to bolster the team's offensive production. Aside from scoring, Burras established herself as one of the team's most tenacious defenders, leading the team in steals with 76. Burras Tamara Ransburg — Freshman Forward PLEASE NOTE: THIS PHOTO IS A FAKE IMAGE. NO AUTHORITY CAN BE ASSURED OF THE EXACT ORIGINAL STYLE, TEXT, OR DESIGN. 10.9 ppg, 7.8 rpg, 2.3 bpg, team-high 50.8 field goal percentage Ransburg not only ended the year tied for the team lead in scoring, but she emerged as the dominant inside threat that Kansas was missing in past years. He Ransburg 68 blocked shots were the fifth highest single-season total in program history. When Ransburg found a way to stay out of foul trouble, her numbers improved. Even more impressive than the blocked shots and team-high six double-doubles was Ransburg's emotional growth. Washington said she thought that Ransburg would emerge from this group of newcomers as the emotional cornerstone. Crystal Kemp — Freshman Forward 10.9 ppg, 5.8 rpg, team-high 74.3 free throw percentage Kemp combined with Ransburg to form an intimidating inside tandem for the next three seasons. Kemp had a tendency to play inconsistent this year. Her best performance of the year was a 26-point outburst on Jan. 29 in a 67-64 victory against Nebraska. Kemp's versatility and Erica Hallman — Freshman Guard 7.8 ppg, 3.3 apg, 32.1 three-point field goal percentage ability to handle the ball outside of the low-post will help her in the coming seasons. Kemp It's pretty hard to sum up the highs and lows of Hall- Hallman man's season in a quick paragraph, but the best word to describe the former Miss Basketball in Kentucky is gritty. Hallman came off the bench to lead the Jayhawks in assists, 97, and three-pointers made, 25. She played the entire season with an injured knee. The injury required Hallman to wear a brace, holding her short of her potential as a lightning-quick point guard. Hallman showed flashes of her ability with some behind-the-back and no-look passes, but she hoped that last week's surgery would help her soar to new heights next season. Stacey Becker — Sophomore Guard 4. 0 ppg. 33.2 three-point field goal percentage son, being forced to sit eight games after transferring from Wichita State. However, when Becker became eligible, she paid dividends immediately, especially beyond the arc. Of Becker's 29 field goals made, 24 of them were three-pointers. Becker also showed to be an imposing defensive presence. If Becker continues to work on her long-range jumpers, she will be an outside weapon to be feared coming off the bench throughout her KU career. 1970 Becker was unable to play in the early portion of the sea- Nichelle Roberts — Freshman Forward 3.4 ppg, 4.1 rpg, 46.9 field goal percentage N. A. Owusu Becker Roberts showed to be exactly the type of player Washington wanted Roberts on her team — a scrappy, tough forward who gives it her all every time out on the floor. Once Roberts began to see more time on the floor, she proved to be a solid replacement for either Kemp or Ransburg when they were in foul trouble. Roberts' offensive numbers tailed off at the end of the year, but she will be an outstanding role player for a team going into next season with postseason dreams. 0. 7 ppg, 0.3 rpg, 10 games played Ebony Haliburton — Freshman Forward Sure, Haliburton's stats as a freshman were not what one might consider impressive, but to see her contribution to the team, you would have to watch her in practices and on the bench during games. Haliburton is one of the team's most vocal members on the sidelines, and she is the same way in practice. She makes everyone around her a tougher player. Haliburton has also drawn praise from her coaches as being friendly and outgoing with fans off the court, helping to give the program a positive reputation. Haliburton Next season, incoming freshmen Lauren Ervin and Sharita Smith will add to what is already a large pool of young talent in the women's basketball program. Washington thinks they will have a smooth transition, benefiting from the experience around them. The experience this year's newcomers received was the most satisfying of all. Not only did they suffer growing pains as a collective whole, but used the season's hard-learned lessons to teach each other and grow as one. Edited by Jason Elliott International Student Association presents... International Awareness SUNDAY, APRIL 6 -Flavora of the World Kick-off Dinner 6pm Lawrence Catholic Center MONDAY, APRIL 7 -Open Game Night 6-9pm, Hawk's Nest THURSDAY, APRIL 10 TUESDAY, APRIL 8 -Muslim Women in America Dr. Saadia Malik 11:30-1pm, Alderson -Picture the World 6-9pm, Auditorium Lawrence Public Library WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 -Salsa Workshop 6-7:30pm, Ballroom CHURSDAY, APRIL 14 -Fashion Show & Dance 3pm, 4th Floor Lobby -Firsthand Experience in Iraq Prof. Scott Harding 6-7pm Big 12 Rm - World Expo 12-5pm, Ballroom - Rhythm of the World 10pm-2am $5 admission Week Office of Study Abroad SATURDAY, APRIL 12 -KU Soccer Mania 9am-5pm, Robinson Field $5 per team -Festival of Nations 7pm, Woodruff Auditorium Applied English International Student and Scholar Services ISA The Story Of World War II All events are free and in the Kansas Union unless otherwise stated STUDENT TRAVEL web fares and NOT just online London...$314 Paris...$441 Amsterdam...$495 Rio de Janeiro.$611 Fare is roundtrip from Kansas City. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. Kansas Union, Room 475 (785) 864.1271 color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color waxing texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage www.statravel.com STA TRAVEL Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - B West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) ISIC EVERYTHING BUTICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass La Prima Tazza 936 Mass. "Sparkling water with any flavor you desire." Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! Try an Italian Spritzer! 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE Avery Tearne The Company Dropped a class? Having trouble getting your class schedule to work? BARTONline Need to add a class? Barton County Community College offers online college courses. We offer both 9-week and 17-week sessions General education courses transfer to Kansas Regents schools. Find our schedule online! www.bartonline.org Celebrating 50 years! 1953 2003 JOHNNY'S TAVERN FIFTY YEARS TOWN DINER CHARITY CITY Now serving New York Italian Style Pizzas Handmade/Homemade Call ahead for Pizzas 842-0377 16”1 Topping $10 $2 Slices Serving 'till 1am on Friday and Saturdays Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU Course C KU KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available 4. 6B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT WEDNESDAY, APRIL9, 2003 WEATHER TODAY TOMORROW FRIDAY 56 25 clearing and warm 69 38 mostly clear 71 40 warm MATTHEW F. LAUBHAN, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE HOUSE by Brian Godines, for The University Daily Konson DEPRESSION OLYMPICS TOM, I'M HERE WITH AN ATHLETE WHO IS SO DEPRESSED HE DOESN'T EVEN GET OUT OF BED TO USE THE BATHROOM ANYMORE. THE REST OF THE FIELD WILL HAVE TO BE REAL DEPRESSED TO EVEN COMPETE. OK, CHIP. NOW, ON TO MORE ACTION. THOSE OF YOU IN THE WEST WILL SEE OUR COVERAGE OF RUSSIAN ROULETTE. IN THE EAST YOU'LL SEE THE WINDOW JUMP OK, CHIP. NOW, ON TO MORE ACTION. THOSE OF YOU IN THE WEST WILL SEE OUR COVERAGE OF RUSSIAN ROULETTE. IN THE EAST, YOULL SEE THE WINDOW JUMP HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 9). Don't let difficulties bog you down this year. Don't let them make you sad or mad. Expect them, and anticipate them ahead of time. Look forward to the challenges. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. Don't get too pushy, even if you know you're right. A little bit of compassion gets your point across more effectively. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. Don't let yourself be bullied into doing something that you think may not work. You're more practical than someone who outranks you. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 6. Are you looking for a promotion or raise? The opportunity could be close at hand. Turn down an outing with friends in favor of a business connection. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 7. Propose a moneymaking scheme to a person who's worried about profits. If it'll work, you'll be a primary beneficiary. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. Expect the unexpected while on the job. Double-check all orders before carrying them out. If you stay calm when others don't, you could wind up in charge. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sep. 22). Today is a 7. rnings are changing quickly, so stay alert. It's also a good idea to have a few friends helping out. Let them know what you need. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 6. You may have to practice your deep breathing in order to keep a lid on your temper. Your nerves may be a tad on edge. Don't blame the others for it. They're nervous, too. Scorpio (Oct 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 7. Others are anxious to take action, but you're not in any rush. You can afford to wait. You're getting stronger in the process. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 6. Everybody knows how generous you are, but you can't afford to do it all. Give freely of your good cheer and advice, but let others pay their own way. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. Defending your home and family is a top priority. That's why you work so hard — so that they can have it better. It's OK to let them know that. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 7. The money should start coming in soon, but other problems arise. A method you thought would work might not, so proceed with caution. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 7. What do you think is more effective — being pushy, or being passive? For now, you'll attract more bees using honey. Crossword ACROSS 1 Wild fear 6 du jour 10 Easy run 14 Flooded 15 __ Hashanah 16 Glowing review 17 Greek letter 18 Italian noble family 19 Smell 20 Check out 21 Luminous trail in the sky 23 Sign up 24 Church part 25 Orders back 27 After-bath powder 30 Emmet 32 Japanese honorific 33 Place to get a brew 35 Shocked 39 Brew holder 40 Unit of work 42 Nick of filmdom 43 Hurting the most 45 Gave recompense to 47 Victory sign 48 Helm dir. 49 Wanamaker and Waterston 50 Mouseteeteer Funicello 54 Family chart 56 Destine to tragedy 57 Dragged forcibly 59 Health resort 62 Up to the task 63 Feudal serf 64 Theater worker 66 Blueprint 67 Beatty film 68 Raccoonlike carnivore 69 Camp shelter 70 Coin receptacle 71 Concluded DOWN 1 Leaf 2 Absent 3 Designate 4 Distinctive doctrine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | 17 | | | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | 20 | | | | 21 22 | | | | | 23 | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | 24 | | | | | 25 | | 26 | | | | 27 28 29 | | | 30 | | 31 | 32 | | | | 9 | 33 | | | 34 | | | 35 | | | 38 37 38 | 39 | | | | 40 | 41 | 42 | | | | 43 | | | 44 | 45 | 46 | | | | | | | | 47 | | | 48 | | | 49 | | | 50 51 52 | | | | 53 | 54 | 55 | | | | 56 | | | | 57 | 58 | | | | 59 60 61 | 62 | | | | 63 | | | 64 65 | | | 66 | | | | 67 | | | 68 | | | 69 | | | | 70 | | | 71 | | | | $ \textcircled{c} $2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 04/09/03 5 Schroder film (with "The") 6 Facade 7 Be vanquished 8 "The Maltese Falcon" co-star Mary 9 St. __ of Avila 10 Fatal gift 11 Gaseous element 12 Egg-shaped 13 Gulls' relatives 12 Jacob's sibling 14 Success 16 __ cum laude 17 Pravda's news agcy. 18 Choir member 19 Suggestive stare 31 __ Haute, IN 14 Beginning 36 "Mephisto Waltz" star 37 Pipe part 38 Kennedy and Koppel 41 Most lamblike L A S S N U M B S U E D E O R E O U R A L A N N O Y A I N U I N T O G L L A D E M A D R A S T O R E E D O R C L A W M I N T S C R E E N E R D E C E I T P L U S C L A N S H A D E I A N R E D D E N S S E E T R I B E S I R E B E A N S E N A T E O V E R A L L L S R U T S E D I T P P U B C R A W L L O C K E R O N I O N E A S E H A L E T I L D E A M I S E L L S S T E E D R A P S S E A T Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 44 Animal restraints 46 Existed 50 Adjust 51 Lordly 52 Pitcher Ryan 53 Atellier stand 55 Elicit 58 PC command. 59 Roe source 60 Seeger or Sampras 61 Desiccated 65 Chip off the old block Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against persons born on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, or other protected status. The Kansan will not knowingly accept Classified Policy 1 advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation of law, 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements H Drummer wanted to play for "Joe and the Casias" Only rockers need apply. Call Joe. Josh or Pat 832-8764 or stop by at 510 Nigel Street Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 markins@swbell.net HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center life SUPPORT 125 - Travel 785/841-2345 www.hoee.lawrence.ks.us 130 - Entertainment Study Abroad in Madrid, Spain. Request a Free Catalog. (800) 266-4441. Or Visit www.GoWiki.com versity of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the same California permit of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion. Dance lessons; ballet课, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-2277 Male Female 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampjobs.com BASS PLAYER 人 人 人 人 Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531. Wanted for top rated local cover dance all Styles 785-754-3649 Recycle Your Kansan 120 - Announcements 205 - Help Wanted T T T T T Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary. Students well comed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepo.org F CAMP TAKAJO for Boys, Naples, Maine TRIPP LAKE CAMP for Girls, Poland, Maine. Picturesque lakefront locations, exceptional facilities. Mid-Mune thru mid- August. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, swimming, land sports, water sports, triding outdoor skills, theatre arts, line arts, music, nature study, secre- tarial. Call Takajo at 800-250-8252. Call Tripp Lake at 800-997-4347 Or submit an application online at www.takajo.com or www.trippakecamp.com Cruise line entry level on board positions avail. great benefits. Seasonal/year rd. 941-329-6434 www.cruisecares.com Dependable, trustworthy female needed to assist wheelchair user. Errands, transportation and light housekeeping. Must like dogs. Good for OT/PT Pre-nursing. 832-0527. Doormen and weekend dart bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 Iowa Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great ties. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. Full-time summer maintenance technician needed for large apartment community. Experience help, but not necessary. Apply at 1303 West 24th and Nassau. Experienced gymnastic instructors needed. Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children preferred. CatTern1934-489-6554 Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey www.surveydollars.com GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-665-0856 Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It isn't too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campwinnau.com or complete application in staff areas of www.campwinnau.com. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, eavens.com Help wanted. Seeking self-motivated person for PT (recruitionist at Lawrence Airport). Phones, customer service, book-keeping & cleaning. Requires knowledge of Microsoft Word & Excel. 1 to 2 evenings per week and 2 to 3 weekends per month for year round. Pick up application 8AM. 4PM at the airplane. 1930 Airport Road. Direct questions to J安842-0000. Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistants! Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon. 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants Resp. inn! Assisting patrons, product, multimedia, maint, library records and materials, computer config/troubleshooting and many special projects. Req. quals excel customer service, computer & A/V equipment experience, excell, communication skills $65.00/hr. 15-25 hrs.wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For into call 864-7853 Deadline April 11, 2002. 120 - Announcements Fraternities • Sororities • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program it works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com I sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 205 - Help Wanted 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and stars. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469- 5554 Move-in coordinator needed. Begins immediately. Must be await to work 20-40 hours per week through the summer. Must be dependable and organized. Stop by Meadowbrook Apkite or call 842-4200. safe Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 825-0544. MOVIE EXTRAS / MODES NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163 ex. 1020 Seasonal Employment City of Lawrence Tennis instructors needed in Parks & Recreation. 15-30 hrs wily beginning first of June. Requires knowledge of basic elements of US Tennis Assc & Nint Jr Tennis League programs, & exp teach children 4-18 yrs of age as well as adults. Prefer CPR & first aid cert. To apply to this & many other Parks & Recreation summer positions, contact City Hall, Personnel City Hall, Personnel 6 E 6th, Lawrence KS 86044 (785) 832-9303 personnel@lawrence.ks.us www.LawrenceCITYjob.org EOE M F Shipping position open immediately. $B\hr 20 hrs/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and onresume with 3 references to EEL, P.O. Box 1304 Lawrence KS 66044 EOE/AA Dealer Data Center 506608 Spring Break was awesome! STS America #1 & Student Tour Operator is now hiring on campus reps for 2003-4 1-800-648-4494 www.stsweb.com TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS. HAVE FUN MAKE $ $ Openings in: ALL TEME & IN- DIVIDUAL SPORTS. ALL WATER SPORTS. PLUS Camp! Hike. Ropes/Rock- Climbing. Ice/Roller Hockey. Office/ Secretaries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM; BOARD/LAUNDRY. Travel allowance ONLINE APPLICATION: The Mass. St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass (upstairs above the smoke house). www.campcobbossee.com or call: (800) 473-6104 S 305 - For Sale X 300s Merchandise S Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings: call 800-319-3232 ext. 4565 MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910希威。 Attention College Students. What are you doing for the summer? No one hiring? We are! Find out how you could make $8,200 monthly this summer.Call 823-1833 BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great pay Call 1-800-806-0092 ext 1422. Hiring Teacher's Aid. 1-6 afternoons. Days may vary. Also hiring any hours for fall. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 N Michigan 841-2185. Brookcreek Learning Center Teaching Assistant. Training provided. Must be energetic and share an enthusiasm for making a difference in the lives of young children. PT ams available. Apply 200 Mt. Hope Court. 805-0222 Don't forget the 20% student discount when placing a classified. With proof of KUID ... WEDNESDAY, APRIL9, 2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B 205 - Help Wanted --- After School teacher Ages 6-9, April and May, Mon-Fri 3:00- 5:30, Wed. 1:00-5:30, Start now Must have licensed care experience and 3 ed. courses. Sunshine Acres. 842-2223 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 & 2 BR apts in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. With wood floors, high ceilings. $425.84-3633 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @843-4000. 1 BR apt for sublease, avail. June 1st, opt lease for fall. Across from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month, water/ trash paid. No pets. Elizabeth A83-6944 1.2.3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. August last 81: 841-6254 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool. KU bus rtl, laundry facility. CALL 843-0011 1-1 BR ApT, Next to Campus. Avail. Aug 1- 1346 Ohio. $490 per month. Utilities paid. Call 555-0426 1712 OHIO Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site. 3BR BA 2 $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040. NO PETS. PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt. Inc. 841- 5393 www.alpinterlawne.com 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. $415 per month, Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage Newl $804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo, plus deposit. Call 550-4148. 7 BR house. 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown. $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Mail 530-452-046 Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice remodeled 1 BR close to campus; quiet mature building. Building, water are paid. No pets, no smoking. Starting $400 841-3192. Avail. August 1st 1:3 BR 2.5 Bath Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher. 831 Alabama $110/month. Café B43-8450 Ext21. Avail. Auk. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated older house, 130k bld. Ver- mont. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique boa. No pets. $440/mo. Call 841-1074. Available in August, 1, 2 bdm. Close to GSP/Corbin between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841- 1207 Great 3BR's Avail. Aug.; Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets.$450.Call 841-1074. Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities $95-150, NO PETS. 841-553-153 VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Now Leasing! Now Leasing close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $940 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 5 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 NICE, QUET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY 405 - Apartments for Rent Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON.FRI9-6 MON-PRI 9-6 LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. **Features include:** Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $650 On North side of 4th floor at Naismith & Ousdahl 641-5533 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample furniture, on site laundry. Call 843-4909. Save Your Money! Now signing YR, LEases starting May. June/July Aug. No smoking extras. nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- cances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more. $405/mo. Spanish Coach Apts. 841-6888 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9087 3 BR apts, FP. skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Call 785-748-9807 MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT - Single Family Homes - Duplexes - Townhomes - Apartments - Condos - 1,2,3,4...Bedrooms Call today. We have something for you. 841-4935 www.masterplanmanagement.com Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apartments New Leasing for Spring 2013 * 1. 3 Bdrm * Washer/Dryer * Swimming Pool & Hot Tub * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Carages Available * High Speed Internet Connections * Security Systems Available * Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4600 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com 405 - Apartments for Rent COOL RENTING OPPORTUNITY Individual Leases Cable plus HBO Resort-stay Plaza Hotel Fitness Facility On KUl huit route 405 - Apartments for Rent JEFFERSON COMMONS BROOKLYN HOUSES Avail Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C. J/0N. No & pets. B521 Call 814-1074 Available June 1: one bedroom apt. at Briarstone, Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd.$490 per month. W/D hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800. SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. ay and find out for yourself! Washer/Dryers* Dishwasher* Microwaves* Patios* Fireplaces* Ceiling Fans one enjoy a townhome community where 842-0032 - Garages; wd Hookups * Microwave Ovens * Some with Fireplaces * On KU Bus Route Lorimar Townhomes 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Townhouses Stop by and You've heard the name. You've heard it's the place to live... www.jefersoncommons.com Located just behind SuperTarget --- Come enjoy a townhome condo no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 1301 W.24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@iks.com www.colonywoods.com - Luxurious 2,3,&4 Bedroom Townhomes - Washer/Dryer in each unit - Internet access in each room - Tanning Bed - Computer Center Apartments Now Leasing For Fall 2003 THE LEGENDS L est. 2003 - Swimming Pool - Reasonable Rates 841-8400 or 841-1287 West Hills 1&2Bedrooms - Tennis Courts - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom ALL INCLUDE UTILITIES PACKAGE NO HOOK JUPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES WASHER AND DRYER FOR UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY FLOORED FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPORTS / CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM / COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNFLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET COLONY WOODS 1301 W.24th & Naismith M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY 405 - Apartments for Rent NOW LEASING May 2003 - On KU Busses Route • Indoor/Outdoor Pool • 3 Hot Tubs (785) 856-5800 - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall - 3 Hot Tubs - Exercise Room - Great Location Near Campus NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED - Digital Cable & Internet LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING Open House Monday Friday 1:00-5:00 405 - Apartments for Rent Courtside Townhomes Town home 3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD. fireplace, kitchen appl, garage/operator, pet. Sublease 6-1/7-31 $650-766-5080 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes • Washer/Dryers • Dishwasher • Microwaves • Patios • Gas Fire Places • Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 1,2,3,Bedroom - Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 www.firstmanagementinc.com 6th & Iowa Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS luxury Bring... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood 4241 Briarwood Dr Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs, basketball court, fitness center and gated Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com MASTERCRAFT WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Campus Place Orchard Corners 15th & Kasolda749-4226 Regents Court Tanglewood Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 405 - Apartments for Rent Equal Housing Opportunity Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship. Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. 838-802 Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hill Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $535. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM. Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. Available now, May or June 1. Very nice, remodeled, spacious top floor. 1 BR apts. 9th and Emery. No smoking.pets. $415 plus utilities. 550-8111 or 841-3192. CLOSE TO CAMPUS 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen mic w/ microwave, porcelain and, security 900lb. Arkansas 843-4090 CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom. 1 bath duplex. $870. 900 Block Michigan Call 843-400-8961 图 Blue Meer Management Inc Apartment & Town Homes Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Corner at an Affordable Price - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ♦ Washer & Dryer ♦ Fully Equipped Kitchen ♦ Serving Bar 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! Luxury Apt.Homes PARKWAY 1. 2, 3 Bedroom Pool Washer/Dryer Fitness Center Basketball Court Security Systems Garages Available 842-3280 2601 Clinton Parkway Models Open Daily 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - Fireplace - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome Model Open Daily! 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790.00 savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances 410 - Condos For Rent Some with fireplaces and Garages OPENHOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 www.lawrenceapartments.com 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 הנתונים Very nice condo. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eh at 841-4470. 415-Homes For Rent 1921 Kentucky. 3 bedroom. $840. Central air, large fenced backyard. unfinished basement. Available June 1. 550-6414. 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. WD hookups. FP, vaulted ceiling, and garages small pet welcome. Call 842-3280. 4. Subleaseers needed, new 4 BR townhouse, 3. BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $912.50, lease through July 31, B1-652-6421 or 6421-657-5850 or 620-342-9273. 2 BR 1 BA nice house with one car garage, garage wood floors, fenced yard, porch with swing. $855,841-3633 anytime 4-BR, 3 BA, 3000 sft of luxury Jacuzzi; cellulared, viewed ceilings, rec room, deck w/ window, two car garage, fenced landscaped back yard; $1450 & 3633 anytime. Avail. Aug. Cute 3 BR, renovated older house 15th & New Hampshire. Wood floors, CA, ceiling fans, DW, WD hookups, ig cloats, fenced yard. Declawed cats and dogs under 20 lbs. and over 2 years call with pet rent and pet deposit. $1,050/mo. Call 841-1074. 430 - Roommate Wanted Female for house ASAP, $175+ until, Cable, CA. CH. WD. Near campus & downtown 1 block from KU bus stop. 856-5511 Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home, Walk-in closet, WID and garage. No smoking.packets $300 + /1 unit Avail Aug. 842-4540 Mature roommate wanted for 3 BD/nice house/W/D/A/garage Avail. NOW. $375+usl. No smoking. Call 766-7010. 440 - Sublease 1 bedroom apartment. 16th & Tennessee. Available May 1st. Rent negotiable. Call Kristen at 393-1549. Key House 3 BR Townhouse BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage, W/D, Central Air, avail, mid-May. Call Adam 830-8076. Female roommate to share a nice 3 BR town home in west Lawrence. Available May 1 - Aug 1. $275 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Julie at 933-2606. Large 1 BR in 2 BR at Highpointe, May- July 31. Rent negotiable. W/D. cable internet ready, great read. Call 785-312-7074 PERFECT SUBLEAGE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA. 749-6060. Sublease 1. BR apt, next to campus. $480 + util. CallSaa. Office at 913-558-9938. Summer sublease. 308 W. 16th Street. 4 BR, 2 BA. Good landlord. Nice front porch. Call 785-979-9617 or 785-331-6778. Offering $100 cash for signing sublease! 500s Services 505 - Professional --- Teacher job fair, West Port Senior Academy, KC MO April 12th 9am. to noon. Call (816) 531-8050 ext 1102. Term Paper Editing! Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students. Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 693-693-EDIT. 510 - Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2232. kansan.com 8B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 2003 KAU Eric Braem/Kansan Athletics Director Al Bohl gives a standing ovation after coach Roy Williams says he is proud of the men's basketball team's high graduation rate. Bohl said yesterday that the media portrayed false tension between Williams and him. Bohl defends job,praises Roy By Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Kansas Athletics Director Al Bohl said yesterday the media had worked to turn public opinion against him. Reports of tension between Bohl and men's basketball coach Roy Williams have fueled speculation that Williams will take a look at the vacant coaching position at North Carolina, where he was an assistant coach from 1979-1988. "You guys have been writing that it's a case where Bohl's got to go roy Will stay here," Bohl said at a pep rally for Williams' team at Allen Fieldhouse. "Hey, it's been pretty good music that we've been to two Final Fours. Those people, they don't even know Al Bohl." Bohl was booed last week at a rally in New Orleans, where the men's basketball team played in the Final Four. "George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, there's a few other people that have been maliciously attacked," Bohl said. "I'm not trying to be in that category, I'm just stating the facts on this thing." Bohl said fans at the New Orleans rally had booed him because they wrongly believed that he wanted to impact Williams' job status. He said he was actually the first person who wanted Williams to stay at Kansas. "I'm like Eisenhower, speaking of this case," Bohl said. "I want Pattons out there. I want a tough son of a gun, like a Roy Williams, that's going to go out there, and you know what? He'sgoing togetto Berlin." Bohl also said no one from North Carolina had contacted him about talking to Williams. "I'm going to have a key to all the doors in this building right here, and I'm going to lock them all, and we're all going to make sure that Roy doesn't get out of this building." Bohl said. "I'm going to lead the charge and make sure that we keep Roy Williams at Kansas." Edited by Leah Shaffer Swing, batta, batta 3 Brandon Shepard, Kansas senior infielder, swings at a pitch from the Baker pitcher on yesterday's game. The Jahayhwaks lost 7-4. Baker scored 5 runs in the first two innings and added 2 runs in the ninth to even the season series at one game a piece. Kansas scored 3 runs in the eighth to get within one run of Baker. The inning was highlighted by Kansas catcher Sean Flynn's bases-loaded triple, which brought the score to 5-4. Kansas travels to Macomb, Ill., to face. Western Illinois in a doubleheader at noon tomorrow. Dan Nelson/Kansan KANSAS 4 - BAKER7 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 -R H E Baker 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 -2 -7 H E Kansas 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 -4 -10 1 Pachner Baker, Dace Cayz, Josh Duran Baker, Kyle Mangler, Adam Podschidun Win House Save More Lose More Homerum: Bix Ellenbecker A 2003-04 CCO Staff Applications Are Out! The Center For Community Outreach is now accepting applications for student positions for the 2003-04 school year. Administrative Staff Positions (May 2003-April 2004): Two Co-Directors (20 hours/week, paid) Financial Director (15 hours/week, paid) Communications Director (15 hours/week, paid) Two volunteer co-coordinator positions for each of the following programs: Community Resources Engaging in the Arts Through Education (CREATE), Concerned, Active & Aware Students (CAAS), Environmental Action to Revitalize the Heartland (EARTH), GROW Community Garden Project, Hawks for Health, Helping Unite Generations (HUG), Into the Streets Week, The Jubilee Cafe, Lifeline, Mentors In The Lives of Kids (MILK), Music Mentors, Natural Ties, Students Tutoring for Literacy (STL) Applications are available at 405 Kansas Union. For more information stop by or call (785) 864-4073 All Applications Due On April 11th. Applicants will be considered regardless of education level, race, socioeconomic status, religion, sexual orientation, disability, or ethnic origin. First Management Living Communities. Live with the best. "We do!" First Management Living Communities. Live with the best. Highpointe 6th and Iowa 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Fireplace Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 Chase Court 19th and Iowa 1 & 2 Bdrm Fireplace Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Walking Distance to KU On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available Gated Entry High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 Brand New Community Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apts 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 832-8805 Highpointe Chase Court. 19th and Iowa Highpointe 6th and Iowa 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Fireplace Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court DryKU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome Chase Court 19th and Iowa 1 & 2 Bdrm Fireplace Washer/Dryer Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apts 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available Pet Welcome Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 807 106th Canyon Rd Malibu Court Malibu Court NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL OTHER LOCATIONS Hawthorn Townhomes 2300 Hawthorn Dr Melrose Court 1605 Tennessee Oread Apartments 1201 Orgad Parkway Townhomes 3520 W 22nd Regency Place 303 J Louisiana Stadium View 1040 Mississippi Abbott Corners 410 W. 18th St. Applecroft 1735 W. 19th St. Canyon Court 700 Cornet Lane Carson Place 112 Louisiana Chamberlain Court 1735 Ohio Hawthorn Houses 3000 W. 24th H HOURS Mon-Fri: 9-6 Sat: 10-4 Sun: 12-4 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY LONG HOUSES student union activities The University of Kansas 781-884-SHOW www.suaevents.com UPCOMING EVENTS THURSDAY 7:00 craig karces The Amazing Mentalist 7:30 p.m Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 FEATURE FILM The Hot Chick 7:00 & 9:30 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 FRIDAY I am not sure. Let me look at the image again. It looks like a circular shape with concentric circles radiating outwards. In the center of the circle, there is a small square with a face. The face has black eyes and a neutral expression. 107 p.m. feature film The Hot Chick 7:00 & 9:30 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 tunes @ noon Laural Woodhouse 1:20 pm Union Plaza kansas union, level 4 图 SATURDAY 112ml MOVIE ON THE HILL The Goonies! 3:00 pm Lampenile Hill Free kansas union gallery usa Thalhammer a solo exhibition 9:00 am-4:00 pm through April 15th kansas union, LEVEL 4 100 TUESDAY sua committee meetings 5:00, 6:00, 7:00 pm Kansas Union check sua office for meeting locations and times. open to all BENEAVON ALL TICKETS FOR MOVIES ARE $2.00 AT THE HAWK SHOP, LEVEL 4, 4 VERTICAL UNION OR PRESS WITH AM SUA MOVIE CARD. QUESTIONS ABOUT THERE OR OTHER SUA EVENTS? CHECK SUAEVENTS.COM OR CALL THE SUA OFFICE AT 864-SHOW - 4 Thursday April 10, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 131 Today's weather 68° Tonight: 40° KANSAN Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Cocaine: The powder-white drug no one wants to talk about Jayplay Jayplay Cocaine the silent drug p.8 Hemenway fires Bohl OJHAW Courtney Kuhien/Kensan Al Bohl responds to questions from reporters at his press conference held in his front yard. He said yesterday was "a sad day for collegiate athletics, when a basketball coach has the power to hire and fire a university athletics director." Athletics director axed after refusing to resign By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer In the battle of Roy Williams versus Al Bohl, Bohl lost his job as Kansas athletics director yesterday. Chancellor Robert Hemenway announced in a press conference held at 3:30 p.m. yesterday that Athletics Director Al Bohl was fired. But most of Hemenway's speech and responses focused on attempting to convince the media that this wasn't a "Roy versus Al" battle. Bohl disagreed. "This is a sad day for collegiate athletics, when a basketball coach has the power to hire and fire a university athletics director," Bohl said at a press conference he held at his house after the announcement. "A source close to the athletics department believes that I am one of the misfortunate people who personally endured the results of Roy Williams' hatred and vindictiveness." Earlier yesterday morning, Bohl met with Hemenway and was asked to resign. Hemenway said at the press conference. When Bohl refused, Hemenway removed him from his position as athletics director. Hemenway said he had decided to fire Bohl after he had conversations with members of the University of Kansas Athletics Corporation board, coaches and other athletics department staff, alumni and contributors to Kansas athletics. A. Drue Jennings was named interim athletics director pending the outcome of a national search. ALBOHL'S CAREER AT KANSAS April 26, 2001 — Bob Frederick Kansas athletics regions as Kansas state university June 28, 2001 — Al Bohl is selected as athletics director after five years as athletics director at Fresno State and nine years at Toledo. Aug. 1, 2001 — Bohl arrives at Kansas. Nov. 4, 2001 — Bohl fires football coach Terry Allen with three games remaining in the season. Nov. 5, 2001 — During a press conference, men's basketball coach Roy Williams voices his disappointment with Bohl about Allen's firing. Dec. 3, 2001 Bohl hires football coach Mark Mangino. Fall 2001 - Winter 2002 — The Fresno Bee publishes stories about financial discrepancies and academic fraud during Bohl's tenure as Fresno State athletics director. April 9, 2003 — Chancellor Robert Hemenway fires Bohl. Hemenway said that Bohl was ineffective as athletics director. "On the basis of those conversations and my own evaluation of the situation, I came to the conclusion a change of leadership was needed at this time," Hemenway said. Bohl said he was in a hopeless situation in the matter of his employment because of "malicious" attacks. "I believe the Kansas basketball coach had the power to hold his athletics director in his hand like a dove — he had the choice to either crush me with the power SEE DIRECTOR ON PAGE 8A City states support of academic freedom By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com kansan staff writer Lawrence City Commissioners joined the legion of local voices supporting Dennis Dailey with a unanimous vote Tuesday evening. Instead of the typical solution of drafting a resolution, commissioners voted to have City Manager Mike Wildgen draft a letter, which would be signed by the mayor, to Gov. Kathleen Sebelius stating their support of academic freedom at the University of Kansas. David Dunfield, newly appointed mayor, said commissioners chose the unusual measure of support because the situation needed immediate attention. He said this attention was needed because the budget amendment to deny funding for Dailey's human sexuality classes sat on the governor's desk. Classes are now on. "This is a more direct way of asking the governor to respect the University's academic freedom," he said. The issue wasn't on the city commission's agenda until retired social welfare professor Herman Leon brought it to their attention, Dunfield said. "Once he brought it to our attention and suggested it was an issue that concerned the entire city, we agreed," he said. SEE CITY ON PAGE 8A Harassing phone calls annoy University office By Erin Ohn eohm@kansan.com Kansas staff writer The office filed a criminal report Monday at the KU Public Safety Office concerning harassing telephone calls to the office's main line. An anonymous male caller wants to be set up with University of Kansas women, but dating services are not something the Office of Admissions and Scholarships provides. Lisa Pinamonti, director of Admissions and Scholarships, said the same Lt. Schuyler Bailey of the KU Public Safety Office said officers had been called to the KU Visitor Center, 1502 Iowa St., a couple times in reference to male had been calling the office from an off-campus phone for about two weeks. She said he has asked for information about students and to be put in contact with female students. Pinamonti said the frequency of his calls varied, and the office sometimes received as many as 20 calls within a couple minutes. SEE PHONE CALLS ON PAGE 8A Online voting gets going Brandon Baker/Kansan ( By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer After one day at the polls, elections commissioner Courtney Wachal said, "So far, so good." STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE In the inaugural year of online voting, students cast their votes on computers at polling sites yesterday. Wachal and the Karen Keith, Tulsa, Okla., senior, casts her vote for student body representatives. Keith said she was happy with yesterday's online voting process and looked forward to improvements in the future. "It's not that complicated. It's just slow." Keith said. elections commission are responsible for fixing problems that occur. Although the new computer system is working—slow, but working - minor problems arose such as dead cell phones, used for communication between polling sites, and hard-to-find polling sites. "Pretty much everything that could go wrong, has gone wrong," she said. "But I have a tendency to overreact." Aaron Brown, Academic Computing Services programmer, developed the online voting system. He, too, worked yesterday to make the online program more efficient, so voters could log in, vote and be on their way faster. He said the system wasn't in a repair situation but was slow because the University of Kansas' main Web server gets thousands of hits a day during regular use. Later in the day, Wachal said everything calmed down and was going well. "On top of that, there's online enrollment. On top of that, there's online voting." Brown said. At the Wescoe Hall polling site Gary Laster, poll worker, said to a voter, "Jus be patient because it's slow." The polling site has had a steady turnout. Most voters weren't complaining about the slowness but did mention it, Laster said. Five minutes was the rough estimate Elections Commissioner Courtney Wachal will announce the election results at the Parlor Room in the Kansas Union at 6:30 p.m. KUJH and KJHK will air the results. Students need to bring their KU online IDs, passwords and KUID numbers to vote. VOTETODAY Polling sites will be open today and students can vote online from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.The Budig Hall and Kansas Union computer labs will be open today until 10 p.m. Thursday polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. POLLING SITES Wescoe Hall Purple Union of voting time, said Diana Calkins, elections commission chairwoman. Strong Hall Wescon Hall Wescoe Hall Burge Union Kansas Union Down the hill at the Wagnon computer lab in Summerfield Hall, Bill Araiza, poll worker, was manning his station. He said the biggest Kansas Union Mrs. E's Area by Summerfield and Malott halls Oliver Hall Oliver Hall GSP-Corbin Hall Wagnon computer lab at Summerfield Hall Budig Hall computer lab Learned Hall computer lab Source: Elections Code concern from voters was the slowness "Other than that, it's been pretty quiet," he said. - Edited by.Andrew Ward 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 News briefs CORRECTION Yesterday's The University Daily Kansan contained two errors. In "Coalition and Independent President and Vice President Pre-election Activity Expense Report," Amanda Meglemre was identified as Ashley Meglemre and Tony Treu's name was misspelled. CAMPUS 'Kansan' selects editor and business managers The University Daily Kansan Board has selected the Summer 2003 business manager and the Fall 2003 business manger and editor. Danielle Bose, Summer 2003 business manger and Lawrence junior, is currently the national sales manager and has worked as an account executive at the Kansan. Michelle Burhenn, Fall 2003 editor and Topeka junior, is a Kansan campus editor and copy editor this semester. She has also worked as a reporter and designer at the Kansan and reported at the Lawrence Journal World, The Kansas City Star and The Topeka Capital-Journal. Amber Agee, Fall 2003 business manager and Arlington, Va., junior was the Kansan business manager in Spring and Fall 2002. She has also been a campus sales representative, campus sales manager and is currently a zone manager at the Kansan. She worked as an advertising intern at the Fort Collins Coloradoan in summer 2001. She was named 2002 Business Manager of the Year by College Newspaper Business and Advertising, Inc. The editor position for Summer 2003 is still open. Applications are available at room 111 in Stauffer-Flint Hall and are due to Malcolm Gibson, general manager, by noon Monday. Applications for section editor positions are available now at the Kansan newsroom, room 111 in Stauffer-Flint Hall. Kansan staff reports International Awareness activities planned this week The International Student Association will host events for International Awareness Week. The activities, which are open to everyone, are designed to promote international understanding, Cindy Yeo, ISA president, said. This is the 51st annual International Awareness Week at the University of Kansas. Events Today International Fashion Show & African Dance, 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the fourth floor lobby of the Kansas Union ■ "My Experience in Iraq" 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Big 12 Room in the Kansas Union. Scott Harding, professor of social welfare, presents his trip to Iraq along with updates on the current situation from Iraqis he met while he was there. Tomorrow World Expo, noon to 5 p.m. at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Saturday ■ KU Soccer Mania, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Robinson Field (next to Watkins Memorial Health Center). $5 per team, each team must have 11 players. Festival of Nations, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. — Henry C. Jackson LOCAL Kansas National Guard leaves for overseas duty TOPEKA—The Kansas Army National Guard's fixed-wing flight unit has left for overseas duty, the Guard announced Monday. Six of the eight members of Detachment 37, Operation Support-Aviation, left Sunday for their mobilization station at Fort Benning, Ga. They are en route to an overseas duty station in the Central Command area of responsibility in the Middle East, the Guard said. All but one of the soldiers are pilots who fly C-12 aircraft. The unit's mission is to provide high-priority, short-notice air transport of passengers and cargo. -The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJHTV Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. KUJH-TV News News: Aashley Earnst and Cary Dreher Weather: Matt Jacobs Sports: Mike Alzamora 07 kansan.com On KJHK,90.7 FM,listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to ransan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer, Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan A student declines a handbill offered by Josh Kaplan, Overland Park junior, in front of the Kansas Union. Kaplan, who is running for business senator and handed out election information yesterday, said people on campus had been pretty receptive overall. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Environs will host a Veggie Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the ECM, 1204 Oread A.m. Call 843-4933. The Student Development Center will host a Nontrad Brown Bag Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Alcove E in the Kansas Union. Contact Laura Morgan at 864-4064. Shannon Campbell of the School of Journalism will give a lecture on "Using Effective Strategic Communications for HIV/AIDS Prevention in South Africa" at noon at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. Call 864-1064. A. Leticia Arroyo Abad of the Center of Latin American Studies will give a lecture on "The New Argentina: Change and Continuity in Perón's Time" at noon at room 318 in Bailey Hall. Call 864-4213. Noelle Giuffrida of the Art History Department will give a Tour du Jour lecture on "Chinese Themes in Japanese Painting" at 12:15 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art.Call 864- 4710. University Career and Employment Services will host a workshop on "Resumes from Scratch" for juniors and seniors at 3 p.m. at the PC Lab in Budig Hall. Call 864-3624. Sheree Willis of the Center for East Asian Studies and Eric Rath of the History Department will give a lecture on "Eating Etiquette in East Asia" at 4 p.m. in the ECM, 1204 Oread Ave.Call 864-3843. Neve Gordon of Ben-Gurion University in Israel will give a lecture on "Extra-judicial Executions and the Legitimization of Authority" at 4 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-2859. Roy Plotnick will give a lecture on "From the Top Down or the Bottom Up? Nature and Controls of Self-similarity in the Fossil Record" at 4 p.m. at room 103 in Lindley Hall.Call 864- 4974. Author Robert C. Hagan will be at Oread Books in the Kansas Union for a reading and book-signing at 5 p.m.Call 864-4431. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will meet from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.at room 207 in Robinson. Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. The Pre-Occupational Therapy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at room 108 in Smith Hall. Contact Dena Fishburn at 832-6114. Craig Karges will perform at 7 p.m. at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. Call 864-7469. The KU Karate Kobude Club will practice from 7:30 p.m.to 9:30 p.m.in St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422. ON THE RECORD ■ A 28-year-old KU employee told the KU Public Safety Office that someone caused $550 in damage to four win dows in Snow Hall, 1460 Jayhawk Blvd, between 5 p.m. Monday and 10 a.m. Tuesday, according to reports. A report filed with the KU Public Safety Office showed someone caused $250 in damage to a door window in Learned Hall, 1530 West 15th Street, between 10 p.m. Monday and 1:40 a.m. Tuesday. A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged the door and door frame of his residence between 11 p.m. Monday and 1 a.m. Tuesday in the 1600 block of Tennessee Street, according to reports. Damage was estimated at $200. Et Cetera 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bi-weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. Postmaster: Send address changes to *The University* Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 60045 which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Sunrise Terrace Apartments Available Fall Available Fail Fall - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ - Balcony / Decks w/ view - Some with w/d's - On Site Laundry Two Story, and Two baths - Digital Cable Ready Call to view The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 free computing workshops Register at All workshops are FREE for KU students, staff and faculty, but REQUIRE registration for everyone. Workshop descriptions and schedule: locations/calendar Register at www.ku.edu/acs/train or 864-0494. Academic Computing Services Questions? Get help at question@ku.edu or call the ACS Help Desk at 064-0200. Directions & map: www.ku.edu/acs/directions Become A Microsoft Office Specialist Set yourself apart from your peers and get certified as a skilled desktop computer user in Microsoft Office programs. Certification is available to all KU faculty, staff and students. Each exam costs $65; fees must be paid prior to the exam you wish to take. To register or to find out more, visit www.ku.edu/acs/certification, send email to Web Authoring: Intermediate Prerequisites: Web Authoring: Foundations and Web Authoring: Introduction. Requires registration for all. Tues., April 15, 8:30-11:30 a.m. Budin Media Lab EndNote: Introduction Prerequisite: For KU faculty, staff and students only. Requires registration for all. Tues., April 15, 1:30-4:30 p.m., Budig Media Lab Execl: Introduction Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Wed., April 16, 1-4 p.m., Budig Media Lab ListProc for New List Owners Prerequisite: Owner of a KU ListProc list. Requires registration for all, Thurs., April 17, 9 a.m.-Noon, Budg Media Lab NEW! Microsoft Office Specialist Certification Exam Prerequisite: For KU faculty, staff and students only. Requires registration for all and a $65 fee. Thurs., April 17, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Budg Media Lab **Excel:** Charting Prerequisite: Excel: Introduction. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Mon., April 22, 9 a.m.-Noon, Budig Media Lab **Flash:** Introduction Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Tues., April 23, 2:30-5:30 p.m., Budig PC Lab Access: Introduction Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Wed., April 24, 9 a.m.-Noun, Budig Media Lab THURSDAY,APRIL10,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A GTAC, University work to improve health plan coverage By Nikki Overtfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer If all goes as planned, graduate teaching assistants and graduate research assistants at the University of Kansas will receive more health care coverage starting Fall 2003 Last month, the Board of Regents and Health Care Commission approved the Graduate Teaching Assistants Coalition's request to increase the University's and other Regents universities' contribution to insurance coverage from 50 percent to 73 percent - like other state employees, said Dan Carey president of GTAC and member of GTAC's Health Insurance Task Force. The University is speculating that the new plan will take effect in the fall semester, but it is awaiting confirmation from the Health Care Commission, said Ola Faucher, director of human resources for the University. "This increase makes us a little more competitive and improves our health insurance a little bit more," he said. "It could be better, but it's a step in the right direction." While negotiating its contract with the University, the Health Insurance Task Force began looking at health insurance coverage of other universities for GTAs and compared that coverage to the University's coverage. Carey said. versity's national peers, the University earned a D in health care coverage for GTAs, said Amy Cummins, member of GTAC's Health Insurance Task Force. "Problems include the premium costs, coverage and University contribution to the premium," she said. All of the peer institutions had better plans, and most of them included dental and vision plans. too, Carey said. As part of its contract with GTAC, the University worked with the GTAs to get the changes approved by both the Regents and the Health Care Commission, Lynn Bretz, director of University Relations, said. "The University was part of the negotiation because we wanted to improve GTAs' benefits and salaries," she said. The GTAC and the University originally sent a letter to the Health Care Commission asking for this increased coverage in February. GTAC president Carey said. The Commission then requested the GTAC and the University send a letter to the Regents because this would affect all the regent schools. And in the middle of March the Regents approved that this benefit be extended to all the regent institutions, Human Resources Director Faucher said. Other regent institutions include Kansas State, Wichita State University, Pittsburg State University, Emporia State University and Fort Hays State University. ALEXANDRA MCCALLY — Edited by Amber Byarlay Journalist, professor talks about international reporting Carlos Sariol, international journalist and professor at the University of Puerto Rico at Carolina, reads demographic and geographic facts about Cuba, his native country, to students in a Media and Ethics class. Sariol visited classes for the past three days and talked about mass media communications in Cuba and shared his experiences as a journalist with students. By Kellev Weiss Kelley Weiss/Kansan by katy Weiss kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Carlos Sariol, international journalist and professor, says international knowledge and experience is imperative for good journalism. Sariol, during the past three days, visited journalism, Spanish and business classes to discuss mass media communications in Cuba. Sariol said he had reported from 15 different countries and recently had done freelance work for the British Broadcast Channel. He is the chairman of the Department of Graphic Arts and Public Information at the University of Puerto Rico at Carolina. Sariol had two specific criticisms of the American media sensational coverage of crime and inadequate international coverage. Sariol said the international coverage was insufficient. Sariol estimated that 95 percent of American news was from American journalists, which, he said, made Americans uninformed about world issues and could allow biases. "The war coverage is very bad," Sariol said. "We need to give the other face. War has blood — 90 percent of deaths are civilians and only 10 percent military." He said a "best news is bad news" philosophy had made the press sensationalize violence and crime stories so much that it had desensitized and dehumanized the effects of crime. The reporters embedded in Army forces in Iraq compromise the independence that Sariol said is important for journalism. "I don't like journalists in the Army because they need to remain free," Sariol said. "We are going to war as a PR army." Understanding other cultures and having accurate international news coverage is important. Sariol said, because we are living in a piece of the world that is close to others. The negative image of Americans across the world, specifically in Latin America, is something Sariol said he wanted to help diminish. "I like to help change the image of Americans as being seen as stupid," Sariol said. Linda Davis, associate dean and associate professor of journalism, helped coordinate Sar- iol's schedule for his stay in Lawrence. "It's been very successful." Davis said. "He does inspire fabulous questions by students, and people are fascinated by Cuba and especially Carlos because he is so warm." Chris Quackenbush, Olathe junior, listened to Sariol speak in his Ethics and Media class Tuesday morning and said he had enjoyed hearing the international viewpoint. “It's cool to have a perspective from a different culture,” Quackenbush said. “It's good to get an outside perspective because even though teachers tell us classes aren't biased, they are.” Sariol said he enjoyed meeting students and talking to classes, and his experience visiting with students at the University of Kansas had given him hope for the future. The students' reactions at the University, he said, has further proven to him that Americans are open to new perspectives and welcoming to him. And in contrast to other cities Sariol has visited, Lawrence has left a unique impression on him. In general, college-aged students are Sariol's favorite kind of company, he said. "I like to be around the young people," Sariol said. "Not the old people who talk about retiring and other problems." - Edited by Amber Byarlay 21 to Enter NO COVER! BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass. Lawrence, KS Watch out JAKE is coming... TONIGHT! $2.00 TRIPLE WELLS! $2 U-CALL-ITS! $2.50 Long Islands $1 shots of DR! TOMORROW NIGHT!! MEET JAKE LEINENKUGEL! It's the LEINIE LODGE TOUR! Come on down Friday, April 11th, meet Jake Leinenkugel, and get your picture taken with him to commemorate the experience! Oh Yeah: bring down your Leinies Memorabilia--he'll sign ANYTHING... well, ALMOST anything. $7.00 Leinie Lodge T-Shirts of COURSE he'll sign it! $2.00 Leinie's Taps & Bottles! "Always the ‘Best’ Specials, Always the ‘Most’ Fun!" THURSDAY APRIL 10,2003 NEWS --- 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION 5A THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 TALK TO US Kristi Henderson 864-4854 or khanderson@kansan.com Jenna Goeppert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoeppert kansan.com and ihenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4818 or ishafer.kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Eric Keiting business manager 864-4358 or adsaLES@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mglbson@kansan.com Matt Fisher Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Be smart to be safe on campus at night Students have the right to feel safe both during the day and at night on campus. The addition of more blue lights and street lamps would be beneficial to the campus, but students can increase their own safety by using a little common sense. Schuyler Bailey, KU Public Safety Office police lieutenant, said students needed to be rational when on campus at night. "I would encourage people to walk in groups whether they are male or female. There is a sense of safety in numbers and not being alone," he said, "If you utilize the bus system and Saferide, don't walk alone and avoid places that are dark or out of the way, you should be pretty safe." Colleen Reed, Lawrence doctoral student, said she took certain precautions when she was on campus at night. "When I'm leaving a building I always have my keys ready, I have a flashlight on my key ring," she said. "I vary my route, and I call someone and let them know when to expect me." KUnited and Delta Force have proposed possible strategies to improve the situation. Among the platforms, KUnited has proposed a jaywalk service where students can call and request to be accompanied to their car or home and Delta Force has suggested an increase of lighting and blue lights across campus. Bailey said campus crime had been steadily decreasing during the past five years. However, students must remember that crime is inevitable in any community with more than 25,000 people. The University of Kansas is not exempt from this despite the amount of lighting or any other system that could be implemented. More street lamps and blue lights would improve safety issues on campus, but students cannot rely on the University or political coalitions to keep them safe. Students need to take responsibility for their own safety. Do not walk alone, stay out of dark places and always be aware of your surroundings. M Amanda O'Toole for the editorial board REALITY CHECK Even TROOPS Believe IN OF SPEECH JWADG IN RESPONSE TO THOSE WHO ARE AGAINST PROTESTING... Jennifer Wade for The University Daily Kansan Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com Sex forever, porn forever, Dennis Dailey forever. PERSPECTIVE My friend and I were wondering if any of you over there at Free For All would like to bring us nachos. If so, we're in Room 125 at the Best Value Inn. I'm a KU student who will be in Iraq in less than three weeks, and I want those who are protesting this war to realize that we are not only liberating Iraq but giving freedom to those who are protesting us liberating Iraq. Thank you, and have a good day. My roommate just declared that she would rather avoid speaking to the opposite sex for a month than have to live without a Cadbury egg ever again. Endorsements don't bias coverage of news the opinion side as separate as possible; said Lindsay Hanson, associate opinion editor. Reporters don't vote on candidates, and neither do the section editors. Hanson herself refrained from casting a vote because she is also a copy editor. It's important to keep the news side separate from the opinion page because the news staff must objectively report and edit news about Senate. B A new day dawns, Jayhawks, and it's time to shake off that basketball induced stupor because an important event occurs today: Student Senate elections. READERS' REPRESENTATIVE (3) Tuesday, while many of you were still nursing hangovers, The University Daily Kansan published its guide and endorsement of Senate candidates. To decide who to endorse, the Kansan distributes surveys to the candidates asking about their stances on issues and leadership experience. The surveys are compiled and reviewed by the opinion editors, members of the editorial board and the editor-in-chief, Kristi Henderson. Not all editorial board members are journalism students; they come from a variety of backgrounds and majors. Based on the survey responses, the board decides which candidates to endorse. Leah Shaffer opinion@kansan.com When endorsing candidates, the Kansan aims to keep the news side and So the Kansan editorial stuff goes out of its way to make sure students have an objective source to help them make voting decisions. But what students really need to know on election day, is "why". Why should students take the time to vote? With only 15 percent of the students voting last year, that question is not being answered enough. So, for those of you wondering what the purpose of voting this year is, here's a quick answer: money. It's your money. Every year, Senate controls approximately $800,000 from student fees. According to the Senate treasurer, Ryan Evans, about $600,000 of that is already set to go to certain programs such as the Lied Center. And approximately $92,000 of that goes to student groups from the previous year that have requested the money. That leaves about $90,000 to be allocated to more student groups, events, programs — whatever. It's the "whatever," that voting helps decide. Senate has the power to raise and lower your student fees. If that isn't reason enough to vote, think of it this way. Like it or not, Senate is the most direct-access route to University administration. Senators represent the student population, and that voice can make a difference in everyday aspects of campus life. With programs like KU on Wheels and The Newspaper Readership Program, Senate makes a modest but crucial difference in students' lives every year. A third answer to the question of "Why?" is, "Why not?" With online voting, this year it's easier than ever to give your input. Why vote? Because it's your money, your campus and your opportunity to make sure next year's Student Senate will be a great one. Shaffer is a Hays senior in journalism and environmental studies. PERSPECTIVI Proposed bus route won't raise student costs GUEST COMMENTARY In an effort to clear up any confusion or miscommunications, I wish to offer my professional viewpoint on KUnited's platform proposal of the Jayhawk Express. Recently The University Daily Kansan corrected a mistake saying a free bus route would require a student fee increase of $15. Wrong. The Jayhawk Express would run on the current budget and student fee. Tim Akright opinton@kansan.com Claims have been made that this issue hasn't been discussed and couldn't go into effect next school year. Wrong on both accounts. KUnited representatives have discussed the Jayhawk Express' feasibility with transportation board adviser Aaron Quisenberry and me. In addition, the transportation board can change routes at any time, using hand- One of the final issues is adapting the current KU on Wheels route system to accommodate the Jayhawk Express. Routes will need to be altered, but that needs to happen, regardless. The several routes that serve the few riders living off campus exist because of the lack of coor- bills and map insets to alert students to the changes. dination between KU on Wheels and the city to provide a more cost-effective and widespread transit system to the University of Kansas. Student fees and bus pass rates will have to increase significantly soon to cover growing costs. But the city and University are working on plans to make The T, the Lawrence bus system, more accessible to students. Meanwhile, KU on Wheels, inevitably, will be revamped to focus only on campus and the immediate surrounding areas. The T will cover the rest of the city. I support any movement toward a more efficient, cheaper system, regardless of who presents it. This vote will determine whether KU on Wheels continues to be a pass-based system or whether it takes the first steps toward being a system for those with a KUID. Students must decide when KU on Wheels should transition to a campusfocused system that's free for anyone with a KUID. The Jayhawk Express vote can be a starting point for the change or a decision to sit back and wait for inevitable budget constraints. Look at all the issues. Ask the candidates themselves — they are the ones who can best answer you. This election is your opportunity to influence the future of the University. Don't let your voice go unheard. Akright is an Overland Park junior in English. He is transportation coordinator for Student Senate. United States Student Association makes education possible Education is a right for all people, and membership in the United States Student Association, addressed on the election ballot as Referendum 2, is a big step toward making the University of Kansas a part of that process. Vote yes on Referendum 2 today. Articles in Tuesday's University Daily Kansan blurred the real issue at hand: education. Despite the hard work KU students do to succeed academically, money and privilege play an essential role in attending this University. I am no better than a student who could not afford to come here, but my wallet tells me I am. The fact that I have to GUEST COMMENTARY P. R. M. K. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. M. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. R. Jeff Allmon opinion@kansan.com tion as a privilege is something that must be changed. The 40-page USSA position paper discussed in the Kansan, which a student "found" (as if USSA was hiding it), is not a document outlining the actions USSA takes in opposition to certain issues. It outlines USSA's stance on these issues based upon a democratic process from within its membership. Is USSA lobbying to end "intellectual colonialism?" No, that would be futile and somewhat ridiculous USSA is instead lobbying to make Pell grants an entitlement, thus solidifying them in the face of federal appropriations. USSA is lobbying to preserve campus safety provisions in the Higher Education Act. And USSA is lobbying to eliminate the drug question on the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, which subjects students to double jeopardy. Not everyone may agree with certain The glaring disproportional nature of the fact that spending on weapons far outweighs spending on education should aspects of USSA's stance on particular issues, but making our University a part of USSA will give us a voice in its body and in Washington. We could change aspects of those stances that we disagree with. But most of those issues are not addressed in USSA's action agenda, which governs its lobbying strategy. And the action agenda for USSA is firmly focused on making education a reality for all. We have the power to change the stance of the federal government toward its future and toward its students. A beg the question: Where do we, as students, stand in the minds of our federal government? Surely there is something wrong with a picture that places our importance somewhere near the amount spent on the government's postage for the Gulf War. This is what USSA fights, not "intellectual colonialism." All students deserve better from their government, and USSA membership will make the University part of the process that makes education a right for all students. Alilmon is a Wichita senior in philosophy. He is community affairs director for Student Senate. THURSDAY, APRIL 10,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Med center now a leader in brain technology Nikki Overfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Only three places in the country have the technology capable of creating functional images of the developing brain in the womb, and one of them is the University of Kansas Medical Center. This magnetoencephalography unit is one of the brain research tools that will be used at the new Hoglund Brain Imaging Center.The center opened March 26. Magnetoencephalography is the measurement of magnetic fields over the head generated by electric currents in the brain. "We have a real opportunity for Kansas to quickly establish itself as one of the leading brain imaging centers of the world," said Jeff Lewine, main clinical physician and director of the magnetoencephalography laboratory at the center. Being able to look at a developing brain in the womb can help doctors detect who is at high risk for learning disorders, Lewine said. The Massachusetts General Hospital and the University of Minnesota are the only other places in the country that have brain technology comparable to the Med Center, said William Brooks, director of the brain imaging center. Although the center will also do some clinical work to help decrease the patient load at the hospital, it is predominately a research center, Lewine said. This will allow the technology to be controlled by research, which is an advantage over other facilities who have limited resources, he said. "It's a real exciting time for brain imaging," Lewine said. "We really have unique opportunities here." The center will have technology that will allow researchers to study complications such as strokes, alzheimer's, autism, "It's a real exciting time for brain imaging. We really have unique opportunities here." Jeff Lewine Director of the magnetoencephalography laboratory at KU Med center. schizophrenia and learning disorders,he said. A state-of-the-art imaging center will allow researchers to take pictures of the brain. The pictures will help them locate specific cognitive functions in the brain, Brooks said. And they will have technology to track electrical signals in the brain, he said. There will also be an animal center that will allow parallel experiments to be done on animals as part of the research, Brooks said. The center will reach out to the academic community, Brooks said. Researchers at the University, along with researchers at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and the Stowers Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo., will make use of the facility. Edited by Brandon Gay Smokers receive money to quit participate in metabolism study By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Erin Sailler earned extra spring break cash by quitting smoking. The Overland Park junior participated in a KU study to find relationships between smoking and metabolism rates. She received $500 for spending six nights in a sealed room in Robinson Center, and attending counseling sessions. The study's primary researcher, Dennis Jacobsen, Research Scientist for the Center for Physical Activity and Weight Management, said that about 15 people participated in the study. All participants received $500. Debra Sullivan, assistant professor of nutrition, said the study was primarily created to help people successfully quit smoking without gaining weight. "There are lots of women who smoke to maintain weight," Sullivan said. "We are trying to find out why this weight gain occurs." A committed smoker for four years, Sailler decided that getting paid to quit was a double bonus. "I had to stay in a 14-by-16 foot room for 23 hours at a time," Sailler said. "I felt like I was in jail — they were really long days." She passed the time by watching MTV and a bit of occasional studying. Because no physical contact was allowed during this period, Sailler's food was served through an air-locked slot. She selected her meals of Uncle Ben's Rice Bowls, bagels and assorted dinner. The entire testing process lasted 87 days, with 40 smoking days and 47 nonsmoking days. After 40 days of smoking, Sailler had to quit cold turkey. Sailler was given a CO2 Breathalyzer test each Monday, Wednesday and Friday to ensure she was smoking. "They told us that they were going to give us a saliva test, but they never did," she said. "I think it was just a trick." Sailler quit the habit without any problems,but her roommate in the Sigma Kappa sorority, who also participated in the study, had a more difficult time. "She would have occasional fits from not smoking" she said. Sailler's roommate, Lori Keeshan, was a bit more apprehensive about the testing process. "Giving up so much of your time was difficult," said Keeshan, Topeka senior. Although Keeshan is now smoking again, she doesn't regret the testing process. "I just needed to know that I can quit," she said. Aside from the overnight stays, the participants could lead normal lives during the process. They were free to consume alcohol, and they were encouraged to keep a daily food diary. "The biggest pain about the whole deal was having to walk down to Robinson for the Breathalyzers," Sailler said. "I would definitely do a study like this again." -Edited by Brandon Gay ALEXANDRA KLEIN Dan Nelson/Kansan Erin Sailler, Overland Park junior, talks to her roommate at her room in the Sigma Kappa sorority house. Sailler participated in a program that tested the link between quitting smoking and metabolism. Sailler, who was paid $500 to quit smoking for the study, said she used to smoke about half a pack per day. Bills work to balance Medicare The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Congress should correct differences in how Medicare treats city and small-town hospitals when it debates overhauling the program, lawmakers from rural states said. "If you care about rural America, you have to care about the success of those hospitals," said U.S. Rep. Jerry Moran (R-Kansas). Moran and U.S. Rep. Earl Pomeroy (D-North Dakota), have written legislation that would make it so rural and urban hospitals receive similar payments from Medicare, the federal health care program for seniors. Until this year, hospitals in cities with more than 1 million residents received checks that covered a bigger share of their costs. The difference was based on the premise rural hospitals were cheaper to run. Many lawmakers said that premise was no longer true, as hospitals everywhere compete for the same doctors and nurses when hiring and pay the same for supplies and equipment. Congress equalized some Medicare payments in February, but those changes only applied to the current budget year. Similar measures being considered in the House and Senate would make the fix permanent. The bills also would lessen the extent regional labor costs affect Medicare payments; give more money to the smallest hospitals; remove limits the government now places on financial help to rural hospitals that serve a large number of uninsured patients; and provide loans and grants to fix hospital buildings or buy medical equipment. WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET SANDWICHES The French Reason OUR AUTHENTIC FRENCH BREAD IS BAKED FRESH IN OUR STORES THROUGHOUT THE DAY, AND IF WE DON'T SERVE IT, WE DON'T SAVE IT. THIS BREAD IS NEVER, EVER FROZEN. FREEZER BURN. AS YOU KNOW, IS NO LAUGHING MATTER. RUG BURN. ON THE OTHER HAND. NOW THAT'S A LAUGHING MATTER. JIMMY JOHN'S Since 1974 WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET SANDWICHES WE DELIVER! 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La Prima Taza Fiona Tate 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE Orchard Corners Apartments Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! We offer: - On KU bus route - Small pets welcome - On-site laundry - Friendly on-site manager - Dorm units available - Sparkling pool Models open daily 749-4226 15th & Kasold Mon.-Fri. 9:00 - 5:00 HOME BUILDING OPPORTUNITY APRIL 9TH FROM 9 AM TO 8 PM STUDENT SENATE GET OUT THE VOTE APRIL 10TH FROM 9 AM TO 4 PM STRONG HALL WESCOE HALL BURGE/KANSAS UNIONS MRS. E'S HAWORTH HALL GSP HALL OLIVER HALL --- 1 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 Student learns patience at group home By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Every face in the crowd and every name in the phonebook has a story behind it. Every week, Kansan writer Megan Hickerson tells the story of a randomly selected KU student. Angela Luttrell has had more parenting experience than most University of Kansas students — but she doesn't have any kids. TOTAL LESSONS Dan Nelson/Kansan Luttrell worked for four months as a live-in parent for a girls group home. The Faces in the Crowd $8 per hour pay isn't what motivated Luttrell to parent eight young women at the Achievement Place for Girls in Lawrence. Angela Luttrell, Orange County, Calif., senior, pauses before class at Robinson Center. After working in a girls group home in Lawrence for four months, Luttrell is graduating in May and plans to get a teaching job in New York City. "I get involved because some of these girls have no mentors or mother figures in their lives," the Orange County, Calif., senior said. "I tried my best to compensate for what they were missing." As a live-in parent, Luttrell was responsible for getting the girls ready for school, distributing their medications and entertaining them in the evening hours. Luttrell accompanied the girls to Oak Park Mall in Overland Park in December and encouraged them to purchase gifts for their families. Not all members of Luttrell's family encouraged her to accept this time-consuming job. "My dad didn't want me to do it because he thought it would be a distraction from my schoolwork," she said. Because she had to be with the girls almost every evening of the week, Luttrell actually found more time to get studying done. "It definitely restricted my evening life," Luttrell said. Luttrell said it was often difficult to contain her emotions when conflicts arose, but she walked away from the job with more patience. "There was lots of lying going on," she said. "I had to watch for drinking and smoking — some of them were pretty sneaky. They stand in your face and cuss at you. They just have to get it out of their systems." Working at home for disadvantaged girls made Luttrell appreciate her own upbringing. The most difficult aspect for her was to see the girls who have been through the system several times. "We had one girl who had been placed in over 20 homes in six years," she said. "I was really close to my family, so this really affected me." Luttrell's sorority, Mu Sigma Upsilon, helped raise money by holding a concert at Raoul's to buy the girls' home a new dryer. Jennifer Boyce, Luttrell's sorority sister, was impressed with the time that Lutrell devoted to her job. "She successfully handled 40 hours of working a week, plus, she is a full time student." Boyce, Lenora senior, said. "I could never do it—I'd have a stress attack." After she graduates with a communication studies major, and a Human Development and Family Life minor in May, Luttrell hopes to work for Teach For America in New York City. "I think that teaching will be a bit less intense because I won't be living in my work environment," she said. Edited by Anne Mantey Students bond on Asian-American trip Car ride to Indiana starts Asian Week, Taste of Asia event By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Sometimes an exhausting, 9-hour car ride can be a good thing. Witness the journey of the Asian American Student Union to Bloomington, Ind., last weekend. Thirteen of AASU's members made the trek to the campus of the University of Indiana for a meeting of the Midwestern Asian American Student Union. The conference featured workshops on a variety of topics related to being an Asian-American college student and featured social events. Perhaps more important than the lessons learned at the conference where the bonds the car ride from Lawrence to Bloomington helped build. "The whole trip made the group meld together more," said Bernard Tran, Overland Park junior. "Spending the weekend together prepared us for our upcoming events." This week AASU is preparing for Asian week, six days of activities highlighting Asian culture that will culminate with Saturday's Teste of Asia. John Tran, AASU's public relations co-chair, said preparing for Taste of Asia would require hard work and cooperation. "Around this time of the year, it gets hectic," John Tran, Overland Park junior, said. "Taste of Asia is complex. Without good leadership, that event couldn't be pulled off at all." John Tran said MAASU allowed group members to see what AASU needed to work on and what it was already doing well. "The conference allowed us to see all the strengths and weaknesses of the people in the organization," he said. While Taste of Asia and the other activities planned for Asian Week will require hard work, members of AASU's leadership aren't worried. Cindy Tran, Wichita junior, said the trip to Indiana prepared AASU for Asian Week. She said strong bonds were important to pulling off a week's worth of activities and particularly Taste of Asia. Cindy Tran said that bonding played a huge part in the event. "Without that intimacy, we wouldn't be able to pull it off," Cindy Tran said. Conor Meagher, Overland Park junior, said MAASU helped the members reconsider why they hosted activities. "Looking at other organizations takes you back to the idea of purpose," he said. "To make things more about education, more about getting people to experience it." Finding a tax professional to offer tax advice on April 9 is like trying to pin down a Santa Claus on Christmas Eve — nearly impossible. Local tax adviser eases April stress "Is there someone I could talk to briefly about tax returns?" I asked one secretary. - Edited by Anne Mantey "Not at this time of year," she laughingly replied. Thankfully, the Internal Revenue Service has extensive guides and tips to help first-time filers through this, dare I say, taxing time. And one Lawrence tax advisor, Walter Kihm, agreed to impart his wisdom on stumped students. Whether you're new to the tax trials or revisiting a yearly torture, it's time to whip out the W-2s. 1040EZs and a pencil with a big eraser. Do I have to file? If you're single with no dependents, then you must file if you made more than $7,700 last year, according to the IRS. Dependents are individuals who, as the name suggests, depend on you financially,such as a child. Your parents can claim you as a dependent if they provide more than half your support. They can also claim you if you are younger than 19 or younger than 24 and a student. As a student working part-time, you may still have to file even if your parents claim you as a dependent. You must file if your unearned income is more than $750 or if your earned income is more than $4,700. Kihm said there were benefits to filing even if your earned income didn't meet the minimum requirement. Anyone who had withholdings in 2002 should consider filing, he said. If you don't file, you won't get the refund. What does it all mean? Here are some common terms you may run into when filing your state or federal income tax return. A full tax glossary can be accessed at the Yahoo Finance Web site, taxes.yahoo.com. Taxable income - your total income minus deductions and exemptions. Earned income — wages, tips, bonuses, other employee compensation, and self-employment income, whether in the form of money, services, or COMMON CENTS COMMON CENTS Nicole Roche nroche@kansan.com property. Earned income credit — a refundable tax credit based on earned income and gross income. If you are claimed as a dependent, you will not receive the credit. Tip income — tips not reported to your employer. If you collect more than $20 in tips during one month, you must report it to your employer. Unearned income - money received for the investment of money or other property, such as interest, dividends, and royalties. It also includes pensions, alimony, unemployment compensation and other income that is not earned. Final words of wisdom There are higher education exemptions available — but Kihm warns you should check with your parents to make sure they aren't already claiming you. If they are, you can't claim the exemption. Keep last year's tax return handy as you enter the throes of this year's return. Kihm said if this year's tax return wasn't similar to last year's, you should want to know why. Comparing the two will make it easier to avoid mistakes. E-filing is the future of tax returns, and Kihm said IRS is under a mandate from Congress to minimize its amount of paper usage. Kihm said it's unlikely that filing online could save the taxpayer much time, except maybe the time it takes to staple the forms together or place them in an envelope. He did say, however, that filing online will speed up any refund you may receive, especially if you have selected the direct deposit option. If all else fails, CPAs and enrolled agents like Kihm can offer a four-month extension as long as students apply by April 15. Temporary - but relief nonetheless. Nicole Roche is a Wichita senior in journalism. Each week she covers a different consumer issue. Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass. 749-1772 CITY OF GOD (M) 4:00 6:45 8:30 ADAPTATION. (M) 7:00 8:40 QUIET AMERICAN (M) 4:18 only Today's times only. Students $4.00 today. Jayhawk & Powercat Charms ITALIAN LINK BRACELETS • 18Kt Gold • Stainless Steel • Semi-Precious Stones • Greek Letters The Etc. Shop 928 Massachusetts • (785) 843-0611 OPEN LATE NIGHTS FRI. & SAT. TIL 3 A.M. FREE Soft drink with the purchase of an entree Exp. 04/30/03 Brazilian Steak Salad Shrimp Tacos Fish Tacos Steak Rice Bowl Brazilian Lemonade Horchata Suiza Enchiladas LA PARRILLA LATIN AMERICAN CUISINE Fresh Authentic, Affordable Good Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass. 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Craig Harris, Creator & Composer Mariles Yearby, Choreographer featuring Mouin' Spirits Dance Theater Jonas Goldatein, Video Artist Sweet Honey in the Rock vocal gospel, jazz and blues SUNDAY, APRIL 13 7:30 P.M. This soulful ensemble performs vocal arrangements touching on social issues. It's music for the mind as well as the ear. CornerBank Corporate Sponsor For tickets Call 785-864 ARTS http://www.cornerbank.org But no low The Lied Center of Kansas What's Happening Next? lied.ku.edu All Tickets Half Price for KU Students! BROWN BUTTERFLY A performance inspired by Muhammad Ali SATURDAY, APRIL 12 - 7:30 P.M. ...a bold fusion of music, dance, multimedia and theater, celebrating the style, spirit and times of Muhammad Ali. Craig Harris, Creator & Composer Marlies Yearby, Choreographer featuring Movin' Spirits Dance Theater Jonas Goldstein, Video Artist Sweet Honey in the Rock vocal gospel, jazz and blues SUNDAY, APRIL 13 7:30 P.M. This soulful ensemble performs vocal arrangements touching on social issues. It's music for the mind as well as the ear. CornerBank Corporate Sponsor For Tickets Call 785-864-ARTS twittermaster but do not ticketz for the KANSAN THURSDAY,APRIL10,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Student studies unusual Mexican immigrant enclave By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Every year immigrants from Mexico arrive in southwestern Kansas looking for jobs and places to call home. Surprisingly, one group crossing the border doesn't speak Spanish. Its native language is Low German. Lisa Mays, a doctoral student in Germanic languages and literatures, is studying Low Germanspeaking Mennonites living in southwestern Kansas. The Mennonites have been leaving Mexico since the 1970s to escape poverty. day Poland and migrated to Ukraine, Canada, Mexico and now southwestern Kansas. The Mennonites trace their origins back to the northern lowlands of the Netherlands and Germany. They picked up their Low German dialect in modern- Mays is conducting a sociolinguistic study examining both language and culture. LAWRENCE SUBLETTE MONTEZUMA Mays said it was a rarity that the group managed to keep its language more than 200 years away from its homeland. “It’s kind of like a petri dish,” she said. “The language has not changed much and is now no longer spoken in the area they first picked it up, which was Prussia. You go back in time literally.” at the South Gray Community Learning Center in Montezuma. Mays travels every other week to the southwestern Kansas towns of Sublette and Montezuma. She contacts the Mennonites through church and home visits. Some evenings, Mays volunteers The Mennonites come to the center to learn English. The center has 31 students and about half are the Low German-speaking Mennonites, said Susan Riphan, learning center coordinator. Donovan Atkinson/Kansan "I think they appreciate the fact that someone's there that speaks German and is interested in learning their dialect. It makes them feel more at home," Riphan said. Mays said the Mennonites were honest and hard working. "At the same time they have several issues because they are torn between several cultures," she said. "I can't imagine what it's like to move to another country and re-establish myself." May's research is part of a larger project documenting the different German dialects in Kansas. She is the first person to study this specific Mennonite group coming out of Mexico, said Bill Keel, professor of German. "We need to understand who these people are so we can assist them in living in Kansas," Weel said. Schools in western Kansas have to find ways to teach the Mennonite children English in English as a second language programs. This can be a difficult task because Low German-speaking peoples are rare. "This issue is affecting the state in 2003. This is not a hobby,not something we can do just because we have a lot of extra time. It's a critical issue." Keel said. Mays received the Max Kade Scholarship,worth $12,000, to assist her in research costs. She has written two chapters of her dissertation with plans to finish around Christmas. She will present her findings in August 2004. Mays said she didn't know where this research would take her in the future. "With a topic like this it could very easily become someone's career," Mays said. "It depends where I work if I find a college or research institution to sponsor my research. There are many more aspects to be examined." — Edited by Andrew Ward KU on Wheels to change its routes By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The transportation board has canceled some and added other KU on Wheels bus routes to take effect in the fall. Big changes include canceling the north Lawrence night route and adding a bus stop by The Legends, a new apartment complex at 4101 W. 24th Place, said Tim Akright, transportation coordinator. The changes were made in response to requests made from students and housing managers. Requests were made to change the routes at the public route hearing earlier this semester. The hearing takes place every spring, but suggestions were welcomed anytime. Instead, the board tries to stay with it, he said. “It's pretty obvious that the student body migrates in where it lives from year to year.” Akright said. “It's hard to stay ahead of it." Aaron Quisenberry, transportation board adviser, said the changes were made to best serve the interests of the students. No services were lost, and most of the bus riders are still being picked up, he said. Akright said the changes would not increase student fees. The new recreation center was added to the free night route. If enough people ride, Quisenberry said, a day route could be added. Any comments, questions, or route change suggestions can be directed to the KU on Wheels office, 410 Kansas Union, kuowheels@ku.edu or at 864-4644. The board will continue to look at further bus route changes and will make modifications as the need arises, Akright said. BUS ROUTE CHANGES AND ADDITIONS: The transportation board finalized next year's KU on Wheels bus routes. - Edited by Todd Rapp Canceled day routes - Route 3 — Naismith-Oliver Hall - Route 7 — 15th and Crestline - Route 10 — 22nd and Kasold Added and/or changed day routes Route X----24th and Inverness. It will make roundtrip stops from campus to Naismith and Oliver halls, Stewart Avenue housing area, The Legends and Parkway Commons. Route Y — 15th and Kasold, which will leave campus on 15th Street and make stops to Meadowbrook Apartments and the loop near Orchard Corners. Canceled night routes Routes 12, 14 and 15. Routes 12,14 and 15 Added and/or changed routes Route Z — the free night loop, which will combine services to areas of the on-campus express night route and the off-camps south night route. It will exclude the portion west of Iowa Street but include the new recreation center. Source: Tim Akright, transportation coordinator The Associated Press WICHITA — Military officials assured the wife of a Kansas soldier held captive in Iraq his name was not on one of the bloodied uniforms found inside an Iraqi prison, a family member said yesterday on a condition of anonymity. But the family still did not know the fate of Army Pfc. Patrick Miller, who was last seen last month on Iraqi television answering questions in a shaky voice. Miller, 23, was captured on March 23 after the 507th Maintenance Company was ambushed March 23 near Nasiriyah. At a war briefing, U.S. Central Command spokesman Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks said soldiers found some U.S. uniforms — possibly from American POWs — at a prison on Baghdad's southeastern edge. No bodies were found at the prison. Jessa Miller and the couple's two children — 4-year-old Tyler and 7-month-old Makenzie — moved from Texas, where Patrick Miller was based at Fort Bliss, to Park City to be closer to family after he was sent overseas in December. Pastor Ron Pracht, minister of Olivet Southern Baptist Church in Wichita, married the couple shortly before his deployment and has been acting as a spokesman for the family since Miller was captured. He said yesterday the family was heartened by the rescue of Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch, a 19-year-old supply clerk with the 507th, from an Iraqi hospital after an Iraqi came forward with information about her whereabouts. As an engineer in the U.S. Air Force, there’s no telling what you’ll work on. (Seriously, we can’t tell you.) United States Air Force applied technology is years ahead of what you’ll touch in the private sector, and as a new engineer you’ll likely be involved at the ground level of new and sometimes classified developments. You’ll begin leading and managing within this highly respected group from day one. Find out what’s waiting behind the scenes for you in the Air Force today. To request more information, call 1-800-423-USAF or log on to airforce.com. U.S. AIR FORCE CROSS INTO THE BLUE AIR FORCE As an engineer in the U.S. Air Force, there’s no telling what you’ll work on. (Seriously, we can’t tell you.) United States Air Force applied technology is years ahead of what you’ll touch in the private sector, and as a new engineer you’ll likely be involved at the ground level of new and sometimes classified developments. You’ll begin leading and managing within this highly respected group from day one. Find out what’s waiting behind the scenes for you in the Air Force today. To request more information, call 1-800-423-USAF or log on to airforce.com. BUY NOW to get the best seats for these great series! Series Subscriptions and Single Tickets On Sale Now! FAME The Lied Center of Kansas Series Highlights Buy Today! YOU COME FIRST? All Tickets Half Price For KU Students! STUDENT SENATE Fame Broadway Series Miami City Ballet Concert Series Wadaiko Yamato The Drummers of Japan World Series OTHELLO AQUILA Aquila Theatre Company in Othello New Directions Series Sing-A-Long Wizard of Oz Lied Family Series Yo-Yo Ma with the Silk Road Ensemble Anniversary Special Event St. Lawrence String Quartet Chamber Music Series BUY NOW to get the best seats for these great series! Series Subscriptions and Single Tickets On Sale Now! For Tickets Call: 785.864.ARTS TDD: 785.864.2777 www.lied.ku.edu M OTHELLO AQUILLA WHERE THE BEST SONGS EVER WAS GIVEN --- 8A A=THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN NEWS THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 --- Director CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan AI Bohl makes a statement about his termination as Kansas athletics director at his press conference. He said yesterday he was one of the unfortunate people in America who had personally endured the results of Roy Williams' "hatred and vindictiveness." of influence or to let me fly with my visions for a better total program." Bohl said. "He chose to crush me." The remainder of Bohl's speech focused on how he had built up a struggling athletics department and how the media built a bad perception of him. Bohl nearly teared up when he talked about his character and how important it was to him. He spoke of opportunities and visions lost. "One of my biggest regrets is the shortchanging of football. I will not be able to finish leading the charge to build an outstanding football program." Bohl said. "I strongly believe the mandate for my dismissal reverts the Kansas athletics department back to the pattern of great men's basketball teams with other sports barely surviving." Bohl denied claims that his relationships with coaches were strained, even insisting that reporters call football coach Mark Mangino to talk about their "outstanding relationship." Hemenway said he chose to delay the decision until after the men's basketball season was finished. "While the situation became a distraction during the NCAA tournament, announcing a change while the men's basketball team was still in contention for the title would have been more of a distraction," Hemenway said. Jennings said the only reason he agreed to the position was because it was not permanent. Jennings, 56, a former Kansas football player, is not a candidate for the position. Hemenway said a new search would start and would probably take two to three months. The reason Jennings was made the interim director as opposed to someone within the department was to enable Kansas to conduct a national search. Hemenway said. He said he didn'twant the interim director to be someone the department was considering for the permanent position. Hemenway also said he would take a more active role in the selection process than he did last time. Williams responded to the firing in a press release. "It is always sad for the individual involved when a situation such as this occurs and a change is made," Williams said. "We had difficulties, and we were not as cohesive as the athletic department needs to be. This made the atmosphere somewhat difficult. Dr. Bohl tried extremely hard, and it is important now that we stop blaming individuals and pull together to be as successful as can be." Bohl came to Kansas in 2001 from Fresno State University where he became athletics director in 1996. He said he had not had time to decide whether to file a lawsuit against the University. - Edited by Julie Jantzer "It's not a threatening situation; it's just annoying," Bailey said. threats, but that sometimes the caller would imply he was going to contact students himself if the office would not help him. the harassing caller, but none of the employees of the office were in danger. Pinamonti said she didn't think the caller would follow through with contacting students. Police officers from the public safety office had answered some of the prank calls, she said. Pinamonti said the caller had never made any personal The office blocked one of the numbers from which the caller was making calls, but the calls were coming from multiple phone lines, and the phone number would sometimes register as unknown on the caller ID. She said the office had to answer the calls because it could be someone calling for information about the University. "Now we don't even talk to the person once we realize it's him," she said. "We just put him on hold, and then he just hangs up." Phone calls CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A She said the tactic seemed to be working because the office had not received any more calls Tuesday or yesterday. City CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Edited by Julie Jantzer The community has a vested interest in protecting this funding because the University has a difficult time openly fighting the state legislature, Leon said. Beyond that, the issue has turned personally painful for the retired social welfare professor as he watched it unfold over the last few weeks. It's an issue that captures the classic dilemma between a creative person and those who seek to control that, he said. Leon said it was painful to watch while the class that thousands of students profited from was destroyed "One person chose to take an elective—a disgruntled student—and her pain was somehow picked up by this legislator from Wichita," Leon said. "And somehow that pain was magically, or rather blackmagically transformed into a majority of votes in the state legislature." Lawrence commissioners want their letter to persuade the governor to override that vote with a line-item veto of the amendment to the budget. In addition to that letter, the governor will receive another message from Lawrence when a group of about 10 KU students meet with her tomorrow afternoon. Jen Hein, Lawrence senior, and coordinator of the group planning to meet with Sebelius, said the city commission's letter of support could only help her group's cause. "I applaud the city commission for understanding the importance of this issue and being pro-active," Hein said. "This is exactly what we're trying to do — not just Text of the letter sent to Gov. Kathleen Sebelius regarding Dennis Dailey's human sexuality class April 9,2003 Dear Gov. Sebelius, With the current threat of legislative interference, the Lawrence City Commission urges you to uphold the ability of the University of Kansas to independently make decisions regarding academic curriculum. The academic curriculum of the University of Kansas should be respected. The Honorable Kathleen Sebelius Capitol, 300 SW 10th Ave., Stm. 212S Topke, K6612-1590 The University should be allowed to make decisions necessary for it to move ahead in its mission of teaching students. It is essential that a university and its educator have the freedom to draw on a variety of resources when developing programs that serve a diverse student population who pursue diverse educational goals. We find it especially disturbing that the University's academic freedom is under threat at the same time that its financial health is being weakened as a result of the state's financial crisis. Your support in this important matter is appreciated. David M. Dunfield Mayor Sincerely, go have a meeting but to show that we're all together on this. It's very affirming to know that we're doing the right thing." Professors, graduate teaching assistants and students from all schools who wish to accompany Hein to Topeka are encouraged to contact her at jenhein@ku.edu. Edited by Julie Jantzer TANGLEWOOD APARTMENTS 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished Studios. 1and 2 Bedroom apartment homes. - Laundry facilities on site - Fully equipped kitchens (dishwashers*, disposal, - Within walking distance to KU campus - Telephone and cable outlets in each bedroom - Central Air - Ample off-street parking for tenants - Equal Housing Opportunity *Available in select units - 24 emergency maintenance Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 - On-site manager Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 SUNDANCE 7th & Florida NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Studios, 1BR, 2BR 3 BR w/2 baths & 4 BR w/2 baths - Furnished Apt. Available - Gas heat & water - Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves - W/D in select Apts - Private balconies & patios - On-site laundry facility - Pool - On KU bus route - On-site Manager - 24 hr emergency Maintenance Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m For more information call 785-841-5255 Models Open Daily! COSMAL BUILDING GROWTHFUN HIPAA ... It's Official! We've always protected your confidential information. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act makes it official. 's Official! Look for more details on our website www.ku.edu/~shs and when you visit Student Health Services at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Freshmen and sophomores from residence halls, scholarship halls, greek houses and off campus are invited. HURRY! ONLY 60 SPOTS AVAILABLE. sass hosted by students against spreading stereotypes email registration and questions to sass@ku.edu include name and housing affiliation registration deadline is Thursday April 10th LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • CIGARS • POOL 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE Join us for a FREE spaghetti dinner April 16th 6 p.m.at the ECM devouring our differences. EAT SPAGHETTI. STOP STEREOTYPES. All scholarship hall residents are nerds. All greek students are drunks. Resident hall students are immature. Off-campus students just don't care. Shocked? Mad? Intrigued? color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage color nails waxing texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage texture massage Hair Experts Design Team 2100 B West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) Regents Court Apartments Large 3&4 BR,2 full bath apartments for rent with Starting at $855 - $944 apartments for rent with Workers & Dancers Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Modern Decor Kitchen including Large fully Applianced Microwave & Dishwasher Gas Heat & Hot Water Control Heat & Air Central Heat & Alr Off street parking On KU bus route On KU bus route 24 hr. Emergency maintenance EHO For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 Mon.-Fri. 9-5 THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A Judge sets nuns' trial date in defaced missile silo case The Associated Press DENVER—The prosecutor who won a conviction against three Roman Catholic nuns for defacing a missile silo in a protest said he didn't enjoy convicting the women but said they must accept their fate. "As a lawyer, when I go to trial, I go to succeed. I take no personal pleasure in achieving a conviction of these women," deputy U.S. attorney Robert Brown wrote in an e-mail made public Tuesday by a supporter of the nuns. "However, I offered them a compromise of pleading to the lesser count; they refused, apparently so they could make their point in open court," he wrote. In a telephone interview with The Associated Press Tuesday, Brown confirmed he sent the email to University of Illinois professor Francis Boyle, but he declined to comment further. Boyle was barred from testifying at the trial by a ruling by U.S. District Judge Robert Blackburn. Sisters Ardeth Platte, 66, Jackie Hudson, 68, and Carol Gilbert, 55, were arrested for breaking into a Minuteman III missile silo site on Colorado's northeastern plains on Oct. 6. The nuns claim the Minuteman is a first-strike weapon prohibited by international law. They swing hammers at the silo and painting crosses on it with their own blood. A jury convicted them Monday of interfering with the nation's defense and causing property damage of more than $1,000. They could face up to 30 years in prison, but prosecutors said they likely would get five to eight years. Sentencing will be July 25. Since their arrest, all three have refused the government's offer to be released on their own recognizance. Sue Tyburski, Gilbert's attorney, said the nuns rejected the prosecutor's offer of a plea agreement because they thought they had done nothing wrong. "They're doing important work where they are now, counseling women who are incarcerated and responding to the hundreds of pieces of mail they're receiving," Tyburski said. The nuns have said they were compelled to act as the possibility of war with Iraq moved closer and because the United States never promised not to use nuclear weapons. Their lawyers argued their actions were symbolic and never jeopardized national security. In a pretrial hearing, Blackburn refused to allow the nuns to defend themselves using principals established during the international war crimes tribunal at Nuremberg. During the postwar trial of Nazi concentration camp guards, the tribunal said an individual has an obligation under international law to violate domestic law to prevent continuing crimes against humanity. Brown's e-mail said he took to the streets of Denver to protest the U.S. bombing in Cambodia in the 1970s and that the world would be better without nuclear weapons. But he said he disagreed with the nuns' international defense. Gilbert and Platte both lived at Jonah House, a communal residence for pacifists founded by Philip Berrigan in Baltimore. Hudson belongs to a similar group in Poulsbo, Wash. All joined the Dominican order in Grand Rapids, Mich. The nuns were being held in Clear Creek County Jail because the Federal Detention Center in Englewood, Colo. cannot accommodate female prisoners. STATE Rice county jail bought, may be resold on eBay LYONS — George Saling hasn't decided just what to do with his latest real estate acquisition: the old Rice County jail. One idea circulating was to turn the 1920s jail into a bed and breakfast. Another, Saling said, was to put the property at the intersection of Kansas Highways 14 and 96 in downtown Lyons right back up for sale. "I might even put it on eBay and sell it," Saling said. "I don't think they've had a jail on eBay vet." Saling bought the jail for $47,000 during a public auction Monday. The county sold the building, and the former sheriff's office annex next door, after opening a new $4.3 million facility on the western edge of town. When the jail was built, the sheriff and his wife lived in the two-bedroom home on the lower floor. Originally the sheriff was also the jailer, and his wife was the jail's matron, serving homecooked meals to the prisoners upstairs. The food trays were lifted via a dumb waiter and passed into the upstairs jail through a steel trap door. The red-brick, two-story jail also boasts a Spanish tile roof and is landscaped with shrubs and a large maple shade tree on the south lawn. "I didn't give it a lot of thought ahead of time," Saling said about buying the jail. "But I checked the structure and it's well built. There's nothing there some money wouldn't take care of." Turnpike plans to install cost-saving machines TOPEKA — The Kansas Turnpike Authority plans to install machines to dispense tickets at 16 of its 21 toll plazas along the 236-mile highway. Humans will continue to collect the toll fees and will be available to help those who have questions about the cost-saving machines. "They'll be up and down the turnpike, but not at every plaza, and they won't be in every lane at every plaza," said Lisa Callahan, a. KTA representative She said two ticket-issuing machines — one in Topeka and one in Wichita — have been successfully used on the turnpike during an experiment. Callahan said toll collector positions have been left open from retirements and turnover in anticipation of adding the machines. "It's a project we've been working on for a long time, and we've anticipated these machines for a long time so we wouldn't have to lay anyone off," Callahan said. "There may be some part-time employees who have reduced schedules, but there will be no full-time employees who will be laid off." Suspect dead after running over officer MISSION — A sheriff's sergeant fatally shot a suspected car burglar at an apartment complex in this Kansas City, Kan. suburb, authorities said. Samuel E. Byers, 26, was driving over the sergeant early Tuesday when he was shot and killed. The sergeant, identified only as a 15-year veteran of the Johnson County Sheriff's Department, was treated at a hospital for a broken leg and sent home. Johnson County Sheriff's deputies were watching the parking lot because auto burglars have repeatedly struck apartment complexes in the area. Lenexa police detectives were investigating the shooting. Authorities said deputies saw Byers break into a car around 2 a.m. Tuesday and get back into his car. One deputy followed Byers while another blocked the exits. Seeing he was trapped, Byers then drove into two parked cars and a deputy's vehicle, said Lenexa police Capt. John Meier. Deputies got out of their cars with guns drawn when Byers backed up and stopped his car as though he was giving up, officials said. But Byers then sped forward, running into the sergeant who fired a single shot through the windshield of Byers' car. 党 The Associated Press 2003-04 CCO Staff Applications Are Out! The Center For Community Outreach is now accepting applications for student positions for the 2003-04 school year. Administrative Staff Positions (May 2003-April 2004): Two Co-Directors (20 hours/week, paid) Financial Director (15 hours/week,paid) Communications Director (15 hours/week,paid) Two volunteer co-coordinator positions for each of the following programs: Community Resources Engaging in the Arts Through Education (CREATE), Concerned, Active & Aware Students (CAAS), Environmental Action to Revitalize the Heartland (EARTH), GROW Community Garden Project, Hawks for Health, Helping Unite Generations (HUG), Into the Streets Week, The Jubilee Cafe, Lifeline, Mentors In The Lives of Kids (MILK), Music Mentors, Natural Ties, Students Tutoring for Literacy (STL) Applications are available at 405 Kansas Union. For more information stop by or call (785) 864-4073 All Applications Dué On April 11th. Applicants will be considered regardless of education level, race, socioeconomic status, religion, sexual orientation, disability, or ethnic origin. International Student Association presents... International Awareness Week SUNDAY, APRIL 6 -Flavors of the World -Kick-off Dinner 6pm Lawrence Catholic Center MONDAY, APRIL 7 -Open Game Night 6-9pm, Hawk's Nest TUESDAY, APRIL 8 -Muslim Women in America Dr. Saadia Malik 11:30-1pm, Alderson -Picture the World 6-9pm, Auditorium Lawrence Public Library WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 THURSDAY, APRIL 10 Week WEDNESDAY. -Salsa Workshop 6-7:30pm, Ballroom THURSDAY, APRIL 1 -Fashion Show & Dance 3pm, 4th Floor Lobby -Firsthand Experience in Iraq Prof. Scott Harding 6-7pm Big 12 Rm FRIDAY, APRIL 11 12-5pm, Ballroom - Rhythm of the World 10pm-2am $5 admission Office of Study Abroad SATURDAY, APRIL 12 -KU Soccer Mania 9am-5pm, Robinson Field $5 per team -Festival of Nations 7pm, Woodruff Auditorium Applied English introduction International Student and Scholar Services Coca-Cola ISA HoneywellWorld.com All events are free and in the Kansas Union unless otherwise stated. 1 unique student apartments JEFFERSON COMMONS BABY RAIN Now Leasing for Fall 2003! Individual Leases Home is where your FRIENDS are. Washer/Dryer in Every Apartment Pool Plaza and Jacuzzi Updated Fitness Center Internet Access 70 6th St. 84 Karoll Drive 89 University of Kansas Louisiana St. Massachusetts St. Clinton Pkwy. 23rd St. 10 W. 31st St. Hawaii Indian Nations University JEFFERSON SOUTH LAWRENCE Trafficway Cable with HBO,MTV and ESPN Lighted Basketball Court Call us about our Current Specials! Amenities, Rents and Incentives are subject to change. 2511 West 31st Street Lawrence, KS 66047 www.jeffersoncommons-lawrence.com 785-842-0032 Call for more information 785-842-0032 RUBY'S MIZZER 749-0055 704 Mass. Spicy Red Wine Sauce!! Almost the Weekend Thursday Special!!! 16" Pizza 2 toppings 2 drinks ONLY $10.99 plus tax Open 7 days a week 749-0055 704 Mass. Voted Best Pizza SUNDAY, APRIL 13TH www.pipelineproductions.com FRIDAY, APRIL 11TH people the Billions the Autumn State $3 Bottleneck standingwave at the BOTTLENECK 727 W. HAMMOND ST. 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(785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO --- 10A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 Iraqis welcome coalition celebrate Saddam's fall The Associated Press BAGHDAD, Iraq — Their hour of freedom at hand, jubilant Iraqis celebrated the collapse of Saddam Hussein's murderous regime yesterday, beheading a toppled statue of their longtime ruler in downtown Baghdad and embracing American troops as liberators. "He killed millions of us," said one young Iraqi, spitting on one of countless portraits of Saddam scattered throughout the capital. Men hugged Americans in full combat gear and women held up babies so soldiers riding on tanks could kiss them. Iraqis released decades of pent-up fury as U.S. forces solidified their grip on the city. Marine tanks rolled to the eastern bank of the Tigris River; the Army was on the western side of the waterway that curls through the ancient city. Looting broke out in the capital as Iraqis, shedding their fear of the regime, entered government facilities and made off with furniture, computers, air conditioners and even military jeeps. "We are not seeing any organized resistance," said Navy Capt. Frank Thorp at the U.S. Central Command. "The Iraqi military is unable to fight as an organized fighting force." There was continued combat in cities to the north, though where government troops were under attack from U.S. and British warplanes. The scenes of liberation in Baghdad unfolded as the Pentagon announced that 101 American troops had died in the first three weeks of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Another 11 are missing and seven listed as captured. The British said 30 of their troops were dead. There are no reliable estimates for Iraqi casualties, although an Army spokesman said 7,500 prisoners had been taken. The medical system was overrun with civilian casualties in Basra and Baghdad, cities where fighting has been fiercest. Doctors said 35 bodies and as many as 300 wounded Iraqis had been brought to the al-Kindi hospital in the capital Tuesday. Saddam's whereabouts remained a mystery, especially so since a bombing Monday night on a building where U.S. intelligence officials believed he and at least one of his sons were meeting. Russia's Foreign Ministry denied that the Iraqi leader had taken refuge in Moscow's embassy in Baghdad. There was scattered fighting in the capital, including at Baghdad University, where Iraqis were cornered, the river at their backs. There were clashes in the northeast part of the capital, as well as sporadic sniper fire. Fires burned in the city after dark — the Ministry of Transport and Communication was ablaze and gunfire persisted. Increasingly, American and British forces were turning their effort to humanitarian assistance in the southern part of the country, and their firepower on northern regions not yet under their control. Arafat, new leadership debate selection of new government The Associated Press JERUSALEM — The newly appointed Palestinian prime minister delayed naming his government yesterday because of a dispute with Yasser Arafat over who should be in charge of the region's security forces. Prime minister-designate Mahmoud Abbas' delay came as five Palestinians, including a 16-year-old boy, were killed during clashes with Israeli troops in the Gaza Strip. The two events were not related. The choice for the post of inte rior minister could determine the credibility of a new government, which Western mediators and Israel hope will crack down on Palestinian militants. Abbas favors former Gaza strongman Mohammed Dahlan, who also is backed by international mediators and is seen as likely to try to rein in militants. Arafat wants to retain his longtime aide Hani Al-Hassan, who has served as interior minister for months but has made no serious move toward reforms, officials have said. Forming the new Cabinet is a condition for the publication of a U.S.-backed "road map" to Palestinian statehood. Abbas asked Arafat yesterday for a two-week extension and Arafat agreed, said Arafat aide Nabil Abu Rdeneh. Abbas had been expected to name the Cabinet today. In an apparent reflection of the incoming premier's positive image, Abbas and Arafat met yesterday with German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, the first senior government minister to visit Arafat since Israel destroyed most of his compound last year. North Korea not condemned despite United States request The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. Security Council expressed concern yesterday about North Korea's nuclear program but failed to condemn its withdrawal from a global weapons treaty as the United States demanded because of Chinese and Russian opposition. U. S. Ambassador John Negroponte said the United States was satisfied with the outcome of the 90-minute, closed-door meeting. He said the Bush administration still sought a peaceful solution to the nuclear standoff and he expressed hope that Pyongyang would not reject diplomatic efforts to address its nuclear program. At the heart of the dispute is North Korea's insistence on direct talks with the United States and the United States' insistence that the problem be addressed in a multilateral forum including countries threatened by Pyongyang's nuclear program. China, Russia, the European Union and Secretary-General Kofi Annan have tried to get North Korea and the United States to the negotiating table. U. N. envoy Maurice Strong said "sufficient progress" was made in bridging the gap between the sides and there was no reason to delay a meeting. As he hurriedly left yesterday's meeting, China's U.N. Ambassador Wang Yingfan said, "I think it was a good discussion. All the efforts are being done, and will continue, to promote political dialogue — that's what I stressed." The United States was seeking council approval of a statement condemning North Korea's withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the cornerstone of global efforts to curb the spread of nuclear weapons. North Korea has warned that any Security Council action against it would undermine attempts to peacefully resolve the crisis. It also warned that it would regard U.N. sanctions against its isolated regime as a declaration of war. Tensions on the Korean Peninsula escalated in October, when the United States said North Korea admitted having a secret nuclear program. Doctor alleges SARS cover-up under-report of cases by China The Associated Press BEIJING - A prominent Chinese doctor yesterday charged that the mainland government covered up details of the spread of SARS in Beijing, and an American man with the disease was declared dead in Hong Kong. Other parts of Asia nervously invoked extra precautions to contain severe acute respiratory syndrome, which has infected around 2,700 people globally and killed at least 106. The accusations of a government cover-up from Jiang Yanyong, retired chief of surgery for a Beijing military hospital, came as news surfaced that one of Beijing's hospitals had shut down because of SARS. that there were 106 cases of the disease in Beijing — more than five times the figure announced by authorities. The Health Ministry reports four deaths and 19 cases in Beijing. Jiang said doctors and nurses at two other hospitals told him at least seven deaths had occurred in their hospitals and Doctors and administrators reached by telephone at the hospitals cited by Jiang refused to comment. World Health Organization investigators said they met with Health Minister Zhang Wenkang and Vice Premier Wu Yi yesterday, discussing "the concern that there are many rumors and no clear answers," said Henk Bekedam, the WHO representative in China. "They definitely said they will be following up ... and with this high level of commitment, very soon we'll get some real answers," Bekedam said. At the People's Armed Police General Hospital In Beijing, a receptionist who answered the telephone said the facility had closed five days ago after staff members fell ill. She wouldn't give her name. A sign blocking the hospital entrance said, "Adjustments being made inside, treatment temporarily suspended, entry forbidden." Meanwhile, James Salisbury, a 52-year-old U.S. citizen and English instructor at a polytechnic institute in Guangdong province, was taken from a hospital in the border city of Shenzhen to Hong Kong, according to a family friend. sansbury's 6-year-old son, Mickey, was taken to Tuen Mun Hospital and was in stable condition, said a government representative, Josephine Yu. A friend of Salisbury's, David Westbrook, said Salisbury had been ill for about a month but thought he had the flu and only sought treatment nine days ago. 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The doubleheader at Western Illinois is the Leathernecks' home opener. Because of rain and snow, Western Illinois has had many cancellations and postponements. Price said these games would be a challenge for his ball club because the Leathernecks were on a rebuilding mission like the Jayhawks. Kansas faced Western Illinois earlier this season and defeated them 10-6 in its home opener. "When we played them earlier this season it was their first game of the season," Price said. "They are a lot better now. Someone informed me yesterday that we will be the first team to be ranked at some point during the season to play a game at Western Illinois since 1985. It is going to be a big game for them and we have to come ready to play." The two starters on the mound for Kansas will be senior left-hander Pat Holmes and sophomore right-hander Kenny Falconer. Price will save his normal rotation of senior Kevin Wheeler and juniors Chris Smart and Ryan Knippschild for their upcoming conference games this weekend at Texas Tech. So far this season. Holmes is 2-1 with an earned run average of 6.11. He has started seven games this season. Falconer is 1-0 with an earned run average of 7.47 in 12 appearances but has started once. Heading into a weekend in "When those four guys are good,we are good as a team. They make or break us with their play. Ritch Price Kansas baseball coach which the team will play five games in four days, including three conference games in Lubbock, Texas. Price pointed out that the Jayhawks would need a lot of production from the middle of their lineup. The middle of the batting order for Kansas is composed of junior first baseman Ryan Baty, who bats third. He is followed in the batting order by Wheeler, senior left fielder Casey Spanish and junior right fielder Matt Tribble. Price called those four play ers the backbone of the team. "When those four guys are good, we are good as a team," Price said. "They make or break us with their play." Kansas is also concerned with the status of junior relief pitcher Brandon Johnson. Johnson has been the No. 1 man out of the bullpen and has a record of 5-2 with a earned run average of 1.75. The junior from Lawrence has been struggling with an elbow injury, but still managed to pitched three and one-third innings last week against Nebraska to get the victory. "He has been battling a lot of injuries this season," Price said. "We do not want to use him as much as we have been. With the rest of our pitching staff struggling a little bit, he is a huge key to our success this weekend." Edited by Todd Rapp North Carolina tired of waiting for Roy North Carolina ready for Williams' word other coaches wait The Associated Press CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — The North Carolina players sit around and talk about their coaching wish list. The names include Roy Williams, Larry Brown, Tubby Smith and George Karl. They also wonder what's taking so long. "We're real anxious to get this thing going," forward David Noel said yesterday, eight days after Matt Doherty's forced resignation. "It's been hard going through workouts knowing you CAROLINA TAR HEELS don't have a coach. You've just got to push yourself." Williams said he talked with former UNC coach Dean Smith on Tuesday night. But a day later, there was no word from the Kansas coach or Smith on what was discussed. Smith refused to comment, sending word through his secretary that he wasn't in a position to talk about the coaching search and referring all such questions to athletic director Dick Baddour. Baddour was on campus yesterday, but refused to meet with the media. So it was unclear whether Baddour would offer the job to Williams, who lost the NCAA title game to Syracuse on Monday night, or head in another direction. Williams, a former player and assistant under Smith at North Carolina, turned down the prestigious job three years ago when Bill Guthridge retired and Baddow settled for Doherty. Doherty resigned April 1 with three years left on his contract after a group of players met with Baddour and said they would transfer if Doherty remained. Baddour said more than a week ago that he would consult with Smith and Guthridge about a new coach, but he and chancellor James Moeser would make the final call. "Coach Guthridge and coach Smith know that," Baddour said. "My philosophy on looking for a new coach is you don't look for a new coach until you don't have a coach." he added. "I know a lot of ADs say in the bottom drawer they've got three people. I believe if you have coaches in place you work with them as hard as you can for them to be successful." For Noel, the wait gets more difficult with each passing day. "We need a coach, and if you're going to accept the job accept the job." Noel said of Williams. "If he doesn't take it, we'll just keep moving on. It's just a waiting game now. "I know it's a tough decision because he has his own legacy at Kansas. It would be tough to leave that, but this is North Carolina." Nebraska threatens Kansas with variety By Steve Schmidt schmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter After sloppy field conditions canceled the Kansas softball team's doubleheader against Creighton yesterday, the Jayhawks will square with another squad at 5 p.m. today from the Cornhusker state: No. 7 Nebraska. The Cornhuskers (28-9, 5-4), despite their Top 10 national ranking, are No. 6 in the Big 12 Conference. It's important to note that all four of Nebraska's conference victories came against ranked Big 12 foes — Oklahoma, Texas and two against Texas A&M. Nebraska is also riding a four-game winning streak in which it has outscored its opponents 17-3. Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said all nine batters on Nebraska's lineup were dangerous. "They're a very well-coached team that has a lot of senior leadership," she said. Bunge said she was a good friend of Nebraska coach Rhonda Revelle. In a recent telephone conversation, Revelle told Bunge that she didn't think that her Cornhusker squad had yet to play a "total game." That's a scary thought when you look at the recent Nebraska statistics. Nebraska appears to have few weaknesses with either hitting or pitching. The Cornhuskers lead the Big 12 with overall batting average of.290,with five players hitting .305 or better; three of those players have averages of.316 or more. The 'Huskers have the ability to "We've had to go through a period of a little adversity." Tracy Bunge Kansas softball coach score runs in bunches at any time — for the Jayhawks to get the victory, they need to smother the Cornhuskers in the first two innings. On the year, Nebraska has outscored opponents 54-9 in the first and second innings. And then there's pitching. Bunge said the Cornhuskers had one of the greatest one-two punches in the conference in junior Peaches James (15-7 on the year) and freshman Summer Tobias (12-2). Kansas (22-12, 2-6) is currently No. 8 in the Big 12 and recently dropped out of the top 25 rankings after losing four of its last six games. Bunge said that as her team found itself in the heart of the conference schedule, it was starting to realize how long the season was after flying out the gate early on. "For the first five to six weeks, life was easy for us. We were getting the ball to bounce our way," Bunge said. "But we've kind of hit a bump in the road. We feel like we've had some games we should have won and we didn't get it done. We've had to go through a period of a little adversity." Kansas will return home this weekend for a two-game series against Texas A&M. The first game is at 2 p.m. Saturday; the second contest is at 1 p.m. on Sunday. Edited by Todd Rapp GET CARDED USE YOUR JAYHAWK® VISA® CARDS AND SUPPORT THE KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PLATINUM 4371 0229 8765 VISA INTRUST Check Card 1089 10/04 VISA OFFICIAL JAYHAWK VISA CARDS Apply today. www.intrustbank.com 544 Columbia • 785-830-2600 901 Vermont • 785-830-2612 1-800-222-7458 INTRUST INTRUST encourages responsible credit card spending. To learn more about handling credit, contact Consumer Credit Counseling Service at 1-800-383-0217. Member FDIC GET CARDED USE YOUR JAYHAWK® VISA® CARDS AND SUPPORT THE KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICIAL JAYHAWK VISA Cards Apply today. www.intrustbank.com 544 Columbia • 785-830-2600 901 Vermont • 785-830-2612 1-800-222-7458 INTRUST encourages responsible credit card spending. To learn more about handling credit, contact Consumer Credit Counseling Service at 1-800-383-0217. Member FDIC NO COVER! BEFORE 10 PM KU’S NEWEST & HOTTEST DANCE CLUB & BAR NOW OPEN WEDNESDAYS Wednesday: $2 Anything $3 Doubles Thursday: $1.75 Pints $1.50 Any Shot Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Smashoff Vodka Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $4 Pitchers 21 to Enter Doors open at 8pm 729 New Hampshire (Across from Borders) 838-4623 KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PLATINUM 6048-0229 8765 CARD NUMBER 13470004 V VISA KU INTRUST Check Card 4648 0275 8765 4191 1989 10/04 V VISA FD 13 HARUKA OFFICIAL JAYHANWK VISA CARDS Apply today. www.intrustbank.com 544 Columbia • 785-830-2600 901 Vermont • 785-830-2612 1-800-222-7458 INTRUST® INTRUST encourages responsible credit card spending. To learn more about handling credit, contact Consumer Credit Counseling Service at 1-800-383-0217. Member FDIC NO COVER! BEFORE 10 PM KU'S NEWEST & HOTTEST DANCE CLUB & BAR NOW OPEN WEDNESDAYS Wednesday: $2 Anything $3 Doubles Thursday: $1.75 Pints $1.50 Any Shot Friday: $2 Coronas $2.25 Flavored Brimroff Vodka Saturday: $3 Double Red Bull Vodka $4 Pitchers 21 to Enter Doors open at 8pm 729 New Hampshire (Across from Borders) 838-4623 12A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS THURSDAY,APRIL10,2003 A Fans CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A Hemenway said, "It's a little hard to say if it was asking permission or if it was notification, but they said that they wanted to talk to Roy, and I was not surprised that they called." For his part, Williams has provided little indication of his future plans. After the announcement of Bohl's termination, Williams issued a statement that said only that he endorsed interim athletics director A. Drue Jennings and that there had been conflicts within the Athletics Department. During his team's run to the NCAA championship game, he deflected all questions on the When CBS sideline reporter Bonnie Bernstein pressed the issue shortly after Syracuse defeated Kansas 81-78, Williams shot back, "I could give a shit about North Carolina right now. I've got 13 kids in that locker room that I love." subject, saying that he was concentrating solely on his team and the games ahead. While Williams said, in a postgame press conference, that his comments to Bernstein came in the heat of the moment, he did not offer any further comments about the North Carolina situation except to thank reporters for focusing their questions on the game. Williams' players have questions of their own. Sophomore forward Keith Langford told reporters that the end of the season meant decision for the Kansas coach and players. "I mean, you know Kansas ain't Kansas if Roy Williams ain't here," Langford said. "I mean, I'm not about to sit here and say he's thinking about leaving now, but if he is, it don't look good for me either." —Edited by Andrew Ward home. With his wife by his side, he stated his case on his front lawn. Bohl CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A Reading from a prepared statement, Bohl blamed Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams, who has been rumored to have a tense relationship with Bohl for more than a year. "A source close to the Athletics Department believes that I am one of the misfortunate people in America who personally have endured the results of Roy Williams' hatred and vindictiveness," Bohl said. Bohl said the media were responsible for malicious, unfounded attacks on his fam ily, his character and way he ran a business. After finishing his statement and taking questions, Bohl invited the media into his house. As her husband took more questions, Sherry Bohl reflected on the whirlwind of negative press and complaints in the department, which the Bohls said led to the firing. "He is respected across the country in athletics, and this behind-the-back stabbing is very malicious," she said. "People did not comment to his face. I've loved him, and I will stand by his decisions." But Sherry Bohl, who is finishing a masters degree at the University, will not hold a grudge against it. "I love Kansas, I love KU," she said. "I will walk down the hill in May. I have no bitterness towards KU — just bitterness towards the people who are back-stabbing." When asked whether Williams was one of those people, she said, "You'll have to ask my husband." — Edited by Melissa Hermreck TODAY Baseball at Western Illinois, doubleheader, noon, Macomb, Ill. Softball at Nebraska, 5 p.m. Lincoln, Neb. Kansas Athletics Calendar TOMORROW Baseball at Texas Tech, 7 p.m. Lubbock, Texas SATURDAY Rowing at Knecht Cup, all day, Camden, N.J. Men's golf at The Intercollegiate 2003, all day, Chapel Hill, N.C. Track at John McDonnell Invitational, all day, Fayetteville, Ark. Football Spring Practice, 1 p.m. Memorial Stadium Tennis vs. Kansas State, noon Robinson tennis courts This much is known — Bohl just made the most inflammatory statement ever directed at Kansas' legendary basketball coach, and people deserve to know whether it has merit. Baseball at Texas Tech, 2 p.m. Lubbock, Texas Rowing at Knecht Cup, all day, Camden, N.J. SUNDAY Men's golf at The Intercollegiate, all day, Chapel Hill, N.C. Softball vs. Texas A&M, 1 p.m. Javhawk Field Malashock is an Omaha senior in journalism. Baseball at Texas Tech, 1 p.m. Lubbock, Texas Malashock CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A taçade. Volleyball coach Ray Bechard talked of the professional respect he had for Bohl but added there was a constant void of contact. There was no friendship. And that's where Bohl went wrong. Thus, controversy No. 2 has been sparked. Why was Al Bohl fired? What did he do wrong? We may never know the exacts. Through the last few months, Bohl saw the wheels rolling, saw his job in jeopardy but acted as if nothing was wrong. He put that same grin on his face, day in and day out, wanting just to be liked, just to be accepted. But he wasn't. And now, he's lashed out at Williams, blaming one man for the downfall that was likely caused by the feelings of many. As everyone in Kansas knows, though, Williams has the most influence of any figure within the athletics department. NHL playoffs underway; Devils victorious The Associated Press OTTAWA, Ontario — Dave Scatchard, Alexei Yashin and Shawn Bates scored, and Garth Snow earned his first career playoff shutout to lead the New York Islanders to a stunning 3-0 victory over the top-seeded Ottawa Senators last night in the opener of their first-round series. One day after New York coach Peter Laviolette proclaimed his eighth-place team was better than the Presidents' Trophy-winning Senators, the Islanders backed him up. Despite finishing 30 points behind the Senators who had 113, New York got goals from Scatchard and Yashin in the first period. Bates then scored midway through the second. Yashin, the former Senators captain who was jeered whenever he touched the puck, gave the Ottawa fans something new to boo about at 11:35 when he scored his 10th career playoff goal. Oilers2, Stars1 DALLAS — Ryan Smyth popped a short-handed goal between Marty Turco's legs, and Shawn Horroff beat the record-setting goaltender's glove on a 2-on-1 break, sending eighth-seeded Edmonton past top-seeded Dallas in Game 1. Turco turned away seven first-period shots and was bolstered by a 1-0 lead on a goal by Mike Modano. Then Turco allowed two goals within a 3:48 span early in the second period and Dallas never recovered. A spurt of penalties in the third left the Stars down at least one man the final 4:06, draining their comeback hopes. Edmonton's Tommy Salo stopped 20 shots, and Turco made21 saves. Maple Leafs 5, Flyers 3 PHILADELPHIA — Mikael Renberg scored a power-play goal with 5.39 left, leading Toronto over the Philadelphia in the Eastern Conference quarterfinals series opener. The Flyers outshot the Leafs 31-15, but Toronto scored four goals on its first 13 attempts against Roman Cechmanek. Alexander Mogilny had three goals, for his first playoff hat trick, and Tie Domi also scored for the Leafs. Ed Belfour made 28 saves for Toronto, which has won four straight first-round series. Eric Desjardins, Donald Brashear and Eric Weinrich scored for Philadelphia, which has been eliminated in the opening round four of the last five years. That trio scored only 18 regular-season goals. The Flyers, did surpass its record-low total of two goals in its five-game playoff loss to Ottawa last year. Devils 2, Bruins 1 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Jamie Langenbrunner scored twice and Martin Brodeur had 26 saves to lead New Jersey over Boston in the opener of their first-round playoff series. POLI Bryan Berard scored for the Bruins in the series that matches teams coming off embarrassing first-round losses last year. There were plenty of hard hits, and both teams played with a chippiness that could make this an interesting series. Langenbrunner staked the Devils to a 2-0 lead with goals in each of the first two periods against Steve Shields. Brodeur made them stand with three good saves down the stretch after Berard scored early in the third Shields, who ended up with the starting assignment after Bruins coach Mike O'Connell hesitated to pick a goalie, stopped 26 shots. Will Roy kansan.com Williams fill the coaching vacancy at North Carolina? No, he stayed last time; he will stay this time. He will consider it after the tournament excitement dies down. Yes, Nick and Kirk are gone; so is Roy. No, North Carolina won't pursue him after he said no last time. Log on to Kansan.com to cast your vote. Free forAll These are the Quail Run kids, and we just want to say we love KU basketball. need to add a class? Jayhawks, don't hang your heads. It's not about winning championships. Being a Jayhawk is about love. 窗 Aaron Miles, I love you. Will you come to the ASHC formal with me? 图 --need to add a class? I just wanted to say that I don't need a boyfriend because I have a serious, committed relationship with the basketball team. 图 I just wanted to say that the newspaper is wrong: Nothing is over. The tradition for Jayhawk basketball will always live on, and it's only the beginning for Nick and Kirk. Keith Langford is awesome because unlike the rest of his teammates, he had enough class to show his face to his fans after the welcome home rally. 图 This is to Chancellor Hemenway: Keep Roy; fire Al. You know what, I'm sick of people bashing our basketball team. Did we not just get second in the nation of all D-1 basketball teams? 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Barton County Community College offers online college courses. Find our schedule online! www.bartonline.org The Lindenbaum Memorial Lecture Presents Leo Bretholz Leap Into Darkness who will discuss his acclaimed book Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive A compelling story of escape, survival and determination during the Holocaust 917 Highland Drive windshield wiper fluid? Red Lyon Tavern Gold Lion Crest April 12,2003,7:30 p.m. windshield transmission? spark plug? alternator? starter? A book purchase and signing will follow the presentation 944 Mass. 832-8228 we do it all! fluid? 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However, I have always chosen to be positive and to face the issues instead of self-serving confrontations. My focus has been working for Kansas. I take tremendous pride in being a hard worker, honest, having great integrity and honoring the Lord. I was recruited to strongly enhance the entire Kansas Athletics Department. I lit a fire of expectations under all Athletic programs: The Williams Fund All staff members made significant strides in: Academics Every men's and women's athletic team, including men's basketball Rules compliance Equity Diversity During my two years, we have Fund raising Finances Competitiveness One of my biggest regrets is the shortchanging of football.I will not be able to finish leading the charge to build an outstanding football program. Also, I will miss fulfilling the mission of creating even more opportunities for women and minorities. I strongly believe the mandate for my dismissal reverts the Kansas Athletics Department back to the pattern of: Great men's basketball teams with other sports barely surviving. I understand the realities of the Athletics pyramid of popularity. I believe the Kansas basketball coach had the power to hold his Athletics Director in his hand like a dove: he had the choice to either crush me with his power of influence, or let me fly with my visions for a better total program. He chose to crush me. I want to thank the multitude of good people throughout Kansas who have expressed their support and concern for my precious family and me, during this very trying chapter in our lives. KANSAS COACHES REACT Football coaches express no harsh feelings in firing There is a difference of opinion regarding the state of the Kansas football program in the aftermath of Al Bohl's dismissal as athletics director. "One of my biggest regrets is the shortchanging of football," Bohl said outside his home yesterday. "I will not be able to finish leading the charge to build an outstanding football program." Bohl expressed concern that all sports at Kansas would take a back seat to men's basketball and denied rumors of a strained relationship with football coach Mark Mangino. "I feel so great about my relationship with Mark Mangino," Bohl said. "I'd like you to go call Mark Mangino and ask him about Al Bohl. We have a great relationship." Mangino, who has previously described his relationship with Bohl as "cordial,"was not available for interviews but released a statement through the Athletics Department. Mangino "I'm sorry Al will no longer be with our athletic department," Mangino said. "I wish him and his family the very best." Former Kansas football coach Don Fambrough didn't think the football program would feel adverse effects from Bohl leaving. The former coach, who attends all the Jayhawks practices, remains close to the program but said he didn't know enough about Bohl to comment on his termination. "I'mgl he hired Mangino," Fambrough said. "As far as anything else that happened, I don't know." Shane Mettlen Washington prepared for new athletics director When Al Bohl arrived at the University of Kansas, one of his initial goals was to move the athletics director's main focus away from men's basketball, citing that it could stand on its own. Unfortunately, women's basketball was in need of help and did not receive it. This was one of the reasons leading to Bohl's departure. Bohl's relationship with women's basketball coach Marian Washington was never especially a good one. Washington agreed with men's basketball coach Roy Williams that there was unneeded conflict within the school's athletics department "I think that we needed to PLEASE REFER TO THE ORDER FOR A COPY. come together, there's no question about that," Washington said. "We needed to support each other a lot more, and some of that was missing." Washington Washington said she would continue to trust in the leadership provided by Chancellor Robert Hemenway, but also knew what she wanted from the school's next athletics director. "I think that our program just needs someone to believe in it and to really support us," Washington said. "I think we are making some positive steps, and it's going to be important for our next AD to believe in it." — Ryan Greene The following is the entire statement from the University of Kansas, released shortly after Al Bohl was fired as athletics director Hemenway announces Al Bohl's termination Chancellor Robert Hemenway today announced that Dr. Al Bohl, athletics director at the University of Kansas since Aug.1, 2001, is leaving his position, effective immediately. A. Drue Jennings, a KU graduate (B.S, 1968; J.D., 1972) and former CEO of Kansas City Power and Light Company, has agreed to serve as interim athletics director pending the outcome of a national search. Plans for that search will be announced at a later time, but Hemenway expects internal candidates to be given strong consideration. Jennings, 56, of Leawood, played football for four years at KU and is currently a member of the KU Endowment Association Executive Committee and the KU Alumni Association Board. He served on the KU Athletic Corporation Board from 1991 to 1995 Jennings will not be a candidate for the position. Hemenway discussed the leadership of KU athletics with Bohl during the past six to eight weeks. He also talked with members of the KU Athletic Corporation board, coaches and other athletic department staff, alumni and contributors to KU athletics. "On the basis of these conversations and my own evaluation of the situation," said Hemenway, "I came to the conclusion a change of leadership was needed at this time." Hemenway added that he chose to delay his decision until the close of the basketball season. "While the situation became a distraction Y. R. GARDNER Hemenway during the NCAA tournament," said Hemenway, "announcing a change while the men's basketball team was still in contention for the title would have been more of a distraction." Hemenway noted that the appointment of A. Drue Jennings as interim athletics director had been discussed in advance with Head Men's Basketball Coach Roy Williams, who expressed support for Jennings. Hemenway said his action was consistent with provisions of Bohl's employment agreement, but that the University will not provide details. "It is important that the entire Department of Intercollegiate Athletics focus its energies, and those of KU's many fans, on those things that matter most," said Hemenway, "the education of our students and the success of all team sports. That will be the highest priority as we begin the search for a new athletics director." Bohl came to KU from Fresno State University, where he was director of athletics from 1996 to 2001. He was previously director of athletics at the University of Toledo (1987-96) and an assistant director of athletics at Ohio State University, where he received a doctorate in 1978. Hawk Nights and Templin Hall Presents A Night On The Vegas Strip PRIZES FREE FOOD TEMPLIN MIRAGE KU CASINO NIGHT Win Prizes such as a 7-day Vacation, Playstation 2, Stereo, DVD's, Concert Tickets, and much, much more. FRIDAY,APRIL 11th,7pm-11pm TEMPLIN HALL COMPLETELY FREE EVENT canned food donation in exchange for extra start up cash HAWK NIGHTS AUTHOR OF CITY Coca Cola Student Senate DSH POLYTECHNIC Phi Kappa Psi THE U NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN It's a part of student life 14A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, APRIL 10,2003 HURSDAY, APRIL 10,2003 WEATHER 205 - Help Wanted TODAY 68 49 sunny Earn Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $1c & $1.25 more per survey! 405 - Apartments for Ren TOMORROW 71 43 mostly sunny Available once this week (until voted above) 8pm to 10pm 205 - Help Wanted TODAY 68 40 sunny Not Paid For Your Opinion. Earn $10.05 and may get money! www.dockboys.com 405 - Apartments for Rent TOMORROW 71 43 mostly sunny Available. No job openings in vacant bedroom. Take on month's task. Windsight polls, action shots, interviews. 405 - Apartments for Rent SATURDAY 78 52 partly cloudy Not Paid For Your Opinion. Earn $10.05 and may get money! www.dockboys.com WWW.WEATHER.COM DOCK BOYS SOURCE DOORBOYS EXC by Scott Drummond, for The University Daily Kansas SANGUEZ SETS UP FOR THE SHOT... BUT NO! IT'S STOLEN BY JIMMY! A SHORT PASS FINDS BORIS WITH THE BALL... BUT HE'LL HAVE TO GET PAST PALE TO GET TO THE GOAL HE SHOOTS, HE SCORES!!! YOU GUYS NAMED YOUR FOOSBALL PLAYERS? SOMETIMES THAT'S YOUR ONLY DEFENSE AGAINST HIS RUSSIAN FRONT LINE! 405 - Apartments for Re SATURDAY 78 52 partly cloudy A SHORT PASS FINDS BORN WITH THE BALL. BUT HE'LL HAVE TO GET PART PELE TO GET TO THE GOAL. HE SHOOTS, HE SCORES!!! SANQUEZ SETS UP FOR THE SHOT... BUT NO! IT'S STOLEN BY JIMMY! SANQUEZ SETS UP FOR THE SHOT... BUT NO! IT'S SYOLEN BY JIMMY! A SHORT PASS FINDS BORIS WITH THE BALL... BUT HE'LL HAVE TO GET PAST PELE TO GET TO THE GOAL HE SHOOTS, HE SCORES!!! YOU GUYS NAMED YOUR FOOTBALL PLAYERS? SOMETIMES THAT'S YOUR ONLY DEFENSE AGAINST HIS RUSSIAN PRONTLINE. GO BORIS! YOU BLU'S NAMED YOUR POOBOBALL PLAYERS? SOMETIMES THAT'S YOUR ONLY DEFENSE AGAINST HIS RUBBISH FRONT LINE. GO BONUS! HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 10). They say that the more you learn, the luckier you get. You'll have a chance to test that theory this year. Studying and practicing helps, but you'll hit a phase where the struggle starts to dissipate. Hang in there until that happens. Aries(March 21-April 19). Today is **RU** It's good to think of everything that might go wrong, but don't frighten people to death. Help prepare them to take care of themselves. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is 9 6. Gamini (May 21-June 21) Today is a 6. Be patient with a person who doesn't seem to be listening. Wait until later to make your explanation. Here's another instance where talking too much could get you into trouble. It's not easy for you to pre-evaluate what you say, but you can learn. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 7. There's a lot to be done, but where to begin? Take care of your job first. The money coming in will help make the other stuff easier. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is an 8. Conditions are still in a state of flux, but they're shifting in your favor. You'll have to act quickly at first, but then you should be able to relax. Virgo (Aug, 23-Sept, 22). Today is a 7. Home is your place of refuge in an ever-changing world. But what if your home is changing, too? That's OK, as long as it's a change for the better. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 6. Are the actors who've been working behind the scenes finally out in the open? It's a relief in some ways, and disgusting in others. Hold them accountable. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21), Today is a 7. If you pitch in and help, you might earn a bonus. You're good at that, and it looks like something does need to be done quickly. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 7. An impulsive gesture, though well intentioned, is apt to backfire now. If in doubt as to how to proceed, wait. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. A change you've been thinking about for a while can finally happen. A loved one is concerned that it'll cost too much, so shop for a good bargain. Aquarius (Jan, 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 6. More effort may be required to achieve the results you want. Tomorrow should be much easier, if that's any consolation. Pisces (Feb, 19-March 20). Today is a 7. Everybody has an opinion, but don't let others keep you from doing your job. Simply take care of your own. Crossword ACROSS 1 Crazy bird? 5 University of Maine setting 10 Greedy 14 Austen hereline 15 Canadian island 16 Treat for Rover 17 Gallop or trot cookies 19 Hint Apart 20 Available for 26 Availabie for purchase 23 Psychedelic drug 24 Contest site 25 Copical abodes 27 Bard's offering 30 With prudence 32 G.I. entertainers 33 Washstand pitcher 35 Lordly 38 "Mourning Becomes" 41 Refrain 43 Kind of system or power 44 Comic Carvey 46 Inc in Britain 47 Reviewe 49 Soup dispensers 52 Smoleons 54 "As You Like It" role 56 J. L. Lewis' org 57 WWII planes 57 500 sheets 64 Cowpoke contest 65 So-so 66 Taj Mahal site 67 Severe 68 Type of duck? 69 "Shane" star 70 Trial runs 71 Maxwell or Lancester DOWN 1 Big name in building blocks 2 Arabian suitanate 3 Leave out 4 Patriot Hale 5 Mileage recorder 6 Played over 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 Close to 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 $ \textcircled{c} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. 7 Intimidate 8 Breakfast area 9 Beginnings 10 TV network 11 Beach game 12 Currently occupied 13 Exploits 21 Before, to Shelley 22 H.S. students 26 Conspiracy 27 Grafton and Lyon 28 Scandinavian capital 29 "Bilthe Spirit" playwright 31 Iraq neighbor 34 Desert gully 36 Diet word 37 Terminate 39 Sandburg or Sagan 40 Group of three 42 Birthday party items 45 Glives one's 04/10/03 P A N I C P L A T T R O T A W A S H R O S H R A V E G A M M A E S T E O D O R E Y E M E T E O R J O I N A P S E R E M A N D S T A L C A N T S A N A L E H O U S E A G H A S T S T E I N E R G N O L T E S O R E S T R E W A R D E D am S V E E E N E S A M S A N N E T T E T R E E D O O M H A U L E D S P A A B L E E S N E U S H E R P L A N R E D S O A T I T E N T S L O T E N D E D Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. call consent 48 Crave a drink 50 intention 51 Ermuate a dileftette 52 Diego Rivera specialty 836-3377 53 Greek letter 53 Critic Roger 59 Cast ballots 59 Israel's airline 59 Flock leaders 61 Mets parkball 61 Frenzied Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kenyan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kenyan will not knowingly accept 1 120 - Announcements 100s Announcements F Wanted: Papa Roach concert pictures video with kid on stage. Will pay 816.739.1129 jphinsing@aol.com Classified Policy Ma Marks EWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 markings.in@swbell.net 785/841-2345 www.bqce.lawrence.ks.us HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center life SUPPORT 130 - Entertainment Dance lessons: balroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights: 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass. 331-2272 男 女 205 - Help Wanted 200s Employment --- $$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$ 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.onestreetclubs.com After School teacher BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great pay. Call 1-800-806-0082 ext 1422. BARTENDER POSITION 6-Ages 8-9, April and May, Fmn Pt-30 5:30, Wet; 1:00-3:00, Start now! Must have licensed care experience and 3 od courses. Sunshine Acres, B42-2232 Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531. Bartender Trainees needed. 120 - Announcements 1. adverting that is in violation of University of Tennessee's license or law. versity of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in newspaper is subject to a waiver of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion 205 - Help Wanted Brookcreek Learning Center I'll go with a simple representation of a group of people, possibly representing students or friends. Brockwell Learning Center Teaching Assistant, Training provided Must be energetic and share an enthusiasm for making a difference in the lives of young children. PT, a m.t. available. 200 Mt. Hope Court 855-0022 CAMP TAKAJO for Boys, Naples, Maine, TRIPP LAKE CAMP for Girls, Poland, Maine. Picturesque lakefront locations, exemplary facilities. Mid-June thru mid-August. Over 100 counselor positions in tennis, swimming, land sports, water sports, trips, outdoor skills, theatre arts, fine arts, music, nature study, secretary Call TakaJO at 800-258-8252. Call Tripp Lake at 800-997-4347. Or submit an application online at www.takao.com or www.trippakecamp.com Dependable, trustworthy female needed to assist wheelchair user. Errands, transportation and light housekeeping. Must like dog. Good for DT(PT) Pre-nursing. 832-0527 Doormen and weekend day bartender needed. apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 laws. Experienced gymnastic instructors needed. Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children preferred. CaterTerrill 913-469-5554 Full time summer maintenance technician needed for large apartment community. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Apply at 1301 West 24th and Nassimh. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Com- bine operators & truck drivers. Guarantee paid, good summer wages. Call 970- 483-7490, eavings. kansan.com Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistantst Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon. 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Inpst Instal asleep patrons, produc multimedia, maint, library records and materials, computer config/ troubleshooting and many special projects. Requ. qualify excel customer service, compuser and A/V equipment experience, excell, communication skills, 85.50 hr, 15-25 hrsw. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For info call 864-7458, Deadline April 11, 2002 Hiring Teacher's, Aid. 1,16 afternoons. Dave may vary. Also hire any hours for fall. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 205 M Michigan B41-1285 Hundreds of pointer positions available. No experience necessary. Students well- comed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepro.com Immediate openings for swim instructors Indoor heated pools in Lanexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554 Attention College Students. What are you doing for the summer? No one hiring? We are! Find out how you could make $2,600 monthly this summer Call 383-1833 Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. Cruise line entry level on-board positions avail, great benefits. Seasonal/year id: 941-329-6434 www.cruiseline.com **Fraternities • Sororities • Clubs • Student Groups** Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program it works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com 120 - Announcements F sex, handicap, familial status or female origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. ^ Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 205 - Help Wanted Move in coordinator needed. Begin immediately. Must be avail to work 20-40 hours per week through the summer. Must be dependable and organized. Slob by Meadowbrook Acts, or call 642-4200. MOVIE EXTRACTS / MODES NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163 or 1020 Schumm Foods needs a part-time office assistant who has prior office experience and good customer service skills. Start at $7 per hour. $8 per hour after a year. Apportion at Schumm Foods at 719 Mass (above the Smokehouse). Great practical experience in all facets of a small business. Seasonal Employment Seasonal Employment City of Lawrence Tennis instructors needed in Parks & Recreation 15-30 hrs wriky beginning first of June. Requires knowledge of basic elements of US Tennis Assoc & Nirt Jr Tennis League programs, & expr teaching children 4-18 yrs of age as well as adults. Prefer CPR & first aid cert. To apply for this & many other Parks & Recreation summer接触 contact City Hall, Personnel 6 E dith. Lawrence, KS 86044 (785) 832-3320 personnel@lawrence.ks.us www.LawrenceCITY.gov EOE M F D Deutsche Banknote Summaril Shipping position open immediately. $5/hr, 20 wk/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and or resume with 3 references to EEL. PO. BO. 13044.Lawrence, KS 68044. EOE/AA Spring Break was awesome! STA 8/4 # Students I Toulouer Operator in now hiring on campus for 2034-3 1-800-545-4849. www.stairway.com STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD (SHAB) Board appointed board MAKE A DIFERENCE Pick up an application at the Student Senate Office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union or Wardene Don't forget the Health center on the second Administration Office. SHAB is seeking diverse individuals in major, nationality, ethnicity and experience for the 2003-2004 academic year. Board members shall advise & counsel the Waltens Administration on matters pertaining to the program on health care and education for all students of the University of Kansas. SHAB is a Student Senate After-Class workout. First-Class pay. FedEx Ground Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 - $ .25 raise every 90 days for a year - Weekly paycheck - Tuition Assistance - 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week - $10-11/hr starting pay - $100 new hire bonus - paid vacations and holidays 20 - Need ability to load, unload, and sort packages. 20% student discount when placing a classified. With proof of KUID ... 4 THURSDAY,APRIL10,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 15A 205 - Help Wanted T T T T Get Paid For Your Opinion! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS; COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM, A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUSI CALL NOW 785-855-0856. Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It's not too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campinwaundo.com or complete application in staff area of www.campinwaundo.com. Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club, 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. Help wanted: Seeking self-motivated person for PT receptionist at Lawrence Airport. Phones, customer service, bookkeeping & cleaning. Requires knowledge of Microsoft Word & Excel. 1 to 2 evenings per week and 2 to 3 weeksend per month for year round. Pick up application 8AM-4PM at the airport, 1930 Airport Road. Direct questions to Janice at 842-1000. Summer staff needed. Camp. Wooo YMCA, Elmidge, KS. Counselors, wrangler, leadership director, specialty/trip camp coordinator, evening cook. 820-273-8641 or camppwood@bigdell.net. The Mass, St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS - HAVE FUN- MAKE $5 Openings in: ALL TEAM & IN- DIVIDUAL SPORTS ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS Camp/Gike, Ropes/Rock- Climbing, Ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Secret- aries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUNDRY, Travel allowance, ONLINE APPLICATION www.campcobbossee.com or call:(800) 473-6104 X 300s Merchandise 305-For Sale S Cars from $500. Police Impound! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323, ext. 4565 MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance, $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 405 - Apartments for Rent 400s Real Estate Save Your Money! 1 & 2 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings. $425.841-3633. Now signing 1YR, leases starting May/ June/July/Aug. No smoking/meets. ice well, keep 2 BR kites. Alt., all appliances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/month, Spanish Creator BK. 841-6868. 1.2.3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. August last 18: 841-6254 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and quiet. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU bus rte, laundry facility, Call 843-0011. 1-1 BR ApT. Next to Campus. Avail. Aug 1 1346 Ohio. $490 per month. Utilities paid. Call 550-426-928 1712 OHIO Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt. DA, CM, air laundry, on site. 384 BR BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 5533 www.appartmentslawernet.com 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. $415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 Avail mid May, June, or Aug. Nice remodeled 1 BR close to campus, quiet mature building. Gait, water are paid. No pets, no smoking. Starting $400.841-3192. Avail, Aug. Cute 1 bedroom apt In renovated old house, 1300 bik. Verm. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique box, no pets. $440/mo. Call 841-1074. 405 - Apartments for Rent Avail, Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C. 10th & NY. No pets. $520. Call 841-1074. Avail, Aug; Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets.$450.Call 841-1074. Avail, August 1st. 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washer/Dryer/Dischwasher. 831 Alabama $110/month. Cat43-845 401.Ext 21. Available in August, 1, 2 bdrm. Close to GSP/Corbin between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841-1207 Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 100 Emery Rd. $490 per month. W/D hookup. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4789. Available now, May or June 1. Very nice, remodeled, spacious top floor. 1 B apts. 9th and Emery. No smoking; $415 plus utilities. 580-8111 or 841-3192. CLOSE TO CAMPUS 3, BR 3, BA town houses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closes, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w microwave, porches/patios, security 900 Bk Arkansas 843-4090. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870. 900 Block Michigan Cell 843-4090. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 **গোপব্য & $560** On North side of 4th line between Naismith & Ousdahl 841-5533 Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NPETS. 841-5533 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances. ample playground. on-site laundry. Call 843-4909. Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship. Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. 838-8392 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1 BR apt for sublease, avail. June 1st, opt lease for fall. Access from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month, water/ trash paid. No pets. Elizabeth. 834-984- Tuckaway HAWKER APARTMENTS 2600 w 6th Street Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street Washer/Dryer Alarm System Tuckaway at Briarwood Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Fully Equipped Kitchen Tuckaway has two pools hot tubs, basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car parage, all appliances, W/D hook up. Very tice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 3 BR apts. FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Call 785-748-9807 Attention seniors & Grad students Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Attractive studio apt. near KU at 945 Mo. avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen/cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study $400, gas & water paid. No pets or smoking. Call 749-1066. Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes & 3 Bedroom Townhomes • Washer/Dryers • Dishwasher • Microwave • Parrot • Gas Fire Places • Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway Now Leasing for Fall 2003 - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Flireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome HIGHPOINTE 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Apartments & Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 * ♥ Washer & Dryer * ♥ Fully Equipped Kitchen * ♥ Serving Bar Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 PARKWAY COMMONS Call 840.9467 for an appointment FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE Luxury Apt. Homes ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOCKJACK, NO DEPOSITS, NO MASSES!) WASHER AND DRIVER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BAKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPLED STIMMING CENTER GARAGES & CARPORPS. CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM. CDMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNLIGHT BROADCAST HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 THE LEGENDS - Poor - Washer/Dryer - Cleaner 3601 Clinton Parkway 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com - Basketball Court - Security Systems NOW LEASING May 2003 - Washer/Dryer - Fitness Center Now leasing for fall 2003! LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING - Garages Available - Fitness Center - Basketball Court 1. 2,3 Bedroom Real Models Open Daily 405 - Apartments for Rent 7 BR house, 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown. $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Call 550-0426 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. Newl. 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo. plus deposit. Call 550-4148. Town home 3 bedroom, 2 bath, W/D, fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/operator, pet. Subside 6/1-7/31 $650. 766-5080. Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes earth ship-up catalytic Washer/Dryers* "Dishwashers* Microwaves* "Patios" Fire Places* "Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Almsmith 842-5111 colony@ikxs.com www.colonywoods.com 1&2Bedrooms - On KU Bus Route • Indoor/Outdoor Pool • 3 Hot Tubs • Exercise Room • New Leasing for Sumn *Exercise room* *Now Leasing for Summer & Fall* Canyon Court M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 700 Comet Lane Luxury Apartments *Now Leasing for Spring 2003* •1, 2, 3 Bdrm •Washer/Dryer •Swimming Pool & Hot Tub •Fitness Center •Basketball Court •Garages Available •High Speed Internet Connections •Security Systems Available •Small Pet Welcome SUNRISE 842-3280 www.firstmanagementinc.com VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic Gith St.) Luxurious 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Townhomes Luxurious 2,3, &4 - Garages; w/d Hookups - Images, No Books · Microwave Ovens · Some with Fireplaces · On KU Bus Route - Swimming Pool OPEN: MON-FRI 10-12 & 1-5 - Tennis Courts 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 MASTERCRAFT ARTISTIC WALKTO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Hanover Place 14th & Mass*841-1212 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Campus Place Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 + * ♦ Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 langlewood 10th & Arkansas*749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Equal Housing Opportunity 405 - Apartments for Rent --- Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Haps. Great location at 1012 Emery Road, 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790 $^{10}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances OPEN HOUSE Some with fireplaces and Garages 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Now Leasing! A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route village@webserf.net - 1 & 2 Bedroom CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - Washer/Dryer - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - On KO Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome - Small Pet Welcome Model Open Daily! 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All apps. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4600 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.theofxrun.com HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 1 BED/1 BATH $450-$475 2 BED/1/2 BATHS $560-$585 3 BED/1/2 BATHS $645 CALL MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT 785 841 4935 - POOL • ON KU BUS ROUTE • COVERED PARKING • ON-SITE LAUNDRY • PETS ALLOWED • 6-12 MO. LEASE 2000 HEATHERWOOD DR. 415 - Homes For Rent 410 - Condos For Rent Very nice condo. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eilf at 841-4470. נסיינו במשחק כדי לבצע מה שהאם 1921 Kentucky. 3 bedroom, $840. Central air, large fenced backyard, unfinished basement. Available June 1. 550-6414. 2 & 3 BR houses and TH. W/D hookups, FP, vaulted ceiling, and garages small pet welcome. Call 842-3280. 2 BR 1 BA nice house with one car garage, wood floors, fenced yard, porch with swings, $685.841-3633 anytime. 4 Subleasers needed, new 4 BR town- house, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $312.50, lease through July 31, 816-520- 612 or 638-578-3505 or 620-340-3273. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jaccuzzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fenced landscaped back yard, $1450, 841-3633 anytils. 430 - Roommate Wanted Avail. Aug. Cute 3 BR, renovated older house. 15th & New Hampshire. Wood floors, CA, ceiling fans. DW, WD hookups, lg. closets, fenced yard. Declawed cats and dogs under 20 lbs. and over 2 years old with pet rent and pet deposit. $1,050/mo. Call 841-1074. Female for house ASAP $175+ usable. Cable, CA, CH, W/D. Near campus & downtown. 1 block from KU bus stop. 856-5511. 2 2 Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2 util Avail Aug. 842-4540. Mature roommate wanted for 3 BD/nice house/WD/AC/garage. Avail. Now $375+uil. No Smoking. Call 766-7010. 440 - Sublease 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail. mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo $300 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. Sublease 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus, Garage, W/D, Central air, avail, mid-May, Adam 830-8076. 3 BR, 3 BA apt. Furn. WD full kitchen + more. Avail. May Aug. Merg $375+让水, water cable, Call Amz 766-5199 40 MBA students need summer subleases for July. If interested e-mail italy03@ku.edu. Female roommate to share a nice 3 BR town home in west Lawrence. Available May 1 - Aug 1 $275 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Julie at 933-2606. Large 1 BR in 2 BR at Highpointe. Late May-July 31. Rent nego. W/D, cable internet ready, great view. Call 312-7047 PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA. 749-6060. Sublease 1 BR apt. next to campus.$480 + utilise Callus at913-658-3938. Summer sublease, 308 W. 16th Street, 4 BR, 2 BA. Good landlord. Nice front porch. Chase 785-979-9617 or 785-331-6778. Offering $100 cash for signing sublease! --- 500s Services 505 - Professional Teacher job fair, West Port Senior Academy, KC MO. April 12th 9am, to noon. Call (816) 531-8050 ext 1102. Term Paper Editing! Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students. Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 866-693-EDIT. TRRAFFIC-DUIT-MIP'S PERSONAL INSURY Student legal matters/residency issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of D. MOLD G. STROLE Donald G. Strace 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation 510-Child Care Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Susan Acres 842-223-922 Tell us your news Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS 16A THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY Ryan Malashock rmalashock@kansan.com Chancellor Robert Hemenway announces former athletics director Al Bohl's termination as A. Drue Jennings, Kansas' interim athletics director, looks on. Chancellor Hemenway fired Bohl yesterday. Chancellor silent about reasons for Bohl firing Fans wondering Will Bohl's sudden dismissal influence Williams' decision on North Carolina position? The University of Kansas just traded one controversy for another. Chancellor Robert Hemenway announced the firing of Kansas athletics director Al Bohl at an afternoon press conference yesterday. That ended controversy No. 1 — whether Bohl would get the ax. For the last few months, a dark cloud of speculation has been cast over Bohl's head. Complaints from anonymous "Athletic Department sources" ran rampant. Radio talk show personalities and newspaper columnists lit into Bohl's personality. sounny. Fan reaction more fitted for Quin Snyder greeted Bohl around Lawrence. He was booed in New Orleans at an alumni-filled pep rally. He was chastised by the Kansas students as he walked through the The Louisiana Superdome. But, through it all, there were no allegations of wrongdoing. No pinpoint examples of poor professional work. Just an overwhelming sense of discomfort. Why was Bohl fired? What did he do wrong? And yesterday, Hemenway acted Enter controversy No.2. It's a simple question that in most cases is simply answered, especially in this case when the University will have to buy out at least some portion of the three years remaining on Bohl's contract. But Hemenway was tight-lipped when asked for reasoning, presenting minimal information. He refused to discuss the particulars for Bolel's firing. If anything, Hemenway fueled circulating rumors. The main conception, that an ongoing feud between Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams and Bohl would end Bohl's career, may or may not be true, but yesterday's events did little to settle any queries. Hemenway spoke first. "This decision is not a Roy verses Al decision." Hemenway said. "Roy Williams has never once said to me, that Al Bohl should be fired. He's never once said to me 'If Al Bohl doesn't go, I will go.' He's never uttered those words to me or in any way tried to indicate to me that that should be what guides my decision-making." It's not fair, or ethical, to make the general public side with one man or the other without complete knowledge of the situation. This is where Hemenway slipped up. He should have discussed exactly why Bohl was fired. Bohl fired back an hour later at his own press conference. Bohl believes he brought progress to the Kansas department. He did make strides. He increased Williams Fund participation and funds. He hired four successful coaches. Football attendance jumped. own press conference. "This is a sad day for collegiate athletics, when a basketball coach has the power to hire and fire a University athletics director." Bohl told reporters. "A source close to the Athletics Department believes that I am one of the misfortunate people in America who personally have endured the results of Roy Williams' hatred and vindictiveness." So what are we supposed to believe? Here's the school's highest-ranking official, defending Williams, and the man just fired, slamming Williams. But for all the positives, there were always more negatives. He just rubbed people in the athletics department the wrong way. Alumni and boosters alike saw Bohl's energetic smile as a fake When asked, Hemenway said he did not want to "get into a character assassination." SEE MALASHOCK ON PAGE 12A By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter FRED SCHNEIDER Williams The question has changed. permission to speak to Williams about the coaching vacancy in its men's basketball program. Matt Doherty, formerly Williams' assistant coach at Kansas, resigned from the position under pressure at the end of the season. Kansas fans are no longer wondering whether a rift between Kansas athletics director Al Bohl and Roy Williams will drive Williams to North Carolina — Chancellor Robert Hemenway ended that concern when he canned Bohl yesterday morning. Now the question is: Is getting rid of Bohl enough to keep Williams from returning to coach at his alma mater? At the press conference announcing Bohl's termination, Hemenway confirmed that North Carolina's athletics department had See page 13A for reactions from other Kansas coaches. "The North Carolina athletic director called at 11:30 this morning." SEE FANS ON PAGE 12A AUTHOR Bohl addresses his termination Ex-athletics director expresses sadness, blames press, Williams By Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter As a herd of reporters and photographers entered her home and surrounded her husband in front of their living room fireplace, Sherry Bohl stood at the back of her living room, away from the chaos. She motioned to a table displaying pictures of her three children and two grandchildren. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan Sherry Bohl listens to her husband respond to questions about the nature of his termination as Kansas athletic director. He answered questions in his living room after the press conference held on his front lawn yesterday. "They're the light of our lives, and it has really, really hurt his sons," Sherry Bohl said yesterday after her husband, Al Bohl, was fired as Kansas athletics director. "I have loved Al Bohl for 39 years. I have known him since second grade," she said. "We've been married for 34 years. He has the highest integrity." Al Bohl was not allowed to attend the University of Kansas press conference to announce his firing, Chancellor Robert Hemenway said it was not University policy to let former employees speak at press conferences. So, Bohl brought the media to his BOHL ON PAGE 12A SEE BOHL ON PAGE 12A Heard on the Hill Compiled by Henry C. Jackson How do you think Al Bohl's firing will affect Roy Williams' decision to stay at Kansas? "I think it can be nothing but a positive effect on Roy's decision." Andrew Wymore, Leawood senior IUFU "Obviously their relationship wasn't good.I think anything that will help Roy out is good for the school and he'll want to stay." Bryan Young, Huston sophomore PANDA "I don't think it will affect his decision at all." Danny Mason, Omaha, Neb., junior "It will make him happy, a little more comfortable and maybe PENN STATE COLLEGE we'll win next year." Nicole Williams. Leawood sophomore "I think he has such strong ties to Lawrence and a lot of loyalty that his decision will be made on his own." Lauren Salvini. Lawrence sophomore "Hopefully in the positive." Mike Valk, lecturer of English PETER W. JACKSON Jayplay Cocaine the silent drug p.8 2 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN INSIDE THURSDAY,APRIL10,2003 Jayplay The University Daily Kansan 3 Music A reggae legend comes to Lawrence 3 Live music calendar Where to go, what to do 4 Music Street performers gain attention 5 Music Bands, film students collaborate for "Kallide" 6 Downtown Paradise Café now open for lunch 7 Sex To fake it or not to fake it: That is the question 8 Cover Cocaine: find out what it does and who's doing it 10 Eat This Make sure your meat is cooked 11 Music Music critic Aaron Passman reviews Superdrag at The Bottleneck 12 Film City of God is this year's must-see 13 Movies Around Town What's playing and where 14 Video games Dragonball Z won't disappoint --- 15 Tongue in Beak U.S. forces close in on Technodrone 8 Photo illustration by John Nowak Cocaine Find out what the drug does and who's using it Coming next week... - Find out the latest about what's going on with the Lawrence music scene and how it stacks up against other cities Tell us your news Contact Brooke Hesler at bhesler@kansan.com Cover photo illustration John Nowak WhaT'S YouR FLAVO R? VODKA CRANBERRY RASBERRY VODKA & SPRITE SEX ON THE BEACH DIRTY SHIRLY SCREWDRIVERS $1.50 U-CALL-IT THURSDAY: LADIES' NIGHT JACK FLANIGANS Bar and Grill 18 TO ENTER, 21 TO DRINK LOCATED ON 23RD STREET BEHIND MCDONALD'S WhaT'S YoUR FLAVOR? VODKA CRANBERRY RASBERRY VODKA & SPRITE SEX ON THE BEACH DIRTY SHIRLY SCREWDRIVERS $1.50 U-CALL-IT THURSDAY: LADIES’ NIGHT JACKFLANIGANS Bar and Grill 18 TO ENTER, 21 TO DRINK LOCATED ON 23RD STREET BEHIND MCDONALD’S BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING MADE EASY WITH THE NEW WEEKLY SPECIALS YOURS TO KEEP ON THE BACK OF EVERY JAYPLAY THURSDAY,APRIL10,2003 MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3 Reggae legend comes to Lawrence, plays Bottleneck By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer "Living legend" is an appropriate term for noted sexagenarian subjects, but there's a distinction to be made between artists who truly deserve that title and dinosaurs who owe their misleading designation to lazy critics and overzealous fans. Any way you slice it, Jamaican-born and-bred reggae kingpin Frederick "Toots" Hibbert probably qualifies as a legend. "He's the best," said Lisa Starr, Tonganoxie senior and avowed reggae fan. "You can hear his influence in so much music out there today, it's amazing. I can't wait to see him live." For a living legend, however, Toots is shockingly accessible. While most people who have reached his stature in the music industry surround themselves with a labyrinth of yes-men more impenetrable than the National Security Council, Toots is playing the Bottleneck for the second time in three years. He allows his management to give out his home phone number in Jamaica to anyone claiming to be a reporter. If Toots is nowhere to be found around the house, no one hesitates to reveal his cell number. Keep in mind, this is the man who invented the term, "reggae" (on 1968's Do the Reggay), who spent eighteen months in jail on a trumped-up ganja charge in the early '60s and who had a Grammy-nominated album as recently as 1998. Of the few remaining links to reggae's roots, he is perhaps the only one still recording new music in the studio, which is where, after a little tracking we caught up with Toots. "It's going to be a number-one album," Toots claims matter-of-factly. Three of his last five full-lengths have been nominated for Grammys, and he has enjoyed gold-selling success in all corners of the world. With "Beautiful Woman," he even scored a platinum single. Unfortunately, it seems fewer and fewer people do know, or at least recognize, the contribution to popular music that the original reggae artists made. Sure, Bob Marley's greatest-hits package, Legend, consistently ranks among the top-selling catalog albums of any given year, but the profile of other, more political, reggae singers has dropped over time, replaced with the easy-to-digest and witty dance hall composers like Shaggy. But there are people out there of all generations who've developed an appreciation for Toots' rarefied reggae. "I think his music's positive and the beat's always fun to dance to," Georgia Palos, a junior from Lawrence, said explaining her fascination with reggae's elder statesman. "He's definitely the best of all the old guys, right up there with George Clinton." Toots takes influences from American soul and gospel music and singing over hard-driving Jamaican beats. He even went so far as to record Stax covers on 1988's 'Toots in Memphis', his most highly regarded and popular album to date. Though he's worked with every major reggae producer from Sir Coxson, Leslie Kong and Byron Lee down to Sly and Robbie, Toots is trying his hand at it alone this time. "I'm producing this new record myself. It's got to be good, because it's coming from the inventor," he said. CALENDAR — Edited by Anne Mantey TODAY Cave In w/ Piebald / The Damn Personals, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck Floyd The Barber, 7 p.m. at Pachamama's Big Metal Rooster at The Jazzhaus Helios Creed / Santo Gold at Replay Lounge In Kansas City... - "Jagermeister Music Tour" feat. Breaking Benjamin / (hed)pe / Saliva / StereoMud / Systematic, 6 p.m. at Uptown Theater - KCBS Free Jam at Grand Emporium - Temprid / One Last Hope at Davey's Uptown, 21+ Overstep / Theta, 10p.m. at The Pyro Room, 21+ Dirtnap / Sicbay / Ring / Cicada, 10 p.m. at The Brick, 21+ TOMORROW Dougie MacLean at Lawrence Art Center Paul Schneider CD Release Party w/thesistermaria, 8 p.m. at The Jazzhaus Dj Not a Dj at The Jazzhaus :: following Paul Schneider, $4 Be/Non / The Charge Droplets at Replay Lounge Lee McBee & The Confessors, 9 p.m. at Stu's Midtown Tavern - **The People / The Billions / The Autumn** - State at The Bottleneck - In Kansas City.. Luce / The Duece Project / Feel, 8 p.m. at Beaumont Club Randy Reed, 9 p.m. at Westport Coffee House Animated By Sound / The Stella Link / Pathos at The Pyro Room Cyclamatic / Black Mollys at Davey's Uptown The Elms / Holland / Radial Angel, 7:30 p.m. at The New Earth Coffee House animated by sound / Stella Link / A Stoired Northwest / Pathos, 10 p.m. at The Pyro Room Dionne Warwick at Ameristar Hotel & Casino The Feds / Doosu at The Hurricane Koko Taylor at Grand Emporium Catch 22 / Madcap / Count the Stars, 7:30 p.m. at El Torreon Battle of the Bands feat. Gametime / Anteye Luci / Around the Bend / Footcandle / Perestroika / Agent 5 9 / Trangquility Lost / Deliver Us / Loosening Bridges / Chloe Bridges, 10:30 p.m. at Shawnee Civic Center Seven Nations, 10 p.m.at Danny's Bar & Grill SATURDAY Guster / Wheat, 7 p.m. at Liberty Hall Larry Garner and the Road Lizards at The Jazzhaus Pomeroy / Heiruspecs at Abe & Jake's Landing Brown Butterfl. 7:30 p.m. at Lied Center bulldog battle break dance competition, 3 p.m. at Granada Theatre MidLife Crisis / Paul Schneider, 10 p.m. at Granada Theatre Stu's Birthday Bash feat. Blue 88 / Rocking House, 9 p.m.at Stu's Midtown Tavern Son Venezuela at The Bottleneck Green Party Benefit w/ Danny Pound / Two Dollar Shoe / Acme Jazz Co. / Homespun / Et Tu Brute. 3 p.m. at Replay Lounge In Kansas City... The Underdog Conspiracy / Eleven Hours Down / Foregone Conclusion, 7:30 p.m. at The New Earth Coffee House Deep Elm "Too Young to Die" Tour w/ Brandtson / Red Animal War / David Singer / Desert City Soundtrack / Settlefish, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Be/Non, 10 p.m. at The Brick Blue Riddum at Grand Emporium Mr. Marco's V7 at Davey's Uptown DJ's Are Not Rock Stars" feat. Princess Superstar (DJ Set) / Mac Lethal / DJ Bee-Can, 9 p.m. at The Hurricane Oldies Unlimited Party, 8 p.m. at Madrid Theatre Kirby Wendler, 9 p.m. at Westport Coffee House The Elders, 10 p.m. at Danny's Bar & Grill SUNDAY Sweet Honey in the Rock, 7:30 p.m. at Lied Center Bob Log III / Bebe and Serge at Replay Lounge Scott Keeton & The Deviants, 9 p.m. at Stu's Midtown Tavern Standing Wave / TBA at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... Tim McGraw and The Dancehall Doctors, 8 p.m. at Kemper Arena Ann Berreta / National Fire Theory/ Off by One, 7 p.m. at El Torreon MONDAY Getaway Driver at Granada Theatre :: "Collide" an experiment in music and video Open Mic Night - Last Band Standing at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... Brodiokie at The Brick Appleseed Cast / Cursive / Casket Lottery/ Putrecine, 7:30 p.m. at El Torreon Colonel Bruce Hampton and The Code Talkers at Grand Emporium TUESDAY The Epoxies at Replay Lounge - Toots and the Maytals / The Yards, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... Club Wars Invitational Round feat. Ilicit Trip / Soulitify / Substance, 8 p.m. at Grand Emporium The Deal / Forgone Conclusion / Sister Mary Rotten Crotch, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Emma Feel / Houston at The Hurricane Pat Green w/ Lost Trailers, 8 p.m. at Abe & Jake's Landing WEDNESDAY Q not U / El Guapo / * (the color blue), 8 p.m. at The Bottleneck Honey Tongue at The Jazzhaus The Nexus Intent / J Pharoah / Michael J. Box, 10 p.m. at Paradise Café In Kansas City. boysetsfire / Hope Conspiracy / Vaux / Midnight Creeps, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Coco Montoya at Grand Emporium Vena Cava at Davey's Uptown Pillbox / Tripwire / Mud Puddle Dive at America's Pub Midnight Creeps, 10 p.m. at The Pyro Room 4 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MUSIC THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003 Lawrence resident Hollis Berry plays his guitar at the corner of 9th and Massachusetts Streets downtown Monday evening. Although only an amateur at this point, Berry said he is "trying to get out and play more lately." Buskers make music, money downtown Kansan file photo By Neil Muluka nmulka@kansan.com Jayplay staff writer Prostitutes are not the only people making money on the street. Street performers, or "buskers" are reappearing on downtown streets as the weather warms 0p. A busker, somebody who entertains in the street or a public place in the hope of receiving money from passers-by, can range from a full band of instruments or a troupe of actors to a lone person with an acoustic guitar. Shawn Bedient, Lawrence resident, said busking was his only source of income. Bedient plays acoustic guitar on Massachusetts Street in the afternoons. "This is my sole source of income," Bedient, a busker for five years, said. "I have a broken back , so it's kind of difficult to get a labor job." While most artists and performers enjoy a community feel in Lawrence, Bedient said that in the world of busking it's every man for himself. "Everybody is coming into this from their own individual motivation, and there's no real cohesive group," Bedient said. "It just appears that way. I know for one, I like to work alone. I don't want to share the money I make." Money is not the only form of payment street performers receive. According to J Phoenix, Lawrence resident, and Dominick Johnson, Kansas City, Kan., resident, small toys and drugs are also common items in the tip jar. "A lot of times we'll be playing and someone comes up." Phoenix said. "We'll talk for a while, and it turns out they have drugs I like using. So usually after I am done playing someone will smoke me up." Phoenix and Johnson are members of the recently defunct hardcore techno group Deep Thought. They said playing on the street instead of in clubs and at house parties was vastly different and presented its own set of problems. "Playing on the street there is no set venue," said Phoenix. "It's more like show up and do your thing. There's no boss, and there's no money." Phoenix said people would hand him GOOD GUITAR BUSKING SPOTS Outside churches and after services: weddings, baptisms and bar mitzvahs. After funerals is OK but sometimes frowned upon; it depends on the crowd. Outside supermarket entrances. At Saturday markets. ■ Flea markets: Just set up shop; customers love it. Inside or outside cafés. Source: http://www.stiffermingsociety.com money, but the amount was not set. "You can't go out in the street and say I'm going to make 40 bucks tonight," he said. While some buskers are out trying to make a living, others are in it for the joys of performing. Derek Sharp, owner of Supersonic Music, 1023 Massachusetts St., has played drums in the street with fellow musicians. He said playing to make people happy was his main goal. "The times I've done it have never been for money," Sharp, Topeka resident, said. "It's just been for fun and for entertainment for the crowds that walk by. It's fun downtown to see the people in the suits stop and smile in their busy little lives." When playing on the streets the performer is much closer to the audience than on a stage. This intimate setting allows for more interaction between the two the groups leading to some unpredictable results. "A guy came up who was drunk or high or something and wanted us to play some song that nobody knew and promised to pay us if we do," Sharp said, "We started making noise, he loves it and he had 50 one-dollar bills. He threw them up in the air, and the bills dropped on my head, on the guitar players, on the ground, and he just walked away." In front of Supersonic Music on Monday nights is a public drum circle. From 7 p.m.to 9 p.m. people are encouraged to bring their drums and play music with each other on the streets. The circle, started about two and a half years ago in Topeka and attracts anywhere from 12 to 60 people a night to perform. —Edited by Amber Byarlay and Julie Jantzer two 11 o'clock and 10 o'clock THURSDAY, APRIL 10,2003 MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5 Filmmakers, bands collaborate on project By Neil Mulka nmulka@kansan.com Jayplay staff writer Film, music and art will Kallide Monday at the Granada. Combining the word collide with "kallos," the Greek word for beauty and the root for kaleidoscope, the Kallide Project will feature films by local filmmakers set to live performances of Lawrence bands Kelpie, Getaway Driver and E.V.A.C According to producer/director Matt Blume, the made-up word describes the kaleidoscopic event perfectly. "It's constant interplay," said Blume, Lawrence resident. "The films are playing into the band, and the bands are playing into each other." "Art is not just to This event is also an attempt to break away from the traditional way various styles of art are digested. "Art is not just to be appreciated in galleries and museums," Blumesaid., "This event affords art to be fully experienced in a nonconventional space where the audience is part of the experience." "Art is not just to be appreciated in galleries and museums. This event affords art to be fully experienced in a nonconventional space where the audience is part of the experience." Matt Blume Kallide Project producer/director The performance is divided into two acts with the bands performing three 15 minute scenes during each act. Except for the bands changing with each scene, the music is continuous. During each of the four-minute transitions of the scenes, two of the three bands will play together. "We only play together during the transitions," said John Momberg, drummer for Kelpie. "We play our own music, our own parts." Performing live music while screening prerecorded films can present it's own KALLIDE, A DIALOGUE BETWEEN MUSIC AND VIDEO Starts at 10 p.m. Monday at the Granada with a running time of two hours and 15 minutes Featuring music by E.V.A.C., Getaway Driver and Kelpie. Featuring projections by Tyler Alfrey, Matt Blume, Ryan Glendening, Kyle Hamrick, Jeff Ruggles and Nick Yates problems with music/visual syncopation. "Everything originally was going to be perfect," said Momberg, Lawrence resident. "Minute to minute, second to second but it was near impossible to do so." The show, which has no official theme, will run for two hours and 15 minutes. Blume hopes that the time element of the performance will add to the audience's experience. "I want them to see a merging of different specialties in a very temporal setting," Blume said. "At a regular live music performance there might be an encore. With this, there will only be two hours and 15 minutes." The idea for the Kallide Project was conceived last year by Blume. After finding interested filmmakers, artists and musicians the group started having regular meetings in January to discuss the project. While the concept for music to be performed with video is not new, according to Blume, it has not been done recently in Lawrence. In addition to the film and music, local artists Todd Hippensteel, Michael Klodginski and Erik Sultzer will create oversized cartoon illustrations around the walls of Granada, 1020 Massachusetts, to add to the atmosphere of the event. "The artwork we're doing is for the peripheral viewing of the audience," said Michael Klodginski, St. Louis, Mo., senior. "It helps add to the idea of all the different mediums colliding together." — Edited by Brandon Gay TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 ON SALE NOW DANIELLE RYAN Starla Benford Erin Moran From TV's Happy Days Amy J. Carle What Do Jayhawks Call Their Vaginas? THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets. www.ticketmaster.com. 816-931-3330. The Lied Center Box Office, or 785-864-ARTS *Service Charge may apply. I. A. THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD 10.10 6 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN DOWNTOWN THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003 More Than Just Your Daily Crossword Buffalo. Buffalo. Buffalo. It's what's for sale Buffalo. Buffalo. It's what's for sale Buffalo. Buffalo. Buffalo. It's what's for sale THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Paradise Café's new owners say lunch important, a priority By Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer As a patron for 20 years of The Paradise Café, 728 Massachusetts St., Schuyler Lister said he was frustrated that his favorite restaurant was closed during lunch hours. Since he took over as owner in August, however, Lister has made sure the café stayed open. "This is Lawrence, Kan," Lister said. "Half of the people roll out of bed at 1 o'clock." The Paradise Café's extended hours are just one aspect of the revamped restaurant. Lister said he and general manager Scott Swedlund have spent eight months painting, polishing and renovating the restaurant, which made its debut in Lawrence more than 20 years ago. Lister said the previous owner, Steve McCoy, was "ready to start a new adventure" after running the restaurant for 16 years. That's when Lister stepped in with a fresh concept for the café — and a few "We started to bring it back to its former glory," Lister said. paintbrushes. A new blue stage is the restaurant's focal point, adorned by a blazing sun painted on the wall behind it. The stage is a symbol of the type of creativity Lawrence embodies. Lister said. A creative stage called for creative bands, and Lister said the café worked to bring in local bands like Love Squad and Satan's Jeweled Crown. "During the day, it's relaxed and comfortable, and you always run into people you know," Staves said. "Night's got a little more action." Staves said she first started eating at The Paradise Cafe five years ago. She said she had noticed the restaurant's food had become more consistent in the past year, and she was pleased she could now get dinner—and lunch—throughout the day. The Paradise Café is now open from 6:30 a.m. to 2 a.m. Monday through Saturday and from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Sundays. The kitchen is open until 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday and until 4 p.m. on Sundays. — Edited by Anne Mantey SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay 20" SPEAKERS Lots of powerful bass. Must sell. $150. Call 555-1212. If you’ve got it, we can sell it. Your ad runs in The University Daily Kansan and on kansan.com. Students receive 20% off. Call 864-4358 for details. 20" SPEA Must sell 20" SPEAKERS Lots of powerful bass. Must sell. $150. Call 555-1212. If you've got it, we can sell it. Your ad runs in The University Daily Kansan and on kansan.com. Students receive 20% off. Call 864-4358 for details. THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 SEX THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7 Discussing orgasms improves sex Have you ever faked it? Come on, be honest. Have you ever faked an orgasm? Well, I'll be the first to admit that I have. When I was a bit younger and more self-conscious about my body and my sexuality, I was not comfortable talking about orgasms with my partners. Instead of admitting that my partner hadn't gotten me off, I pretended I had come just to make the situation less awkward. And believe me, faking orgasms did little to lift that awkward tension that exists when two people become sexually active. COMMENTARY A. Lindsey Hodel lhodel@kansan.com In fact, these acts of deceit only led to more hurt and more embarrassment later when I finally cracked and had to tell my partner to step it up a few notches. When I looked back on my sexual experiences in which I have faked orgasms, I tried to decipher what makes anyone, male or female, want to fake an orgasm. Many factors worked together to make me think that faking was the way to go. First, I wanted to make my partner feel confident and great about the sexual experience we had just shared. I didn't want the memory tarnished by the lack of climax, because I thought it would tarnish that person's memory of me as a person. I also faked orgasms to protect my own ego, because I thought something maybe wrong with me. After all, women were supposed to scream and moan and start feeling themselves during sex, weren't they? Wasn't that how all the movies and stories went? Well, sorry guys. For most women, traditional intercourse usually isn't the way to get a woman off. In The Technology of the Orgasm, Rachel Maines discusses how 80 percent of women she interviewed reported having difficulty coming during normal penetration. So no wonder women fake orgasms more often than men. For most women, clitoral stimulation is key, so pleasing a woman manually or orally is probably a more efficient way to make her come. The main reason for faking orgasms comes from not wanting to ask your partner to do it differently, Cynthia Akagi, assistant professor in health education, said. "Sometimes people aren't comfortable enough in their relationships to discuss orgasms," she said. Akagi teaches a health and human sexuality class in which faking orgasms is classified under "sexual difficulties." "It's not a huge deal to fake here and there, but when it becomes a pattern, it starts affecting the relationship," she said. "If you are faking, you are not being honest, and you are setting yourself up for failure in future intimate relationships." Yes, it's easier for a woman to fake an orgasm because she doesn't ejaculate, but women tend to be more self-conscious about their bodies and pleasing men. "Another reason some women can't have an orgasm is because they can't relax or they are mad at their partner." Akagi said. $ ^{9} $Percentage of college students who have faked it If your partner isn't doing the job or you are concerned that you may need to adjust your own technique, talk to your partner. Discuss what turns you on and what doesn't; not only will this make your sexual experiences more pleasurable, the conversation could also serve as incredibly sexy foreplay. Teach and learn from each other, because only you know your body the best. Female heterosexual: 60 percent Lesbian/Bisexual female: 71 percent Male heterosexual: 17 percent Gay/Bisexual male: 27 percent Percentage of college students who have never had an orgasm Female:13 percent Male:6 percent Source: Elliot and Brantley, 1997 research study If you don't feel comfortable talking to your partner about the big "O," talking about more serious issues likes pregnancy, STDs and commitment could be impossible. Communication and openness are major parts of the relationship,and if you aren't ready for those,you aren't ready for sex. Model is a St. Louis, Mo., senior in journalism. WE LOVE OUR KANSAN. Friday March 7, 2003 Today's weather 59° Tell us your news THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas tops Western Michigan 8-1 at Hoglund Ballpark p. 1B Anti-war walkout sparks debate Students vary in opinions on war in Iraq 100 Walkout FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2023 The person is busy world with business and family life. The person is busy world with business and family life. The person is busy world with business and family life. FRIDAY MARCH 1, 2003 Walkout MUNDO MARCH 14 A group of young people will take a stroll around the city to raise awareness about the problems faced by the poor and underprivileged. The event will be held at the Municipal Stadium in São Paulo on March 14, 2003. The group of young people will take a stroll around the city to raise awareness about the problems faced by the poor and underprivileged. The event will be held at the Municipal Stadium in São Paulo on March 14, 2003. The group of young people will take a stroll around the city to raise awareness about the problems faced by the poor and underprivileged. I am very proud to have served as a member of the United States Army. I will always remember my time in the Army and the dedication you gave me. Friday March 7, 2003 Sun 11:15 AM, Mon 11:12 PM Today's weather 59° Sunny Tell us your news Cincinnati Bombers beat Jets Colorado Fri at Jasmin Hornsby, a playoff win to 10-6 NBC Sports KANSAS Kansas tops Western Michigan 8-1 at Hoglund Ballpark p.1B Anti-war walkout sparks debate Students vary in opinions on war in Iraq By Eddy Wilson Associate Editor, The New York Times СОЮЗНАЕНИЯ ОБУДОВНОГО СТАЙСТВА ПРОГРАММА С УПАКТИВНОГО СЛАРМАТЕЛЬНОГО ДЕЛИ СУМПИТРОВЫХ ЛЕГОРОДИЙ СОУЗОВ НА ПРИХОД ПРОГРАММА С УПАКТИВНОГО СЛАРМАТЕЛЬНОГО ДЕЛИ --- 8 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY,APRIL10,2003 COVERSTORY --- Photo illustration by John Nowak/Kansan Cocaine... the underground drug nobody talks about By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer B low, snow, coke. It all means the same thing. In the words of blues god Eric Clapton, cocaine. he said he thought marijuana was a "lower-level drug." "Everywhere you look, the people with money now are "If your thing is gone and you wanna ride on, cocaine. Don't forget this fact, you can't get it back, cocaine." In Blow, a movie based on a true story, Johnny Depp played George Jung, the man who established the American cocaine market in the 1970s. the ones who use," John said. "It's just not as cool to do pot; it's just not as elite." At one point in the movie, he said if you bought cocaine in that time period in America, there was an 85 percent chance it was from him. The real-life Jung is still in prison. Normally known as an '80s drug, cocaine is making somewhat of a comeback in Lawrence, said John, senior at the University of Kansas who did not want his last name used in this article. Although cocaine arrests have not gone up significantly in Lawrence, several students admit to its return to prominence in Lawrence's drug scene. In the movie, Jung progresses from selling marijuana around California to selling cocaine in the late 1970s and early 1980s. John began using cocaine because Photo illustration by John Nowak/Kansas About Cocaine In its pure form, cocaine is a white crystalline powder extracted from the leaves of the South American coca plant, according to the Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse. On the street, pure cocaine is diluted or "cut" with other substances to increase the quantity, and thereby increase the profits of its sellers. Cocaine is typically a more expensive habit than marijuana. According to cocaineeffects.com, the short-term effects of cocaine include increased temperature dilated pupils, constricted vessels increased blood pressure, mental alertness, increased energy decreased appetite and increased heart rate. Cocaine is a strong central nervous system stimulant that interferes with the reabsorption process of dopamine, a chemical messenger associated with pleasure and movement. Extra dopamine is released as part of the brain's reward system and CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE 测试 THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 COVER STORY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9 2013 Photo illustration by Eric Braem/Kansan CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE causes the cocaine high. Bob's story Bob, another senior at the University, said cocaine was now an occasional habit for him, but it used to be an addiction. "I used to do it all the time, but I could never get as good a high as I wanted, so I kept trying," said Bob, who also wanted his last name kept confidential. "After rehab, it was only a matter of time before I got back, but now I can keep it from becoming a constant thing. It's hard, but the highs are a lot better when you're not trying all the time." Bob said he encountered trouble paying for his habit. "I started to do anything I could to try and get the money," he said. Bob said he went home from college one weekend and tried to steal money from his 16-year-old sister's purse. He was caught by his mother and questioned about why he needed the money. Bob said he stormed out without answering. "I really didn't know what I was doing," Bob said. "I finally got tired of it and told a friend, who told my Many cocaine addicts develop a high tolerance for the use of cocaine with continued use of the drug. The reality of drug addiction is that this high will never be felt again and some addicts chase this for years causing them to lose everything. National Institute on Drug Abuse parents." The first night, he screamed, trembled, sweated and hallucinated. It took him awhile to get over it, and he said he wouldn't wish it on his worst enemy. Soon Bob was in rehab, where he encountered horrible withdrawal symptoms. Cocaine High The rush associated with the first use of cocaine is often the best a user will ever feel. After the rush is over, users are left with a depressed feeling, often causing the user to seek more cocaine to get According to a report by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the users are chasing an impossible dream. back the rush. Bob said he still used cocaine, but not as much as he used to. "Many cocaine addicts develop a high tolerance for the use of cocaine with continued use of the drug," the institute said. The faster the absorption, the more intense the high. However, the slower absorption lasts longer. Increased use can reduce the period of stimulation. The high for snorting is typically 15 to 30 minutes, while smoking can last 5 to 10 minutes. It all depends on the body's rate of absorption. "The reality of drug addiction is that this high will never be felt again and some addicts chase this for years — causing them to lose everything." "I can't totally get rid of it. There's just something about that feeling," Bob said. "But at least I'm taking care of part of it by not doing it as often, right?" The length of the high is different, depending on method of ingestion. - Edited by Melissa Hermreck --- 10 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FOOD THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003 Cook meat thoroughly to be safe Christina DiGiacomo/Kansan Today, many favorite restaurant dishes and down home cooking ideas include the star attraction: poultry or red meats. Barbecue chicken and Potatoes O'Brien. When cooking any kind of meat, like barbecue chicken, make sure to cook it all the way. Uncooked meat is associated with disease. Crunchy fried chicken and baby back barbecued ribs are certainly some all-time favorites, but somehow every time these meals are tried in the kitchen, they never seem to turn out quite like mom's. How come? Most likely, many tend to overcook such foods or are just unaware of how to cook such foods all together. Yes, following a recipe can help, but lacking the proper knowledge of knowing how to thoroughly cook a piece of chicken or beef can truly wreck a classic. Checking with a cooking thermometer, chicken and turkey should be cooked to a minimum of 160 degrees Fahrenheit to a maximum temperature of 170 degrees Fahrenheit. Cooking past these temperatures will kill food-borne bacteria such as salmonella. Whole birds, such as turkey, chicken or duck, should be cooked at no less than 170 degrees Fahrenheit but no more than 180 degrees Fahrenheit. To test bone-in cuts, insert thermometer near the bone. Boneless pieces should be checked at the thickest part of the cut (this goes for beef, as well). When chicken meat is thoroughly cooked, it should always look opaque with no sign of pink and the juices should run clear. Beef, which includes roasts, steaks and ground beef, should be cooked in the range of 145 degrees Fahrenheit (for medium rareness) to 160 degrees Fahrenheit (for a medium temperature). Try not to cut into any piece of beef, or chicken to check for doneness; this loses all the wonderful juices inside the meat. Plus meat should always sit after it's cooked for at least five minutes so it retains its juiciness. After the consistent use of a thermometer to check whether it's done, senses of touch, sight and smell will begin to determine when the meat is cooked thoroughly. Ground beef and ground turkey should always be cooked until they reach 160 degrees Fahrenheit. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention link eating undercooked or pink ground beef to an increased risk of illness. So, food for thought; Don't eat ground beef while it's still pink on the inside. With these facts, cooking juicy, tender meat doesn't sound all that difficult anymore, does it? Now, all that is missing in your cooking repertoire is a cooking thermometer. Expect to find prices ranging from $5.99 to $14.99 at any store with kitchen supplies. Christina DiGiacomo cdigiacomo@kansan.com EAT THIS The tastes of a juicy, perfect steak is waiting. Favorite Barbecue Chicken with Cheesy Potatoes Serve this with coleslaw and a large glass of ice tea. Ingredients: 1 chicken fryer,cut into pieces or a few favorite chicken pieces 1 cup of flour, seasoned with salt and pepper 3 tablespoons of vegetable oil Barbecue sauce: 2 tablespoons Vinegar 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 2 tablespoons Worcestershi 1 teaspoon salt 1/2 teaspoon red pepper 1/2 teaspoon black pepper 1 teaspoon chili powder 1 teaspoon paprika 3/4 cup ketchup 3/4 cup water 1/2 a lemon 1/2 a white onion, chopped Directions: 1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Heat oil in a large heavy frying pan over high heat. Dredge chicken pieces into flour and slowly place chicken in pan and brown on all sides. Remove chicken from pan and set into a large casserole dish. 2. Sprinkle onion over chicken and squeeze the juice of the lemon over the chicken. 3. Mix all barbecue ingredients together and pour over chicken. Bake for 1 1/2 to 2 hours or until cooking thermometer reads 160 to 170 degrees. Makes 4-6 servings. Cheesy Potatoes O'Brien Ingredients: 132 oz. package hash browns O'Brien, defrost 1/2 cup melted butter 1 can cream of chicken soup-undiluted 1/2 cup chopped onion 1 16 oz. carton sour cream 1 small jar of cheese whiz (not the stuff you put on crackers) Directions: 1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Combine all ingredients and place in casserole dish. Season with salt and pepper. 2. Bake for 40 minutes or until potatoes are golden brown. Makes 6 to 8 servings Note: You will have leftovers of the potato dish, but you can freeze it and when ready to remake it, bake it at 350 degrees for an hour and a half. DiGiacomo is an Apple Valley, Minn., senior in communication studies. She studied at Dante Alighieri cooking school in Florence, Italy. C04040 THURSDAY, APRIL 10,2003 MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 11 Bands perform fine rock'n'roll REVIEW Maybe it's just me, but it seems like hardly anyone shows up at the really good shows in Lawrence anymore. Superdrag and Ozma's coheadlining tour was in town Sunday night, and The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., was surprisingly spacious, with the crowd at best filling only 75 percent of the venue's capacity. --- Aaron Passman apassman@kansan.com But those who were there got their share of rock 'n' roll, as Lawrence's current gold mine of quality rock shows continued. Lawrence natives Getaway Driver kicked off the night, and this band gets better each time I see it. Despite playing before a pretty scant crowd and appearing to have some equipment troubles (including low vocals throughout the set) the Getaway boys continue to be a tighter live band. Throughout its half-hour set it played songs from each of its EPs, including all four tracks from its recently released Cliches With Harmonies EP. In the interest of full disclosure, Nate Harold, guitar player for Getaway Driver, is also a Jayplay music critic. Now, I like Weezer a lot. So it's probably not surprising that Ozma is one of my favorite bands. Musically it's similar to Weezer but with elements of '80s new wave thrown in for good measure. Opening the set with a rockin', synth-heavy version of "Domino Effect," it was clear right out of the gate that Ozma wasn't going to be screwing around. Having not played Ozma's new songs were poppiest and darker, and the opening set didn't screw around, while Superdrag's brand of rock came through full force. Lawrence since the summer of 2001, the small crowd that was familiar with the band was out in full force, singing along to nearly every song, including "Shooting Stars," "The Ups and Downs" and "Battlescars." But it wasn't all sing-alongs. In addition to songs from its first record (2000's Rock and Roll Part Three) and its EP (2001's Double Donkey Disc,) the band also premiered four new songs from its upcoming record Spending Time on the Borderline, due out May 6. The new songs are poppier, darker and just as good (if not better) than anything Ozma has put out thus far. But Ozma's high-point came early on, with a cover of the Tetris theme song (which, unbeknownst to many, is a traditional Russian folk song). Both vocalist/guitarist Ryen Slegr and vocalist/bassist Daniel Brummel seemed to be in a talkative mood and chatted with audience throughout its set, even calling out "Go Jayhawks!" several times, in anticipation of Monday's championship game. But while Ozma was chatty, members of Superdrag could hardly keep thier mouth s shut, and there was nearly as much talking on stage as there was rocking, during its hour and 45 minute set. Tennessee's finest wasted no time breaking into its opener "Baby Goes To 11," and despite being absent from Lawrence for two years, it seemed thrilled to be back, and the crowd was more than happy to welcome the band. Superdrag's brand of rock is heavy on the distortion, giving it a mid-90s alternative flavor, but elements of southern classic rock come through at times, too, especially in the guitar solos. But the southern feeling came through full force when the band performed a Merle Haggard cover, as well as "Ambulance Driver," a slower, countrytinged number about vocalist/guitarist John Davis's grandfather. "We put out a new record since the last time we were here in Lawrence, Kan., at The Bottleneck," Davis told the crowd, "and we've got it for sale tonight for only GETAWAY DRIVER ... B+ OZMA ... A SUPERDRAG ... A OVERALL GRADE ... A $10. But if y'all just want to spend your money on beer instead, that's cool, too. Just make sure and go over to the Love Garden and pick it up sometime." The band was gracious to a fault, constantly thanking Lawrence for its hospitality and enthusiasm and thanked the crowd by instigating an audience-wide sing-along on "Keep It Close To Me," as well as dedicating "A Staggering Genius" to all the drinkers in the crowd. With songs as radio-friendly as Superdrag writes them, it's sort of surprising that its mid-90s hit "Sucked Out" was its only radio hit. And it's too bad, because between all three bands, Sunday again brought some fine music to Lawrence. You just have to look a little left of your radio dial to find them. Note: Superdrag and Ozma will be in Manhattan tonight. You should go. Trust me, I'm a critic. Passman is a Towanda junior in journalism and film. Aldhill's Arboretum by Of Montreal Reviewed by Aaron Passman apassman@kansan.com Aldhill's Arboretum, the most recent album from Of Montreal, seems to take much of its musical inspiration from Magical Mystery Tour-era Beatles. The same psychedelic, joyful nonsense that pervaded the Mystery Tour album is on display in Aldhill's Arboretum and seems to have had a strong influence in much of the world of independent, underground music. Many of the bands from San Francisco's Elephant 6 Collective, which included Apples in Stereo and The Olivia Tremor Control, also seemed to take their inspiration from said Beatles record. But whereas many of the Elephant 6 bands seemed concerned with taking the psychedelia and expanding it with experimentation, Of Montreal are primarily concerned with writing great pop songs in the tradition of "Your Mother Should Know" and "Penny Lane," both Magical Mystery Tour tracks. cf Montreal Contributed art Songs on Aldhill's Arboretum such as "Old People in the Cemetery," which is centered on a reggae-tinged chord progression, deal with relatively grim issues in a cheerful manner. But the opening track, "Doing Nothing," may be catchiest song about sheer boredom since Green Day's "All By Myself." One of the album's strongest tracks, "Jennifer Louise," opens with an upbeat keyboard and guitar intro, ultimately rendering the song as something that almost seems like a reject from the Beatles' Rubber Soul. The country-western bounce of "Isn't It Nice?" and the straightforward lyrics of songs such as "Natalie and Effie In The Park" and "A Question for Emily Foreman" show Of Montreal doing what it does best 90.7 90.7 kjhx KJHK Top 10 1. WHITE STRIPES ... Elephant 2. THE FAINT ... Danse Macabre Remixes 3. CHROMATICS ... Chrome Rats Vs. Basement Ruts 4. SINGLE FRAME ASHTRAY .. Burn Radio Airtest 5. APHEXTWIN . 26 Mixes for Cash 7. DEERHOOF ... Apple O 6. BLOOD BROTHERS ... Burn Piano Island, Burn 8. EARLIMART... Everyone Down Here — writing great pop songs about mundane subjects such as country life and getting a dog. 9. ESSEX GREEN ...The Long Goodbye It's the simplicity that makes Of Montreal so charming. It's a band that, while talented and ambitious, isn't trying to reinvent the wheel. It's merely trying to write great pop songs and capitalize on a fondness for mild psychedelia. When the songs are consistently this good across the entire album, you can't ask for much more than that. 10. LIBERTINES .Up the Bracket Note: Of Montreal will play The Bottleneck on April 24, along with local bands Ghosty and The Hardaways. Grade: A 12 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FILM THURSDAY, APRIL10, 2003 'City of God'a violent, wild time REVIEW It's become my personal mission in life to get people to see City of God. This is the kind of wild-ass masterpiece nobody makes anymore, a movie that recalls the golden age of 1970s Hollywood, a thrill-seeking entertainment on the level of Goodfellas and Boogie Nights. Forget that it's in Portuguese with English subtitles. Exhilaration is a universal language. THE NEW YORKER Stephen Shupe sshupe@kansan.com Bursting with more energy than the last 10 films I've reviewed combined, City of God is a violent plunge into a forgotten underworld — the Brazilian slums that served as ground zero for drug trafficking through Rio de Janeiro in the '60s and '70s. The film's epic scope begins with the end of one generation of dealers and follows the natural progression of the next, rendering the endless cycle of the drug world with astonishing clarity. Based on a true story, the film's hero is Rocket (Alexandre Rodrigues), a bright youth blessed with more gifts than his world knows what to do with. The '60s, the shorter of the film's two eras, depicts the downfall of Rocket's older brother, Shaggy (Johnathan Haagensen) and his hoodlum friends. With most of them wiped out after Bursting with more energy than the last 10 films I've reviewed combined, 'City of God' is a violent plunge into a forgotten underworld. a hold-up that ends in a bloodbath, the action jumps to Rocket as a teenager as he begins to show a budding interest in photography and losing his virginity. Like Pulp Fiction, the film is broken into sub-sections with titles of their own. In a brutal early episode, we see the psychopathic Li'l Ze (Firmino da Hora) morph from a little kid cackling as he massacres a motel room to a paranoid adult who's the boss of the city. In another, the violent history of an apartment unravels in a dizzying series of shots taken from a single camera set-up. As a purely sensory experience, City of God is nothing short of breathtaking. The director, Fernando Meirelles, sends us hurtling over the crumbling walls of the city, as if the camera were constantly racing to catch up with the characters. The middle part of the movie, in which Rocket befriends a good-hearted gangster named Benny (Phillippe Haagensen), is a surreal rock-and-roll fantasia in the tradition of Apocalypse Now. Every scene brings with it a new discovery, a new excitement. With just as much flair, Meirelles jampacks his film with tremendously resonant thematic undertones. The catching nature of violence is in City of God an urbanized version of William Golding's Lord of the Flies, where savage boys quench the bloodthirsty beast within. Even Rocket has to fall back on a life of crime, in a place where it really is the only thing that pays. The adrenaline factor might seem inappropriate at times for a movie this bleak. In a CITY OF GOD ... A Starring: Alexandre Rodriques, Phillipe Haagensen and Fermino da Hora. Rated R for strong, brutal violence, sexuality, drug content and language. Playing at Liberty Hall Theater, 642 Massachusetts St. heartbreaking sequence, a child is forced to choose between two friends, one of whom he'll have to murder in cold blood. But the film is often brightened by Rocket's ironyting voice-over. And there's always someone to root for, be it Rocket as he leaves the city for a career in photojournalism or Knockout Ned (Seu Jorge) - once a straight-and-narrow role model - as he joins up with a rival gang to take down Li'l Ze. City of God continues a wonderful streak of terrific Latin-American films, after Amores Perros and YTu Mama Tambien, suggesting today's serious artistic breakthroughs are to be found east of Hollywood and south of the border. Shupe is an Augusta graduate student in journalism SAKAROFF'S the salon Voted "Best Salon on the Hill" by students head GAMES GRAHAM WEBB Nolita 12 E 8th St. • 841-4247 1 9 2 S 3 D O m e 10 d 11 c u 4 l 5 + o r a h 6 i n 12 t e r e s t i n g n s n g 7 g 8 KANSAN Crosswords THURSDAY, APRIL10, 2003 MOVIES AROUND TOWN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 13 The following reviews and summaries were written by Jayplay film critic Stephen Shupe unless otherwise noted. 12 04 LIBERTY HALL Adaptation Grade: Aam Sandler's mild-mannered businessman in the be the Bob Fosse Broadway hit, but after Chicago is over you may wonder what all the fuss was about. Director Rob Marshall's carbon-copy theatricality ensures you'll have a good time, but for less style over substance, see Björk in the daring Dancer in the Dark. Contributed art Charlie Kaufman's Mad Hatter idea to write himself into his own screenplay pays off in spades in Spike Jonze's latest comedic stunner. Nicholas Cage gives a blistering performance as the screenwriter hired to adapt Susan Orlean's The Orchid Thief, a decidedly non-cinematic book about flowers. Meryl Streep plays Orlean in some of the best sequences in the film, which feature an Oscar-winning Chris Cooper as a greasy horticulturist who journeys through the swamp lands to lift endangered orchids. Charlie's descent from artistic integrity to derivative hell is one of the movies' most memorable unraveling acts in years, and Adaptation's restless originality all but guarantees it cult status. The Quiet American Grade: A- (Ends today) Thomas Fowler (Oscar nominee Michael Caine), a British journalist chasing the dragon and other interests in 1952 Saigon, meets Alden Pyle (should-havebeen-nominated Brendan Fraser), an American charmer who falls in love with Fowler's Vietnamese girlfriend. When Fowler investigates a violent political faction, one that's fighting both the communists and the rebels, he finds Pyle waiting for him around every corner. Phillip Noyce's incredibly suspenseful rendering of Graham Greene's novel is the most politically inflammatory American movie in years, one that should provide plenty of fuel to the fire for today's anti-war movement. SOUTH WIND 12 Agent Cody Banks Grade: C (Ends today) Malcom in the Middle's Frankie Muniz makes the leap to the big screen with this unexceptional kid adventure. Muniz plays a typical Seattle teen with girl issues who's secretly a CIA super-agent. I loved this movie the first time when it was called Spy Kids and directed by Robert Rodriguez, who makes movies with eye-popping visuals and plenty of conceptual wit. Apart from a few laughs and some snappy casting, Agent Cody Banks is dull to look at with a silly robot plot that's way too complicated for kids to follow. There's enough bikini-wear on display here that it prompted one tyke at my screening to call Jack Nicholson plays the therapist from hell to Ad out, "Oh, my gosh!" When I was his age we were treated to such family-friendly classics as Home Alone and Who Framed Roger Rabbit. But today, kid flicks have fully embraced the overly violent world of monster-mayhem cartoon television. Anger Management (not reviewed) Adam Sandler and Jack Nicholson team up for an eclectic screen experiment in which Sandler plays the straight man and Nicholson the out-of-control egomaniac. After an airplane incident lands him in court, mild businessman Dave Buznik (Sandler) is ordered to attend anger management sessions conducted by Dr. Buddy Rydell (Nicholson), an eccentric therapist who employs tite- $ \frac{1}{2} $ -tite methods for soothing his volatile patients. When Buddy moves into his apartment, Dave must decide whether to retreat into his shell or finally stand up for himself. There be controversy about whether Bringing Down the House, with Steve Martin as the Stuffy White Guy and Queen Latifah as the Loudmouthed Black Chick, reinforces racist stereotypes. But few can deny that the silver-haired prig and the brassy babe are a unique comic alloy. Bringing Down the House Grade: B —KRT Campus Chicago Grade: Bam Sandler's mild-mannered businessman in the be the Bob Fosse Broadway hit, but after Chicago is over you may wonder what all the fuss was about. Director Rob Marshall's carbon-copy theatricality ensures you'll have a good time, but for less style over substance, see Björk in the daring Dancer in the Dark. Everybody sings and dances just swell in this Academy Award-nominated take on Dreamcatcher Grade: B- Four telepathic friends enter the snowy New England woods for a weekend hunting expedition, only to be hunted themselves by little green men. At the heart of this Stephen King story is one of the more intriguing ideas about alien invasions ever where interplanetary monsters draw upon dreams and hide behind the friendlyneighbors imaginings of such movies as Close Encounters of the Third Kind. In King's book, this concept was overwhelmed by a seemingly endless race against time, and Dreamcatcher's director, Lawrence Kasdan, possesses no other ambition than to film it faithfully. Some of the acting — especially by Damian Lewis as a shape-shifting alien with a James Bond accent — is fun. But the demands of big budget sci-fi - creatures and special effects - quickly take over the picture. Old School Grade: B+ A mile-a-minute tummy-tickler, Old School follows the travails of three 30ish friends unwilling to leave behind the glory of their collegiate yesteryear. A movie that spoofs the Greek experience has the artistic license to be rowdy, bawdy and completely lacking in moral fiber. The director, Todd Phillips, plays by those rules while also giving the film an exquisite sixth sense for the kitsch 1980s nostalgia most yuppies just can't escape. And as a newlywed streaking his way to a quick divorce, Ferrell goes Farley in a comedy that's savvy enough to give him free rein. Tears of the Sun Grade: C- A Nigerian war film about genocide and American intervention, Tears of the Sun plays like Black Hawk Down minus the wall-to-wall slam-bang action of that previous film, leaving only the sketched-in human relationships to fill up a two-hour running time. Director Antoine Fuqua (Training Day) strives for a more contemplative war film a la The Thin Red Line, but the script has so much ground to cover that familiar faces like Isaiah Washington and Donnie Wahlberg barely register. Only the cinematographer, Mauro Fiore, seems to realize this is a movie designed to engage an audience, and he enthralls with striking tropical landscapes. Bruce Willis leads this solemn enterprise, a movie that undercuts his back-to-back M. Night Shyamalan triumphs, The Sixth Sense and Unbreakable. View From the Top Grade: D+ (Ends today) According to Miramax topper Harvey Weinstein, his studio paid Gwyneth Paltrow $10 million to star in the flight-attendant romantic comedy View From the Top. And it appears that Miramax spent all of $10 for everything else. 一 -KRT Campus 14 - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIDEO GAME THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003 New fighters give game punch REVIEW Chris Moore cmoore@kansan.com The fighters of Dragonball Z have returned to the gaming stage. It's been a few years since I've seen an actual Dragonball Z fighting game. Still, Dragonball Z: Budokai had to contend with some of its predecessors such as the 3-D fighting game Dragonball GT: Final Bout and Dragonball Z: Legends, one of the only games where you could pick three fighters to fight simultaneously (Sorry, but Marvel vs. Capcom doesn't come close to that). Budokai is a good old 3-D fighting game with the cast of one of the greatest fighting-style anime programs there is. PlayStation 2 DRAGON BALL Z BUDOKU武道会 T Contributed art The game takes place at the end of the last World's Martial Arts Tournament, where Goku won his first tournament against the Namekian Piccolo. After that, Goku has a son, Gohan, who gets captured by Raditz, Goku's brother. And then starts the Dragonball Z saga. Players must now fight their way through some of the most intense Dragonball Z fights up to the end of the Cell Saga. The game also features the World Martial Arts Tournament. Players can compete in the Tournament to win prize money for themselves.The money is useful later in the game. However, there aren't just fights that you must win. Players must complete special missions to progress. For instance, Goku must hold his brother as Piccolo launches the Special Beam Cannon at him; players must position Raditz in the right position at the right time for it to hit him. Also, some of the fights have stipulations to them. One example is when Goku becomes infected with a heart virus fighting Android 19. Players' life bar steadily decreases, and it's up to them to defeat the Android before their life is depleted. The fights aren't always won easily. Players can find themselves eliminated in the first round if they're not careful. The rules are just the same as the World Martial Arts Tournament; players either win by knocking out their opponent or they can knock them out of the ring. This is fun to do, but players will want to watch out for their opponents. They sometimes tend to turn around and knock the player out the ring. Players earn money for winning or coming in second place. One of the greatest features in this game is the integration of the fighters and the Capsule Corporation's capsules. Players have the option of choosing a fighter and customizing them with their choice of attacks and support abilities. Players can get the capsules by winning battles in story mode and by buying them from Mr. Popo's shop. Players use the prize money they win DRAGONBALL2:BUDOKAI .. A Now available for Playstation 2 Rated T for Teen Sells for an average retail price of $50 from the tournament to buy the capsules. The capsules let the player build the perfect character for them to fight with. Also with the story mode, players have the option of rewriting Dragonball Z history. Players can take on each saga from the bad guy's point of view. Players can have Vegeta become a Super Saiyan at the end of the Saiyan Saga and have Frieza become immortal in the Frieza Saga. These were interesting twists for the game to have. Budokai is a great game. The fighting is a rather fast-paced for a 3-D game, the graphics have the Dragonball Z anime style to it and the English-speaking Dragonball Z cast lend their voices to the characters. This game is a must-have for fighting gamers. Moore is a Tulsa, Okla., freshman in journalism everyday. 15 This page is satire. All names are made up, except in cases when public figures are being satirized. Other use of real names is accidental unless otherwise noted. Questions? comments? Contact Lucas Wetzel at 864-4810 or beak@kansan.com TONGUEINBEAK WWW.KANSAN.COM/SATIRE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003 Hawksheets confuse voters CHINA by Johan Novak/Kansan "Did you remember to save? " asks Hawk coilition member Andre Rieu as he hands KUnited CLAS candidate and Beloit junior Eagan Waggoner copies of the Hawk Sheet. By J.C. Hackmuth beak@kansan.com Kansas Janay纸writer Although members of Delta Force and KUnited lined Jayhawk Boulevard yesterday to hand out free smiles and colorful sheets of paper, it was a third-party handbill that garnered the most voter enthusiasm. The Hawk Sheet, a yellow coupon booklet handed out each Wednesday on campus, impressed voters with its variety of candidates and their individual campaign pledge. "The other coalitions' handbills are just full of empty promises," Topeka freshman Jayden Applebee said. "The Hawk Sheet offers results you can eat, as well as high quality products and services from places like Nail Citi." Among the Hawk Sheet's platform issues are a "Rent one movie, get one free" promise from off-campus candidate Miracle Adult Video and an "All-You-Care-ToEat-Buffet" plan from non-traditional incumbent Mr. Gatti's Pizza. After familiarizing themselves with the issues supported by The Hawk Sheet, many voters were disappointed by their absence from the ballet "I thought The Hawk Sheet meant the dawn of a new KU filled with Pizza Huts, Burger Kings and hair salons, but it was too good to be true" Applebee said. In other Senate election news, KUnited Presidential candidate Andy Knopp, Manhattan Junior, refused to admit that he had run into snags with the "Free campus busses" (sic) mentioned in KUnited-related chalk scribblings. "Have you ever heard of the Magic School Bus?" asked Knopp. "Well we've got it. Except not really." Knopp said KUnited would continue to build on Jonathan Ng's groundwork for a new Multicultural resource center. KUnited plans to have the center completed by the time current freshmen are senior citizens. Despite missing the final presidential debate, Lord Wads remained proud of his coalition. "Anyone who witnessed Peter "Pookie" Thornhill's plumber's crack during the bicycle jousts has a new understanding of royalty." he said. Delta Force candidates were unavailable for comment, as they were busy recycling. Way to go, Recycle Force. U.S. forces close in on Shredder Shredder By Sam Hopkins beak@kansan.com Kansan Jayplaywriter US Military Sources said Wednesday that they have taken control of the Technodrome, lair of the evil ruler Shredder. "We have defeated Bebop and Rocksteady, and are ready to take on the more elite Foot Clan units scattered throughout the area," Lt. Gen. Tommy Franks, chief of the allied command, said. Shredder dismissed the claims of his impending overthrow in a deep, muffled voice from somewhere in the sewer: "In the name of Krang, we will repel our enemies decisively." by Spencer Roberts/Kansan The resolve of coalition troops has been strengthened recently by reports that Foot Forces have captured American reporter April O'Neill. They are seemingly not deterred by fears that Shreddder might possess illegal weapons, including a "big, spinning ballthing that shoots shurikens, which of course violates the Ninja Non-*roliferation Treaty of 1989," according to a In an image taken from the new CBS Documentary: "Shredder: Rise of Evil," Shredder responds to a reporter's query about whether he enjoys penicillin on his pizza. When asked how long it might be before Shredder is located, Franks replied, "It could be months, or a few minutes; it really depends on if I find my Game Genie, which I'm pretty sure is under my little brother's bed. When I find it, though, 'Cowabunga, Shred- head!" After the fall of the Technodrome, liberated denizens looted toy stores and melted plastic Shredder figures in the microwave to show their defiance. Freshman girl regrets decisions from night before Zima. Dongs. Greeks. Ping-Pong paddles. Bigotry. For most students these are the essential ingredients in a bunt cake of Saturday night fun. However, Allison Prell survives as an example of how, if improperly combined, these elements will bake a snickerdoodle of regret. Of all the decisions Leawood Freshman Allison Prell has made in her young college career, the worst were consecutively made and inextricably linked last Saturday night. Prell recalls little after her fifth Zima Saturday night and little before finding herself in bed with a drifter Sunday morning. Nonetheless, much of the evening has survived thanks to numerous accounts from fellow students and local police. "Before midnight I saw her puke in a pint glass. She washed her mouth out with Goldschlager and announced herself 'Queen Schlager.' It was all very funny until she started professing her deep hatred for all 'Greeks.' Not frat or sorority types. She apparently actually hates people from Greece," Lawrence resident Paul Mitchell said. The Mad Greek could not be reached for comment but is reportedly very angry. Prell's most regrettable decisions came in the early hours Sunday morning when she decided to "perform" something she had seen just weeks earlier during Spring Break in Tijuana. Her attempt at the famous "She-deviled egg," a failure, Prell reportedly found solace in the arms of Pizza Shuttle delivery driver and Athens, Greece senior Vangelis Papasassoon. "It was cool," said Papasassoon. "She said, 'I'll touch your dong for some pizza.' And I said, 'Yeah, baby. Here's some pepperoni! Then she found out I was Greek and kicked me in the junk." Papasassoon, reeking of feta cheese, lamented in a humorously heavy Mediterranean accent. Kierkegaard once said, "do it or do not do it-you will regret both." Had Allison Prell properly "stuffed the 'She-deviled egg'", maybe she wouldn't have awoken Sunday morning behind the Granada on a deservedly abandoned futon with "Herb the Hippie Drifter". "I don't even know what she was trying to do, but she had a Ping Pong paddle, shaving cream, a stapler and three hard-boiled eggs." said her best friend, Topeka freshman Ally Breck. "I was actually inside when I heard the screams. Apparently it didn't go well." Maybe Allison Prell is a bigot. Maybe she is a drunk and trollop. Maybe she's not as dexterous with a Ping Pong paddle as Tijuana Tammy. Nevertheless, she is full of regret-deep, damaging regret. And isn't regret all that anyone should really expect out of a college freshman? Nipsley Russell II NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC squirrels gone wild squirrel 16 - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT THURSDAY,APRIL 10,2003 There's a better way to vent. --- free for all 864-0500. KANSAN ABE & JAKE'S BUBBA'S BUFFALO WILD WINGS granada JACK GANGANS Pool Room VELVET ROOM $4 Big Red Gulf Vodka BIG PARTY Pomeroy Improv Night All are welcome to participate www.abejakes.com www.abejakes.com PAT GREEN CONCERT $2.50 Captain Morgan $3.50 32oz Bubba Beers $2 Bud & Bud Lt Bottles $3 Smirnoff Martins $1.50 Shots $2'50 Southern Comfort $3.50 Bubba Beers $5 Miller Pitchers $2 Michelob Lt & Ultra $1.50 Miller Highlife $5 Miller Pitchers $2.50 Parrgt Bay Drinks $3 Chic Drink $3 Imports $2 Wells $2 Michelob Lt & Ultra $2.50 Any Bottle $0 Price Applause Spm 10pm $1.50 Domino's $1.50 Domino's $1.50 Domino's $1.50 Domino's $1.50 Domino's $1.50 Domino's $0 Price Applause Spm 10pm FOAM PARTY III: "Special Event" International Party. BullDog Battle 3 pm MidLife Crisis & Paul Schmid 10 pm www.thegranada.com Kalitee 3 Bands www.thegranada.com Service Industry Night $1.50 Local in Las Vegas Night $3 National Vodka Night $15 and $10 Night $4 Smirnoff Night $2'75 Long Island Ion Trails $2'75 Long Island Ion Trails $8 Curve Light Bottles $8 Curve Light Bottles $1.50 Big Burgers $2 Backboard Pints $2c Wings $2 Big Beers Family Night after 10pm $2.50 Imported Bottles $2 Bully Pint $1 Sex on the Beach $4 Smirnoff Dole Bulldon Breakdance Battle III Project Groove Flashback $1.50 Screen Van $3 Orange Juice $1 O Deals Bottles Free Pool Midnight 2am $2'1 Wei Singles $8 Dom Gusto $1 Dom Gusto DoS Free Pool Midnight 2am $2 Dom Bottles $1 Ruffy Shots $2 Longies and Free Pool Midnight 2am $3 Dom Guava $3 Daquim $1 Blue Hawaiian Free Pool Midnight 2am $1.50 Special Outdoor No Coffee No Coffee No Coffee $2'10 Amplified Rio Quiet Rio Quiet Wild MeD $2 Upright Inzoner Drinks $1 Off of Martins $1 Winks $2 Cuddle DJ Robey Footwear Prime Rio Dinner $2 Guiness, Import & Microbrew Pints Balanced Cheese $2 Domestic Bottles Mr. Gustaf Morrison $0.99 CO Bottles $2 Rolling Beverages $3.50 Jimmy Margaritas $5.50 Jimmy Pumpkin Smoothie 1.2 Price Burgers $2.50 Domestic Big Beers 50c Tacos $2 Coronas $2.50 Margaritas 30c Wings $2 Domestic Longnecks BUFFALO WILD WINGS GRILL BAR Pool Room JACK TEARIGANS The Pool Room JACKYLANGANS JACKS Friday April 11,2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 132 Today's weather 76° Tonight:45° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor kansan.com KA KANSAN Rumors abound about whether Roy Williams will stay or go p. 1E KUnited wins I Coalition wins presidency, majority of seats Catherine Bell and Andy Knopp receive a victory hug from Marlon Marshall at Johnny's Tavern after their presidential and vice presidential victories. KUnited won the majority of the senator seats including the presidency and vice presidency. Jegen McDermott/Kansan By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Screams and sprays of champagne erupted from the crowd of KUnited candidates when KJHK radio announced Andy Knopp and Catherine Bell as next year's student body president and vice president. More screams and gasps followed when KUnited candidates were announced as winners of 49 of the 67 empty senator positions. Bell, her clothes and hair soaked with champagne, pumped her fist in the air and stomped her foot in excitement as the crowd closed in on her and Knopp. Chants of "Knopp and Bell! Knopp and Bellt!" filled Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., after the Student Senate election results were announced at about 6:30 p.m. Knopp and Bell earned 2,324 votes, Delta Force candidates Drew Thomas and Fallon Farokhi won 1,211 and Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade candidates Andy Foertsch and Brett Wadsworth won 184. KUnited suspected of violating elections code, page 6A "I was really nervous," Bell said. "had no idea how to predict the election.I'm very,very proud of all our candidates and our supporters. I'm in shock." Abandoned hamburgers and empty champagne bottles littered the booths and high-top tables as the soaked candidates gave each other high-fives and hugs. New senators pulled their cell phones out and plugged one ear to block out the noise as they called parents and friends. "I'm a senator!" Bobby Birhiray, Lawrence junior who won a CLAS seat, yelled into his cell phone at his mother. Birhiray called her first, then his football teammates and finally his father with his silver cell phone in one hand and a bottle of champagne in the other. or Chicago. Although Josh Kaplan, Overland Park junior and business senator, and Nick Sterner, Shawnee freshman and CLAS senator, said they were working more for Knopp and Bell than themselves, Knopp said the biggest thrill was having the majority of the empty Senate seats go to KUnited. "I'm excited about how many candidates we got in there," Knopp said. "All along, that was really a big goal of mine. I was trying to campaign for our individual candidates and it was great to see that pay off." Students were able to vote online at various on-campus polling stations for the first time. Candidates spent two days standing along Jayhawk Boulevard in their coalition shirts, handing out informational filers and encouraging students to vote "This campaign has been absolutely amazing," said Chris Cardinal, Salina freshman and CLAS senator. "When I went to Phi Psi Tuesday night and saw how organized it was and how everyone was putting a hand in, I was completely amazed." Jessica Bankston, former Voice coalition Student Senate presidential candidate, helped manage last year's first KUnited campaign. Bankston lost the student body president election three years ago to Justin Mills—the only Delta Force candidate to win the presidential race in the coalition's seven-year history. She said she was elated at Knopp and Bell. "They strove to get a diverse group of super-motivated people and that's clearly what they got," said Bankston, first year law student. "I've known them both since they've been at KU and they are the perfect people for the job." Both the referendums on the ballot passed. Referendum 1, adding first year representation to Student Senate through a fall online election, passed with 2,204 votes in favor and 815 votes against it. Referendum 2, adding a 50-cent per semester student fee to fund University membership to the United States Students Association, passed with 1,863 votes in favor and 1,175 votes against it. Cate Batchelder contributed to this story. This story was edited by Ryan Wood. Lord Wads goals met; group gets third place JONATHAN S. LEE By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Delta Force looks ahead After hearing the Student Senate elections results from KU Info on his cell phone, Lord Wads announced triumphantly to his friend Sir Baranowski that their coalition had received 184 votes. They received 2,140 fewer votes than KUinited election winners Andy Knopp and Catherine Bell. But Lord Wads wasn't in it to win. Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade, led by Overland Park senior Brett Wadsworth, reached its goal by achieving third place of three coalitions in the election. But that didn't stop coalition members from celebrating their mental victory Wednesday night, when they beat KUnited and Delta Force in a trivia contest at the Hawks Nest in the Kansas Union. By Henry C. Jackson cjjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writers SEE LORD WADS ON PAGE 6A Brian Thomas, Plano, Texas, junior, and Shannon Cline, Wichita sophomore, hug after hearing the results of the Student Senate elections yesterday. Thomas and Cline were part of the Delta Force coalition, which lost the majority of seats in Student Senate to KUnited. As the election results were read, Drew Thomas shook his head, grimaced and lit a cigarette. He had lost his bid for student body president and for a moment, he was stunned. But much like the rest of the Delta Force coalition he ran with, Thomas, Hays senior, recovered quickly. "We lost," Thomas said. "But, you know what, we've lost six out of seven times. It doesn't matter. We're still smart people. We're still going to go out and make a difference." Student Senate elections did not turn out as Delta Force members had hoped, but they took defeat in stride. Defeated in the presidential election and bested by a 49 to 18 margin in the number of Senate seats earned, Delta Force rallied around its ideology and vowed it would play a role in next year's Senate. Kelley Weiss/Kansan "I think we are surprised," Gregory said. "I think we knew we had tough competition, but this is a surprise." Though members of Delta Force were not surprised by defeat in Senate elections, the KUnited's margin of victory in terms of number of Senate seats won was higher than Anna Gregory, Topeka junior, thought it would be. Coalition members celebrated Delta Force's 18 victories with beer and live music. Gregory said she thought KUnited's organization hurt Delta Force's chances in Senate elections. "They run a machine," she said. "KUnited seemed ready to run in November and we didn't start until February." Gregory, Thomas and Fallon Farokhi, Delta Force's candidate for vice president, all expressed hope for the future. "Delta Force is filled with intelligent, hardworking people," Gregory said. "They can change the world." Brian Thomas, Plano, Texas, junior who ran for a CLAS seat and lost, said the defeat was disappointing to a point. "I feel about as defeated as one could get over Student Senate elections," Thomas said. "But in the big picture, what does Student Senate mean? We'll still be involved and we'll bounce back." Edited by Christy Dendurent Unofficial ELECTION RESULTS Delta Force Independent KUnited Lord Wads Student Body President/Vice President Student Body President/ Vice President *Andy Knopn/Catherine Bell* 2324 *Drew Walton/Falton Faroki* 1211 *Sir Foersth/Lord Wads* 184 Referendum 1 Referendum 1 A student initiative to add first year representation to Student Senate Yes, I do support this referendum 2204 No, I do not support this referendum 815 Referendum 2 Referendum 2 A student initiative to add a 50 cent fee to fund University membership to the United States Students' Association Yes, I do support this referendum 1863 No, I do not support this referendum 1175 Architecture (2) ★ Nicholas Lawler 77 ★ Clarisa Diaz 74 ◀ Tony Treu 33 ▲ Hannah Franko 28 ● Mike Warner 23 Business (2) ★ Josh Kaplan 128 ★ Katie Cmkovich 124 ▲ Molissa Menke 40 CLAS Freshman/Sophomore (14) **CLAS Freshman/Sophomore (14)** ★ Elizabeth Knop 920 ★ Molly Kocour 917 ★ Collins Wade 914 ★ Jennifer Lyon 892 ★ Arthur Jones 880 ★ Jenny Ternes 877 ★ Steven Munch 865 ★ Marynell Jones 843 ★ Nick Sterner 842 ★ Anna Clovis 839 ★ Greyson Clymer 829 ★ Jana Szatkowski 829 ★ Jake Hills 817 ★ Chris Cardinal 807 ▲ Kevin McKenzie 390 ▲ Kyle Stearns 389 ▲ Jessica Christenberry 386 ▲ Ethan Nuss 380 ▲ Anne Iverson 379 ▲ Kristan Seibel 373 ▲ Jack Henry-Rhoads 366 ■ Brandon Snook 368 ▲ Kelly Gibbens 363 Dan Peters 360 ▪ Tausha Jackson 354 ▪ Becky Harpstrite 332 ▪ Christie L. Moses 315 ● Peter “Pookie” Thornhill 284 CLAS Junior/Senior (14) ★ Shannon Bell 469 ★ Mark A. Dupree 443 ★ Amanda Boyer 436 ★ Leo Khayet 421 ★ Jeff Dunlap 413 ★ Egan Waggoner 404 ★ Alicia Ellingson 397 ★ Cribb Altman 392(tie) ★ Keval Shah 392(tie) ★ Blake Shuart 392(tie) ★ Ashlee Reid 284 ▲ Scott McKenzie 377 ★ Bobby Birhaiy 376 ▲ Robin Anderson 353 ▲ Andrew Wymore 350 ▲ Anna Gregory 348 ▲ Brian Thomas 347 ▲ Blake Swenson 345 ★ Steve Vockrodt 340 ▲ Travis Weller 334 ★ Benjamin Barmes 318 ★ Tyler Longpine 315 ★ Kelli Brandt 315 ★ Tyler Young 313 ● Phil Mitchell 310 ▲ Shannon Snapp 307 ▲ Bethany Baxter 305 ▲ Ashley Dosien 286 ● Amanda Moglemre 173 ● Nick Reddell 145 ● John P. Waller 114 ● Brett Gilmore 111 ● Steven P. Adams 109 ● J. Tanner Rapelye 109 ● Brandt Pangborn 105 ● Doozie Martin 107 ● Drew Baranowski 90 Education (2) ★ David Hagan 51 ★ Chris McEchron 44 CONTINUED ON PAGE 6A tA • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 News briefs CORRECTION Yesterday's The University Daily Kansan contained an error. The article, "Student learns patience at group home," stated a benefit concert was sponsored by Mu Sigma Upsilon. The concert was sponsored by the Achievement Place for Girls. CAMPUS 'Movie on the Hill to air tomorrow night Student Union Activities will present the "Movie on the Hill" tomorrow. The selected film, The Goonies, will be shown at 9 p.m. on Campanile hill. "It's a great movie to show to get some'80s nostalgia going while watching a movie under the stars," said Lauren Stewart, SUA vice president for University Relations. SUA traditionally shows a "Movie on the Hill" series during Hawk Week each August and shows an outdoor movie during the spring semester. Students should bring blankets or lawn chairs and snacks. Stewart said "Movie on the Hill" is free and open to the public. Lauren Bristow LAWRENCE 'Men's Journal' names Lawrence among best The presence of the University of Kansas helped earn Lawrence a spot on Men's Journal magazine's list of "The 50 Best Places to Live." In an article in its May issue, the magazine featured cities it concluded had all the amenities of a big city while maintaining the "familiarity of a small town." Lawrence was ranked 10th. The magazine limited its picks to cities with populations between 50,000 and 100,000. It also considered quality of life factors such as the environment, cost of living, the number of bars and bookstores. NATION Endangered rivers list excludes Missouri WASHINGTON —For the first time in nine years, the Missouri River was absent from a widely publicized list of the nation's most endangered rivers. The conservation group American Rivers, which issued the list yesterday, is suing the federal government to return the Missouri to a seasonal ebb and flow to improve habitat for birds and fish. The "Big Muddy" dropped off the list not because conditions are better, but because the group expects to win the lawsuit, said American Rivers president Rebecca Wodder. "We believe the overwhelming scientific, economic, and legal evidence that supports restoring more natural flows to the Missouri will be as compelling to a federal judge as it has been to the American people," Wodder said in a statement. Another factor is a lengthy series of delays in a new management plan for the river, which would dictate any flow changes. "What the endangered rivers list is about is rivers whose fate will be decided in the coming year — it's not America's worst rivers," said American Rivers spokesman Eric Eckl. Man attempts to cash rapper's royalty checks RALEIGH, N.C.—A 28-year-old man is accused of diverting mail intended for old school rapper Ricky "Slick Rick" Walters and trying to cash his royalty checks. Walters, 37, whose nits include "La-Di-Da-Di," and "Children's Story," is being held in Bradenton, Fla., by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The INS is attempting to deport Walters, who is British, over an attempted murder conviction in a 1990 shooting, for which he served six years. Bill Adler, a spokesman for Walters and his wife, Mandy Aragones, said Glenn forged Walters' name on royalty checks, deposited them into Walters' bank account and then tried to withdraw the money. Steven Burke Glenn was arrested April 3 and charged with three counts of forgery, two of obtaining property under false pretenses and one of identity theft, Raleigh police Sgt. Chuck Hurst said Thursday. Additional charges were being considered. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. KLIJH-TV News News: Tawnya Bach and Brooke Wehner News: Tawny Bach and Brooke Wehner Weather Matt Jacobs Sports: Mike Alzamora On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. kansan.com Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to 907 kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU Scott Reynolds/Kansan To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Tuesday, according to reports. The computer was valued at $2,400. Phil Brandt, Lenexa senior, shoots for par on hole seven at the disc golf course at Centennial Park, 6th and Rockledge. The temperature in Lawrence rose to more than 70 degrees yesterday, enabling KU students and Lawrence residents to enjoy outdoor activities. ONTHERECORD A 41-year-old KU employee told the KU Public Safety Office that someone took a Dell ethernet card from Anschutz Library, 1301 Hoch Auditoria Drive, between 9 p.m. Sunday and 10:30 a.m. Monday, according to reports. The card was valued at $62.50. A 21-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone slashed three of his car's tires between 2 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. Sunday in the 900 block of Tennessee Street, according to reports. Damage was estimated at $225. A 21-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone stole more than $500 in cash, a Dell laptop A 28-year-old KU employee told the KU Public Safety Office that someone took a Dell Inspiron laptop from Robinson Center, 1301 Sunnyside Ave., between 5:15 p.m. April 3 and 3 p.m. computer and a Pentax camera from her residence between 8:15 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. April 4 in the 900 block of Missouri Street, according to reports.The loss was estimated at $2,610. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com The International Student Association will sponsor World Expo, a display of more than 50 countries, from noon to 5 p.m. today at the ballroom in the Kansas Union. Contact Cindy Yeo at 550-1786. Andrew Tsubaki of the Department of Theatre and Film will give a lecture in Japanese on "Noh and Kabuki in Japan Today" from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today at 4010 Wesco Hall.Call 864-3849. Lorena Martinez, CRIPDES president, will give a lecture on "The Role of Women in Popular Movement Organizing in El Salvador" at 4 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union, Call 864-4213. Donald McCallum of the University of California-Los Angeles will give a Murphy Lecture on "The Producers of Japanese Hakuho Period Sculpture: Artists or Artisans?" at 7 tonight at the auditorium in the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4713. The Society of Women Engineers will hold its 30th Anniversary Celebration at 5 p.m. Saturday at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.Call 864- 3620. The Lied Center will host "Brown Butterfly," a bold fusion of music, dance, visual technology and theater celebrating the style, spirit and times of Muhammad Ali, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Call 864-2787. The band Sellout will perform a benefit concert for Headquarters Counseling Center at 8:30 p.m. Saturday at Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St. Tickets are $5 in advance, $7 at the door. Contact Wendy Leedy at 841-9900. Student Union Activities will show the film The Goonies from 9 to 11 p.m. Saturday at the Campanile as part of its Movie On The Hill series. The event is free.Call 864-7469. The Center for East Asian Studies will show the Korean film Passage to the Buddha from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday at the Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3849. Grammy Award-winning group Sweet Honey in the Rock will perform at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lied Center. Call 864-2787. The School of Fine Arts will sponsor a Collegium Instrumental and Collegium Musicum at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at St. John's Catholic Church, 1229 Vermont.Call 864-3436. Et Cetera Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily, Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045 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 25 cents. Subscrip- tions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stuffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd. Lawrence, KS60445 The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0748-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. 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FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A $230 traffic ticket teaches student highway lesson Drivers must change lanes to go around emergency vehicles By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer When the Legislature passed a law requiring motorists to change lanes to avoid emergency vehicles, it allowed a one-year educational period to inform the public through a combination of warnings, posters and public service announcements. In January he came upon a highway patrol car on Kansas Highway 10, the highway connecting Lawrence and Johnson County. The police vehicle was pulled over on the right side of the road with its lights on because it had just finished ticketing a speeding driver. Though he could have changed lanes, Goldstein did not and received a $230 traffic ticket for his failure to yield. Leawood senior David Goldstein didn't get the message. Fines for the violation range from $60-$180, depending on the type of highway, plus $59 in court costs. Goldstein's fine was recently upheld in the Lenexa traffic court. "The person he had pulled over had just pulled away so he was by himself," Goldstein said. "Technically I could've gotten over into the other lane, but I wasn't speeding. When I saw him I cut my speed down quite a bit." Slowing down was good, but not enough, said Kansas Highway Patrol representative 2nd Lt. John Eichkorm. The highway patrol had 18 pulled-over cars hit from behind in the six months before the law was passed in the summer of 2000. In 1995, a state trooper was struck and killed on Interstate 70 under similar circumstances. No new numbers were available to determine if those incidents had decreased since the law passed, Eichkorn said. "We understand that people lead busy lives, they have a lot on their minds, they're talking on the phone or whatever. Even when it's safe to change lanes safely it might not enter a driver's mind," he said. The highway patrol's goal was to encourage people to change lanes regardless of who is on the side of the road, be it an officer or a stranded motorist. "There are a lot of people who do violate it though and can't help it they can't get over — or they just don't think about it. We want to make them think about it," Eichkorn said. Goldstein said he had 230 good reasons to think about it. He said he also anticipated a spike in his insurance rates when his insurance agency learned of his failure to yield to an emergency vehicle. It all added up to an expensive lesson in highway safety. "I if see those flashing lights on the side of the road I'm damn sure to get over now," he said. - Edited by Andrew Ward Dancing for awareness THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF LUTUWA Pilar Pena/Kansan Emmanuelle Watonsi, Yaounde, Cameroon, sophomore, and Sira Konare, Mali junior, dance at the African Dance Show at the lobby in the Kansas Union. The event was part of the International Awareness Week sponsored by the International Student Association. Budget to cause med school to cut jobs By Nikki Overfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Budget woes have hit the University of Kansas Medical School. The school has to eliminate 84 jobs before the 2004 fiscal year starts in July, said Ed Phillips, vice chancellor for administration. "We have to make them now so we can pay our work force in 2004." he said. Thirty-one of the 84 jobs are vacant now and will not be filled, but the other 53 positions are filled, he said. Of the 53 filled positions that will be eliminated, 22 are classified employees and 31 are unclassified. The school has to cut $1.6 mil. sured employees. Of the 31 vacant jobs that will not be filled, 17 are classified and 14 are unclassified. Classified employees are considered civil servants of the state and some of their jobs include secretaries, custodians, librarians maintenance workers and administrative assistants. Unclassified employees are engaged in teaching, university administration and professional services related to instruction and research. The jobs have to be cut to adjust to the governor's new budget, Phillips said. The school will have $5 million less in its budget for the upcoming year. lion in fringe benefits, such as health insurance, he said. It will have to take away money from the leaders of the school departments and reallocate the money to the fringe benefits, he said. This will take a toll on the school departments, Phillips said, and the school will have less money to carry out its mission. The school had to notify the employees whose jobs are being cut by the end of March, Phillips said. "We are working with these people that are negatively impacted by this," he said. Phillips and the school are trying to help these employees find other jobs, he said. So far they have helped 16 of the 53 employees find other positions. These cuts will only affect the school, not the hospital, said Dennis McCulloch, representative for the Kansas University Medical Center. "The layoffs do not directly affect anyone employed by the hospital," he said. "But obviously we are concerned because of our affiliation." The Med Center is affiliated with the school but is independently governed and not on the same budget as the school, McCulloch said. — Edited by Michelle Burhenn PRIZES Hawk Nights and Templin Hall Presents A Night On The Vegas Strip FREEFOOD CASINO NIGHT Win Prizes such as a 7-day Vacation, Playstation 2, Stereo, DVD's, Concert Tickets, and much, much more. FRIDAY,APRIL 11th,7pm-11pm TEMPLIN HALL COMPLETELY FREE EVENT canned food donation in exchange for extra start up cash NASHVILLE MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Coca Cola HAWK NIGHTS Coca-Cola Universiti Santo Domingo Student Senate DSH Phi Kappa Psi Student Situte DSH Phi Kappa Psi KANSAS 51 98 95 SOFTBALL Sat. 12th 2:00 pm Sun. 13th 1:00 pm vs. Texas A&M SATURDAY FREE MESH HAT! FOOTBALL Sat. 12th 1:00 pm Open Practice at Memorial Stadium SOFTBALL Sat. 12th 2:00 pm Sun. 13th 1:00 pm vs. Texas A&M SATURDAY FREE MESH HAT! FOOTBALL Sat. 12th 1:00 pm Open Practice at Memorial Stadium TENNIS Sat. 12th 12:00 pm vs. Kansas State at Robinson Courts JAYHAWK SPORTS WEEKEND TENNIS Sat. 12th 12:00 pm vs. Kansas State at Robinson Courts JAYHAWK SPORTS WEEKEND 800.34.HAWKS KUAthletics.com KUStore.com 4P FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAIEYKANSAN - 5A 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepert@kansan.com and ihenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers'representative 864 4810 or lshaffer@kaniain.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 884-7667 or mgibson@kansai.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kanan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 884.7686 or mfisher@kansan.com Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 图 I just tried to vote online at work, and I was denied. So what's the point of online voting? it's pretty amusing that KUnited claims it's not the Greek coalition, yet they're offering a free pizza party for whichever fraternity and sorority have the most members go vote. Coincidence? I think not. I'd like to thank whoever's idea it was to start online Senate elections the same time we start online enrollment, because now the computer lab is full of people voting and I can't enroll. □ 图 I know this makes me really immature, but I will always laugh when I see the word "vagina" displayed in giant block letters on a billboard or the back of a bus. 题 Someone just told me voting was fun and everyone needs to vote because it's fun. - How wonderful, KUnited has rented parly buses to shuttle the little frat and sorority boys and girls back and forth to the polls. So if elected, is that what you're going to do with the tuition increase? If that's having a say before you pay, then I say no. 图 Daylight Savings Time bites my ass I'm sick of KUnited people accosting me on campus. It'll be nice when I can walk through campus in peace. --- I have the answer: Triscuits and tuna can solve all the world's problems. Just ask fat people and lesbians. --- No one does the mullet quite like MacGyver did. Online voting is the worst idea since the hydrogen blimp, eh? My roommate and I are going to be holding informational meetings for guys to teach them how not to be jerks. So if in the phone book, you're looking up El Hodiri, you look up "El" or "Hodiri" first? --- Does anyone find it strange that at 5:25 in the morning, my roommate's singing "Rock Your Body" by Justin Timberlake and doing his "sexy dance"? Yeah, he's a guy. Yeah, I said I voted, but I didn't. 训 ATKINSON'S VIEW Bohl-ed by emotion Donovan Atkinson for The University Daily Kansan SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. PERSPECTIVE The Kansan will print as many submissions as possible that conform to these guidelines. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Feminism relies on exaggerated info, fails to depict accurate gender relations SUBMITT E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Staufer-Flint GUEST COMMENTARY It has been suggested that feminism, the "F" word, has been given a dirty name in the media. As a result few American women are willing to call themselves feminists even if they wholeheartedly embrace feminist ideals and identify with feminist concerns. Feminism has enjoyed a fabulous reception in the media from Oprah Winfrey to Katie Couric to Lifetime Television Network and The New York Times. The media have been so eager to promote feminism that they have accepted bogus statistics that have no credible studies to support them, such as the claim that battery against wives increases on Super Bowl Sunday. Instead of bothering to see if this statistic was merely a gross exaggeration or, as it turned out, was cut from whole cloth, journalists disseminated the false statistic across the nation before journalist Ken Ringle of The Washington Post exposed it for what it really was — a sheer falsehood. Feminist statistics on anorexia have about as much credibility as the battery claim. Joan Brumberg, former director of women's studies at Cornell University and author of Fasting Girls: The Emergence of Anorexia Nervosa as a Modern Disease, attributes 150,000 deaths a year to anorexia. Gloria Steinem also uses this figure in her book Revolution from Within. Steinem credits this statistic to feminist author Naomi Wolf's The Beauty Myth. Arrah Nielsen omnion@hansan.com According to its president, Diane Consider for a moment that roughly two million people die in this country each year. That amount of deaths from anorexia is pretty extraordinary when only 40,000 people die from automobile accidents (including pedestrians). Christina Hoff Sommers, author of Who Stole Feminism? , actually bothered to call up the American Anorexia and Bulimia Association only to find out that the 150,000 statistic referred to 150,000 sufferers. Mickley, the association had been misquoted. The National Center for Health Statistics reported fewer than 100 deaths per year due to anorexia. Certainly these deaths are regrettable and medical professionals as well as the friends and family of sufferers should strive to prevent them, but 100 deaths hardly constitutes as national health crises. Despite this, in The Beauty Myth, Wolf refers to anorexia as "a Holocaust" and suggests that women "must claim anorexia as political damage done to us by a social order that considers our destruction insignificant because of what we are — less." Anorexia is a disease (and a rare one at that) that has nothing to do with the patriarchy. But who needs objective reality when you have feminist ideology? Feminist ideology ranges from enlightening to divisive to just plain silly. Consider for example the anti-syntactical evasion of man in alternative spellings of woman such as "womyn" or "wimmin." Or the replacement of the obviously sexist word word "seminar" with the more female-friendly "ovular." Arguing that gender-neutral language will improve the status of women in society is roughly akin to arguing that inner city African-American children would have a better lot in life if there were black Keebler elves. Domestic abuse and anorexia are serious issues, but statistically challenged feminists have harmed the very causes they seek to promote. What we need is accurate figures, not hysteria. Feminism has warped from a noble justice-seeking cause into a paranoid philosophy of victimology. PERSPECTIVE It is our duty to appreciate the freedoms we enjoy and seek to advance them to our brothers and sisters elsewhere. Most women have deduced (correctly) that modern feminism does not speak to them and has few solutions to offer them. The depiction of American women as being polarized in a gender war against patriarchal forces is not only inaccurate but deeply ridiculous. American women are among the freest, most privileged agents in history. Neilsen is a Wichita junior in biological anthropology. Sociology does not cause gender differences sex roles stem from biological, historical factors Men and women are not the same. It is a frequently argued position in modern academia that men and women are all identical at birth, and it is only through the negative influences of a patriarchal society that women and men are different during their lives. COMMENTARY T. But Hasbro Toys discovered something many liberal feminists arguing against innate differences would find outrageous: women and men are different. Matthew Dunavan opinton@kansan.com In a controversial test, Hasbro allowed young children to interact with a playhouse it considered marketing to both boys and girls, but not all of the children interacted with the toy in the same way. The girls dressed the dolls, and cared for them as they would small infants. The young boys? They catapulted the toy furniture from the roof of the playhouse. The frenetic physical activity of the young boys in the Hasbro toy test is a natural part of what most young men are constructed to do: engage in physical life or death competition against Mother Nature. Gender is not socially constructed. Our different brains were formed by the same evolutionary forces that shaped In the Ancestral Environment (AE) where our minds originated, men and women had differing roles in simple proto-human societies. In this environment, men and women acquired different psychological characteristics as a direct result of the most important biological difference between men and women: women can have babies. Women would have been settled at a "home" because of their reduced ability to move great distances while pregnant our different bodies, and it does not imply any superiority or inferiority to a half of the species to hold this position. By applying evolutionary concepts to our minds, we can explain differences between men and women with little effort, and the field of evolutionary psychology does this regularly. or caring for children, and men would have been the hunters of protein-rich animal flesh. It would be beneficial for the species to have those who cared for children (the women who were more grounded to a given location) develop tendencies to desire to care for those children. Those who did not had their genetic legacy go extinct. That women are more apt to take on roles of caring and nurturing in modern life reflects not a patriarchal effort to force women into these career options but rather that women are uniquely suited to careers that rely upon compassion for the weak, as a legacy of the necessity of their caretaker responsibility in the AE. It also explains how women came to have greater communicative abilities than men. Women would have spent a much greater period of time socializing with each other in cooperative environments, where verbal skills would have The AE clearly explains why men have greater spatial reasoning ability than women. Men would have needed it to find their way across the Savannah to the animal herds and to find their way home again after killing a wildebeest. been important, while the men were out competing against the world for a haunch of giraffe to bring home. There are only a few great exceptions to the general rule of male/female gender roles. Girls with congenital adrenal hyperplasia are subjected to high doses of androgens (male hormones) in the womb. These girls grow up to be more aggressive than other girls and tend to play with toys traditionally associated with boys. Is it logical to assume that girls exposed to androgens are all socialized differently? No. Their gender is created by their biological development. Does this mean that no part of gender role is shaped by culture? No. Culture surely plays a part in who we are, but it can never reverse the hardwiring with which all humans, male and female, are born. No matter how much we attempt to alter human nature, it can never succeed. Countless communes, totalitarian regimes and social programs have shown us the error of that line of thinking. Mother Nature made us into who we are and only Mother Nature can change us into something else. Dunavan is a Topeka senior in political science and philosophy. FRIDAY,APRIL 11.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Student film to star George Clinton By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Imagine this. You're sitting in the backseat of your friend's Pontiac Grand Am and sitting next to you is the godfather of funk music, George Clinton. I Contributed art Over spring break that dream was reality for independent filmmaker, Dan Ryckert, Olathe freshman. George Clinton will star in student filmmaker Dan Ryckert's movie Harold. Ryckert, Olathe freshman, asked Clinton to play a godfather figure to Harold's protagonist. Ryckert said the movie will appear on www.studentfilms.com in two to three weeks. "After his concert, we drove George back to his hotel room." Ryckert said. "He was just standing in the parking lot holding a Styrofoam container of fried chicken he had taken from backstage." Ryckert used Clinton and his band, the P-Funk All-Stars, for a scene in his upcoming movie. Harold. In the comedy, Clinton plays a godfather figure to a young Canadian who has come to the United States to be a bounty hunter, Ryckert said. "It's just one of those moments you don't believe," said Troy Hirsch, Hays freshman. Hirsch plays the main character in the movie. Clinton was actually the second choice for the part. Ryckert had written the scene to include singer Ted Nugent but rewrote the script after having no luck casting Nugent, he said. "Since I couldn't get Ted, I had to think about who my next choice would be," Ryckert said. "I only had to think about it for a few minutes and I started trying to get in touch with George." Ryckert contacted Clinton's lawyer, who put him in touch with Clinton's creative director. After a week long process, Ryckert was contacted by the tour manager who sent three tickets and backstage passes to Clinton's St. Louis show, Ryckert said. "I was surprised by how easy the process really was," he said. "Everyone was just so nice and easy to work with." While standing backstage at the show, Ryckert saw Darius McCray, the actor who played Eddie Winslow on the television series, Family Matters. Ryckert introduced himself and asked McCray to be in the movie, he said. McCray plays one of the godfather's thugs. guideline through The movie will be finished and released on the Internet site, www.studentfilms.com, in two to three weeks, Ryckert said. He is still a little shocked by the experience. "It was surreal enough to be sitting in the backseat with George." Ryckert said. "But then I have Eddie Winslow from the TV show Family Matters knocking on the car window asking if he's still going to be in my movie." Edited by Todd Rapp Speaker says women in male-dominated fields face obstacles The problems facing women in the engineering and science fields need to be dealt with at the institutional level rather than by changing women, said Sue Rosser. She said the first step in dealing with problems was recognizing policy barriers. Rosser, who serves as dean of the Ivan Allen College at Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, appeared yesterday as part of the "Understanding the Pipeline" series sponsored by the Hall Center for Humanities and the Policy Research Institute. Respondents to a survey Rosser conducted of female engineers and scientists said they felt they could do better if the barriers were removed. The concerns for women in those fields included balancing work with family responsibilities and gaining credibility and respectability from peers and administrators. Jessica Hood News kansan com SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE FREE KAYAK DEMO Check out the latest boats from: perception LONE STAR LAKE APRIL 12, 2003 10AM-4PM 804 Massachusetts St. Downtown Lawrence (785) 843-5000 SUNSEEK XX Overseas flights steady, travel agencies say By Kevin Wiggs kwigws@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Overseas travel has not declined because of the war in Iraq, according to local travel agencies. Beverly Failey, owner of Lawrence Travel Center, 2323 Ridge Ct., said there had been no decrease in international flight requests since coalition forces invaded Iraq last month. "We're still getting the same number of inquiries," she said. "We've had more questions concerning the war, but I haven't noticed more reluctance." However, the number of people traveling to the Middle East has significantly declined. "It's not a hot spot right now," she said. "It's still an option but I haven't noticed a lot of people going. It's mostly just students going home or people on business." John Novotny, manager of Travellers, 831 Massachusetts St., said the travel industry as a whole had been down since Sept. 11, 2001, but having no terrorist repercussions from the war has been positive. "The last two years haven't been real solid," he said. "We have had quite a few inquiries for "Due to the military action, we did see a softening of bookings of transatlantic flights in March and we've seen a steep decline in April," he said. "We're monitoring the situation closely and anticipate improvement." this summer. I think people are just waiting to see how things go in Iraq." "They are expected to go higher but they keep going John Kennedy, spokesman for Delta Air Lines, said Delta had not seen the same consistency in sales as the local travel agencies. He said Delta had reduced the number of international flights in response to sagging flight sales. Falley said prices for international flights were generally cheaper in the late winter months and then increased in the summer season. A ticket that may be $900 in the summer can be as low as $500 in the winter. Ruth Nye, manager of Adventure Travel, 544 Columbia Drive, said this summer's flight prices may be lower because of the war but travelers would have to wait and see how prices are affected. He said the anticipation was based on ticket prices being at their lowest level in 15 years. "I'm sure people will take advantage of prices once they are less concerned about the military action," he said. Nye said someone considering flying overseas, but feeling reluctant, should think hard before buying a ticket. down," she said. "I don't know what's going to happen. It usually depends on fuel costs and the airlines wait until the last minute to change them." "If you're concerned, don't go," she said. "You can't get refunds anymore, and trying to change plans will get you all kinds of penalties." Edited by Ryan Wood Now Leasing 2 BR Apartments For Fall 2003! Kentucky Place Apartments - Furnished apt. available - Furnished apt, available - Within walking distance to campus - fully equipped kitchens including microwaves & dishwashers - Large walk-in closets - Private parking - Laundry facilities on site - Laundry facilities on site For more information call The Center For Community Outreach is now accepting applications for student positions for the 2003-04 school year. 841-1212 or 749-0445 2003-04 CCO Staff Applications Are Out! Handprint Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Administrative Staff Positions (May 2003-April 2004): Two Co-Directors (20 hours/week, paid) Financial Director (15 hours/week, paid) Communications Director (15 hours/week, paid) Two volunteer co-coordinator positions for each of the following programs: Community Resources Engaging in the Arts Through Education (CREATE), Concerned, Active & Aware Students (CAAS), Environmental Action to Revitalize the Heartland (EARTH), GROW Community Garden Project, Hawks for Health, Helping Unite Generations (HUG), Into the Streets Week, The Jubilee Cafe, Lifeline, Mentors In The Lives of Kids (MILK), Music Mentors, Natural Ties, Students Tutoring for Literacy (STL) Applications are available at 405 Kansas Union. For more information stop by or call (785) 864-4073 Applicants will be considered regardless of education level, race, national status, religion, sexual orientation, disability, or ethnic origin. All Applications Due On April 11th. KU College Republicans present Congressman Jim Ryun Monday, April 14TH @7:30 PM Pine Room, Kansas Union ALLEY EVERYONE IS WELCOME STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE [Image] Sweet Honey in the Rock vocal gospel, jazz and blues SUNDAY, APRIL 13 7:30 P.M. This soulful ensemble performs vocal arrangements touching on social issues. It's music for the mind as well as the ear. CornerBank Corporate Sponsor For Tickets Call 785-864 ARTS Line Arts University of Houston ticketmaster BUY ONLINE 955-555-5555 STUDENT SENATE Upon Request ...a bold fusion of music, dance, multimedia and theater, celebrating the style, spirit and times of Muhammad Ali. Craig Harris, Creator & Composer Marlies Yearby, Choreographer featuring Movin' Spirits Dance Theater Jonas Goldstein, Video Artist Sweet Honey in the Rock vocal gospel, jazz and blues SUNDAY, APRIL 13 7:30 P.M. This soulful ensemble performs vocal arrangements touching on social issues. It's music for the mind as well as the ear. CornerBank® Corporate Sponsor For Tickets Call 785-864 ARTS ticketmaster buy online STUDENT SCHOLASTIC ONLINE tickets.com The Lied Center of Kansas What's Happening Next? lied.ku.edu All Tickets Half Price for KU Students! BROWN BUTTERFLY A performance inspired by Muhammad Ali SATURDAY, APRIL 12 - 7:30 P.M. ...a bold fusion of music, dance, multimedia and theater, celebrating the style, spirit and times of Muhammad Ali. Craig Harris, Creator & Composer. Marlies Yearby, Choreographer featuring Movin' Spirits Dance Theater Jonas Goldstein, Video Artist Sweet Honey in the Rock vocal gospel, jazz and blues SUNDAY, APRIL 13 7:30 P.M. This soulful ensemble performs vocal arrangements touching on social issues. It's music for the mind as well as the ear. CornerBank Corporate Sponsor For Tickets Call 785-864 ARTS Time Arts ticketmaster Buy Online STUDENT SENATE brought to you by Campus Coupons KANSAN & kansan.com Dr. Kevin Lenahan Optomerist 935 Iowa 838-3900 $99 Eye Exam & Disposable Contacts Price includes: Eye exam, contact lens fitting, two follow up visits, & two 6-packs of two wk disposable contacts of doctor's choice. Does NOT include color, tonic, or bitonal lenses. Not valid with insurance or any other offers. Exp. 4/22/03 ROD'S Hallmark SHOP 2329 Iowa, Lawrence • 841-2160 Gumby's Pizza 841-5000 1445 W. 23rd (exterior to Paper warehouse) 14th Large 1 topping Pizza anytime $6.99 Delivered Not valid with other coupons MTSW 4 pm - 3:30 am Tuesday 4 pm - 3:30 am First Friday 11 am - 2 am Free Full Color Copies with each order of 10 copies or more receive 3 copies free. originals can not exceed 8 1/2" x 11" Exp. 4/11/03 KU Printing Services Wescoe Publication Center. 1520 Wescoe Hall. 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Exp. 04/22/03 Go to kansan.com for great offers from these advertisers Campus Coupons brought to you by Campus Coupons KANSAN & kansan.com THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dr. Kevin Lenahan Optometrist 935 Iowa 838-3200 Price includes: Eye exam, contact lens fitting; two follow up visits, & two 6-packs of two wk disposable contacts of doctor's choice. Does NOT include color, toric, or bilocal lenses. Not valid with insurance or any other offers. Exp. 4/22/03 $99 Eye Exam & Disposable Contacts Price includes: Eye exam, contact lens fitting; two follow up visits, & two 6-packs of two wk disposable contacts of doctor's choice. Does NOT include color, toric, or bilocal lenses. Not valid with insurance or any other offers. Exp. 4/22/03 BUY 1 CARD, GET 1 FREE! (up to $1.99 value) exp. 4/22/03 ROD'S Hallmark SHOP 2329 Iowa, Lawrence • 841-2160 GUMBY'S Pizza 841-5000 1445 W. 23rd (next to Paper Warehouse) Gumby's DESTROYR 14" Large 1 topping Pizza anytime $6.99 Delivered *Not valid with other coupons* METW 4 pm 3:00 am Thurs 4 pm 3:00 am Fri-Sun 11am 2 am Free Full Color Copies with each order of 10 copies or more receive 3 copies free. originals can not exceed 8 1/2" x 11" Exp. 4/11/03 Full Printing Services Wescoe Publication Center. 1520 Wescoe Hall. (Next to Cafeteria) 864-3354 Yello Sub 75¢ Off Any Sub Not valid w/any other offers 624 W. 12th 841-3268 1814 W. 23rd 843-6000 Exp. 04/22/03 Teller's RESTAURANT & BAR *with purchase of one item of equal or greater value NOT GOOD FOR CARRY-OUT. DOES NOT INCLUDE DRINKS OR TAXES. 746 Massachusetts (786) 845-4111 Historic Downtown Lawrence Russell Stover Candles; Cookies; Ice Cream Buy 1 get on FREE caramel apple exp. 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Shop Hanover Place Apartments Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! - Fully applianced kitchen w/ microwave kitchen w/ microwave laundry facilities - Laundry facilities - Private off street parking - Central Heat and Air - Walk-in closets - Washer/Dryer hookups - Fireplaces - Garages - Walk to K.U. - On-site Manager - 24 hour emergency maintenance KUnited may face elections code violation for soliciting 14th & Mass. (785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO By Cate Batchelder, Henry C. Jackson and Kelley Weiss editor@kansan.com Kansan staff writers Last-minute campaigning may have resulted in an elections code violation for KUnited. Ashley Smith, Tulsa, Okla., freshman and GSP Hall second floor resident, said three male members of KUnited walked into her open room Wednesday at about 9 p.m. to talk to her and her friends about voting for KUnited. Smith identified one of those members as Student Body President Jonathan Ng. Having three men walk into her room was awkward because she wasn't expecting any men to be in the hall. The nature of their visit was also unsettling, Smith said. "It kind of makes me lose respect for KUnited," Smith said. "I already had posters put in my window without them asking." Another second floor resident, who would not give her name, said KUnited members slipped filers under residents' doors. Ng said he was aware of the soliciting rules and was following them when he, Arthur Jones, and Steven Munch, KUnited freshmen/sophomore CLAS winning candidates, talked with students in GSP. Ng said a GSP resident escorted them into the building. Ng said Jones asked students if they had questions about platforms. They also reminded them to vote, he said. "We were following all the rules, period," Ng said. "I know all the rules, period. I follow all the rules, period." Elections Code, section 409.D.2, states the general limitations for campaign activities, campaign materials are allowed in student housing if the complex director and/or assistant director allows them. Ng said they did not ask the GSP complex director because it was not standard practice to ask the housing director to visit acquaintances. Ng said their escort took them to the doors of residents she knew. Courtney Wachal, elections commissioner, said the possible violation would be investigated KUnited's Andy Knopp and Catherine Bell, student body president-elect and vice president-elect, said they did not know about the incident. Iennifer Kennedy, Arkansas After they left, the men went down the hall to knock on more doors, Kennedy said. When Kennedy found out that knocking on doors in residence halls to campaign for a campus coalition was a violation, she said she was disappointed in KUUnited. City freshman, said at about 10 p.m. Wednesday three or four men knocked on her door in GSP. She said she did not answer the door. "It makes me think they shouldn't be on our senate," Kennedy said. "It's pretty shady." Edited by Todd Rapp Lord Wads CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Wadsworth said his coalition won by about double the points. "We railed them both big time," said Drew Baranowski, Overland Park junior. "If people voted for us they are voting for the smarter candidates." Increased student awareness and to have fun with the elections were the reasons the coalition formed, Wadsworth said. Lord Wads was the vice-presidential candidate for the coalition because of a discrepancy about the validity of signatures on his petition to run for president. But Wadsworth was still the acting power of the coalition. Voter turnout increased by 15 percent from last year, Lord Wads said, so the coalition considered its campaign successful. "I think we did it, totally. Voter turnout was our highest priority." he said. tion with the outcome of the campaign, before the results were released. Wadsworth hinted he might be upset if he was not elected student body president. Despite his eventual satisfac "I have armies waiting at the gates of KU," he said. "If I don't win, there's a good chance they'll come in and go medieval on their butt." About 15 coalition members attended the Lord Wads elections results party at The Crossing. 618 W. 12th St., wearing official tunics with the coalition seal — "veritas aequitas," or truth and justice. Wadsworth said only the dedicated members showed up, and aside from the small number of knights with Lord Wads, other students at The Crossing didn't seem concerned about the election results. "I didn't vote and I don't care," said Justin Nickel, Augusta senior. "I haven't voted in fouryears." Ryan Jones, Overland Park freshman and a squire under the training of Lord Wads, said he would help carry on the tradition and vision of the coalition to do anything they wanted after its leader graduated. In a last-minute addition to the coalition platform, Baranoski said Lord Wads and the 12 Knights of the Crusade were in favor of keeping Roy Williams and were against Al Bohl. After leaving The Crossing. Lord Wads and his knights visited the other coalitions, offering congratulations and consolations. Edited by Amber Byarlay CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Engineering (3) ★ Kyle Johnson ★ Marcel Deuth ★ Jason Boots ★ Ryan Mills ★ Nikki Gibson ★ Sam Polise Fine Arts (2) △ Evan Miller △ Even Billinge ★ Elyse Black ★ Tom Reid Graduate (10) ► Cornelius Miner 114 ► Amenda Harrington 104 ► Hugo A. Vera 103 ► Sueng Eun Oh 101 ► Roksana Alavi 99 ► Shaylina Hurte 98 ► David Mitchell 96(tie) ► Michael D. 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For Tickets Call: 785.864.ARTS TDD: 785.864.2777 www.llied.ku.edu OTHELLO AQUILA STEVE DAVIS & RICHARD BROWN News NOW k a n s a n . c o m Dean Hashimoto, A.B., M.S., M.D., J.D., M.O.H., and now, finally, IRA. As a man who's devoted his life to the pursuit of knowledge, Dean Hashimoto wasn't going to pick a retirement plan without first doing his homework. That's why he chose an IRA from us, the people with over 80 years' experience managing portfolios for the world's sharpest minds. After discovering that our IRAs offer a variety of investment choices and low expenses, he decided to add one to his resume. A wise choice, by a very wise man. Log on for ideas, advice, and results. TIAA-CREF.org or call (800) 842-2776. TIAA CREF Managing money for people with other things to think about Retirement Insurance Mutual Funds College Savings Trusts Investment Management Dean Hashimoto became a participant in 1988. TIAA-CREF founded and instituted Macro22 for New York Personal Investors Services. TIAA-CREF is a firm specializing in private investment calls from 857-2333. We serve for prospectures. Dean Diane can help with investment calls from 857-2333. We serve with Annabel Baumholtz University Retirement Funds Fund. TIAA-CREF. New York. NY 10024. [Smiling face in front of a bookshelf filled with books] TIAA CREF Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS 1B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY Jonah Ballow jballow@kansan.com Williams saga continues Kansas hoops will persevere without Roy If Roy Williams decides to leave Kansas for Chapel Hill to coach the North Carolina Tar Heels, the quality of Kansas basketball will not decline. JACKSON TOWNSHIP There is no doubt that Kansas is one of the premier basketball programs in the country. It has a long standing tradition dating back to the man who created the sport, James Naismith. This weekend everyone around the University of Kansas will be biting their nails in anxiety of Williams (or is it Roy because the media seems to be on a first name basis with the coach) hitting the road. The question needs to be asked, what would a post-Williams regime look like at Kansas? There is no doubt that Williams is seen as an icon in the state of Kansas. He has achieved success in 15 seasons with 418 victories and four Final Fours. But more importantly, he hasn't won a national championship. According to Andy Katz of ESPN, there is a possible coaching candidate to fill the shoes of Williams. The man is Bill Self, coach of the Illinois Fighting Illini. In his first two seasons at Illinois, Self led the team to back-to-back Big 10 Conference championships along with 27 victories in 2001 and 26 in 2002. During the 2001 season, the Fighting Illini marched to the Elite Eight while beating the Jayhawks. Last season, while in a rebuilding year, Illinois posted a 25-7 season and 11-5 in the Big 10 before losing to Notre Dame in the regional quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament. Before arriving at Illinois, Self coached at Tulsa and led it to a 32-5 record and an Elite Eight appearance in 2000. That year he was also named the National Coach of the Year by The Sporting News. Kansan File Photo Ballow is a Littleton, Colo., junior in journalism. Updating back to 1987, Self was an assistant at Oklahoma State for six seasons where the team went 128-88 during his time. Self was a part of the Kansas program and understood the tradition along with the winning ways that have been established over the years in Lawrence. team with six wins. The biggest and most important part of Self's résumé is that he was a former assistant at Kansas under Larry Brown. During the 1985 to 1986 season, the team went 35-4 and advanced to the Final Four. revival of a new culture Kansas fans, stay optimistic whether Williams leaves the University, the basketball program will continue to have success in the many years to come. Also like Williams, Self has not won a national championship, but the man is only 41 years old and is recognized as one of the best young coaches in America. Kansas fans need to remain calm about the future of the basketball program heading into the weekend when Williams will talk with North Carolina athletics director Dick Baddour. In comparison to the rest of the athletics program, basketball will stay at a high level whether Williams decides to leave or stay. Williams has done a great job in creating a successful and clean basketball program. However, a new coach is not necessarily a bad prospect for a team that has not won a national championship since 1988. Players are still going to want to attend the University because of its tradition and die-hard fans. A new coach could also bring new recruits that would have not looked at Kansas in the past. It may be in the best interest of Williams to head back to the university where he was once an assistant. He might need the revival a new place brings, and Kansas might need the revival of a new coach. Rumors have been flying around the sports world about the status of Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams. Williams has yet to comment on the vacant basketball coaching position at North Carolina. By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter These are the facts; There is a coaching vacancy at North Carolina; Al Bohl's title is now former athletics director; Dick Baddour is still North Carolina's athletics director and he released a statement saying he had spoken to Williams; Williams declined the North Carolina job three years ago; Williams graduated from and coached at North Carolina; Williams hasn't publicly said if he would take the job at North Carolina if it were offered. North Carolina are the facts, and so far they have been mixed together into a Rubik's Cube of speculation. Hypotheses have Williams using a possible flight to North Carolina to oust Bohl, former Tar Heel coach Dean Smith holding secret meetings with Williams, alumni using donation money as leverage to fire Bohl and appease Williams. Williams staying to continue his Kansas legacy or leaving to save the struggling North Carolina basketball program. There was even a rumor from a North Carolina CBS affiliate that a North Carolina alumnus was sending a private jet to transport Williams yesterday morning from Fairfax Airport in Kansas City, Kan., to Chapel Hill, N.C. This was reported despite the fact that Fairfax closed in 1985 and that a Kansan staffer spotted Williams jogging along Jayhawk Boulevard at 1 p.m.yesterday. Baddour said in his release that he would continue to speak to Williams throughout the weekend,but he had not offered him the job. "Typically I do not comment on job searches. However, this is obviously not a typical situation. Coach Williams and I both felt there was so much misinformation out there that an update to confirm our talks was both responsible and necessary." Baddour said. "Coach Williams and I feel the timing is too near the Final Four and there is too much going on in Lawrence at this time to conclude our talks," Baddour said. "I have not offered the job to coach Williams, but we have had good conversations that will continue over the next few days. He understands we will continue to proceed with other candidates, as well. - Edited by Andrew Ward Reactions vary to Bohl's speech By Kevin Flaherty and Henry C. Jackson kflaherty@kansan.com and cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writers "It is a sad day for college athletics when a basketball coach has the power to hire and fire a university athletics director," Al Bohl, former Kansas athletics director, said Wednesday. At his press conference, Bohl made remarks that quickly sparked conversations and arguments on sports talk shows throughout the area. Bohl's statement, read at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, said that Roy Williams, Kansas basketball coach, was at fault in his firing. "A source close to the Athletic Department believes that I am one of the misfortunate people in America who personally have endured the results of Roy Williams' hatred and vindictiveness," Bohl said. Chancellor Robert Hemenway's response was that the decision was not that simple. that simple. "This was not a Roy and Al issue," Hemenway said. "This was an issue that has to do with responses to the Athletics Department from many different quarters." on talk radio Wednesday and yesterday the opinions varied as to the validity of Bohl's statement. Some callers supported Bohl, saying that to come out and make a statement with such disregard for his image and future employment showed character. Others ripped his speech as "stupid" and referred to Bohl as a crybaby or a jerk. Hemenway said the statements were SEE BOHL ON PAGE 6B Phog Allen's son, former player dies By Kelley Weiss kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The University of Kansas lost a piece of its basketball history April 3 when Dr. Robert Allen of Mission Hills died at the age of 83. Allen was an All-American basketball player and the son of a legendary basketball coach. Robert Allen went on to become a legend of his own in Kansas City. Allen was the son of Phog Allen and played basketball for him at the University from 1938 to 1941. Robert Allen is the only player in Final Four history who played for his father in a national title game and also led the team in scoring during that game. Howard Engleman, who played basketball with Allen, said Allen's contribution to the team as a point guard was invaluable. "He was a team leader," Engleman said. "It was a pleasure. He was a great basketball player and passer. I wouldn't have made All-American without him passing to me." Allen's wife, Jean, said she started dating Allen when she was 16 and they continued dating through college. Dating a KU basketball player wasn't the easiest thing to do, she said. "It wasn't much fun," Allen said. "He SEE ALLEN ON PAGE 6B 10 Kansan File Photo Forrest "Phog" Allen, left, coached his All-American son Robert, right, at Kansas from 1938 to 1941. Dr. Robert Allen died April 3 at the age of 83. Defense looks to linemen for results By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer In the physical world of the Big 12 Conference, it is often who wins in the trenches that wins the game. While most of the Big 12 teams have powerful offensive lines, it is the defensive lines that gain the most attention. Several teams look to have standout defensive lines next fall, with Oklahoma SEE DEFENSE ON PAGE 6B --- "I'm not worried at all. I'm staying confident he'll be back here next year." Sophomore guard Keith Langford about Roy Williams 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS COMMENTARY Brad Zollars bzollars@kansan.com Inside Sports Roy-UNC saga similar to reality TV FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 Does this seem like a reality TV show to anyone? Roy Williams furrowing his brow, muttering "gosh darn" under his breath as he holds one long-stemmed rose, while looking longingly at his two attractive suitors. Roy might not be ABC's version of The Bachelor, but he sure looks the part right now. Al Bohl causing you trouble, Roy? Poof, he's gone. No more dove. Need anything else? Just rub the lamp and Chancellor Hemenway will come out. For North Carolina, it's wooing by kin. From his mother to Dean Smith to the drink cart girl at Pinehurst golf club, everyone that has ever known Roy Williams from his days in Chapel Hill are trying to guilt-trip him into making a move. True, Roy is married to Kansas, to this University, to the kids in his program. But sometimes love is not enough. Deep down, the Kansas coach wonders if the grass really is greener on the other side. He is curious if things could be better at his alma mater and sadly for us, there's only one way to find out. Kansas and North Carolina have pulled out the whole bag of tricks in order to get Williams. But let's be honest. It's not really Roy Williams whom we will miss if he jets to North Carolina, it's the quality of players he is able to bring in year after year. And I'm not just talking physical ability. Kansas' coach has separated himself from the elite coaches in college basketball by his ability to recruit stars who are not only good players, but good people. Bill Self, Rick Pitino or not. These coaches can't match Roy's eye. Most schools couldn't care less if the players can even string a sentence together — and a lot of them can't — as long as they can play ball. It's not that way at Kansas. People such as Jacque Vaughn, Nick Collison and Jo Jo White can attest to that. If Roy leaves, my fears won't rest in Kansas' ability to recruit the type of players that will continue its level of excellence. We are still Kansas, with or without Roy. My fear is that we will have to settle for mere talent, for players that smugly smile after hitting a three during the first half of the national championship game. But who really knows what will happen next. What will the evolving soap opera give us? An Al Bohl book of bird poetry? TJ Pugh coming back to coach his alma mater? Tune in next week. Zollars is a Chicago senior majoring in communications. Georgia hires new basketball coach ATHENS, Ga. — Dennis Felton kept an eye on the problems at Georgia, hoping to be entrusted with rehabilitating a men's basketball program left in disarray by Jim Harrick. The Associated Press Felton will get his chance, leaving Western Kentucky on yesterday to become Georgia's coach with a five-year contract worth $700,000 annually. "As soon as I thought there might be a chance of a coaching opportunity at Georgia, I was very interested," Felton said. "I want to have the opportunity to build one of the next great basketball programs in the country." He led the Hilltoppers to three straight NCAA tournament appearances and was 100-54 in five seasons. Before that, Felton worked as an assistant at Providence and Clemson. "It's a pleasure to have a happy press conference," said Georgia athletic director Vince Dooley. "We haven't one of those in a long time." Harrick left amid accusations of academic fraud and improper benefits to players. He resigned, then announced his retirement last month, two and a half weeks after being suspended with pay. The scandal also cost his son a job as an assistant coach and prompted the school to ban the Bulldogs from the SEC and NCAA tournaments. An investigation is ongoing and the school could face additional sanctions. In looking for Harrick's successor, Georgia used a search firm to run background checks. The screening including criminal records, how well candidates followed NCAA rules and whether their educational history was accurate. "We did an extraordinary job of due diligence in this case with all our candidates," Dooley said. "We put a good deal of emphasis on finding the right person, the right fit. He is the right person for Georgia." Felton's Western Kentucky contract calls for a school that hires him away to agree to a four-year home-and-home series with the Hilltoppers. Felton plans to honor the agreement. "I'm happy to play the four games," he said. "I've never forgotten how lucky I was. And it would be a way for me to repay Western Kentucky for giving me the opportunity." "I think they're getting the next great coach." Western Kentucky athletic director Wood Selig said. "I don't think it will be very long before Dennis Felton will be mentioned everywhere among the nation's finest men's basketball coaches." TENNIS 'Hawks to face in-state rival at first match in Lawrence The No.61-ranked Kansas tennis team will face in-state rival, the No.34- ranked Kansas State Wildcats, at noon tomorrow at the Robinson Courts in its eighth straight conference match. "They are playing really well right now," coach Kilmeny Waterman said. "They have pretty much the same team as last year, but it has come together for them." The Jayhawks have struggled in conference matches with their most recent loss to Colorado April 5, leaving Kansas 7-9 overall and 3-6 in the Big 12 Conference. With two victories in the last two seasons, Kansas dominates the all-time record against the Wildcats at 38-3. K-State is red hot with a four-match winning streak, including its most recent victory over Colorado. The Wildcats are in a fourth-place tie with Oklahoma in the Big 12 standings. In doubles play, K-State has won seven of its last nine matches while the Jayhawks have struggled to succeed in doubles by losing the last doubles point against Colorado. Junior Emily Haylock leads Kansas with a 10-6 record at No.3 singles entering the match-up against Kansas State. The match is the first in Lawrence for the Jayhawks. ROWING The Kansas rowing squad will travel to the East Coast to compete in the Knecht Cup tomorrow and Sunday in Jonah Ballow Kansas to row in Knecht Cup after success in Austin, Texas In their last competition, Kansas was swept in all five faces against Texas on March 29 in Austin, Texas. Camden, N.J. "Our expectations is to be in the top of the medals," coach Rob Catloth said. "We've had good success in our previous years at this race.I don't expect that to change." Last season, the Jayhawks captured first place titles in the varsity fourwoman and both 2nd varsity eightwoman races. Kansas finished third in the varsity eight-woman race. Catloth say there will be around 70-75 teams in the Knecht Cup. Despite the magnitude of the Knecht Cup, senior Lauren Royall said the team would be awestruck about the number of entries in this weekend's event. "These races are a little more exciting with more boats," Royall said. Jason Hwang Will Roy Williams fill the coaching Men's golf at the Intercollegiate 2003, all day, Chapel Hill, N.C. = Yes. Nick and Kirk are gone; so is Roy. Football spring scrimmage, 1 p.m., Memorial Stadium SUNDAY Baseball at Texas Tech, 2 p.m., Lubbock, Texas SATURDAY Men's golf at the Intercollegiate, all day, Chapel Hill, N.C. Track at John McDonnell Invitational, all day, Fayetteville, Ark. TODAY vacancy at North Carolina Tennis vs. Kansas State, noon, Robinson Courts No. He stayed last time; he will stay this time. Kansas Athletics Calendar Rowing at Knecht Cup, all day, Camden, N.J. than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. No. North Carolina won't pursue him after he said no last time. 器 Baseball at Texas Tech, 7 p.m., Lubbock, Texas Softball vs. Texas A&M, 1 p.m., Go home, Fresno. Jayhawk Field than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. Rowing at Knecht Cup, all day, Camden, N.J. Free for All Baseball at Texas Tech, 1 p.m., Lubbock, Texas than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. kansan.com Is it me or is Al Bohl acting like a 13-year-old girl? 四 Hey Al, don't you know you can't mess with God? Especially when God's name is Roy. than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. The only reason Bohl got fired is because Roy doesn't want this to become as big a football school as it is a basketball school. 图 than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. Three years ago, Roy Williams pledged his loyalty to KU and his players, but now he's using the same job offer to leverage his popularity against his superiors. And this is from a guy who preaches constantly to us students and fans about having class. Roy, if you stay at Kansas, I'll come over to your house every Saturday morning and move your lawn for free. Boo for Bohl, Roy for pre --than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. Out with the Bohl and in with the new. than I thought and you should have been fired a long time ago. I'm wondering if someone would please call the whambulance for Al Bohl. POLL I just heard Al Bohl talking about Roy Williams, and nobody talks about Uncle Roy like that. Rock chalk, Jayhawk. Al Bohl is blaming the media and he is blaming Roy. Is he ever just going to take responsibility for being a sucky director? We love you, Roy. Al Bohl, if you think that you can wage a war against Roy Williams and win it in Lawrence, Kansas, you're even dumber He will consider it after the tournament excitement dies down. Hey Al Bohl, the fact that you refused to step down and then released nasty remarks to the press just proves you never belonged here at Kansas. We're too classy for that. This whole athletic director thing is making Roy look bad. Bohl wouldn't have been fired if it was unfounded. We love Roy. 图 - Hey Al Bohi, even Nixon had brains enough to resign when he saw the writing on the wall. Hey everybody, Kansas Relays are next week, April 16-19 at Memorial Stadium. Things are going on all day, all four days, so come down and be part of one of the longest-running traditions in KU history. It's not just a track meet, it's the Kansas Relays. --- - Wilt Chamberlain did play basketball at KU, but what was his first reason for coming to KU? That's right, he wanted to run track and perform at the Kansas Relays. Hey Al, Mizzou's calling. 二 The only day in recent Jayhawk history was the day Al Bohl was chosen to represent us. The venomous sewage which spewed forth from Al Bohl's mouth in his press conference ensures the fact that he will never work in Division I basketball again. I hope you've had a good time, Al. You suck. - Bye, bye, Bohl - - Yes, Mr. Bohl, you just got crushed by Roy. And you deserved to be crushed by Roy. - Someone stick a pacifier in AI Boh's mouth because that baby needs to shut up. Do you suppose Al Bohl accidentally put on a pair of Quin Snyder's panties? Because he's sure acting like something's getting squeezed a little too tight. 四 - Everyone needs to go to www.petitiononline.com and click on "Keep Roy at KU." Rock chalk, Jayhawk. Al Bohl, you should have known when you came to Kansas that Roy is the law. You fought the law, and the law won. I'm a former football player and I'd just like to thank Al Bohl for everything he's done for the football team. - Al Bohl, you got fired because you were doing shady business at Fresno State, not because Roy doesn't like you. - Someone should build a big statue of Al Bohl, just so we can drape a KU flag over his head and then tear it down. O OPEN LATE NIGHTS FRI. & SAT. TIL 3 A.M. FREE Soft drink with the purchase of an entree Exp. 04/30/03 Brazilian Steak Salad Shrimp Tacos Fish Tacos Steak Rice Bowl Brazilian Lemonade Horchata Suiza Enchiladas LA PARRILLA LATIN AMERICAN CUISINE Fresh, Authentic, Affordable, Good! 814 Massachusetts St. - 841-1160 Open Daily IFTH lunch & Dinner Orchard Corners Apartments Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! We offer: - 2 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - 4 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - 4 BR - 2 Bath - Furnished & unfurnished apartments - On KU bus route - Small pets welcome - Private patio or balcony - Small pets welcome - On-site laundry - Friendly on-site manager - Dorm units available - Sparkling pool Models open daily 749-4226 15th & Kasold Mon.-Fri. 9:00-5:00 SOLID HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Regents Court Apartments Starting at $855 - $944 Large 3&4 BR, 2 full bath apartments for rent with Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Large fully Applianced Kitchen including Large fully Applianced Microwave & Dishwasher Gas Heat & Hot Water Central Heat & Air Off street parking On KU bus route EHO 24 hr. Emergency maintenance For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 V Mon.-Frl. 9-5 6 FRIDAY,APRIL 11,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B 'Hawks get back on track with sweep of Leathernecks By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas baseball team rebounded from its 7-4 loss to Baker University on Tuesday by sweeping a doubleheader against Western Illinois, 6-5 and 9-6 in Macomb, Ill., yesterday. Senior Pat Holmes got the start in the first game for Kansas and pitched eight innings, allowing 11 hits, three earned runs and striking out two batters. Junior Brandon Johnson pitched the ninth inning to record the save. After not scoring in the first inning, the Jayhawks put up two runs in the second. Senior designated hitter Kevin Wheeler led off the inning with a walk and was followed by junior right fielder Matt Tribble. Tribble ripped a single into the outfield to advance Wheeler to second. After senior outfielder Casey Spanish laid down a sacrifice bunt to advance both runners, sophomore third baseman Travis Metcalf doubled, scoring both Wheeler and Tribble Metcalf finished the day by going 4-for-5 with three doubles and three RBI. "The middle of our lineup began to contribute again today." coach Ritch Price said. "Metcalf just had a huge game and so did Wheeler. It was crucial for us to win both games today and get some confidence heading into the weekend." The only other inning which Kansas managed to score multiple runs was in the fifth when the Jayhawks scored three runs. Holmes picked up the victory with his performance and improved his record to 3-1 on the season. The second game saw sophomore Kenny Falconer take the mound for Kansas. He pitched four innings allowing four hits and two earned runs. Falconer was credited with the victory and improved his record to 2-0. "It's pretty hard to win on the road without using your weekend pitchers." Price said. "We really did a nice job throughout the whole lineup. It was important for Holmes to go deep into the game, and he did that." Kansas scored six of its nine runs in the fourth inning. Wheeler led off the inning with a double and was followed by Tribble reaching base on a dropped third strike. With the wild pitch, Wheeler advanced to third and then was brought home by a single from Metcalf. After Metcalf's single, junior infielder Kyle Kilgo came to bat and hit a single, loading the bases for junior catcher Jake Kauzlarich. Kauzlarich, talking advantage of a rare start, then hit a two-run double. After Western Illinois recorded an out, senior outfieldier Lance Hayes ripped a double into the outfield, scoring Kilgo and Kauzlarich. The inning was capped when freshman infielder Ritchie Price singled in Hayes. Metcalf had another solid game, finishing 2-for-4 with an RBI and a run scored. Hayes, Price, junior first baseman Ryan Baty and Kauzlarich all also recorded two hits in the game. "We are at the point in the season where every game matters," Baty said. "We definitely wanted to head into this weekend on a winning note rather than just losing two games. The mark of a good team is when you cannot tell if you won or lost the night before. We just need to remain positive and play solid ball." Kansas will now travel to Lubbock, Texas, to play a three game conference series against the GAME 1 KANSAS 6- WESTERN ILLINOIS 5 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 B - R H E W. Illinois 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 10 H 14 Kansas 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 - 16 12 Pitchers: Joshua Hewlett (10), Brad Johnson (11) William Elliott (5), Shafter (4/12), Nathan Miller (4/2/3) Wai-Henry (5)—3-1 Save-Henry (5)—3-1 GAME2 GAME 2 KANSAS 9 - WESTERMILLOIS 6 KANORES Town 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H I W. Illinois 0 1 0 1 2 0 6 - 7 8 Kansas 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 9 13 Pitchers: Nathan Foster (4), Eric Peterson (1), Renjian Robinson (2), Brian Johnson (1), Braden Johnson (3), MacKenzie (7) Wins: Foster (2-0) Save: Foster (2-0) Middle Cool (3-0) Texas Tech Red Raiders. First pitch is scheduled for 7 tonight. Edited by Ryan Wood Soccer team travels south for weekend doubleheader 'Hawks to take on Tulsa, Arkansas By Shane Mettlen smettenk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas soccer team will take a record of 3-2-2 to Tulsa tomorrow and close out the spring season. The Jayhawks will take on Arkansas and Tulsa in a doubleheader. Kansas assistant coach Kelly Miller said he wanted the team to end the season positively. "Obviously we'd like to get a couple of wins," Miller said. "I think the important thing is to finish on a good note and improve Edited by Andrew Ward on the things we've been working on all season." The Jayhawks defeated the Golden Hurricane 1-0 in Lawrence on Sunday but failed to score a goal on their own. Kansas' lone goal was accidentally deflected into Tulsa's goal by a Tulsa player. The Jayhawks haven't faced Arkansas this season but have a loss and a tie against Southeast Conference opponents. Kansas will try to build off one of its best outings of the season when it plays tomorrow. The Jayhawks scored 7 goals in the second period against Oral Roberts University on Sunday, giving Kansas an 8-1 victory. The end of the season should give the Jayhawks an opportunity to recover from an assortment of injuries. Three Jayhawks went down with minor injuries during last weekend's action, something Kansas coach Mark Francis attributed to the nature of the spring season. Francis won't be with the team in Tulsa. He left Lawrence yesterday to rejoin the under-21 national team, of which he is an assistant coach. "We're a little bit banged up right now." Francis said. "When you play a couple of games in a day you're going to have some injuries." Weekend meet sends track team to Arkansas for outdoor contest By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Ark., has been good to the Kansas track and field team this year. Every time the team has traveled to Fayetteville this season, it has turned in strong performances. The team's first trip was for the Tyson Foods Invitational from Feb. 14 to 15. The men's and women's teams each had eight athletes set personal best times or marks. After that meet Kansas coach Stanley Redwine said he was proud of his team for competing so well at a high quality meet. The second trip to Fayetteville this season was at the NCAA Indoor Championships from March 14 to 15. Junior sprinter Leo Bookman won the 200-meter dash at the meet and became the team's only NCAA champion in the indoor season. Tomorrow the team will travel to Fayetteville once again for the John McDonnell Invitational. This will be the first time this season that the team will compete outdoors at Arkansas, but Redwine knows the place well. Redwine ran track at Arkansas from 1980 to 1983 and was an assistant coach for the Razorbacks for 11 years. He is also a member of the Arkansas Hall of Honor. Before the Tyson Invitational, Redwine said his homecoming was not a factor for the team. "It's always great for me to go back to the University of Arkansas, but it has been so long now that none of the kids on the team know anything about it," Redwine said earlier in the season. The field events begin at 9 a.m. with the hammer throw, and the running events begin at 2 p.m. with the 3,000-meter run. — Edited by Amber Byarlay Summit House Apartments Now taking applications for Fall 2003 - 24 hr. Emergency maintenance - $475-490 • 1 BR & 1 BR Loft Apartment Available • Water and trash paid • Walking distance to Campus • Laundry facilities on site • Private off street parking • 24 hr. Emergency Call (785) 841-1429 for details Mon-Fri 9 am - 6 pm 1105 Louisiana EHO CONSTRUCTION AND MOVING BARTONline Having trouble getting your class schedule to work? Dropped a class? Need to add a class? Barton County Community College offers online college courses. We offer both 9-week and 17-week sessions. General education courses transfer to Kansas Regents schools Find our schedule online! www.bartonline.org START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MISS. STREET DELI INC. THURSDAY- "WING IT" NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT •14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells DELI INC. EVERY NIGHT •1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 KANSAN O expect the unexpected Bob's Grandmother and Bob were very happy to see Bob in the yard. SUNDSINCE Studios, 1BR, 2BR 3 BR w/ 2 baths & 4 BR w/ 2 baths 7th & Florida NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 - Private balconies & patios • On-site laundry facility • Pool • On KU bus route • On-site Manager 24 hr. emergency Maintenance - Furnished Apt. Available - Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves * W/D in select Apts SOCIAL BENEFITS JOBSERVICE Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m Models Open Daily! For more information call 785-841-5255 Available Fall Sunrise Terrace Apartments Fall Available Fall - Studios & One Bedroom *Two,Three,&Four Bedroom w/ Two Story, and Two baths - On Site Laundry - Some with w/d's - Digital Cable Ready - Balcony / Decks w/ view The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Call to view FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 CLASSIFIED 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY,APRIL 11,2003 ENTERTAINMENT CAPTAIN RIBMAN in Tele-Visions by Sprengelmeyer & Davis ...A LIBERATED NATION OF ABUSED PEOPLE CHEER WILDLY IN THE STREETS. PROTESTS CEASED AND THE STOCK MARKET SOARED ON REPORTS OF... IS THIS THE WAR NEWS OR DID EI FINALLY CANCEL THE ANNA NICOLE SHOW? TODAY TOMORROW SUNDAY 76 45° mostly sunny 81 48 mostly sunny 74 59 cloudy and windy A LIBERATED NATION OF ABUSED PEOPLE CHEER WILDLY IN THE STREETS. PROTESTS CEASED AND THE STOCK MARKET SOARED ON REPORTS OF. IS THIS THE WAR NEWS OR DID IT FINALLY CANCEL THE ANNA NICOLE SHOW? HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 11) You're lucky this year, but it's not all a gift. Your own judgment has a lot to do with it. Although you face challenges, don't be afraid. With faith you can come out on top. Play by the rules, the way you were taught, and you'll gain wisdom and success. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 9. Don't get so interested in playing that you forget to take care of business. You'll have a lot more fun with a few more coins in your pockets. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 5. Your place would be perfect for the party this evening, and for most of this weekend. Schedule private time for Sunday. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 7. Continue to study as much as you can. What you learn may seem to contradict what you already know, but that's what makes it interesting. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 6. The work may be challenging, but you're the best one for this job. You'll be rewarded if you concentrate on doing it well. Leo(July 23-Aug.22).Today is a 10. You're lookin' good, and so are most of your favorite people. You may have a few little squabbles, but you're usually the ones others follow. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 5. The best investment you can make now is in fixing up your place. Besides, it'll make you feel much better. It's a win-win situation. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is an 8. Stick to your routine as much as you can, and the day will go by quickly. Follow an enthusiastic friend for a way around any problems. Scorpio (Oct.23-Nov.21). Today is a 5. Your general rule is to never volunteer, but maybe you can make an exception this time. Check with the people who need help. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 10. You're rarin' to go, but there are still a few important tasks on your list. If you don't do them now, they'll slow you down tomorrow, and that would be awful. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 5. It's hard to get your message across to a person who isn't listening. Save your breath, and show what you mean with deeds instead of words. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is an 8. Hand the baton to an enthusiastic teammate. The others can push your project forward while you watch for possible problems. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 5. Some folks insist on staying the course, and some say it's time for a change. If you keep pointing out what works, you'll benefit either way. Crossword ACROSS 1 New Zealand bird 5 "Endymion" poet 10 Cabbage dish 14 Motel room 15 Borden's cow 16 Sound property 17 Thrill-seekers 19 Trigger treats 20 Individual 21 Tatum and Ryan 22 Make booties, e.g. 23 Tranquilizes 25 Middle of the month 27 One of those girls 28 Entered swirling 32 Tramps 35 Chili con_ 36 Miss. neighbor 37 Pact partner 38 Fists 39 Fedora feature 40 Greek cross 41 Expand 42 Elbows 43 Uniformity 45 Joey in Australia 46 Salamander 47 Halftime inspiration 51 Mixer setting 53 Ethiopian's neighbor 56 Sandra of "Gidget" 57 U.S. rocket launchers 58 Start of festivities 60 Again 61 "Mack the Knife" singer 62 Otherwise 63 Revel (in) 64 Smart follower? 65 __ off (angry) DOWN 1 Accolade 2 Foolish 3 Hyped-up 4 Resident's suffix 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 46 47 48 49 50 48 49 50 $ \textcircled{c} $2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Santa's helpers 7 Gobi location 8 Cash drawer 9 Hearings 10 Stirs up, as a fire 11 Usurer 12 Opposed 13 Into the sunset 18 Showers with affection 24 Marine greeting 26 Buck attractor 28 __alive! 29 Small song bird 30 Author Wiesel 31 Beaver projects 32 Despise 33 Norwegian king 34 Prudes 35 Cows' chews 38 Lite drink 39 Italy's shape 41 Opposite of ESE 42 Drop by 44 LaGuardia alternative 04/11/03 Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. L O O N O O R O N O O A V I D E M M A D D E V O N B O N E G A I T O R E O S O L U E O N T H E M A R K E T L S D A R E N A T E P E E S S O N N E T W I S E L Y U S O E E W E R N O B L E E L E C T R A A B S T A I N S O L A R D A N A L T D C R I T I C L A D L E S M O O L A H C E L I A U M W D I V E B O M B E R S R E A M R O D E O B L A H G R A S T E R N L A M E L A D D T E S T S E L S A / 45 Restore a connection 47 Fit of terror 48 Confuse 49 Housing contract 50 Used push-buttons 51 Condescending person 52 Volcanic bed 54 October birthstone 55 Scant 59 Obtain WELCOME OUR KANSAN. Friday Monday, June 23 59¢ KANSA Kansas tops Western Michigan 8-1 at Hoglund Ballpark p. 18 Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept I 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements Wanted: Papa Roach concert pictures/ video with kid on stage. Will pay! 816-739-1129 johnsissing@aol.com F1 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 markinsc@swbell.net Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Come on in ... the tofu's just right! GAMMANTLE MERCANTILE CO. THE MERC! NATURAL FOOD GROCERY 9TH & IOWA. OPEN 7AM-10PM - 130-Entertainment Dance lessons; ballroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptionals etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 313-2277 130 - Entertainment Men and Women 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampbooks.com --- After School teacher Ages 6-9, April and May, Mon-Fri 3:00- 5:30; Wed, 1:00-5:30 Start now. Must have licensed care experience and 3 courses. Sunshine Acre, 842-2223 After School teacher Classified Policy Summer staff needed Camp Wood YMCA, Elmidea, KS Counselors, wrangler, leadership director, speciality/trip camp coordinator, evening cook. 620-273-8641 campwood@bouldognet.com ATTENTION MEN & WOMEN Wanted for immediate nine to work for Local Business. Entry-level position starting at $450 w/guarantee + bonuses. All training provided. Must have strong work ethic and Reliable transportation. Call for interview, 795-843-8274 ATTENTION TO Sociable, Positive, Outgoing Person's Wanted for immediate hire to work for BARTENDER POSITION BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours. great pay. Call 1-800-806-008 ext 1422. ever rising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531. MOVIE EXTRACT / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 / 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163 or 1020 versity of Kansas. All real estate advertising in this county is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, 205 - Help Wanted 一帆风顺 Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-2191-5900. Experienced gymnastic instructors needed Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children preferred Call Tern at 913-469-5554. Full time summer maintenance technician needed for large apartment community. Experience helpt, but not necessary. Apply at 1301 West 24th and Nasmith. GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865-0856. Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It's not too late to join the funch! For More info email staff@campwinadu.com or complete application in staff area of www.campwinadu.com Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Help wanted: Seeking self-motivated person for PT receptionist at Lawrence Airport. Phones, customer service, bookkeeping & cleaning. Requires knowledge of Microsoft Word & Excel. 1 to 2 evenings per week and 2 to 3 weeks per month for year round. Pick up application 8AM-4PM at the airport. 1930 Airport Road. Direct questions to Jaucey at 844-0000. Hiring Student Office & Technology Assistant $ ^{1}$ Academic Resource Center in Wescoe Hall has 4 openings available soon: 2 student technology and 2 Office Assistants. Resp incl: Assisting patrons, product, multimedia, maint, library records and materials, computer config/troubleshooting and many special projects. Req. quals; excell customer service, computer & A/V equipment experience, excell communication skills. $6.50/hr. 15-25 hrs/wk. Pick up detailed descriptions and applications at 4069 Wescoe Hall. For info call 684-4785 Deadline April 11, 2002. Hundreds of painter positions available No experience necessary, students will come and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepro.com Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching, basics and competitive strokes; turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554. LIVE AND WORK IN COLUMBUS BE A CAMP COUNSELOR at Girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature, sports, challenge course, dance and drama). Early June - mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Contact amg@sonic.com x281 or email rdonatan@sonic.com Move-in coordinator needed. Begins immediately. Must be avail to work 20-40 hours per week through the summer. Must be dependable and organized. Stop by Meadowbrook Apts. or call 842-4200. OFFICE HELP NEEDED Attention Tracy, EOE kansan.com OFFICE HELP NEEDS Part-time work help needed (approx. 20 hrs/week, M-F, 1 PM - 5 PM). Duties include answering phones, data entry, data customer service. Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Avamar, PO Box 3487, Lawrence, KS 60046. FOE sex, handicap, familial status or emotional origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 205 - Help Wanted HAPPY WEDDING Schumm Foods needs a part-time office assistant who has prior office experience and good customer service skills. Start at $7 per hour. $8 per hour after a year. Apply at Schumm Foods at 719 Mass (above the Smokehouse). Great practical experience in all facets of a small business. Seasonal Employment City of Lawrence tennis Instructors needed in Parks & recreation: 15:30 hrs wkly beginning first if June. Requires knowledge of basic elements of US Tennis Assoc & Nntl Jr Tennis League programs, & expr teaching children 4-18 yrs of age as well as adults. Prefer PCR & first aid cert. To apply for this & many other Parks & Recreation summer positions, contact City Hall, Personnel 6 E 6th, Lawrence, KS 60044 (785) 832-3203 personnel@lawrence.ks.us www.LawrenceCitiesJobs.org EOE M/O Shipping position open immediately. $8$/hr, 20 wks/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation. Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and enclosure with 3 references to EEI, P.O. Box 1304Lawrence, KS 60044, EOE/AA Small well-established Financial Office is seeking a well-organized individual wishing to learn and grow with the business. People skills, computer skills, and attention to details extremely important. Position includes communicating with clients with respect to their small business needs, preparing monthly "books", preparing business and personal income tax returns and general accounting office duties. Small office environment requires individual with flexible attitude. Required computer skills: Proficient in Windows 98, Microsoft Office Suite: Excel, Word, Outlook and internet research. Send resume to P.O. Box 235, Bonner Springs, KS 66012, Attn: Jane. STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD (SHAB) SHAB is seeking diverse individuals in major, nationality, ethnicity and experience for the 2003-2004 academic year. Board members shall advise & counsel the Wakins Administration on matters pertaining to the program on health care and education for all students of the University of Kansas. SHAB is a Student Senate MAKE A DIFFERENCE pick up an application at the Student Senate Office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union or Walkins Health Center on the second floor Administration Office. Attention College Students. What are you doing for the summer? No one hiring? We are! Find out how you could make $2,800/month this summer Call 832-1833. The Mass. St. Deli is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Deli or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). Doormen and weekend day bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 lowa. BASS PLAYER Wanted on top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. Brookcreek Learning Center Teaching Assistant. Training provided: Must be energetic and share an enthusiasm for making a difference in the lives of young children, PT a.m., shift available. Apply 200. Hope Court. 865-0022. Get Paid For Your Opinion! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B 205 - Help Wanted KANSAS GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Univ. of KS, West Campus, currently has several student positions available. For job duties, requirements, deadlines, and online applications visit http://www.kgsku.ksu.edu/General/jobs.htm) or contact Annette 864-2152, n@kgsku.ku.edu. Applications also available at 324 Hambleton Hall, AA/EOE. Leasing Agents Enargette, outgoing personalities needed. Part time, flexible schedule, weekend hrs. Apply in person at Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway. TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS - HAVE FUN- MAKE $ 5 Openings in ALL TEAM & IN-DIVIDUAL SPORTS, ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS; CampHike, Ropes/Rock- Climbing, Ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Sec- taries, Top Satelites, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUNDRY, Travel allowance, ONLINE APPLICATION: www.campobosses.com www.campcobbossee.com or call:(800)473-6104 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale S --- S Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext.4565 MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 & 2 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings,$425,841-3633. 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670 walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @843-4000. 1-1 BR Apt. Next to Campus Avail. Aug 1 1346 Ohio. $490 per month. Utilities paid. Cash: 554-0260 CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870; 900 Block Michigan. Bank 843-4090. 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and quiet. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU bus rte, laundry facility Call 843-001-01 1.2-3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. Available August 1st. 841-6254 1712 OHIO 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhomes. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR ab DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site. 382 BA $900, 48R 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841-5358 www.apartmentsinlawrence.net 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. $415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 3 BR apts. 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights. 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. Nets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9607 3 BR apts. FP, skylights. 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D w hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Call 765-748-9807 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. New! 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo, plus deposit. Call 545-4148. 7 BR house,2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown.$1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Call 550-0426 Avail. Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C. 10th & NY. No pets. $520. Cali B41-8174-103 Avail. Aug; Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house. 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets. $450. Camlid 814-1701. Avail, August 1st. 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher. 631 Alabama. $110/month. Call 843-8540 Ext. 21. Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NOP 841-5833. Great location. 1801 Mississippi). BRpt. in duplex, Hardwood floors, CA, no pets, $610/mo. Avail. Aug 1 842-4242. 405 - Apartments for Rent Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 4th between Naismith & Ousdahl On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841,5533 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances; ample parking, on-site laundry. Call 843-4909. Moving to Wichita? Moving to graduation. If you are graduating or working an internship. Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. 838-8302 2727 Amidon. 838-8302 1 BR apt for sublease, avail; June 1st, opt. lease for fall. Access from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month, water/ trashpaid. No pets. Elizabeth, 843-9944. Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes Washer/Dryers* Dishwasher* Microwaves* Patios* Fire Places* Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where one no live above or below you. no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes - Washer/Dryers * *Dishwasher * *Microwaves * *Patios * *Gas Fire Places * *Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway MASTERCRAFT WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes lived with row in mind Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 * Hanover Place 14th & Mass841-1212 + Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Regents Court Sundance 7th & Florida841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-2415 19th & Mass·749-0445 NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity 405 - Apartments for Rent 405 - Apartments for Rent --- Now signing YR, 18 learners starting May June/July Aug. No smoking pets. Extra nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- cations, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more! $405/mo. Spanish Class Ages. 841-6886. Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hill Haps. Great location at 1012 Emery Road, 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $335. Water paid. High-speed internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. Attention seniors & Grad students Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath, W/D, fireplace, kitchen appl, garage/operator, pet. SubLEASE 6-1/7-31$1 650-766-5080 Save Your Money! Attractive studio apt, near KU at 945 Mio. avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study $400, gas & water. paid. No pains or smoking. Call 749-0166. Avail. 8/1, Quiet, no smoking, no pets. 6th & Kasolid. 2 BR, 1.5 BA $685/month plus security deposit. 1-year lease. 550-6812. Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Apartments & Town Houses Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $585-$650 JEFFERSON HONORARY Now Leasing for Fall - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ♦ Washer & Dryer ♦ Fully Equipped Kitchen ♦ Serving Bar Blue Mountain CHASE COURT Call 840.9467 for an appointment Blue Most Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 8200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Cable plus HBO Resort-style Pool Plaza 24 hour Fitness Facility On KU bus route Stop by and find out for yourself! Now leasing for fall 2003 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 1 & 2 Bedroom 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. You've heard the name. You've heard it's the place to live... - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - On KU Bus Route 405 - Apartments for Rent Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Washer/Dryer in each unit Internet access in each room Tanning Bed Computer Center 1942 STEWART AVE Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. $^{00}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. 843-8220 Individual Leases Cable, plus HBO Some with fireplaces and Garages Model Open Daily! - Small Pet Welcome Model Open Daily! 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 842-0032 M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 www.lawrenceapartments.com 1,2,3 Bedrooms www.jeffersoncommons.com Located just behind SuperTarget 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com OPEN HOUSE W/D,all appliances 405 - Apartments for Rent L Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Bristanore, Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. W/D hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. Available in August. 1, 2 bdrm. Close to GSP/Corbin between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841-1207 Available now, May or June 1. Very nice, remodeled, spacious top floor. 1 BR apts. 9th and Eighth. No smoke/sg petts. $415 plus utilities. 550-8111 or 841-3192. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen wi microwave, porches/palates, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas. 843-4090 1 BR, $450/mi. Avail Aug 1. New carpet, paint, vinyl, hardwood floors in Br. Very cuticleen; 730 Arkansas; Call 843-8540 ext 21. COLONY WOODS 1&2Bedrooms - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - Exercise Room - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall VILLAGE SQUARE apartments M-F 10-8 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Luxury Apartments Now Leasing for Spring 2003 • 1, 2, 3 Bdmr • Washer/Dryer • Swimming Pool & Hot Tub • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Garages Available • High Speed Internet Connections • Security Systems Available • Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 www.firstmanagementinc.com Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools hot tubs,basketball court fitness center and gated entrance call 838-3377 Briarwood pool, fitness 405 - Apartments for Rent www.tuckawaymgmt.com A Avail. Aug. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated older house, 1300 lbs. Vermont. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique cup, no pets. $440.imo. Call 841-1074. NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2,3 & BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR MASH & DBAIT BAY HUGE GAME ROOM COMPUTER & CRAFT BOOM SUNLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET ALL INCLUDE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES WASHER AND DRILTER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBELT & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPED FITNESS CENTER (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments Bedroom Apartments - Spacious, Luxury Apts - All apps. + W/D - Water paid - 6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com FOX RUN 1,2,3,Bedroom HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2009 - Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! 1. 2,3 Bedroom • Pool • Washer/Dryer • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Security Systems • Garages Available Models Open Daily 842-3280 68423200 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com 410 - Condos For Rent ٥٤١ Very nice condo. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eli at 841-4470. 415 - Homes For Rent Avail. Aug, Cute 3 BR, renovated older house, 15th & New Hampshire. Wood floors, CA, ceiling fans, DW, W/D hookups, lg closets, tended yard. Deciduous cats and dogs under 20 lbs and over 2 years old with pet rent and pet deposit. $1,050/mo. Call 841-1074. 1921 Kentucky. 3 bedroom, $840. Central air, large fenced backyard, unfinished basement. Available June 1.550-6414. 2 & 3 BR houses and TH, W/D hookups, FP, vaulted ceiling, and garages. small pet welcome. Call 842-3280. 415 - Homes For Rent 2 BR 1 BA nice house with one can garage, wood floors, fenced yard, porch with swing, $695.843-3633 anytime. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jaccuzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fenced landscape back yard; $1450, 641-3633 anytime. 430 - Roommate Wanted 440 - Sublease Mature roommate wanted for 3 BD/nice house/WD/AC/garage. Avail. NOW. $375+ No smoking. Call 786-7010. Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2 util Avail Aug. 842-4540. 3 BR Townhouse. BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage, W/D, Central air, avail. mid-May Call Adam 830-8076. Sublease 2 BR 2 BA apt, at Parkway Commons. Avail, mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jess at 312-9710. 3 BR. 3 BA apt, Furn, W/D full kitchen + more. May. Aug. Aug. Rent $375 - util, water, cable Call. Amy 766-5199. 4 Subleasers needed, new 4 BR town- house, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $312.50, lease through July 31, 816-520-6421 or 636-578-3505 or 620-340-3273. Female roommate wanting to share a nice 3 BR town home in west Lawrence. Available May 1 - Aug 1: $275 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Julie at 393-2606. Furnished Apartment for Sublease! 4BR, 2 BA. liv rm. din rm. kitchen, patio (laundry fac. and *pool* on apartment complex) to campus (*Orchard Corners*) on the bus site. Starting mid May or neg.$216/mo. + until **Cable** and DSL. No furn. need needed! Call Liz or Canda at (783) 658-3683 or leave a message. Huge, new, 3 BR townhome 2.5 BA, FP, WG, W/D, DW, 300/mo, + 1/3 utilities. Call ASAP913-157-8956-4100 Clinton Phpw IBR in 2BR apt. Summer Sublease! Right on campus. Available May or June. $320/mo. Call Nicole 691-5204. Large 1 BR in 2 BR at Highpoint, Late May-July 31. Rent nego, W/D, cable, internet ready. great view. Call 312-7074 Need suceler to live w 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent paid. Call 785-830-8003 PERFECT SUBLEAF FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA 749-6060. Roommate wanted for large 5 B R H house. Half block from campus. $315/mo. Call 393-3197 Sublease 1 BR apt. to campus. $480 + utilities. Calls ajet.com @913-558-3938. Summer sublease 308 W. 16th Street. 4 BR, 2 BA. Good landlord. Nice front porch. Call 785-975-9617 or 785-331-6778. Offering $100 cash for signing sublease! 500s Services 505 - Professional --- Teacher job fair. West Port Senior Academy, KC MO. April 12th 9am, to noon. Call (816) 531-8505 ext 1102 Term Paper Editing! Editing Performed by Professors & Graduate Students. Visit us at www.papercheck.com or call us toll free 866-693-EDIT. 510 - Child Care Pencil Icon Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad cuniculum; park-like playground. Call Sunrise Acres 842-2233. 6B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS FRIDAY,APRIL11,2003 LIBERTY HALL 244 Massachusetts Ave. Lawrence 73851-2388 1012 CITY OF GOD Directed by Fernando Meielles LIBERTY HALL 844 massachusetts street 17351748 1912 CITY OF GOD Directed by Fernando Meirelles R FRI 4:00 6:45 9:30 SAT 4:00 6:45 SUN 1:15 4:00 6:45 9:30 Adaptation. FRI 4:15 7:00 9:40 SAT 1:30 9:40 SUN 1:30 4:15 7:00 9:40 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM Opens next Friday! WEEKEND TIMES ONLY! 'Hawks head to Texas after Nebraska loss FRI 4:15 7:00 9:40 SAT 1:30 9:40 SUN 1:30 4:16 9:40 By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas softball team fell to No. 7 Nebraska 8-0, in Lincoln, Neb., yesterday. The Jayhawks were the victims of a no-hitter from Cornhusker junior pitching sensation Peaches James, as the squad lost to another Big 12 Conference opponent. James ended the contest with eight strikeouts. If she hadn't hit Kansas freshman left fielder, Ashley Frazer, with a pitch in the third inning, she would have had a perfect game. Nebraska (29-9 overall, 6-4 Big 12) tallied nine hits off of Kansas pitchers Kara Pierce and Kirsten Milhoan. Nebraska senior shortstop Amanda Buchholz did the most damage offensively, going 3-for 4, with three RBI. Nebraska broke a scoreless game in the third inning by posting 5 runs in the inning. When it scored 3 runs in the fifth inning, the five-inning run-rule came into KANSAS 0 - NEBRASKA 8 Team 1 2 3 4 5 - R H E Nebraska 0 0 5 0 3 - 0 9 0 Kansas 0 0 5 0 3 - 0 9 2 Pitchers: 1 2 3 4 5 - R H E 0 0 0 5 0 3 - 8 9 0 0 0 0 5 0 3 - 8 9 0 Pitcher: Philadelphia (2), Milwaukee (2/3/3) Nebraska: James (5) Win: James (16-7) Lose: None Loss: Pearce (14-8) play because the Huskers were ahead by 8 runs by the fifth inning. Pierce took the loss for the Hawks, dropping her pitching Things don't get any easier for Kansas (22-13, 2-7 Big 12), as it takes on No. 18 Texas A&M over the weekend in Lawrence in a two-game series starting at 2 p.m. tomorrow. record to 14-8. The Aggies (28-14, 6-4 Big 12) currently sit in fifth place in the Big 12. The Texas A&M squad is 16-1 at home but only 3-7 on the road, something in which the Jayhawks can take solace in. "They're playing well. They continue to build that club every year it seems," Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said. "They are a solid defensive club." Bunge said the Aggies were led both on the offense and defense by All-American senior catcher Selena Collins. She is hitting .303 with 30 RBI. Texas A&M has solid pitching as well, anchored by juniors Jessica Slataper and Lindsay Wilhelmson. Both players have ERAs under 2.00. Edited by Amber Byarlay NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews Now. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan kansan.com TANGLEWOOD APARTMENTS David McMillan (92) fights off a block to get to the ball carrier. He's had an awfully good spring, coach Mark Mangino said. The Kansas football team will practice at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium. 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished Studios, Iand 2 Bedroom apartment homes. 92 - Laundry facilities on site - Fully equipped kitchens (dishwashers)$^2$, disposal, storage, refrigerator micro - Central Air - Within walking distance to KU campus - Telephone and cable outlets in each bedroom - Ample off-street parking for tenants - On-site manager - 24 emergency maintenance Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Equal Housing Opportunity *Available in select units and Kansas State boasting two of the nation's best. Defense CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B The Kansas football team next year looks to compete with its defensive line, after a season that saw the Jayhawks crushed by opposing offensive lines. Coach Mark Mangino said the defensive line was working hard. "We're getting better," Mangino said. "We've been pretty banged up so far this spring. We've been working on understanding the schemes and gap responsibilities and are really progressing." David McMillan and Cory Kipp are both practicing with the first team defensive ends, and McMillan has been one of the standout players in the spring. McMillan is a cat-quick 6-foot-3,240 pounds with a great motor and ability to get to the quarterback Last season McMillan had 55 tackles including nine for loss,12 quarterback pressures and three sacks.After an offseason of working out and working on speed,it is Mangino's hope that some of those pressures will turn into sacks. "He's had an awfully good spring," Mangino said. "He's been really good as far as rushing the passer, and now he's starting to play better in the run game. He's much more physical and just keeps getting bigger and better." If McMillan is the quick pass rusher, Kipp is the bigger end to help against the run. Standing 6-5 and 280 pounds, Kipp is a tackle-end hybrid and should help to hold ground against the more powerful offensive lines Defensive tackle is another story. Mangino said there were no standouts at tackle so far in the spring. "We've been rotating some guys and they all kind of blend together," Mangino said. "Now they have progressed from last year, but nobody really sticks out yet." Travis Watkins started all 12 games last year but was also a big part of the team that had its toughness questioned by Mangino. The tackles were routinely pushed off the ball, which led to large running lanes for opposing running backs. After one such game, Watkins said he was grateful for being pushed. "If we were coaches, we'd say the same thing to us," Watkins said. "The way he responded, we felt the same way. It'd be bad if coach came in there and said, 'Oh, you know, we just got outplayed and this team was better than us.' Because they weren't." The search for another defensive tackle has yet to yield promising results, and just like the linebacker position, the best players could arrive in the fall. So when the spring scrimimage rolls around tomorrow, don't focus on the quarterback, cornerbacks or receivers. Focus on the trenches. If the Jayhawks win,it will be the lines that lead. Bohl CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Edited by Ryan Wood not good to make "I think they hurt Al Bohl's image," Hemenway said. Sherry Bohl, Al Bohl's wife, said that the University already succeeded in hurting his image. "The University would not even show Al the courtesy of letting him have his press conference on campus," Sherry said. Bohl's press conference was held on his driveway at his house in Lawrence instead of at Hadl Auditorium, where most Kansas athletics press conferences are held. Several bystanders stopped to watch the scene as television trucks and vans blocked traffic on Wimbledon Drive. After the conference was over, Bohl invited reporters into his home to ask more questions. Hemenway said Al Bohl's remarks about Williams were not true. "I think it's just absolutely unfair what he had to say about Roy Williams," Hemenway said. "All of coach Williams' concern has been for the Athletic Department as a whole." Various members of the Athletics Department would not comment on the issue. Edited by Christy Dendurent Allen CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Off the court. Allen majored in chemistry and went on to medical school at the University of Pennsylvania. was out of town and playing and there I was stuck at my sorority house." Allen's sister, Elanore Nelson, said Allen took his studies seriously and was a dedicated athlete in college. "Bob was very studious, staying up until 2 a.m. sometimes to finish homework after basketball practice," Nelson said. "Those were the facets of basketball then." Allen was two years older than his sister, and Nelson said she liked being at the University while her brother was there. Nelson said she had to follow her brother when Allen graduated and headed to Pennsylvania for medical school. "I thought I would miss him so much I had to go with him," Nelson said. "We used to have dinner on Sundays in Pennsylvania which really made being there worth it." Nelson said she really didn't know how to sum up the years of her brother's life. She did say Allen was the best brother she could have ever had. "Bob was the most complete personification I would wish any sister to have as a brother," Nelson said. Jean Allen, who was married to Allen for 59 years, said her husband made many great accomplishments in his life and his loyalty to the University never diminished. "There weren't any games that Bob missed," Jean Allen said. "His loyalty to KU was extraordinary." Jean Allen also said her husband was dedicated to his profession as a general surgeon at St. Luke's Hospital. He was the chairman of the surgery department and president of the medical staff. Allen was buried at Oak Hills in Lawrence on Saturday. His memorial service is today at the Second Presbyterian Church in Kansas City, Mo. - Edited by Christy Dendurent LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. Need a Job? THEATRE DU BLEAU BOSTON BARTENDERS SCHOOL of AMERICA BE ABARTENDER! - Special student discount - Hands on training/niteclub setting - National Alcohol Awareness - Super job placement assistance Certification 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. - Conveniently located in downtown Kansas City 1-816-221-8555 The Lindenbaum Memorial Lecture Presents www.bostonbartender.com CALL TODAY! Leo Bretholz A compelling story of escape, survival and determination during the Holocaust who will discuss his acclaimed book April 12, 2003, 7:30 p.m. Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive Leap Into Darkness A book purchase and signing will follow the presentation EVERYTHING BUTICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass. LIBERTY HALL VIDEO LATE FEE AMNESTY WEEK YOU RENT ANY VIDEO OR DVD WE DELETE ANY LATE FEES ON YOUR ACCOUNT. ONE WEEK ONLY! Sunday, April 15 To Saturday, April 19 640 MASSACHUSETTS 22 901 IOWA IN THE MERC PALM TREES Catch Spring Fever! Fitness Special 3-Month Tanning unlimited usage $70.00 Tanning Special Save $100 annual membership $25/month Can Freeze Over Summer exp.4/15 Non-members welcome! exp.4/15 --- BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa international Student Association presents... SUNDAY, APRIL 6 SUNDAY, APRIL 6 -Flavors of the World -Kick-off Dinner 6pm -Lawrence Catherine Center -April 7 749-2424 TUESDAY, APRIL 5 -Muslim Women in America Dr. Saadia Malik 11:30-1pm, Alderson MONDAY, APRIL 7 -Open Game Night 6-9pm, Hawk's Nest -Picture the World 6-9pm, Auditorium Lawrence Public Library THURSDAY, APRIL 10 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 6-7:30pm, Ballroom Fashion Show Work 3pm, 4th Floor Lobby Firsthand Experience in Iraq Prof. Scott Harding 6-7pm Big 12 Rm FRIDAY, APRIL 11 - World Expo 12-5pm, Ballroom - Rhythm of the World 10pm-2am $5 admission Office of Study Abroad Applied English International Student and Scholar Services Cox Cella Week SATURDAY, APRIL 12 SATURDAY, APRIL -KU Soccer Mania 9am-5pm, Robinson Field $5 per team -Festival of Nations 7pm, Woodruff Auditorium All events are free and in the Kansas Union unless otherwise stated ISA International Society of Astrophysics Monday April 14, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 133 Today's weather 86° Tonight: 63° Tell us your news THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas tennis team stumbles, drops match against K-State p. 1B Kristen Steinbock My Father's Daughter THE THIRD PLANET Pilfered Profits Petty theft affects people more than shoplifters can imagine Mary Corcoran always told her friends if she ever went to jail for anything, it would be for stealing lipstick. "Mostly I just think, 'This stuff is way overpriced,'" Corcoran said. "And who am I killing by stealing it?" stealing iphones The Lawrence senior knows shoplifting is wrong, but she still steals makeun. Shoplifters may think they are taking from faceless corporations that will never feel the effects. But everyone pays a price for shoplifting — businesses, customers and shoplifters themselves — in a ripple effect of pilfered profits. Shoplifting cost U.S. businesses $10 billion in 2001, according to a University of Florida study last year The study also found that many retailers had started adding "shrink" — a 1.8 percent charge designed to compensate for shoplifting losses — to the cost of the merchandise. Shoplifting cases in Lawrence have increased during the past three years. There were 322 reported in 2000,368 in 2001 and 438 in 2002, according to the Lawrence Police Department. Most thefts involve items that can be easily taken, said Lawrence police Sgt. Mike Patrick. "Typically you're not talking about big ticket items like a television," Patrick said. "You're talking about items that can be hidden in a person's clothing." Corcoran said she limited herself to shoplifting makeup. The most expensive item she has stolen was $10 eyeliner. "It's small, and it's easy to take," she said. "So it's a little safer." At first, Trish Jess found it difficult to approach someone she suspected of shoplifting. The cost to businesses "Now, it's like, 'Hey, you're taking my paycheck here,'" said Jess, director of operations for The Third Planet, 2 E. Ninth St. There's no database that tracks revenue losses for local businesses, said Luke Middleton, research economist for the University of Kansas Policy Research Institute. He said most businesses didn't want to broadcast hefty losses. But people should know shoplifting is devastating for local businesses, Jess said. The Third Planet's four Kansas stores collectively lose an average of $10,000 a year in merchandise costs because of shoplifting, she said. Last month someone stole a hand-blown glass pipe from the Lawrence store's second floor. The Third Planet bought the pipe for $200 and was selling it for $400. Jess said the store lost not only the original purchase price but also That amount's not even counting the time her employees wasted ordering, unpacking and displaying the item, Jess said. "We have to do a lot more in sales to make up for it," she said. Jess said a loss for her business could affect other businesses as well. The Third Planet purchases many of its pipes from local glass blowers. A shoplifting loss limits how many pieces Jess can buy from those glass blowers in the future, she said, causing other local businesses to suffer with her. Theft also affects her ability to give employees raises, she said. Emily "Everyone here takes it personally," Jess said about the stolen pipe. "I'm still bitter about it." SEE PETTYTHEFT ON PAGE 8A Supporters of sex class present case to governor By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Susan Wagle brought politics into the classroom with her proposed budget amendment to eliminate funding for the University of Kansas' School of Social Welfare, which includes the undergraduate class on human sexuality. Last week, supporters of Dennis Dailey fought back through the same channels. On Tuesday, Lawrence city commissioners ordered a letter drafted to Gov. Kathleen Sebelius stating their support of academic freedom. Two days later, the University Council PETER ROSENBERG Sebelius approved a resolution encouraging Sebelius to veto Wagle's amendment. Secundus For more coverage of the debate about Dailey's Human Sexuality course see page 5A And on Friday three KU students from Dailey's human sexuality class met with the governor's staff to present their side. "We spoke to them about the misconceptions of the class, and the importance of context and, more importantly, the lack of respect for the system that's already in place at KU to handle this," said Jen Hein, a Topeka senior who organized the trip. The group also addressed the benefits of the class and the broad ramifications and dangers of this type of bill, Hein said. The five members of the governor's staff who attended the meeting liked what they heard, said chief counsel Matt All. The budget amendment, which could cut as much as $3.1 million in funding from the School of Social Welfare, arrived on the governor's desk on Friday. Gov. Sebelius has until April 22 to decide whether or not to line-item veto it. With that in mind, Friday's meeting was more for information gathering while the governor weighed the veto, All said. Dailey's supporters hope drawing the governor's attention to their concerns will result in just such a measure. "The governor's office took us seriously as students, adults and Kansans," Hein said. "A lot comes back to how it can hurt the entire state of Kansas. It's hard to get quality professors to come to your state if the Legislature determines classroom content." Edited by Julie Jantzer Templin Hall deals out fun, prizes at Casino Night Dancing on the Dance Floor Kelly Carson, Littleton, Colo., freshman, places a wedding ring on Miranda Wormell, Ottawa freshman, at the Little White Wedding Chapel on the sixth floor of Templin Hall during Casino Night on Friday. The annual event was put on by Templin Hall and Hawk Nights activities. By Jessica Palmenio jalpalenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The Las Vegas Strip was brought to Daisy Hill Friday—and there was no need to check IDs—when Templin Hall held its annual Casino Night with the help of Hawk Nights activities. Some participants were not sure what to expect at the event, James Dietrich, Ft. Collins, Colo., sophomore, said he and his friend were drawn by the spotlight outside the building. "We got confused," Dietrich said. "Home Depot had spot lights too, so we went there first, but now we're here." When students entered the first floor they picked up chips and entered their names in a competition. Each player started with $200 worth of fake money in chips, and each canned good players brought earned them an extra $25. The canned goods collected will be distributed to area charities. Dressing up for the event also earned gamblers money. "Looking spiffy is another $25 to $50," said Mike Zelazek, Warrensburg, Mo., sophomore and Hawk Nights committee member. Residents of Templin decorated the hall for the event. Each floor represented a different casino on the Las Vegas strip, such as the Luxor, Caesar's Palace and While they waited in line, students ordered drinks from the fully stocked non-alcoholic bar. Drinks such as "Unfuzzy Navels" and "Shirley Templins" were served all night. Students were impressed with the amount of work residents put into the event. "This had to have taken so much coordination," said Carolyn Cornett, Wichita freshman. The sixth floor, or the "Little White Wedding Chapel," came complete with a mock aisle, photographer and wedding cake. People could marry their "unlawfully wedded" husband or wife, but some took a less traditional approach to the union. One student opted to marry a balloon at the beginning of the night, but it was OK because fake annulments were also available. 1 9 SEE CASINO ON PAGE 7A 17 1 ] * 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN --- MONDAY,APRIL 14,2003 News briefs STATE Kansas Olympic medalist to speak about experiences Kansas Congressman Jim Ryun will be speaking at the KU College Republicans meeting at 7:30 p.m.at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.Ryun was first elected to congress in 1996. The group is expecting Ryun, a 1970 KU graduate, Olympic silver medalist and former track world record holder, to speak about his experiences in Congress and take questions. "It's probably inevitable that he will talk about the war and the budget crisis," said Josh Steward, Hays sophomore and KU College Republicans Event Coordinator. The event is free and open to the public. Jessica Palimenir High school lab explosion iniures 3 Wichita teachers WICHITA — Environmental workers were expected to clean up a Wichita high school after a lab explosion injured three chemistry teachers. The teachers were taken to the hospital Friday after an experiment went awry during a training session at Wichita West High School. All three were treated and released Friday night Thick, black smoke with a pungent smell filled a classroom around 2:45 p.m. The 25 high school chemistry teachers and three students who had gathered in the room for a day of training fled the smoke after the explosion. Neither the hospital nor the school district would name the teachers. There did not appear to be any structural damage to the school, said Tim Phares, who is in charge of the cleanup for the district. No students will be allowed back into West until the district's environmental services office is sure all the chemicals are cleaned up, Phares said. Five die, three injured in birthday party blaze COLUMBUS, Ohio — A suspicious fire broke out in a three-story house early yesterday as a college student's 21st birthday party was breaking up, killing five people and injuring three, authorities said. One of the injured, a 20-year-old man, was in critical condition with burns and smoke inhalation, officials said. Arson and homicide investigators were at the student-rented house near Ohio State University, and police were investigating reports that a fight had started before the fire began, said police Sat. Dana Norman. The house is about a block from campus in a neighborhood of older homes popular with the university's students. Firefighters found two men and three women dead inside. It appeared some had been sleeping when the fire began, Norman said. Phelps demonstrators target Connecticut church HARTFORD, Conn. — A handful of anti-gay protesters jeered and shouted at parishioners heading to Palm Sunday Mass at St. Patrick-St. Anthony Church because they said the church supported same-sex marriages. "Churches are encouraging people to commit sin," said Margie Phelps, a member of the Topeka-based Westboro Baptist Church. "You expect politicians to be sinners, not people who believe in God." The Westboro church, led by Phelps' father, Fred Phelps, regularly demonstrates around the country against gay rights. Margie Phelps and seven other members, stood across the street from the church yesterday morning, holding signs and shouting at parishioners. She also took issue with the Catholic Church because of the highly publicized church abuse scandals involving pedophile priests. "Don't bring your children in there to be molested," she screamed at a couple walking into church with their children. Some parishioners chose to leave their children at home or attend a different church because of the protest. A slightly larger group of counterprotesters stood in front of the church, keeping a silent vigil. Many of them were dressed as angels. "There's really nothing to say," said a counter protester who would not give his name. "We want our silence to speak for us." The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJHTV Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. KUJH-TV News News: Brett Wiard and Laine Baker Weather: Brian Hunter Sports: Doug Donahoo On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9 Then again at 6 p.m. kansan.com Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to 90.7 KYDY kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU A Lindsey Gold/Kansan To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffar-Fint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Anne Domann, Doylestown, Pa., freshman, falls on the Twister board at Kappa Delta's Twister Tournament on the lawn of Allen Fieldhouse. Saturday afternoon's tournament benefited Women's Transitional Care Services, 2518 Ridge Court, and Prevent Child Abuse America. Event chair Jessica Schickler, Des Moines, Iowa, junior said the group registered 40 teams in the double elimination competition and wanted to raise $10,000. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Richard Rambuss of Emory University will give a lecture on "Bad Taste Bad Faith" from 3:30 to 5 p.m. at the conference room in the Hall Center for the Humanities. Call 864-4798. Comets and the Origin of Earth's Water" at 4 p.m. at room 3005 in Malot Hall. Call 864-4626. Humberto Campins of the University of Central Florida will give a lecture on "The Composition of Distinguished lecturer John Anderson will give a lecture on "Antarctica's Contribution to Eustasy" at 4 p.m.at room 103 in Lindley Hall. Call 864-4974. The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will practice from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at room 207 in Robinson Center, Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. The University Band will perform at 7:30 p.m. in the Lied Center. Tickets are $5 for students and $7 general admission. Call 864-ARTS. ON THE RECORD A 24-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took his Jensen CD stereo and seven KJHK T-shirts between 9 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. Saturday in the 1200 block of Louisiana Street, according to reports. The items were valued at $220. A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took her Pioneer CD stereo and a case with 50 CDs between 8 p.m. Friday and 10:30 a.m. Saturday in the 2700 block of Ridge Court, according to reports. The items were valued at $800. A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone stole his Sony digital camera between 9 p.m. Thursday and 2 p.m. Friday in the 1700 block of Vermont Street, according to reports. The camera was valued at $350. A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged the dashboard of his car and took his Alpine CD stereo and coins between 10:30 p.m.Friday and 7:30 a.m.Saturday in the 2500 block of West Sixth Street, according to reports.The loss was estimated at $153. A 23-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took her Sony Palm Pilot, Pioneer CD stereo, Siemen cell phone and a case with 25 CDs between 10:30 p.m. Friday and 8:30 a.m. Saturday in the 2700 block of Redbud Lane, according to reports. The items were valued at $950. Sulfate level rises in Kansas drinking water HUTCHINSON — While the flow of the Arkansas River through southwest Kansas drops, the sulfate level in the water continues to rise. The salinity of the water could cause some small towns like Deerfield population 900 to make an investment in quality drinking water. Et Cetera "It's a problem up and down the river," said Wayne West, Deerfield City Administrator. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 65045. More than 70 percent of Kansans' drinking water comes from groundwater, and nearly all of southwest Kansans depend on the Ogallala Aquifer for their water supply. As salinity rises, water could become a problem for more and more residents. Sulfate has been traveling down the river from Colorado for years, but the drought and an irrigation-depleted aquifer has left less water to dilute the salt. The Associated Press The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-9467) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045 filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Sunrise Terrace Apartments Full Available Fall - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ Two Story, and Two baths - On Site Laundry - Digital Cable Ready - Some with w/d's - Balcony / Decks w/ view The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Call to view The University of Kansas The Commission on the Status of Women And the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center the WOMEN'S Recognition PROGRAM guest speaker The Honorable Julie A. Robinson U.S. District Judge Tuesday, April 15th, 2003 7:30 p.m. Big 12 Room, Kansas Union Reception Following 4 MONDAY,APRIL 14,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Group to celebrate Black Love Week By Henry C. Jackson cjjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The Black Student Union is getting old — 40 years old, to be precise, and just one day of celebration wouldn't do it justice. Members of the organization will celebrate the group's anniversary with a 51st party on Wescoe Beach. The event will be part of Black Love Week, five days of activities designed to involve the University of Kansas community in celebrations of African-American culture. Black Love Week's activities include a talent show, basketball tournament and the week's most awaited event, the 40th birthday party. "Turning 40 shows that even though we are small in numbers we're going to be here and we're going to be united anyway." Renita Norman, Topeka sophomore, said. "It shows we're strong and able to be united on one front forever." Black Love Week will be especially fun for Norman because, as the group's programs chairwoman, she rarely gets to enjoy the activities she organizes. Norman said that sometimes she only got to look at what the group was planning on doing. Hatches said the group wanted to involve everyone and would like to have the whole University come out. "Having it all set and being able to participate makes me feel good," she said. C'Nea Hatches, Valaparaiso, Ind., sophomore and the organization's vice president, said the week's activities would focus on involving the whole University community — not just African Americans. "We want people to experience black love and we don't want BLACK LOVE WEEK ACTIVITIES: Today Study session at 7:30 p.m. at the Relay Room, formerly the Pioneer Room, in the Burge Union after the Black Student Union meeting Tomorrow Black Student Union talent show at 7 p.m. at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union them to just be black people," she said. "We want people to experience it through BSU." Members of the organization have been planning Black Love Week for more than a month. Mark Dupree, Kansas City, Kan., junior and the group's president, said the event's activities, particularly the 40th birthday party Wednesday Birthday party from noon to 2 p.m. on Wescoe Beach. Black Student Union celebrates its 40th anniversary. Wednesday Thursday Friday Thursday Black faculty and staff appreciation day ■ Friday Basketball tournament at 6 p.m. at Robinson Gymnasium scheduled for Wednesday,showed the organization's staying power. Dupree said it was a great accomplishment. "It shows that the fight has not ended," he said, "and we will not be stopped by any problems or any situations." — Edited by Christy Dendurent 50 Eric Fransen, Louisville, Ky., graduate student in mathematics, and Giulio Caviglia, Genoa, Italy, graduate student in mathematics, juggle outside of Wescoe Hall. The two students took a break Thursday before going to class. Juggling fun and class By Amy Potter By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Elementary science forms future careers Science experiences in elementary school can make or break a student's attitude toward the field. As students continue through school their opinions about the subject may turn negative. "It's terribly important that students have a positive experience in elementary school before they are turned off," said Doug Huffman, assistant professor in teaching and leadership. According to Jim Ellis, associate professor of teaching and leadership, students going into education face some startling statistics. The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study was conducted in 42 countries in grades four, eight and 12 in 1995. U.S. fourth graders ranked about average. Kelley Weiss/Kansan Eighth-grade students are in the bottom third, and high school students are at the bottom in the global ranking. "U.S. students don't start behind," Ellis said. "They fall behind." "Iinquiry-based students have an opportunity to experience the natural world first." Ellis said Ellis instructs a class that prepares students to teach middle and secondary school science. He teaches future students to use an inquiry approach to learning. For example, a student studying photosynthesis would first have the opportunity to examine the plants, collect data and then analyze it. After all that is done the student would be introduced to the science vocabulary and science concepts. Huffman instructs a class called Teaching Science in the Elementary School. Less emphasis is placed in lab experiments. "The field is really moving more toward hands-on science, trying to engage kids in inquiry," Huffman said. "The students become more problem solvers faced with interesting tasks." Huffman's students also gain field experience in a classroom using the various teaching concepts learned in class. "It makes the things I'm modeling very real," Huffman said. "They get the chance to try it out with real kids." Erin Beck, Security, Colo., senior, will be qualified to teach physics and earth science either in middle school or high school when she graduates. She plans on using models and experiments in her classroom to help the children visualize what she is teaching. Beck recently taught a biology lesson in a Lawrence classroom. "They were pretty open and receptive to it." Beck said. "And they came up with some great ideas." Elementary school teachers face the difficulty of teaching everysubject. Nationally, elementary school teachers spend two or three hours a week teaching science, Huffman said. There are some teachers who don't even bother with the subject. "One of the goals it to get consistency across the board so that all teachers are teaching science every year for all kids," Huffman said. Beck has prepared herself for students who might have a negative attitude toward science. "I think my attitude will have a lot to do with it," Beck said. "If I'm excited about it and I enjoy science then I can help them share in that and experience it for themselves." — Edited by Julie Jantzer St. Louis Cemetery Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence A YOU HAVE A TON OF BOOKS AND TEN MINUTES TO MAKE IT ACROSS CAMPUS. College life definitely has its challenges. The last thing you want to worry about is banking. Tasks for you, you don't have to. Because with free checking and JM locations on the way to wherever you're going, Commerce has made that decision easy. Open an account today and turn your ID card into an JM debit card that can be used all over campus and all over town. In fact, about the only thing it can I buy you is a faster route to your next class. NOW YOU CAN USE YOUR KU CARD AT ANY MERCHANT THAT DISPLAYS THE STAR LOGO — INCLUDING STORES SUCH AS DILLON'S, KMART AND WAL-MART. Call: click, or come by • 864-5816 • www.commercebank.com COLLEGE IS TOUGH. COMMERCE IS EASY. 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Apartments & Town Homes 4A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION AYAQCOM MONDAY,APRIL 14,2003 TALK TOUS 884-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepfert.kansan.com and jhening@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kanan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Ketting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsale.com/kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 884-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com LYDA'S VIEW WHAT'S NEXT FOR AL BOHL? WELL, I'VE ALWAYS WANTED TO BE A.D. AT NORTH CAROLINA. MARK LYDA 2013 Mark Lyda for The Universe EDITORIAL BOARD Bohl firing puts coach's authority in question Roy Williams is one of the most, if not the most, respected and idolized men at the University of Kansas. He does his job as well as anyone in his position in college basketball. Now that the head coaching position at North Carolina is vacant again, people have speculated that Williams might leave Kansas for a place referred to as "Blue Heaven," the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In a report in The Kansas City Star, a source said that Roy Williams would probably stay at the University of Kansas if Athletics Director Al Bohl were fired. Result: Al Bohl was canned two days later. Chancellor Robert Hemenway said Al Bohl was fired because "a change of leadership was needed," based on his own evaluations and discussions with Bohl in recent months. Chancellor Hemenway had to make a decision, and what an easy decision it was: Risk losing the man who, for a dozen years, led the University's good name to national recognition, or fire the man who was hired two years ago to make the football team less crrappy. Jon Reiston for the editorial board But that begs the question: Should Roy Williams have that much power over someone who was essentially his boss? Just a handful of coaches across the country have that much power and respect at their universities, including Kansas' national championship rival, Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim. It was a no-brainer. Bohl can whine all he wants about how Williams "chose to crush" him, but it was never Williams' choice to make. It was Chancellor Hemenway's who has a lot of respect and appreciation for what coach Williams has done for the city of Lawrence and the University of Kansas. To lose him would be a major blow not only to the basketball program, but to the University's image as well. It would be hard to associate Williams with another school after his 10 plus years here, his only tenure as a head coach. Hemenway did what he thought was right, and because of it, one of the elite basketball programs in the country will have a better chance to keep one of the elite head coaches in the country and treat him like a god. PERSPECTIVE March challenges female standard by giving women power of voice The first time I attended the Womyn Take Back the Night march, I was a junior in high school. It was there where I first heard women talking about their experiences as survivors of sexual and domestic violence. I listened to one woman speak through tears about being sexually abused by her father. When she paused to cry onto a friend's shoulder, women in the circle began to shout, "You can do it!" and "We are here for you!" Another woman, who was almost beaten to death by her boyfriend, proclaimed, "I am not a victim! I am a survivor!" c I had no idea this sort of thing was allowed. As a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, I received a million subtle messages never to talk about it. Yet in that circle, women were allowed to speak the truth about their lives. When I came to the University of Kansas and started helping with the march, I began to recognize vast misconceptions that I never would have imagined that first night in high school. People who had never attended the event talked about the march as "man-hating" or "exclusionary" in part because men and women have different speak-out circles, and until this year, men did not march down Massachusetts Street. Yet what seems to anger people the most is that women are challenging the status quo of being a female. GUEST COMMENTARY Lea Burgess-Carland opinion@kansan.com Women in this society know the rules: Do not go out alone at night. Do not bring shame to your family by talking about being abused. Be quiet, polite, and by God, do not take up too much space. The Womyn Take Back the Night march challenges all of those understood rules in one big swoop, and to top it off, it is without apology. Every year I am reminded of why the march is important, not only because of the healing that takes place as a participant, but also because the reactions of observers remind me of the deep-rooted problems we challenge. During the speak-out circle, men have driven by and yelled, "You deserved it!" and other frightening sentiments. While marching down Massachusetts Street, we have been heckled by men to "Go back to the kitchen where you belong!" This reminds me that no matter how much lip service we give about women deserving equality, some people are still greatly offended by that very idea. Women speaking out about abuse are still told to shut up or that its their fault, Women chanting, "Yes means yes and no means no," are somehow so threatening to the patriarchal social order that it is cause for women to be verbally assaulted. The Womyn Take Back the Night march is important because it combats the very idea that women should accept, or expect, to be verbally, sexually or physically assaulted in our homes on or the street. It is important because it allows women's voices to be heard and not censored from telling the truth about our lives and experiences. It is important because it is the only time the whole community can come together and demand that women be treated as equal human beings deserving of a legitimate voice, respect and safety. Burgess-Carland is a Lawrence senior in women's studies. WOMYN TAKE BACK THE NIGHT MARCH When: Friday, April 18 Where: Watson Park Who: Anyone & everyone For more information, contact the Women's Empowerment Action Coalition at ku_weac@hotmail.com PERSPECTIVE Men must learn about sexual assault According to an estimate from 2001 Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network data, somewhere in the United States a woman survives the traumatic experience of forced rape about every 5 or 6 minutes. Somewhere else in the United States a woman is beaten and battered, usually by her intimate partner, every 15 seconds according to the 2000 U.N. Study on the Status of Women. Whether you realize it or not, it is almost impossible for you not to know among your friends and loved ones a woman who has experienced physical abuse, sexual assault or rape. GUEST COMMENTARY physical abuse, such as While it is important to remember that rape and violence can be perpetrated by anyone, it is nevertheless the case that the vast majority of those who do so are men. On the other hand, the majority of those actively working to change these discouraging statistics are women. It would seem that men have difficulty thinking of this as their problem, which I've come to learn is really another way of saying we don't think it's a problem at all Luke Middleton opinion@kansan.com I sometimes wonder if, like many things, we feel we've done our part simply by being men. That we've somehow taken comfort in the notion our strength can protect those women close to us. It may sound old-fashioned, but those ideas die hard — I'd challenge men to consider it a possibility. Consider also that we're obvious failures at protection if we believe the incontrovertible rape statistics. Beyond that, I think the whole line of thought reflects a tragic misunderstanding. Rape is an act of consummate weakness and lack of self-control, and the women who survive it are the powerful ones. Women don't need us to protect them, because we're the ones abusing them — more often than not, women are raped by their husbands, fathers, boyfriends and acquaintances. It's us, the "good guys," who are doing this. For sexual violence to end, men will have to acknowledge this and shoulder their share of the responsibility. We need to proactively educate ourselves about how sexual violence really occurs and be brave enough when the time comes (because it will) to face the way we've personally contributed to its perpetuation. This means more than telling ourselves we aren't rapists. I've never raped, but as long as I held to that as my blanket alibi I couldn't face the fact I was nevertheless sexually abusive. As hard as it was to accept that, it didn't compare to the suffering I inflicted on those I loved as long as I denied it. One out of every three or four women you know is going to be sexually abused in her life, either by you or by someone else. If you do nothing to stop it, what does that say about you? Recognize that sexual violence scars more than just those who experience it. As long as men continue to rape, we lose the trust of the women we love, we lose respect, we lose intimacy, we lose our right to be loved in return — all the best of life we forfeit. I know it may be difficult to appreciate these losses until it happens to someone you know and care for, but in all likelihood, it already has. It's not a matter of whether, but a matter of when you choose to make yourself aware of it. This semester, the University of Kansas' Men Can Stop Rape student group is promoting the White Ribbon Campaign. The white ribbon stands for a pledge never to use, condone or remain silent about violence against women. The campaign is for all students, but especially for those men who have begun to face what women have known all along. If you'd like to sign the pledge posters, visit the Men Can Stop Rape table on Wescoe Beach from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on April 11, 15 and 17. To learn more about what you can do to end sexual violence, e-mail MenCanStopRape@yahoo.com. Middleton is a Lawrence graduate student in English. Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com --someone left their Ralph Lauren glasses at the Wescoe polling site on Wednesday, and they can be picked up in the dean of students' office,133 Strong Hall. The great thing about voting is that you get one of those little "I voted" stickers, which is like a free pass to get all the way across Wescoe without getting harrassed. Thank God. 图 rms is to the guy who left his bank card sitting at the Burge Union ATM. If you want to see it again, you need to bring a bag of jellybeans to the corner of Engel and 15th. Or you can go to the lost and found at the Burge. - Man, I wish some foreign country would come invade us to overthrow our evil dictator of a ruler. - Dear Fallon, Drew and all of the Delta Force candidates for Senate. We thank you for running an ethical and principled campaign this semester. It's a good thing I don't carry chalk with me on a regular basis, because every time I see "KUnited needs your vote" on a sidewalk, I want to cross out "vote" and put "parents' money" or "high-school mentality." 图 To the guy whose apartment I was at last night, if you have my crutches, could you contact Scott and tell him to call Kim? 图 Looks like next year, Delta Force better invest in a party bus. But wait, that would be over budget. Yeah, the giant pole in the middle of the Hawk's Nest really interrupts the flow of chi. I can see it bouncing around me right now. It's terrible Feng Shui. 图 Hey KUnited — next year, game over. Fallon, would you marry me? I'd bake you cookies every day, sing you lullabies at night and I'd just treat you right. I promise. What do you do when your supposedly heterosexual male friend is looking up gay porn on the Internet? 国 图 Screw the Kansan reporters. How could a girl know that there were four guys outside of her door when she didn't even answer it? If you haven't sat in a pie, I recommend you try it sometime. - Being a deskie and living at Oliver Hall is very much like what they said in Aladdin: "Phenomenal, cosmic powers ... itty bitty living space!" 图 Attention, gentlemen. It has come to my attention that scientists have done a study and found that castration actually helps you live longer. So the question is, if you were on your deathbed, would you? - Hey Al Bohl, do you want some French cries with that? - So I'm listening to "KU Jazz in the Morning," and not once have I heard them play anything that even remotely resembles jazz, so I think somebody needs to tell the DJs what's up. - Attention guys, we know that it's warm outside, but we're not in seventh grade, so please, please leave your jean shorts behind. --- KUnited, as your first order of business, why don't you clean up all 50,000 of your chalkings all over campus? ✓ ( ) --- V V MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Film about sex class to play tonight By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer After coming under fire in recent weeks, Dennis Dailey's human sexuality class will be the topic of a documentary about sexual misedecation tonight. The film, Sex Miseducation: Problems with Sexuality Education in Our Society, will be shown on Out of Focus, a local film and video showcase at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. : "The movie focuses a bit on problems that parents have talking to their children about sex growing up," said Erin Widmer, Topeka senior and the document- Widmer said she would also like to see people open up more and talk about sexuality after seeing the film. tary's director. "If a few more people see it and understand what Dr. Dailey is doing, then I think that's cool." "It's amazing how uptight people are about talking about sexuality," she said. "It's important to talk about it." Chris Martin, Prairie Village senior and film showcase director, approached Widmer about showing the film after Dailey's class came under fire earlier this month. Martin is also the director of a television show called Out of Focus. "I originally wanted to show it on my television show but it gets somewhat explicit," Martin said. "When I saw that Dennis Dailey was coming under fire, I thought the timing was right to show it in the film showcase." The documentary looks at three classes taught at the University of Kansas and how sexuality is portrayed in each of those. Widmer said. "The film goes into classes that are being taught at a college level and how they are trying to fix the problems with the miseducation that people received at a younger age," she said. The documentary was an independent study project for a thea. ter and film class. Widner filmed it last fall when she was enrolled in Dailey's class. She said that she thought the film's showing may help the public to understand more about what is going on in Dailey's class. "I think the class is so important," she said. "The things I saw in the class were always validated in a way for an educational purpose." as seven. The show starts at 7 p.m. at Liberty Hall. Admission is $3. Ten local films and videos are slated to be showcased tomorrow night, Martin said. The selection includes an animated film as well as several with a war theme. Edited by Amber Byarlay Senator sounds off against obscenity By J.J Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer For a state senator from Wichita, Susan Wagle has become pretty famous in Lawrence. The third-year senator's fame has come from her proposed budget amendment that would eliminate funding for classes that purchase obscene materials, as judged by Kansas statutes. If passed, the bill could eliminate as much as $3.1 million in funding for the School of Social Welfare, the school in charge of Dennis Dailey's "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life" class. The bill would not affect funding for human sexuality classes at the state's five other Board of Regents schools because those classes don't use obscene material. Wagle said. Wagle's daughter, Julia Wagle, is a junior in Spanish and biology at Kansas State University. Though she has never taken the human sexuality class offered there, Julia Wagle thinks the curriculum differs from that of Dailey's class. "I'm not required to take it, but from what I do know is that it doesn't show actual sex like the class at KU," Julia Wagle said. "They talk about controversial things like birth control and homosexuality, but they don't actually show video of it." Susan Wagle has not seen any of the material she opposes. But what she hears disturbs her, she said in an interview Friday afternoon. "I heard from several students who've taken the class in the past and some who are currently taking it, and they shared concerns for sexual harassment in that class," she said. Susan Wagle said although she had not seen the films or slides, she had verified with "quite a few" current and former students that the materials met this definition of obscenity, Wagle estimated that she'dspoken with several hundred students, both for and against her amendment. "I know a lot of KU grads, and a lot of them have taken that class," Wagle said. Susan Wagle's concerns with the class don't stop at sexual harassment. "In a time when we're in a downturn with the economy, we don't need to support obscenity with tax dollars," she said. She said opinions on the amendment correlated with the ages of the opinion holders. According to Kansas statutes, material is obscene if "the average person applying contemporary community standards would find that the material or performance had patently offensive representations or descriptions of (i) ultimate sexual acts, normal or perverted, actual or simulated, including sexual intercourse or sodomy, or (ii) masturbation, excretory functions, sadomasochistic abuse or lewd exhibition of the genitals." "People hold very diverse views," she said. "Students feel differently than the older taxpayers." Wagle also said she spoke with doctors and other medical professionals who had seen no such videos in medical school and failed to see their educational value. The University can continue the class if it wants, but it should seek private funding. Wagle said. "Professors don't use vulgarity in class or have homework assignments where you're supposed to take a mirror and look at your genitals," Wagle said. Gov. Sebellus has until April 22 to decide whether to veto the senator's budget amendment. Kansan staff writer Lauren Bristow contributed to this story. This story was edited by Lindsay Hanson Kansas resident faces SARS fears The Associated Press WICHITA — Health officials have said the threat of the contagious respiratory illness being blamed for 116 deaths and 2,700 illnesses worldwide is being blow way out of proportion. And one Kansas man is finding out how much. Mark VanCamp of Wichita has had to find a new daycare provider for his children, been singled out at a restaurant and had an anonymous message left on his answering machine And it's all because of a respiratory illness that he may or may not have had. So far, fewer than 200 Americans are suspected of having SARS. All are people who were infected while in Asia or are family members or others who spent a lot of time with them. At this point, health officials say, there's no reason to buy a respiratory mask or to take other precautions beyond avoiding travel to China and Hong Kong, as the government already has advised. His condition worsened after he got back to Wichita, and he was hospitalized for about a week. Because of his symptoms and his travel, SARS was suspected. VanCamp became ill while he was in China with his family in late February and early March to adopt a child. He's fine now, and his doctors think his pneumonia was from bronchitis, not SARS. Preliminary tests were negative, and subsequent tests continue to show no SARS antibodies in his blood. But a number of people around him, he said, seem to have picked up a case of SARS hysteria. A week ago, at an out-of-town restaurant, the wife of a friend demanded to be moved to a table away from him after finding out VanCamp was the Kansan with the suspected SARS. Thursday, his daughters' daycare provider said she could no longer care for the girls because other children's parents were threatening to boycott her. An anonymous man left a message with racist overtones on VanCamp's answering machine, accusing him of bringing the disease back from China. His son's school called his ex-wife, concerned that the boy could be a carrier. VanCamp said he went to work at Tweco Products for a week before being hospitalized. However, no one else at the company has gotten sick. Yet, his employer doesn't want him back at work until he has a release from his infectious disease specialist as well as his family physician. VanCamp expects to be at work today; his doctor is out of town until then. Outdoor gear store now top tourist attraction in Kansas The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Kan. Tourists in Kansas seem to prefer a huge outdoor gear store to a casino. Cabela's, which was open for just the last five months of 2002, was the No.1 tourist attraction in Kansas last year, surpassing Harrah's Prairie Band Casino in Mayetta, which held the top spot for the previous three years, according to Kansas Department of Commerce and Housing. Cabela's reported 2.4 million visitors, compared to the 1.4 million that Harrah's reported to the KDCOH. Cathy Byers, communications manager for Harrah's Prairie Band Casino, said she wasn't surprised by the numbers. Cabela's had predicted at its August 2002 opening that the Kansas City location would attract 4 million people each year. "They have a much bigger population base to draw from." Byers said, noting Cabela's location off Interstates 70 and 435, near the Kansas City metropolitan area. "Cabela's is attracting all age groups, whereas we are only attracting those age 21 and older." Kim Qualls, tourism marketing manager for the KDOCH's travel and tourism division, said that to be classified as an attraction, destinations must have something a visitor or traveler could experience, see or do. In addition to its sales of hunting, fishing and outdoor gear. Cabela's includes a 12,000-square-foot mule deer museum, 55,000-gallon aquarium, a number of taxidermy displays and a food court. Qualls said locations measured and reported their own attendance figures using admission fees, guest books, sales receipts, observation or a combination of those methods. Ron Soucie, Cabela's general manager, said the store used sales transactions and an electronic system that counted people as they entered the doors. Byers said safety officers at Harrah's doors counted everyone who enters. The Kansas Speedway ranked No. 3 on the list, and the Sedgwick County Zoo came in fourth. The Woodlands Racetrack was No. 5. the only address you need to know. 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Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. 2003 RESTAURANTS Best Mexican:___ Best Chinese:___ Best Breakfast:___ Best Burgers:___ Best Subs:___ Best Italian:___ Best Steakhouse:___ Best Vegetarian:___ Best Pizza:___ Best French Fries:___ Best Wings:___ Best Buffet:___ Best Ice Cream:___ Best Custard:___ Best Coffee House:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Delivery Service:___ Best Bakery___ Best Post-Party Food Restaurant:___ Best Customer Service___ Best KC Restaurant___ Best Local Restaurant:___ Best Overall:___ BARS Best Sports Bar:___ Best Drink Specials:___ Best Martinis:___ Best Margaritas:___ Best Wells:___ Best Selection of Beers:___ Best Dance Club:___ Best Place to Play Pool:___ DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25, 2003 BARS, continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTY SERVICES Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash: Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING BestApartment Complex Best Townhomes: ___ Best Landlord: ___ Best Neighborhood to live in: ___ SCHOOL Best Place to study: Best Bookstore: Best Residence Hall: Best Scholarship Hall: Best Building on Campus: Best Fraternity: Best Sorority: Best Student Organization: THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A U.S.-led coalition captures top Iraqi officials The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Several top officials of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, including the president's half brother and a former science adviser, have been captured by allied forces. The Iraqis are being interrogated about Iraq's suspected chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs, U.S. officials said yesterday. They also are being pressed for details on where Saddam is, if he is alive, as well as the whereabouts of other former Iraqi leaders. The captured Iraqis include Watban Ibrahim Hasan, one of Saddam's three half brothers, who once served as Iraq's interior minister. Hasan was the five of spades in the deck of playing cards the U.S. military issued with pictures of wanted Iraqi officials. The war's commander, Gen. Tommy Franks, said yesterday that the United States was holding several high-ranking Iraqi prisoners in western Iraq. Neither he nor Pentagon officials would say how many leading Iraqis have been captured. As the fighting in Iraq winds down, American forces are stepping up the search for the chemical and biological weapons the United States accuses Saddam's government of having stashed away. So far, no caches of weapons of mass destruction have been confirmed in Iraq, military officials said yesterday. U. S. forces have a list of 2,000 to 3,000 sites in Iraq that need to be checked, and weapons teams are checking up to 20 sites a day, Franks said. Iraqis ranging from common people to high-ranking officials have suggested other possible hiding places to be searched. Franks and other military officials said. "There are so many sites, we are not able to get to all of them right away," a senior Pentagon official said Sunday, speaking on condition of anonymity. "It's fair to say there are a lot of places U.S. forces are adding to the list." One former Iraqi official who could provide major help for the hunt is Lt. Gen. Amer al-Saadi, who surrendered to American forces on Saturday. Al-Saadi, the seven of diamonds in the U.S. deck of cards, was Saddam's point man on weapons of mass destruction. Pentagon officials said yesterday they did not know if al-Saadi was sticking to his prewar assertions that Iraq no longer had any chemical or biological weapons. Shortly before leaving his Baghdad villa Saturday with his German wife, Helga, and surrendering to an American warrant officer, al-Saadi insisted Iraq has no such weapons. Also unclear was how helpful Hasan, Saddam's captured half brother, could be. Hasan was dismissed as interior minister, the official in charge of Iraq's domestic security, and was shot by Saddam's son Odi in 1995 amid one of the many squabbles within Saddam's family. Saddam did not trust Hasan and was having him watched, a U.S. official said yesterday. He was captured near Mosul in northern Iraq, apparently as he tried to escape to Syria, the official said. Another half brother, Barzan Ibrahim Hasan, was targeted by a coalition airstrike Friday on a building in central Iraq. Military officials said Sunday they had not confirmed Barzan Hasan's fate. Other top Iraqi officials have escaped to Syria, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said. Some have moved on to third countries, he said. "We certainly are hopeful Syria will not become a haven for war "There are so many sites, we are not able to get to all of them right away." Senior Pentagon official criminals or terrorists," Rumsfeld said. President Bush also issued a vague warning Sunday to Syrian President Bashar Assad, saying the Syrians should avoid harboring "any people who need to be held to account." Syria's government and Saddam's regime both belonged to the Arab Baath Socialist Party until a bitter split in 1960. In recent years the two factions seemed to have worked out some of their differences. A Syrian diplomat who followed Rumsfeld on NBC's "Meet the Press," Imad Moustapha, denied that Syria was giving Iraqis refuge. Casino CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Minimum bets increased on each floor. In the Penthouse, or seventh floor, the minimum bet was $50 of fake money in chips, and there were bouncers in place to ensure the gamblers had at least that much money. The floor even turned its study room into a back room for private, high stakes games. Prizes such as stereos, DVD and CD players were raffled off throughout the night. Students could purchase additional chances for $200 worth of chips. Some students left because they ran out of chips. The only way to earn more chips was to bring more canned goods. Many students were going in and out of Templin after rounding up or purchasing food for charities. "It's like life — you can either go to the ATM or you're done," said J.D. Boyle, Shaker Heights, Ohio, senior. Family, church thankful for Wichita soldier's rescue —Edited by Anne Mantey The Associated Press WICHITA — The congregation at Olivet Southern Baptist Church erupted into applause after Pastor Ron Pracht announced during Palm yesterday services that Army Pfc. Patrick Miller had been found alive. "For the good news about Patrick ... let there be great rejoicing," Pracht told parishioners. Pracht said Miller's wife, Jessa, received a call from the military early yesterday confirming that her husband was among seven POWs recovered by Marines south of Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit. Pacing the halls outside the church sanctuary was Cheryl Phipps, a cousin of Jessa's. "He is healthy. He is strong. He is fine. Praise the Lord," Phipps said. "I'm just kind of numb." Phipps was still wearing a yellow ribbon, pinned by an American flag, on her lapel — something Miller family members plan to wear until all U.S. soldiers come home, she said. "I'm praying some good will come out of this," she said. Miller's mother, Mary Pickering, said she was elated at the images of her son she saw on television. "I saw him transferring from the helicopter to the ambulance," Pickering said from her home in Farmington, N.M. "This time I wasn't mad at the TV." Miller's half-brother, Thomas Hershberger of Derby, said their mother had spent the day crying "tears of joy." "I don't think they can get him home soon enough," he said. Pracht married Patrick and Jessa Miller shortly before Miller's deployment and has been acting as a spokesman for the family since Miller was captured. Jessa Miller has declined all interviews and is not yet ready to make a statement, Pracht said. Pracht said Jessa Miller is now Jessa Miller and the couple's two young children moved from Texas, where Patrick Miller was based at Fort Bliss, to Park City to be closer to family after he was sent overseas in December. focused on when she can see her husband. Patrick Miller, 23, was captured March 23 when his 507th Maintenance Company was ambushed near Nasiriyah. Unexpectedly released by Iraqi troops, the seven U.S. POWs were declared in good shape after their 22 days of imprisonment. In Valley Center — the small, south-central town of 5,000 people north of Wichita where Miller grew up — the news of his safe return spread quickly. Miller graduated from Valley Center High School in 1998. At a Valley Center convenience store, clerk Rita Kerr told customers coming in early Sunday that Miller was safe. "I'm just thrilled. That's just fabulous. I couldn't be happier," she said. The seven were taken by helicopter to a base near Kut and flown to a military airport south of Kuwait City. They "are in good shape," although two have gunshot wounds, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said. After his capture, video footage on Iraqi TV showed Miller answering questions in a shaky voice, his eyes darting back and forth between an interviewer and another person who couldn't be seen on camera. Miller was with a convoy of the 507th Maintenance Company that was ambushed and was among five POWs later shown on Iraqi television. Pfc. Jessica Lynch, who was rescued from an Iraqi hospital earlier this month and returned to the United States on Saturday, was in the same convoy. Several others who had been with them were killed. Miller's brother, Shane Parker, said from his home in Valley Center, that he had been avoiding television since his brother was captured and that he was looking forward to seeing him in person. "It really upsets me to see Pat on TV. I didn't want to upset myself more than I already was." Parker told CNN. "I just want to see him now. I can't quit crying." 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KANS Chalmers may get his chance Spring Bre everybody's doing it London...$314 Paris...$441 Amsterdam...$495 Rio de Janeiro...$611 Eurail Passes from...$249 Budget Hotels from...$18 Here is round trip from Kansas City. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. Kansas Union, Room 475 (785) 864.1271 pick up your complimentary, premiere issue of BREAK magazine at your local STA Travel branch. Kansas Union, Room 475 (785)864.1271 Tainted Legacy: 9/11 & the Ruin of Human Rights ISIC www.statravel.com STUDENT TRAVEL change your world Executive Director, William F. Schulz Q&A to Follow Dr. Schulz' Address Tuesday, April 15,2003 7:30 p.m. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL USA 1 University of Kansas · Student Union Ballroom ONLINE >> ON THE PHONE >> ON CAMPU/ >> ON THE STREET STATRAVEL Sponsored by: Area Unitarian Universalist Congregations www.uua.org Hosted by Unitarian Fellowship of Lawrence www.uufl.net KU Student Chapter of Amnesty International www.amnestyusa.org europe USA MASS. STREET DELL 941 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 AM - 9 PM SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY 11 AM - 9 PM THURSDAY - SATURDAY All 1/3 lb. charbroiled burger platters only $3.95 values to $6.00 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening values to $6.00 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening 8A THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 Petty theft CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Schuyler Lister, owner of Creation Station, 726 Massachusetts St., said he started his business 13 years ago out of "poverty." Now he's insulted by selfish shifplifters robbing his profits, he said. "We've caught people stealing who had $100 in their wallet, and it was a $4 item," Lister said. "Anyone who's ever been stolen from knows — that's just weak." Kristi Kouloukis, co-owner of The Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St., said people often had the misconception that all business owners were wealthy. "We're actually some of the poorest people you'll meet," she said. Maybe that's why Kouloukis and her employees are crushed when shoplifters target her store. Kouloukis estimated her store lost about $300 a year to shoplifting. Although a $200 loss wouldn't force The Casbah out of business, she said, it was still a blow. "We are a smaller store, and we have an investment in it," she said. "This is our lifeblood." Customers loved the miniature incense pouches that The Third Planet once sold, Jess said. Unfortunately, the pouches were also popular with shoplifters. The cost to customers "If we have a product that gets shoplifted a lot," Jess said, "we'll just stop carrying it rather than have it keep getting stolen." Another problem stores face is recouping from stolen profits. Jess said this often meant having to tack on a little extra — the shrink — to compensate. "They're stealing not only from Watch KUJH TV news tonight for more on petty theft. us but from everyone who shops here because then we have to raise prices," she said. REC Dile Coke £1.99 Coca-Cola 05:20:03 11:37P Jess said the shrink was not a fixed amount, but it's a factor she kept in mind when setting prices. As store traffic increases, it becomes more difficult for business owners to keep their eyes on customers. City Prosecutor Jerry Little said employees could deter shoplifting by mingling with customers. "When you have two or three employees on the floor, people are less likely to steal because they are afraid they'll get caught," Little said. Kouloukis agreed that shoplifting had to be a consideration when determining prices. "You hate to think the worst of people," she said, "but people do steal." Repeated shoplifting could cause a business to fold, Jess said. "If a shoplifter's favorite store can't keep up with the overhead," she said, "then that store isn't going to be there anymore." The cost to shoplifters Lister said Lawrence businesses were a part of the community's creativity. "When people steal from local businesses," Lister said, "they're stealing from their own essence." When businesses report theft, the police department isn't likely to be lenient with shoplifters, Pattrick said. Officers work to protect local businesses, he said. "Theft is theft," he said. "We don't like anyone to become a victim of anything." City Prosecutor Jerry Little said anyone charged with shoplifting less than $500 must appear in municipal court. If convicted, the maximum penalty could be up to $500 and a year in prison. "There's no difference in the eyes of the law if you stole a piece of gum or stereo equipment," Little said. "But that's a factor we look at." Little said he had seen citations for items as small as makeup and candy bars. BAYTOWN 1985 Being aware of customers can help prevent shoplifting. Michael Graham, cashier at the Hawk Shop, watches over the store as footage from the Hawk Shop's security cameras plays on the television behind him. In court, the accused shoplifter must decide whether to go to trial, plead guilty or apply for a one-time diversion — avoiding criminal charges in exchange for participating in an educational program. Little said to be eligible for a diversion, the individual must have no previous record and no aggravating factors, such as assault, involved with the theft. Pleading guilty means the individual waives the right to a trial in exchange for some leniency, such as a lesser fine and probation. Shoplifters should consider what could happen if they are caught, Rich said. "Even as a first-time offender," he said, "you could have a criminal record that will follow you the rest of your life." Getting caught is always a concern for shoilifters, said Cale Spare, Parsons sophomore. "Until you're at home with the stuff, you can't be completely calm." Spare said. Several of Spare's friends shop-lift, he said. Only one has been caught — and he got off easy. One friend recently slipped some items into his pockets at a grocery store. A security guard approached him and asked him to remove one item—a package of cheese—that he had seen him take. "All they did was make him pay for it," Spare said, "and they told him never to come back." Spare said his friend's lenient punishment made him realize how easy it was to get away with the crime. Paying attention to customers is a store owner's first line of defense, Jess said, although recently The Third Planet has turned to surveillance methods. "When people steal from local businesses they're stealing from their own essence." Owner of the Creation Station Schuyler Lister She installed a security camera upstairs to keep an eye on the pricier items, as well as a light- Minimizing shoplifting costs activated sensor by the staircase so employees know when someone goes upstairs. She also hung signs that said, "Big Brother may not be watching — but we are." Doug Dobbins, manager at Jock's Nitch Sporting Goods, 837 Massachusetts St., said his store used cameras to keep an eye on the store. Shoplifters are easy to spot, he said, because they usually stand in the back of the store and look to see whether someone is watching. "You can't stop it," he said, "but you can keep it to a minimum." Great customer service is the number one deterrent for shop-lifters, Kouloukis said. At The Casbah, employees greet customers and make them aware of their presence. Someone is always helping customers. Kouloukls said, and that kindness has paid off. "We've had letters sent to us with money saying, 'I'm sorry I stole from you,'" Kouloukis said. "I think it's because they realize how nice we are." Most of the time, she said, she can detect a shoplifter in the act. One time a woman slid a pair of overalls into her bag. Kouloukis said, and she spotted them. At first she didn't want to take action because the woman technically wouldn't be shoplifting until she left the store. Kouloukis said she made an offhand comment to the woman about the overalls, and the woman discreetly removed them from her bag. "She came back over and asked, 'Do you think these would look good on my daughter?' Kouloukis said. "But she didn't buy them." Business owners often wait until the customer leaves the store to ensure a strong case against the shoplifter, Little said. "At that point they've given the individual every opportunity in the world to pay for that item," he said. After the shoplifter leaves the store, business owners are permitted by Kansas law to use "reasonable force" to bring the individual back inside. This might be difficult for small businesses that have no security. Little said. "Do you really want to tackle people?" Little said. "Without training I wouldn't recommend anyone do that." Jess said she would go to whatever means necessary to keep her store theft-free —she's even chased people down the street before. In the end, Jess said she applied her store philosophy toward her view on the shoplifting problem. "We're all about peace, love and happiness," she said. "So shoplifting is completely against what we stand for." - Contact Roche at nroche@kansan.com. This story was edited by Julie Jantzer JAYHAW MORNING TO COOKIE College Students & Teachers: LOOKING FOR THAT PERFECT SUMMER JOB? With a little help from Quintiles, you can maximize your income AND- your summer fun! 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PRINT IT READ SPORTS We Buy, Sell & Trade USED 841-PLAY & NEW Sports Equipment 1029 Massachusetts SUNSHINE Catch Spring Fever! Catch Spring Fever! Fitness Special Save $100 annual membership $25/month Tanning Special 3-Month Tanning unlimited usage $70.00 *Can Freeze Over Summer exp. 4/15 *Non-members welcome! exp. 4/15 --- BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa ▼ 749-2424 MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A Prime minister names new Palestinian cabinet The Associated Press JERUSALEM—The incoming Palestinian prime minister completed a new Cabinet yesterday in line with a leadership overhaul the United States sought, keeping the key post of security czar for himself and appointing several professionals and reformers. Once the Cabinet of Mahmoud Abbas is approved by the Palestinian parliament, possibly later this week, President Bush is expected to unveil a "road map" to Palestinian statehood, starting the clock ticking on the three-year plan. Israel's willingness to go along with the plan remains unclear. although Prime Minister Ariel Sharon did stake out a relatively moderate position in an interview published yesterday. Sharon's top aide, Dov Weisglass, is presenting Israel's concerns about the three-stage "road map" to U.S. officials in Washington this week. The main issue appears to be Israel's demand that the obligations of each stage should be fulfilled before the sides move on to the next one. Abbas was to have presented his Cabinet list later yesterday to the ruling party, Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement, whose backing he needs. However, the meeting was called off at short notice. The Cabinet list was provided to The Associated Press by three senior Palestinian officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Abbas named several top Fatah officials to his Cabinet to ensure support, but was expected to encounter some resistance because of his refusal to keep Interior Minister Hani al-Hassan, another senior Fatah member. Abbas, who has had personal differences with al-Hassan, kept the interior ministry for himself, meaning he will oversee the security forces and an expected crackdown on Palestinian militants, a prerequisite for moving forward in peace talks with Israel. Abbas also named Mohammed Dahlan, a former Gaza security chief, as state minister for interior affairs, suggesting Dahlan will play a key role in security matters. Both men have criticized attacks on Israelis and enjoy the support of the international community. Dahlan, pegged as a possible Arafat successor, has said he is confident he can restore order in the Palestinian areas. Only two ministers from the outgoing Cabinet, Finance Minister Salam Fayad and Education Minister Naim Abul Hummus, remained in the same posts, according to the list. Fayad, a former senior International Monetary Fund official, is widely seen as having done a credible job of putting the murky Palestinian money transactions, including some of Arafat's reputed slush funds, in order. Abbas also created the new posts of external affairs and deputy prime minister. Nabil Shaath, the outgoing planning minister, was given the external affairs portfolio. Shaath has extensive contacts with foreign leaders and for years acted as de facto foreign minister. Interim peace agreements had prevented the Palestinians from formally creating a foreign ministry. Shaath and Nasser Yousef, a former senior security official, will also serve as deputy prime ministers. Iraqi prison once place of torture, now vacant The Associated Press ABU GHRAIB, Iraq — Falah Hassan spent five years behind the walls of Abu Ghraib prison before he was freed in a mass pardon last fall. Yesterday, he strolled around what was once one of the world's most feared prisons, playing guide to a visitor while looking for a power generator to loot. "They tortured me every day in my first six months here. After that, it was a beating here, a beating there," recalled Hassan, who said he got a 15-year jail term in 1998 for stealing a pair of trousers and a shirt off a laundry line. Abu Ghraib, a sprawling compound 12 miles west of Baghdad was considered one of the most potent symbols of Saddam Hussein's regime, a source of tales of horror and despair. It's eerily empty now, stripped clean by footers who hauled off desks, chairs, computers, sewing machines and inmates' belongings. Many cell doors, locked for so long,stand wide open. Critics of Saddam's regime have long told of the disappearances, torture and executions without trial that befell those suspected of plotting against the Iraqi leader or challenging his policies. Much of that allegedly took place in Abu Ghraib. By the standards of the fallen regime, the punishment recalled by Hassan—nails in the back of his hands, beatings with wooden clubs and iron bars—was moderate. Former inmates have told of chemical and biological weapons experiments on prisoners, and the execution of hundreds in the 1990s as part of a campaign by Saddam's son, Qusai, to ease crowding. Qassem As-Samawi, an Iraqi journalist who spent time at Abu Ghraib on espionage charges, told of tiny isolation cells where political detainees were kept for up to a year without seeing a single person. "When we hear prisoners shout Allah Akbar (God is great), we know that someone is being executed," said As-Samawi, who was released in 1991 more than two years into a seven-year sentence and later moved to Canada. One of Abu Ghraib's more storied inmates, physicist Hussein Shahrastani, was jailed in the 1980s when he refused to head an atomic bomb program. He escaped after the 1991 Gulf War and heads a human rights group in London. The prison belongs to the Ministry of Social Affairs but was run by Saddam's feared intelligence department. In 1996, Saddam fired the social affairs minister for telling a local newspaper that Abu Ghraib was overcrowded and new prisons were needed. No one ever knew how many prisoners it held. But relatives and friends said that in the early 1990s, tens of thousands of people would gather outside each week to visit inmates. It's not clear when Abu Ghraib was emptied of its inmates. In October, a blanket pardon by Saddam sent home thousands, including Hassan, but it was never clear whether political detainees benefited from that amnesty. amnesty. Four foreign journalists arrested in Baghdad late last month were held in Abu Ghraib for a week. Yesterday, the only people in Abu Ghraib were Hassan, several of his cousins and a few of his friends. As two American helicopters hovered overhead, they searched for the elusive generator. Newsday's Matt McAllester said he and his colleagues "were aware of the screams of other prisoners, especially at night when they were taken out of their cells." The four slept on concrete floors in 6-by-11-foot cells. Images of Saddam and quotations from his speeches are slathered everywhere in the prison. "Let us build Iraq and may your enemies die of jealousy." reads one. A large mural shows Saddam surrounded by soldiers, farmers, workers and women soldiers in chadors. Only his mother's weekly delivery of food kept him from going hungry, he said. "Look at me now. I don't know what happened to me," said the gaunt 26-year-old laborer, his voice bitter as he described himself before prison — a healthy specimen who worked out and lifted weights. Hassan said jailers never gave him food while he was at Abu Ghraib. just smoke Hassan wasn't having any luck finding his generator. But some things in the prison remained unlooted. mited weights. "I have no appetite," he said." I just smoke." In the execution ward, two hanging ropes dangled from the ceiling. The metal arms that the executioner yanked to open iron doors under the condemned stood at the ready. CARACAS, Venezuela A pre-dawn bomb blast ripped through the building where Venezuela's government and opposition have been negotiating a peace agreement, destroying three floors but injuring no one. The Associated Press The attack at about 2:45 a.m. Saturday came one day after the Organization of American States brokered a deal between the government and opposition to work toward a referendum on President Hugo Chavez's rule. Bombing threatens summit Federal police chief Carlos Medina said the attack may have been politically motivated. An opposition negotiator said the blast was intended to intimidate his delegation at the talks, while the government blamed "coup-plotting" sectors of the opposition. A night watchman and a technician, the only two people inside the building when the blast hit, were unharmed, said Caracas fire chief Rodolfo Briceno. Medina said the perpetrators may have been the same ones behind bombs that destroyed the Spanish embassy and the Colombian consulate in February. Investigators have suspects in the embassy explosions, Medina said, though he declined to give names. Rafael Alfonzo, an opposition negotiator, said the attack was an attempt to intimidate his delegation at the peace talks. U.S. troops learn to speak Arabic to counter looting, arson The Associated Press Sporadic but tough measures by Marines, along with checkpoints and vigilante groups thrown together by Iraqis, combined yesterday to curb looters who have gutted parts of Baghdad, shut down commerce and pilfered priceless art from millenniums of human history. BAGHDAD, Iraq — Manning roadblocks, Sgt. Steven Christopher found himself picking up Arabic phrases he'd never heard but suddenly needed: "You are a thief. Do you think I am stupid? If you steal, we can shoot you." From Baghdad south to Basra, coalition forces are starting to work with local people to reclaim Iraqi towns from the chaos that followed a war now all but won. Still, fighting was not over in the capital. Late yesterday. Marines outside Baghdad's Palestine Hotel — where many international journalists are staying — engaged in a heavy battle with gunmen who fired on them. Marines were seen taking away at least one man, but firing and the hunt for the gunmen went through the night, with flares in the sky lighting up the area. During the day, smoke from the Ministry of Trade, the Rashid Theater of Fine Arts, offices and Yesterday, Christopher and the other Marine riflemen and tank crews with him worked a checkpoint leading to the Tamooz Bridge over the Tigris River, stopping suspicious vehicles chiefly pickups piled high with apartment buildings was vivid testament that looting and arson continued. Robbery seemed to have eased, probably because the choiceest and easiest booty was gone. "I don't know what I'm going to do with these toilers," Christopher mused, M-16 in hand, as he surveyed the bathroom fixtures and a loudspeaker confiscated from a pickup truck driven by suspected looters. goods. "I came here thinking I wouldn't need any Arabic at all — just 'Put your hands up' and 'Put your weapons down,'" Christopher said. "They've been teaching me how to talk to the thieves. ... Things like, 'You are lying, I'm not stupid,' and 'If you steal, we Chairs, bookcases, refrigerators and toilets seized by the Marines piled high by the side of the road. Confiscated hot-wired cars and trucks sat parked on a side street awaiting owners with proper papers. Local men, desperate to see calm and normalcy return, helped the Marines translate and finger the guilty. In other parts of town, no such policing had kicked in. "We have plans to stop it." Sgt. Spence Williamford said at a median outside the Information Ministry as a looter passed by pushing an office chair stacked with purloined goods. "It's only been a day since we've been taking fire," Williamford answered. "As long as there's chaos, we've got other things to worry about. Right now our first priority is to keep U.S. soldiers alive." In Basra, southern Iraq's largest city, efforts were under way to bring Iraqis into policing Iraiqi police Capt. Abdul Amir Qasim was back in his green uniform and on the streets again for the first time in weeks. Fearful of coalition retaliation, the 32-year police force veteran had stayed away as looters overran Basra. "We wanted to protect the city from the pillaging, but I was afraid," he said. "By the grace of God, I am now ready to go back to work." As part of British plans to restore law and order, traffic police were being recalled yesterday to work alongside British troops in conducting joint patrols. The appointment of a local sheik to head a civilian advisory group also will help matters, Qasim said. $ Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college stu- dents looking for summer employment. 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ONE WEEK ONLY! 646 MASSACHUSETTS 901 IOWA IN THE MERC KU College Republicans present Congressman Jim Ryun Monday, April 14TH @7:30 PM Pine Room, Kansas Union ★★★ THERE'S A BETTER WAY TO VENT ★★★ STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF PUCKMAN SENATE EVERYONE IS WELCOME 20 SECONDS TO SPEAK YOUR MIND 864-0500 free for all THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Holy Week Schedule Monday, 4/14 + Monday, 4/14 Communcal Penance 7:00 p.m. Holy Thursday, 4/17 7:30 p.m. Good Friday, 4/18 7:30 p.m. Easter Vigil Sat., 4/19 9:00 p.m. Easter Sunday, 4/20 8:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m 9:30 a.m 4:30 p.m. 9:30 a.m St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center 1631 Crescent Road Lawrence,KS 785-843-0357 www.st-lawrence.org 1 10A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FEATURE MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 M. C. ROBINSON RESPONSIBILITY ACCOUNTABILITY INTERVENTION LEFT: Andy Burton (left), assistant dean of architecture, drafting, engineering and railroad technology at Johnson County Community College teaches a railroad class with Bill Parks, manager of safety and rules. Along with teaching railroad courses, Burton educates students by using locomotive simulators. RIGHT: Burton helps to teach a class for domestic violence offenders at the Jackson County Courthouse. "The Defendant Education program was initiated four years ago because most social services are for the victim and not the defendant," Burton said. "Society needs to treat the problem, not the victim, to stop the cycle of violence." Vietnam veteran faces disability, lives life of community service 1967 ABOVE: Sergeant Andy Burton poses with his M-14 rifle at Nha Trang firebase South Vietnam in 1969. Burton was stationed in South Vietnam for 26 months from 1968 to 1970. RIGHT: Doctoral candidate Andy Burton talks with graduate Linda Heitzman-Powell about his research project at the Applied Behavior Analysis conference at Dole Center on March 22. Burton's research concerns behavior modification with clients at the Leavenworth Veterans Administration campus. BELLOW: Leavenworth graduate student Andy Burton (left) talks with a client at the Veterans Affairs complex in Leavenworth. Part of Burton's course work involves working with veterans who live in a group home at the complex. Story and Photos by Dan Nelson Before his fellow doctoral classmates were even born, Andy Burton was serving his country in Vietnam. But being a disabled veteran hasn't kept him from pursuing a degree in Developmental and Child psychology at the University of Kansas. Burton graduated from Tavares High School in central Florida in 1967. Soon after graduation, he volunteered for the army and was sent directly to South Vietnam. His clerk/typist job description did not mean he was immune from combat. The firebase where he was stationed near the coast of Vietnam was frequently attacked by the Viet-Cong. "In the heat of battle you hear screaming, you hear gunshots, you don't hear anything, you hear your heartbeat, you hear everything," Burton said. "It's not like what it is on TV." But he did compare the experience of combat to the beginning of the movie Saving Private Ryan. Ordeals such as going out to pick up the bodies after a firefight still give him nightmares. He said the daily life-and-death struggle still affected him and how he saw the world. "I think I was robbed of my youth." Burton said. He said he thought his combat experience was largely responsible for his Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Other problems Burton has include degenerative arthritis in several joints and skin rashes he believes were caused by Agent Orange; a defoliant used by the American military in Vietnam. He is in charge of a sprawling complex at Johnson County Community College dedicated to training engineers for jobs with the railroad. American military in When he is not working on his doctorate at the University of Kansas, Burton is assistant dean of Architecture, Drafting, Engineering and Railroad Technology at Johnson County Community College. He has a family history of railroad workers, as his great- grandfather was an engineer on steam locomotives and his father was a conductor. Burton also helps out with the Domestic Violence Victim/Witness Assistance Center in Kansas City, Mo. Every other Saturday morning, he helps teach a class for people who have been arrested for domestic violence offenses. Burton was recruited as a presenter four years ago when the program started. Part of his practicum includes working with veterans at the VA complex in Leavenworth. He assists veterans who live there with hygiene, money management and other living skills. Burton is working with the VA and Catholic Community Services to renovate dormitories on the VA property that will be used to house veterans and families who need assistance with addictions and other problems. Once the program begins, Burton will have an office on the VA property where he will be counseling veterans after he earns his Ph.D. in Psychology from the University. He said he had about two more years until he graduated. - Edited by Anne Mantey CITY OF NEWCASTLE HYDROXYDIAZEDONE SCHLDEN PRANFILM RELATIV DARVODET N 100 DARVODET N 100 DARVODET N 100 DARVODET N 100 WFS WFS Burton counts out one of the many medications he takes for conditions such as degenerative arthritis and a skin rash possibly caused by Agent Orange. Burton is a disabled Vietnam veteran. 3 03 V ( en ug th not sk ls d ry d h R COOS J199A Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Ghirke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. Tell us your news SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B MONDAY, APRIL 14. 2003 Mangino encourages Roy to stay Eric Braem/Kansar Roy'S house Ultimate frisbee players sweat near Allen Fieldhouse, which fans renamed "Roy's House" last week. Football coach Mark Mangino joined the effort to keep Roy Williams at Kansas Saturday By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter In several conversations last week, Kansas football coach Mark Mangino told his basketball counterpart that he wanted him to stay. In the tug of war for Roy Williams, another Jayhawk is leaning on the rope. "I would love for Roy Williams to stay here at KU," Mangino said, "He's the standard of excellence, and he is somebody that has been very supportive of our football program." our football team. Mangino's statements were an unsolicited addition to his comments to reporters following Saturday's spring scrimmage. Mangino would not divulge the content of his conversations with Williams except to say that he told Williams he wanted him to know how much he meant to him and the University. Mangino said because of his opendoor relationship with Williams, the coaches would occasionally visit with each other in their offices. "I go over and talk to him," Mangino said. "And I knew this was a tough week for him, so I went over and I told him how I felt, and I mean it, because I know this: that he means so much to the University and our fans that he keeps the morale high." North Carolina athletics director Dick Baddour issued a statement on Thursday, confirming he had spoken with Williams about the coaching vacancy at North Carolina. Baddour said he would continue to speak with Williams and other candidates, but at the time of the statement he said he had not offered Williams the job. Williams joined senior forward Nick Collison in Los Angeles during the weekend to accept the Wooden Legends of Coaching Award. Collison finished fourth for national-player-of-the-year honors. Officials at Williams' ceremony instructed reporters that Williams would not answer any questions about North Carolina. SEE ROY ON PAGE 8B Sand and sun BEST VOLLEYBALL EQUIPMENT Anne Murray, Lawrence first-year law student, and Brandon Kane, first-year law student, wait for a member of the Kuhn's Dawgs to hit the ball during an intramural sand volleyball game. Murray and Kane play for the Cru One team. Scrimmage shows promise By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansas staff writer It took until the fifth play of the football spring scrimmage for Kansas quarterback Bill Whittemore to prove his worth as 2002 Big 12 Conference newcomer of the year and a 2003 Kansas football captain. Whittemore rolled right and threw a spiral 20 yards perfectly over the shoulder of wide receiver Brandon Rideau on the sideline. Rideau reached up and snagged the pass as he went out of bounds. On third and eight, Whittemore got a first down. said Whitney. "Bill looks really good, really sharp — I'm excited about him," Mangino said. "He might have a chance to be among the top quarterbacks in the country if we can continue to develop a strong supporting cast for him." got a first down. Mark Mangino, Kansas football coach, said Whittemore had a great spring. for 180 yards and a touchdown in Saturday's spring scrimmage. The scrimmage started with the offense working out of various situations in which it started with a third down and then had to move five or more yards to score. After both the first and second string offense practiced out of third and long, each offense was given the ball on the 25 yard line and faced with having to drive the ball 75 yards for the score. Whittmore completed 13 of 18 passes Tennis drops match against rival at home SEE SCRIMMAGE ON PAGE 8B By Jonah Ballow jballow@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The first home match for the No. 61 Kansas tennis team ended in a 5-2 defeat to in-state rival No.34 Kansas State Wildcats Saturday. "Kansas State has won a lot of close matches, and they have a lot of confidence," coach Kilmeny Waterman said. "I think the difference in the end was their ability to win the big points." In doubles, the Jayhawks struggled and came away with one victory, which resulted in losing the crucial doubles point. needing to win four singles matches for the overall victory, Kansas won two. In No.2 singles, Brown won again by defeat Jessica Simosa in straight sets, 6-3, 6-3. Junior Courtney Steinbock and sophomore Paige Brown beat Andrea Cooper and Hayley McLiver 9-7 at No. 2 doubles. Juniors Emily Haylock and Kristen Steinbock lost to Paulina Castillejos and Petra Sedlmajerova 8-4 at the top position Tennis SEE TENNIS ON PAGE 8B Lindsey Gold/Kansan Junior Kristen Steinbock returns a hit from Kansas State Saturday at Robinson Courts. Top receivers standing out for Jayhawks By Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com Kansan sportwriter From the look of the Jayhawks' spring scrimmage on Saturday, the Kansas receivers might not just be catching on they might be also holding on. they might be too hard to find After problems with dropped passes last year, the receiving corps came with an impressive performance Saturday, as the first team aided quarterback Bill Whitte more in catching easy and difficult passes. "They're all young guys," Whittemore said. "Going through a year of the Big 12, you learn a lot. They're going to step it up this year — I feel like they will." The passing game has been more efficient this spring, as the players have become more accustomed to the offense. "I feel like we're a lot farther ahead than we were last year through spring, basically because it was new for everybody." Whittemore said. "Throughout the whole spring this semester, I feel like we've all been on the same page the whole time. We're clicking and we're going to feed on that." SPORTS COMMENTARY SEE RECEIVER ON PAGE 8A Ryan Wood rwood@kansan.com --- 'Owl Bowl' booze game shakes up sportswriter If anything, Al Bohl made alcohol consumption even more fun during his 20-month vacation in Lawrence. Bohl is signed to a five-year contract (one shot),is fired after two years (one shot) and may still be entitled to receive pay for the final three years (one shot). 20-month vacation in Bohl, who was fired as athletics director last week for being a creep, saw a lot of stupid actions take place during his tenure at Kansas. Many of them were his doing. Some of them were just done under his watch. Either way, when Bohl arrived back in 2001, I invented a great new drinking game that I now have to retire after one more play. Thanks to the "How stupid can the Athletics Department get?" game, my bank account is dry, every bartender in town knows me and I still haven't found my car after leaving it somewhere seven months ago. Al Bohl is hired on June 28, 2001 (take one shot). shot). Al Bohl met with the media on his driveway after getting canned Wednesday, called himself a dove (one shot) and then bashed Roy Williams (10 shots), calling him a man who would crush the innocent bird that is Al Bohl the dove, or something (one shot). The day before, which wood be Tuezday, Bohl mentioned George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, George Patton and Berlin in a 30-second span (bottoms up). months ago. The rule to my game is simple: Take a shot every time the Athletics Department does something stupid. That's it. So get out your shot glasses and your tequila, it's time to play. "How stupid can the Athletics Department get?" tons up). The room is spinning! (one shot to celebraight) In an effort to genereight revenue, the STOOPID Athletics Department raised the student ticket combo prices from 100 bucks to 125 bucks!!!! Can U believe that? Do they really think we're rich?? (take a shot) SEE WOOD ON PAGE 8B --- 4 MONDAY APRIL 14 "There's no doubt that we're going to build this program,but if we don't,you know not even Roy Williams can save me." Kansas football coach Mark Mangino MONDAY,APRIL 14,2003 Home teams succeed during weekend play The Associated Press Mariners4.Rangers3 SEATTLE — Bret Boone hit his second homer of the game in the 13th inning to give the Seattle Mariners a 4-3 victory over the Texas Rangers yesterday. Alex Rodriguez had his fifth home run for the Rangers, and Todd Greene's solo shot tied it at 3 in the eighth. Boone connected on a 2-0 pitch from reliever R.A. Dickey (0-1), bringing Seattle fans who stayed to watch the extra four innings to their feet. Boone also hit a solo shot in the seventh for his 15th career two-homer game. John Mabry had a solo homer in the seventh as well to help the Mariners rally for a 3-2 lead. Kazuhiro Sasaki (1-0) pitched the 13th for the victory. Padres 6,Rockies 2 SAN DIEGO — Rondell White's two-run homer highlighted a four-run seventh inning and the San Diego Padres beat the Colorado Rockies 6-2 yesterday. Mark Kotsay also drove in two runs for the Padres, who've won three of five overall. White's homer, his third, came on a 2-1 hanging curveball from reliever Doug Jones. Jaret Wright (1-1) pitched two scoreless innings for the victory and also doubled in the seventh, his first career extrabase hit. With the score tied at 2, the Padres opened the seventh with a single by Ramon Vazquez and a double by Keith Lockhart to chase starter Aaron Cook (0-1). Vazquez scored on Kotsay's slow roller to second, and Lockhart scored on Ronnie Belliard's fielding error. Diamondbacks 9. Brewers 3 White then homered to left-center for the final margin. PHOENIX — Elmer Dessens became the first Arizona starter to win this year and rookie Robby Hammock drove in four runs with a homer and double as the Diamondbacks beat the Milwaukee Brewers 9-3 yesterday. Arizona closer Matt Mantel is 2-0 after picking up victories in extra-inning games. Dessens (1-1) accomplished in his third start what Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling couldn't, allowing seven hits and two runs in six 2-3 innings. Dessens came out with two out in the seventh after Milwaukee loaded the bases. Mike Myers got cleanup hitter Geoff Jenkins to pop up to second. Luis Gonzalez and Danny Bautista drove in two runs apiece for Arizona, and Steve Finley had an RBI single. Hammock had a memorable debut at catcher, going 3-for-4. He broke a 2-2 tie in the third with a three-run homer off Glendon Rusch (1-2). Angels 8. Athletics2 ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Anaheim Angels snapped Barry Zito's 10-game winning streak in convincing fashion yesterday, scoring in each of the first four innings and getting home runs from Tim Salmon and Troy Glaus in an 8-2 victory over the Oakland Athletics. Eric Owens drove in two runs with his second tiebreaking, bases-loaded single in two days. Shawn Wooten also homered as the Angels swept the three-game series. Ramon Ortiz (2-1) allowed two runs and four hits in six innings, striking out five and walking one. The only runs off the right-hander came on Terrence Long's two-run shot in the second. Zito (2-1) lost for the first time in 12 regular season starts. He allowed seven runs, eight hits and four walks in five innings. Scot Shields struck out five players in three one-hit innings for his first career save. Cubs 4. Pirates 3 CHICAGO — Corey Patterson hit an RBI single and pinch-hitter Troy O'Leary had a sacrifice fly as the Chicago Cubs rallied in the eighth inning to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-3 yesterday. Down 3-2, Sammy Sosa led off the Cubs' eighth with a double against Boehringer. One out later, Pirates manager Lloyd McClendon pulled Boehringer (0-1) after he had a 2-0 count to Hee Seop Choi. Lefty Scott Sauerbeck relieved, and Cubs manager Dusty Baker sent up Eric Karros to bat for Choi. After Karros was intentionally walked, Patterson singled to tie it at 3. Lenny Harris pinch-ran for Karros, Mark Bellhorn drew a walk to load the bases and Mike Williams relieved Sauerbeck. O'Leary followed with a fly ball for the go-ahead run. Kyle Farnsworth (1-0) pitched a scoreless eighth, and Joe Borowski pitched a perfect ninth inning for his third save. Red Sox 2, Orioles 0 BOSTON — Derek Lowe and Tim Wakefield combined on a six-hitter and Namar Garciaparra homered Sunday as the Boston Red Sox rebounded from a disastrous home opener with a 2-0 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. A day after Pedro Martinez gave up 10 runs in the worst start of his career. Lowe (2-1) held Baltimore to two hits over the first six innings before running into trouble in the seventh. He escaped, Lowe gave up five hits and a walk while striking out three. Wakefield pitched the last two innings for his first save. thanks in part to an unassisted double play by first baseman Shea Hillembrand. Rodrigo Lopez (0-2) allowed two runs on five hits and a walk. He gave up Garciaparra's solo homer in the first and then shut Boston down until he was chased in the seventh. Expos 2, Mets 1, 10 innings SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Orlando Cabrera hit a tying home run off Armando Benitez in the ninth inning and Jose Vidro had a game-winning shot leading off the 10th as the Montreal Expos won a hot one yesterday, 2-1 over the New York Mets. The Mets lost their fifth in a row, and Benitez blew a save chance for the third time in eight days. It was 136 degrees on the field when the game started. The Expos are 3-0 at their new part-time home. Even with the wind blowing in, Cabrera hit Benitez's third pitch into the left-field bleachers. Montreal won it an inning later against Mike Stanton (0-2) when Vidro, one of the team's Puerto Rican stars, golfed Stanton's first pitch over the wall. The crowd responded with chants of "Vi-dro! Vi-dro!" and he was mobbed by teammates at home plate. Rocky Biddle (1-0) pitched two innings of two-hit relief for the victory. Phillies13, Reds1 CINCINNATI — The Philadelphia Phillies scored a team-record 13 runs in the fourth inning and beat the Cincinnati Reds 13-1 yesterday. Ricky Ledee's three-run homer capped Philadelphia's outburst, which fell just two runs short of the National League record for runs in an inning. The Phillies' 13 runs were aided by seven walks. Randy Wolf (2-0) was the beneficiary of all the offense. Wolf allowed four hits, walked one and struck out eight in six innings. The major league mark is 17 runs, set by the Boston Red Sox against Detroit on June 18, 1953. After facing just 11 batters through the first three innings, Ryan Dempster (1-1) faced 11 in the fourth alone. Bobby Abreu walked and scored twice, and Jim Thome singled and scored twice in the inning. TORONTO — Matthew LeCroy hit a three-run homer and Michael Cuddyer had a solo shot as the Minnesota Twins completed a three-game sweep of the Toronto Blue Jays with a 9-3 victory yesterday. Twins 9; Blue Jays 3 The Twins gained a measure of revenge against the Blue Jays, who sent them reeling toward a six-game losing streak with a three-game sweep at the Metrodome last weekend. Christian Guzman went 3-for-4 and scored three times for the Twins, who had 24 runs in the series. LeCroy's homer off Doug Linton in the eighth gave Minnesota a 9-3 lead. Twins starter Joe Mays (2-1) gave up three runs and three hits in six-plus innings. He walked four and struck out two. Minnesota took a 3-2 lead in the third against Mark Hendrickson (1-2) on Luis Rivas' RBI grounder, Guzman's RBI double and Corey Koskie's run-scoring single. Devil Rays 2, Yankees 1 NEW YORK — Toby Hall delivered a tiebreaking sacrifice fly in the ninth inning, lifting Tampa Bay to a 2-1 victory over New York yesterday and preventing the Yankees from the best start in the 100-year history of the franchise. After Bernie Williams made it 1-all with an RBI single in the eighth, Marion Anderson opened the ninth with a single against reliever Juan Acevedo (0-1). Damion Easley bunted and both runners were safe when catcher Jorge Posada mishandled the ball. A wild pitch advanced the runners, and Hall delivered the sacrifice fly. New York's Roger Clemens worked seven innings, allowing seven hits. He struck out six and walked three. Devil Rays starter Victor Zambrano stranded seven runners over the first five innings. He allowed three hits, walked six and struck out two, but reliever Lance Carter (3-0) got the victory. MIAMI — Greg Maddux, off to the worst start in his career, earned his first victory of the season by pitching the Atlanta Braves past the Florida Marlins 7-1 yesterday. Braves 7, Marlins 1 Vinny Castilla homered and drove in five runs as the Braves stopped Florida's four-game winning streak. Maddux (1-5) gave up one run and two hits in six innings. The four-time Cy Young winner had lost his first three starts for the first time ever. Pitching on three days' rest, Maddux walked none and struck out three. He threw 59 pitches, 40 for strikes. John Smoltz pitched the final two innings for his third save, completing the combined four-hitter. Castilla's three-run homer in the ninth off Vladimir Nunez broke it open for Atlanta. Mark Redman (1-2) allowed four runs and eight hits in five innings. POLL What was former Kansas athletics director Al Bohl's best move? Firing football coach Terry Allen Beer before football games His best is yet to come; moving out of Lawrence LAST WEEK'S POLL RESULTS Will Roy Williams fill the coaching vacancy at North Carolina? 2,299 votes were cast No. He stayed last time; he will stay this time. 1,186 votes for 52 percent He will consider it after the tour ment excitement dies down. 356 votes for 15 percent Yes. Nick and Kirk are gone; so is Roy, 727 votes for 32 percent No. North Carolina won't pursue him after he said no last time. 30 votes for 1 percent Kansas Athletics Calendar TOMORROW WEDNESDAY Baseball vs. Avila, 6 p.m. at Hoglund Ballpark Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Softball vs. Arkansas, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. at the Kansas softball field THURSDAY FRIDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Kansas Relays. Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 6:35 p.m. in Norman, Okla. SATURDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 2 p.m. in Norman, OKla. Softball at Texas, noon and 2 p.m. in Austin Texas Rowing dual with Kansas State, in Manhattan Tennis vs. Texas A&M, noon at the Robinson courts Women's Golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. SUNDAY Baseball at Oklahoma, 1 p.m. in Norman, Okla. Women's Golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. Free forAll - KU should fire childish Roy Williams and rehire Ai Bohl. 图 At Boht, take a speech class shortly after Munchausen. - Roy, Roy, Roy, Roy, Roy, Roy, Roy. I don't want to read anything else by that Ryan Greene kid. Bring on Doyle Murphy, - I just wanted to say that if Roy Williams moves to North Carolina, so am I. - Al Boht has really taken it upon himself to make himself look like a self-righteous, childish fool, and I am glad he's gone. I'd pick Roy over Al Boht any day. And what's with the talking in third person? --- --- I think it's a sad day when a criminal can blame a basketball coach for being fired. Why is everyone so worried that Roy Williams is going to leave? That would go against every moral fiber that he believes in. - So where can I get a bowl of crushed dove soup? I'm watching Big Daddy right now, and I'm realizing at the beginning of the movie Adam Sandler has a Syracuse Orangemen shirt on, and I'm just thinking, I don't like this movie anymore. Jonah Ballow, what is wrong with you? Kansas is not Kansas without Roy. --- - Hey Ryan Greene, thanks for showing us that you don't have to be good at sports to write bad articles about sports. Thanks. You suck. You could be selected as the UCES Intern of the Month! Rate your experiences to help your fellow internship-seeking peers. It's easy, Just go to our website! While you are there, join the Internship Listserv Share your knowledge and get tips on: • Networking into full-time • Dealing with your supervisor • Skill building Internship Contest For students with Internships during the post year (Summer 2002, Fall 2002, or Spring 2003) 2 Winners in each category! 2 Categories to Enter • Internship Poster • Internship Portfolio see website for details UCES university career and employment services 864-3624 DEADLINE: APRIL 30th Henry T's Bar&Grill 6 2 FOR 1 GOURMET BURGER BASKETS ON MONDAY NIGHTS. THIS IS THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN!!! $2.50 GUSTOS OF Bud, BUD LIGHT, COORS LIGHT AND MILLER LIGHT, MICHELOB LIGHT INDOOR & OUTDOOR TV's 6TH & KASOLD 749-2999 V MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Baseball beats Tech in first conference series victory By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Rallying to win two games in the ninth inning against the Texas Tech Red Raiders, the Kansas baseball team won its first Big 12 Conference series of the year. With the two victories, Kansas improved its record to 28-15 on the season and now has a conference record of 4-8. Junior Ryan Knippschild took the mound for Kansas Friday night to get the series under way and pitched seven-and-a-third innings and allowed nine hits and six earned runs. Junior Brandon Johnson, who has been suffering from an elbow injury, pitched the final one-and-two-thirds innings and recorded the victory for Kansas. "Brandon is as great as a competitor as I have ever been associated with," coach Ritch Price said. "He was absolutely huge for us this series, and when he is out "We went through a valley recently, and we are just trying to play good baseball and get ourselves back in the hunt." Ritch Price Kansas baseball coach there, the confidence level for the guys playing behind him rises as well." After the Jayhawks squandered a six-run lead in the eighth inning, sophomore third baseman Travis Metcalf hit a solo home run in the ninth inning to secure the victory for Kansas. It was Metcalf's seventh home run of the season and second game-winning home run. The home run gave Kansas a 9-8 lead that it would not lose. Kansas also got contributions from freshman middle infielder Ritchie Price SATURDAY SATURDAY KANSAS 4- TEXAS TECH 5 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 - R H E Kansas 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 - 4 11 0 Texas Tech 0 4 0 0 1 0 0 X - 5 12 0 Pitcher: Kansas - Chris Smart(8) Texas Tech - Dusty Buck (6), Jeff Karastina (3) Pinch Run (7/1) Kansas - Save Karpinski (6) Loss - Smart (1/2) YESTERDAY KANSAS 7 - TEXAS TECH 6 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 - R H E Kansas 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 7 - 14 1 Texas Tech 1 6 0 0 0 0 1 - 6 10 0 Pitcher: Kansas - Kevin Wheeler (5/2/3), Don Czyz (1/3), Josh Duran (2/3), Brandon Johnson (2/1) Texas Tech - Greg Gerger (2), Nathan Fouts (7) Winter Classic (1/2) Save - None Loss - Fouts (3/3) and senior left fielder Casey Spanish who both recorded three hits in the game. In the second game of the three-game series, Price sent junior Chris Smart to the mound for only his fourth start of the season. Smart pitched eight innings allowing 12 hits and five earned runs and was credited with the loss. The Jayhawks almost rallied again as the score was 5-2 in the eighth inning. Kansas cut it to 5-4 by scoring a pair in the top of the eighth inning, but could not get any closer as it dropped a 5-4 decision. Offensively, Kansas was led by junior first baseman Ryan Baty who went 3-of-4 from the plate. The third and final game of the series would decide the series winner. Senior Kevin Wheeler pitched for Kansas and pitched five-and-two-thirds innings. Kansas built a 6-2 lead in the game before letting it slip to a 6-6 tie heading into the ninth inning. With two outs and Price on base, Wheeler ripped a single to put runners at first and second for junior right fielder Matt Tribble. With the tension mounting, Tribble delivered a base hit, sending Price home and giving Kansas a 7-6 lead. "I have been waiting for that type of situation all year," Trible said. "When I got it I was just trying to find a hole in their defense and I did. Hopefully this series win against a conference opponent will really get us rolling." Johnson once again came in relief in the ninth and recorded his seventh victory of the season, improving his record to 7-2. The Lawrence junior also has a team-leading six saves on the season. On Kansas' five-game road trip, Johnson recorded two victories and two saves. saves. "Getting two wins on the road is huge for this team." Baty said. "We went through a valley recently, and we are just trying to play good baseball and get ourselves back in the hunt. It was a pretty long week for this team and to win four out of five is great, and it shows a lot about the character of this club." Tulsa, Arkansas defeat soccer team By Shane Mettlen smettlen@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Edited by Michelle Burhenn The Kansas soccer team didn't finish the season as positively as it had hoped to, getting swept by Arkansas and Tulsa Saturday. The losses dropped the Jayhawks record to 3-4-2 for the spring season The Jayhawks got off to a poor start against the Razorbacks and went into halftime trailing 1-0. Sophomore Monica Brothers tied the game with a goal in the second half, but Arkansas answered late in the game to secure a 2-1 victory. The second game of the afternoon was largely uneventful. tuna scored the game's only goal in the first period to ensure a 1-0 victory and avenge the Jayhawks' victory over the Golden Hurricane last weekend in Lawrence. Despite the losses Kansas made progress during the spring season. Now the Jayhawks' focus turns back to the fall season, which opens Aug. 29 with Kansas hosting Northwestern at the SuperTarget Field. The Jayhawks have 14 letterwinners returning, including the spring's leading goal scorer Caroline Smith, and will add seven new freshmen to the roster. Edited by Julie Jantzer Banquet honors women's basketball By Ryan Greene rggreen@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The annual awards banquet for the Kansas women's basketball team not only commended members of the team for their achievements both on and off the court this past season, but it also served as a tribute to coach Marian Washington for her 30 years as the coach at Kansas. The ceremony culminated with a video montage depicting Washington's Kansas career and the presentation of two framed Kansas jerseys, one a frontal view of "Kansas 30," and the other a view from the back of "30 Washington." She was also presented with a framed photo layout of snapshots from her 30-year career. Twelve awards were presented to players and faculty who supported the athletes throughout the season. Peg Wittmer service award Renate R. Mai-Dalton, associate professor of business and director of the Multicultural Business Scholars Program Academic achievement award — Sophomore center Valerie Migicovsky Freshman forward Crystal Kent Freshman academic award Assist leader award — Freshman guard Erica Hallman (97 assists, 3.4 per game) Teaching excellence award Chico Herbison, professor of African and African-American studies Steals leader award — Sophomore guard Aquanita Bur- ras (76 steals, 2.6 per game) Most improved award Juniord guard Lelia Menguc ■ Vickie Adkins rebounding award — Freshman forward Tamara Ransburg Angela Aycock free throw percentage award - Crystal Kemp (74.3 percent) Adrian Mitchell sportsman- ship award — Sophomore guard Blair Waltz Sheila Ullman coaches award - Erica Hallman Shebra Legrant newcomer award — Tamara Ransburg ■ Jackie Martin inspiration award - Leila Mengüç ■ Lynette Woodard MVP award — Tamara Ransburg (10.9 points per game, 7.8 rebounds per game, 68 blocks) Kemp said she thought the academic achievement award spoke volumes for the program's emphasis on success off the court. "It's letting me know and letting my other teammates know that the academics are the important thing," Kemp said. Although Ransburg expected her MVP award to go to Burras, she said she saw it as a positive step toward what she wanted to accomplish next season. "This is my first time getting MVP ever since I started playing basketball, so it's really a booster for me to go into next year and have a bang so I can get it back-to-back." Ransburg said. — Edited by Lindsay Hanson Hockey fans arrested after final game The Associated Press Fans from the winning and losing teams at the NCAA hockey championship threw bottles and rocks, smashed store windows and set trash bins on fire in separate outbreaks of violence that resulted in more than 100 arrests. No injuries were reported in Minneapolis, but in New Hampshire, 17 people were treated for exposure to pepper gas, the university said. The disturbances began shortly after Minnesota beat New Hampshire 5-1 Saturday night in Buffalo, N.Y., for the Gophers' second straight title. At Durham, N.H., police twice fired pepper gas into a bottle-throwing crowd of about 4,000 people who spilled into downtown after the game. It took two hours for the crowd to disperse, and police made 90 arrests. In Minneapolis, shop owners swept up broken glass and repaired storefronts near the university Sunday. Police arrested 11 people after a celebration over the Gophers' victory turned into a window-smashing, rock- throwing melee. Five vehicles, one owned by a TV station, were set ablaze, and emergency workers were pelted with bottles, rocks and chunks of concrete. It took 100 officers to restore order to a crowd of about 2,000, police spokesman Ron Reier said. He expects charges to be filed against those arrested. University President Robert Bruininks said yesterday that he was outraged and disappointed by the criminal activities in and around the campus. "We are deeply disappointed that the actions of some individuals have tarnished the reputation of this institution and the majority of law-abiding, responsible university students," Bruininks said in a statement. "A victory such as this should be a time for building community, not tearing it down." In New Hampshire, firefighters answered 21 calls, mostly for setting fires in trash bins and on a couch, school spokeswoman Kim Billings said. She added that students will be brought before the student conduct system, and there probably will be suspensions. Canadian wins Masters playoff with bogey putt The Associated Press AUGUSTA, Ga. $ \rightarrow $ A Maple Leaf grows among the towering pines of Augusta National. Mike Weir became the first Canadian to win the Masters, making two clutch pars to force a playoff with Len Mattiace, and winning on the first extra hole with a simple tap-in for bogey. The green jacket that Tiger Woods had hoped to slip on for a record third straight year is going north of the border. Weir, who only five years ago had to toil through PGA Tour qualifying school, closed with a bogey-free 68 on a dramatic Sunday at Augusta National, then let Mattiace make all the mistakes in the first Masters playoff in 13 years. Weir had to sweat over a 5-foot parp putt on the 17th and a 6-footer on the 18th, as Mattiace waited on the practice green among chairs that already were set up for the fabled green jacket ceremony. Minutes later, Weir leaned over to tap in for his only bogey of the day, then raised his arms and embraced his longtime friend and caddie, Brennan Little. What a breakthrough — not only was he the first Canadian to win a major championship, he became the first left-hander to win a major since Bob Charles in the 1963 British Open. Mattia watched a brilliant day at Augusta National crumble quickly. He chipped in for birdie, holed a 60-foot putt on No. 10, and charged through the back nine on a mission to build a twostroke lead. But Mattiace bogeyed the 18th for a 65, and he never had an opportunity in the playoff. From the middle of the 10th fairway, he hooked his approach wildly to the left and then chipped some 30 feet by the hole. His par putt nearly went off the green, and Mattiace wound up with a double bogey. Both finished at 7-under 281, the highest winning score at the Masters since 1989. Weir won for the first time this year, and all six of his PGA Tour victories have been comebacks — none more special than this. Until yesterday, the most nervous he has ever felt was watching Canada win the gold medal in hockey at the Salt Lake City Olympics. "This was definitely nerve-racking," Weir said. "I tried to gather myself on each putt. Every putt on this golf course is tough." All of them mattered until the end, when Mattiace chopped up the 10th hole and was struggling to hold back tears when he realized how close he had come. All of them mattered in a nervous pursuit of the green jacket. Woods, who stumbled to a 75, slipped the coveted prize over his shoulders. "Thanks, Tig," Weir told him. "It feels good." LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • CIGARS • POOL 1009 MASS. 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(785) 841-1431 Holiday Plaza: 25th & Iowa Lawrence, KS 66047 Over 4,000 locations to serve you. www.curveinternational.com $ 40 for the rest of the semester $75 for summer semester *with this ad* *We based on live size enrollment, minimum 12 mo. c.d. program.* Join Now 60% Off Service Tar Friday November 23 59 Kansas tops Western 8-1 at Hoglund Ballp Anti-war walkout Border War people wins wedding WE LOVE OUR KANSAN. 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 Tracksters qualify for Regionals Softball loses twice Aggie throws no-hitter The Kansas track and field team should feel confident at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Ark. At the Tyson Foods Invitational on Feb. 14 and 15, the team had eight athletes set personal best times or marks in Fayetteville. The season's biggest highlight for the team also took place at Arkansas when junior Leo Bookman won the indoor 200-meter dash national title on March 15. Kansas coach Stanley Redwine is a former Razorback runner and coach, and he is a member of the Arkansas Hall of Honor. These accomplishments helped the team once again have a strong performance Saturday at the John McDonnell Invitational in Fayetteville.The team had four women, three men and the women's 4x400-meter relay team qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Regional Championships, which is the most qualifiers the team has produced in any meet this year. Regional qualifiers for the women's team included sophomore Kim Clark in the 800-meter run, junior Laura Lavoie and sophomore Megan Mante in the 1,500-meter run, and freshman Abby Emsick in the shot put. The men's team qualifiers were junior T.J. Hackler and freshman Brett Terp in the high jump and senior Benaud Shirley in the triple jump. Hackler won the triple jump with a leap of 6-feet-11 1/2 and was the men's team only event winner. The women's event winners included Lavioie in the 1,500-meter run with a time of 4 minutes,27.67 seconds and Emsick in both the discus (157-5) and the shot put (46-9 1/2). At a recent press conference, Redwine said that he was happy with his team so far this season,but he continued to have bigger goals. "I wish we were better, and we'll say that until we're national champions," Redwine said. "But compared to where we were this time last year, I think we're doing much better, and so we're going to continue to work hard." Kansas will host the 76th annual Kansas Relays this week, April16 to 19, at Memorial Stadium. Edited by Christy Dendurent Avalanche, Wild prepare for Game 3 Minnesota hosts playoff after 11-season absence The Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn. — The playoffs return to Minnesota for the first time in 11 seasons today, and the Wild brought back a little bonus. One of the league's biggest surprises has the best-of-seven Western Conference quarterfinal series even at 1 with the powerful Colorado Avalanche. After splitting two with the Avalanche in Denver, the Wild stole home-ice advantage and now get three of the final five — if the series lasts that long — at a sold-out, sure-to-be loud Xcel Energy Center. Game 5 is tonight, and Game 4 is in St. Paul on Wednesday. Great goaltending, pesky defense, sound fundamentals and excellent coaching have gotten them to this point in just three seasons. "It's going to be exciting or our fans," center Wes Walz said. "They've waited a long time for a playoff game. The first couple of years weren't always the greatest. We lost quite a few games, and they've always stuck behind us." The last time the state of Minnesota The Avs are prepared for a not-so-friendly welcome. "I think we probably are going to face a different team," center Joe Sakic said. "They will have more energy and try to come out hard and forecheck a little bit more. That's the way they usually play there." The Wild were able to win Game 1 with a strong showing by Dwayne Roloson in the net (39 saves) and a 10-minute lapse by Colorado goalie Patrick Roy that put Minnesota up 3-0 in the second period. The Wild stayed out of the penalty box in that one, too, something they didn't do in Saturday's 3-2 loss, aided by a rebound from Roy (24 saves) and some recharged Avalanche special teams. Colorado was 0-for-3 on the power play and killed just two of three penalties Thursday. But in Game 2, Milan Hejduk scored in the first period with the man advantage and the Avalanche killed four of five penalties. Minnesota took six penalties in the first period alone. "That's not our game," center Darby Hendrickson said. "That's not going to help us in a series like this, or really help any team. "To their credit, they were able to capitalize. We didn't come back and get what we wanted. I think the penalties made it more challenging." Another hurdle the Wild will have to clear in Game 3 is their own adrenaline. Some players are concerned about coming out too aggressively. "We might," coach Jacques Lemaire said. "I just hope that it won't be too much of a factor. When everyone wants to go offense, you can have some problems. That's also the reason Lemaire doesn't announce which goalie he'll play ahead of time. Roloson has been sharp so far, but Lemaire has promised to give Manny Fernandez at least one start, too. Count on seeing both clubs fighting hard to score the first goal. The Wild scored first in Game 1, and the Avs did it in Game 2. "It's going to be important to get a good start." Colorado coach Tony Granato said. "If you can get the first goal, you generally have a pretty good chance of winning the game." U.S. Olympic Committee restructures The Associated Press FORT WORTH, Texas — A day after an in-house task force proposed the most sweeping changes in the history of the U.S. Olympic Committee, its members began jockeying for position in the new leadership structure. The task force recommended trimming 114 spots off the 123-member board of directors and eliminating the 21-member governing executive committee. Responses were positive after the presentation Saturday, but the tone was decidedly different a day later as members began to realize the chair had been pulled from beneath them. "I think you've been pushed and shoved and scared by the politicians in Washington," board member George Killian said yesterday. "No matter how hard you've worked, you really haven't thought it out. I'm convinced you haven't satisfied anybody at all. You've left out too many people." It's exactly the response Colorado Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell expected from a group known for its finger-pointing and political maneuvering. "I think they've moved in the right direction, but they still have to get it passed," said Campbell, part of a Senate committee investigating the USOC. "That might not be easy." The scandal-ridden organization got into its latest mess in part because the volunteers and paid staff couldn't get along. The board unanimously approved a motion in support of the initial restructuring proposal, but then the political posturing started up again. Board member Anita DeFrantz was the first to take the microphone during an open forum, voicing her displeasure that only one of the four U.S. IOC members would be allowed on the new board. The IOC's charter calls for all of its U.S. members to be on the USOC's board of directors, but the task force was more interested in keeping the board's size under 10 members. Representatives from the Olympic Alumni Association, USA Deaf Sports Federation, military organizations and community-based sports programs followed DeFrantz, each arguing their case to have more of a voice in the new structure. "We had an IOC member before there was a USOC. The structure is for a purpose," said DeFrantz, the senior U.S. IOC member. "It is not to be considered frivolous or unimportant for the USOC to be the same as every other national Olympic committee in the world. Nor, I suggest, is it debatable." There was a time when the Kansas softball team had no problem getting hits, scoring runs and, most importantly, winning. By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan Kansan swriterwriter Now those things have become a challenge. Kansas was swept by Texas A&M over the weekend,losing 5-1 on Saturday and 6-0 yesterday,as the Jayhawks lost their fourth consecutive Big 12 conference game. "We came in here thinking we needed to get a sweep to keep us in the running for a conference title," Texas A&M coach Jo Evans said. "It's a big boost because we haven't always been great on the road." The two losses sank Kansas closer to the bottom of the Big 12 standings. Kansas gave up six runs on 12 hits in the first contest as the Aggies methodically put the Jayhawks away, getting two hits in each of the last five innings. Aggie senior catcher Selena Collins showed why she was an All-American last year and would probably be a strong candidate this year, going 2-for-3 with a double and leadoff home run in the first inning. The home run, her 11th of the year, gave her the lead for home runs in the Big 12 conference. Kansas freshman second baseman is in second place with 10. "She had a great game," Evans said of Collins. "She really set the tone for us. She's our leader." It wasn't just Collins producing for the Aggie offense. Six other players had at least one hit in the contest. Junior pitcher Kara Pierce took the loss for Kansas. The only Kansas highlight was a solo home run by freshman shortstop Destiny Frankenstein in the third inning, creating the team's only run. SATURDAY KANSAS 1 - TEXAS A&M 6 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Texas A&M 2 0 0 0 1 1 2 - 6 12 1 Kansas 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 - 1 5 1 Pitchers: Kansas-Kara Pierce(7) Texas A&M-Jessica Slater(7) Win-Slater(10-10) Loss-Pierce(14-9) VESTERDAY KANSAS 0 - TEXAS A&M 5 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Texas A&M 0 0 1 0 2 2 0 - 5 7 0 Kansas 0 0 2 4 1 1 X - 0 0 1 Pitchers: Kansas-Kara Pierce (5), Kirsten Milhoan (2) Texas A&M-Lindsay Wilhelmson (7) Win-Wilhelmson (14-4) Loss-Pierce (14-10) Run production got worse for Kansas yesterday, as Aggie pitcher Lindsay Wilhelmson didn't allow a Kansas hit in seven innings. It was the first no-hitter of her career. The junior was able to effectively pitch inside and limit Kansas to ground outs and pop-ups. "She did a very nice job on the mound," Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said. "She didn't make anything easy for us." The Aggies, sparked by a home run in the third inning by sophomore second baseman Adrian Gregory, rang up five runs on seven hits. Pierce again got the loss, dropping her to 14-10 overall. Despite the losses, Bunge said she was pleased with her team's effort. "We just need to get our feet under us," Bunge said. "We aren't playing well. We're just in a bad funk. I got the kinds of kids that are fighters. It's not that they're quitting. It's just that they're trying too hard." Kansas will host Arkansas for a doubleheader at 3 p.m. on Wednesday. Edited by Brandon Gay The Associated Press St. Louis Cardinals blown away by Astros HOUSTON — Edgar Renteria home-red twice and matched a career high with five RBI as the St. Louis Cardinals roughed up Roy Oswalt and beat the Houston Astros 11-8 yesterday. Renteria hit a three-run shot in a 6-run seventh inning against Oswalt (1-1), who gave up 10 runs in the worst start of his career. The Cardinals took two of three in a series between teams that have combined for the last seven NL Central titles. The Astros won both meetings last weekend in St. Louis. Jeff Bagwell homered twice and drove in 3 runs for Houston. Lance Berkman and Craig Biggio added solo shots. Berkman, who led the NL with 128 RBI last season, knocked in his first run of the year with a single in the first inning. Rentera hit a 2-run homer in the fourth and capped the seventh-inning outburst with his third of the season. He has four multi-homer games. Renteria also had five RBI on Sept. 4 last year against Cincinnati. Oswalt had control problems from the start. Cairo's sacrifice fly in the second gave St. Louis its first run. Renteria homered in the fourth after Albert Pujols walked. Scott Rolen's RBI double in the fifth came after Oswalt walked Orlando Palmeiro. Oswalt has not beaten the Cardinals in six lifetime starts. He is 0-2 with a 4.72 ERA. He gave up 7 earned runs, the most of his career, against the Cardinals on July 18, 2001. Bagwell and Berkman hit consecutive homers in the third. Jason Simontacchi had another rough start for St. Louis. He walked two batters in the first and Berkman followed with a single to left field. Jeff Kent hit a 2-run double to the right-field corner. Dreams of the Golden Mountain Astros shortstop Jose Vizcaino made a big throwing error in the seventh, and Cardinal Tino Martinez had an RBI double. Oswalt allowed 10 runs — 5 earned — and nine hits in 6 2-3 innings. He walked three and struck out eight. 图 Kiko Calero (1-0) pitched two hitless innings for his first big league victory. Miguel Cairo homered and drove in 2 runs. Meet the Author. Dreams of the Golden Mountain -BOOKSIGNING- Dreams of the Golden Mountain, (20% Off with student ID) -VIDEO SCREENING- Tell Grandma About Langston Hughes KU Professor Pok Chi Lau Photographs the lives of Asian Americans and explores multiculturalism. An Asian American Festival Event! THURS. April 17th 5:00 - 6:30pm 785-864-4431 oreadbooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 Jayhawka.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fri. 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support student programs, services & facilities Meet the Author. KU Professor Pok Chi Lau Photographs the lives of Asian Americans and explores multiculturalism. An Asian American Festival Event! THURS. April 17th 5:00 - 6:30pm 785-864-4431 oreedbooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 Jayhawka.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fr. 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support student programs, services & facilities GO HAWKS! TACO JOHN'S Come visit us at any of our following locations: 23rd & Haskell • 6th & Maine • 23rd & Ousdahl DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street 1969 Oread Books Something for every mood. Something for every mood. GO HAWKS! GO HAWKS! TACO JOHN'S Come visit us at any of our following locations: 23rd & Naskell • 6th & Maine • 23rd & Ousdahl DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street GO HAWKS! GO HAWKS! TACO JOHN'S THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street MONDAY,APRIL 14,2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN * 5B ENTERTAINMENT TODAY TOMORROW WEDNESDAY 86 63 sunny and windy 81 55 isolated thunderstorms and wind 60 29 thunderstorms and wind 忧 TODAY 86 63 sunny and windy TOMORROW 81 55 isolated thunderstorms and wind WEDNESDAY 60 29 thunderstorms and wind WWW.WEATHER.COM APARTMENT NUMBER 9 by Kevin Gritzke, for The University Daily Kansan look at all these dishes... I can't even see the counter... And there is a raccoon going through the Wok! Even with all this, we will do nothing... I think we can make it another 2 or 3 days... 60 29 thunderstorms and wind KAGI 32 look at all these dishes... I can't even see the counter... and there is a raccoon going through the Wok! And there is a raccoon going through the Wok! Even with all this, we will do nothing... I think we can make it another 2 or 3 days... HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 14). This year you have a natural talent for making good business decisions. You also have a natural charm and can expand your influence. Take on a partner, or rely more on one you already have. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. Take on your responsibilities with enthusiasm. If you don't know how to do a job, don't worry. You'll learn quickly. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. You're not big on putting your feelings into words,but you could do that now. Somebody who's been blue would love hearing from you. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 6. Friends won't let you stay sad for long, even if you're in a pensive mood. See if you can get one of them to help you clean house. That'd make you feel a lot better. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 7. Keep more of your coins in your pocket by finding a fabulous deal. You'll have to know what you're looking for and act quickly once you obtain it. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. The more you do, the more you'll earn, so put your brains to work. You don't want to get much dirtier, so working smarter is a better choice. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is an 8. Love is the most powerful force in the universe, as you may already know. Use it to help yourself stay on track in these unsettled times. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 6. You're not big on doing without. You want what you want. This is a good day to practice, though — so you might as well go shopping. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a You want things to stay pretty much as they are. If that's not happening, be alert. Your input can make an impact. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 6. Focus on your career as much as you can. Stop thinking about what you'd rather be doing, and get yourself to work! People need what you provide, and you'll find a use for the money. Capricorn (Dec.22-Jan.19). Today is a 7. In some areas it's full speed ahead while others are seriously blocked. Don't waste time on a door that's barred shut. You can find another that's open. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18). Today is a 7. You're naturally good at analysis, but don't get bogged down in computations. Give a detailed task another try. It might be easier now. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 6. Truth and justice, faith and facts, don't have to be opposed. All are required in a system that works. Don't settle for anything else. Crossword ACROSS ACROSS 1 Brit's apartment 5 Meat in a can 9 "Jerry Maguire" director 14 Provoke 15 Accompice 16 Indy entry 17 European river 18 Slothful person 20 Alaskan tongue 22 Loses moisture 23 Citric cooler 24 Observing carefully 27 Actress West 28 Moves slowly 31 Uneven cut 35 Nevertheless 37 Show up 38 Favorable responses 40 __ of Cortez 42 Olympian's award 43 Wise man 45 Even one 47 Find a buyer 48 Mournful poems 50 Anderson of Jethro Tull 52 Certain derby participants 58 Cereal grain 60 River of forgetfulness 61 Pick up the check 62 Stabbed with a small dagger 65 Opera song 66 Adores 67 Small whirlpool 68 Like claret or Chablis 69 Signs 70 Facility 71 Fewer DOWN 1 Mutation 2 French city 3 Dramatist Edward 4 Prepare to drive 5 __ Jose, CA 6 Recipients of binding promise 7 Watchful 8 Innumerable 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | 22 | | | | | 23 | | 24 | | | | 25 | | | | | | | 26 | | | | | | | | 27 | | | | 28 | | | | 29 | 30 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | | | | | | | | | 38 | | | | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | | | | | | | | 43 | | | | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | | | | | | | | 48 | | | | | 49 | 50 | 51 | | | | | | | | | | 52 | | | | 53 | | | | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | | 58 | 59 | | 60 | | | | | 61 | | | | | | | 62 | | 63 | | | | | 64 | 65 | | | | | | | 66 | | | | | 67 | | | | 68 | | | | | | 69 | | | | | 70 | | | | 71 | | | | | | © 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 04/14/03 9 Part of a telephone pole 10 Unrefined 11 City near San Diego 12 Tuesday in movies 13 __ Stanley Gardner 19 Actress Winger 21 Comic Conway 25 No vote 26 Cruel brushes 29 Nearly round 30 Foster film 31 "Auld Lang __ " 32 Part of a shoe 33 Inclined to be bold 34 Square one 36 Drink for two? 37 Lacking dirt 41 Licorice flavorings 4 Find a new tenant for a flat 46 Tibetan beast 49 Small sofa Solutions to last Friday's puzzle. K I W I K E A T S S L A W U N I T E L S I E T O N E D A R E D V I L S O A T S O N E O N E A L S K N I T S E D A T E S I D E S H E R S W O O S H E D H O B O S C A R N E A L A A L L Y D U K E S B R I M T A U W I D E N P O K E S E V E N N E S S R O O N E W T P E P T A L K S L O W S O M A L I D E E N A S A O P E N I N G D A Y O V E R D A R I N E L S E B A S K A L E C K T E E D 51 Writer Hentoff 53 Valerie Harper sitcom 54 Fish by dragging a net 55 Unearthly 56 Claude of Hollywood 57 Sojourns 58 Capital of Norway 59 Molecule part 60 Writer Deighton 64 Use indigo Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County Do List: ☑ Take a Study Break ☑ Add something to my resume. ☑ Be someone's friend. ☑ Make a difference. To Do List: Complete your list. Stop by or call today! 211 E. 8th St. 785-843-7359 I LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 42-8665 2888 Four Wheel LIBERTY HALL 7:48 19:12 m) CITY OF GOD m) 4:00 6:45 8:30 ADDAFTATION. m) 4:18 9:40 OUT OF FOCUS FILM FEST 7:00 LIBERTY HALL 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr Really, you just never know... THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses KU ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available Free Runner's Clinic! Sponsored by the Physical Therapy Department at Watkins Memorial Health Center All KU students, faculty and staff are invited to attend Tues. April 15 1:00-4:00pm Wed. April 16 9:00-11:00am Watkins Memorial Health Center south entrance (Inclement weather site: Physical Therapy Dept. 2nd floor) Wear your shorts and usual running shoes for a free evaluation of problems experienced by running, walking and aerobic exercise. This clinic is staffed by physicians and physical therapists. (Aerobic stress test not included.) There is a charge for supplies, if needed. To register, call 864-9592 (appointments preferred) Summer at KU in KC KU Edwards Campus Celebrating 10 years in Greater Kansas City Undergraduate Program Going home to KC this summer? The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. Enroll Today! Eagle Call (913) 897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu KU Summer Semester begins June 3 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 M 6B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS MONDAY,APRIL 14,2003 Tigers to admit various violations The Associated Press COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri's basketball team plans to self-report possible violations in its recruiting of Virginia Military Institute guard Jason Conley, according to reports by The Kansas City Star. The university, however, said it had not taken any action and was still trying to get facts together, according to representative Sam Fleury. Fleury said no letter had been drafted and the athletic department was still in an "information-gathering phase." The Star reported that the school would declare Conley ineligible and request the organization reinstate Conley immediately in a letter to the NCAA soon. "We want to make sure the letter is crafted appropriately," Missouri Athletic Director Mike Alden told The Star on Friday. It is the school's 16th possible violation in just more than four years with Quin Snyder as coach. According to phone records, Missouri might have violated NCAA rules by contacting Conley's mother before Conley requested a release from VMI. Snyder contends that the five calls were in response to calls from Conley's mother to inform her that her son needed to be released before the school could officially speak with him. Because of his January transfer the earliest Conley could begin playing with the Tigers would be the second semester of next year. In February, Missouri guard Ricky Clemons was reinstated one day after the school reported it made excessive phone calls while recruiting him from the College of Southern Idaho. In Snyder's tenure, there have been three more severe rules violations. Rickey Paulding and Arthur Johnson were required to repay Missouri $1,621.45 each,the price of their mothers' traveling on an airplane chartered by the university in September 1999. Recruit Uche Okafor was ruled ineligible last year because he signed with a Russian semipro team before he transferred to Missouri. Former Tigers star Kareem Rush was suspended for one-third of his freshman year during the 1999-2000 season for payments and services he received during his high school career. Wizards overcome D.C. United, 3-2 The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chris Brown scored on a rebound of Josh Wolff's miss fewer than 90 seconds into overtime, giving the Kansas City Wizards a 3-2 victory over D.C. United in the season opener for both teams Saturday night. United goalkeeper Nick Rimando jumped to catch the high shot by Wolff, the U.S. national team forward playing in his first game with Kansas City, but deflected it straight to Brown. Brown put the rebound just under the crossbar to give Kansai City the victory in front of a team record crowd of 22,403. Preki and Chris Klein also scored for the Wizards, who picked up their quickest goal in team history when Preki put a shot past Rimando from 25 yards out in the third minute. Klein's goal 16 minutes into the second half off a feed from Francisco Gomez tied it at 2. Mike Petek scored on a rebound for United in the 36th minute, and D.C. went up 2-1 in first-half injury time when Santino Quaranta headed in a cross from Marco Etcheverry. Kansan Classified T 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Business Personals 115 On Campus 120 Announcements 125 Travel 136 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Male Female 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted X 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 310 Computers 315 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 440 Sublease 400s Real Estate WORKING 500s Services Classified Policy 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services The Kenyan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, religion, sexual orientation, nationality KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limit fiction or discrimination.* Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. - 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements F Wanted Papa Reach concert pictures/ video with kid on stage Will pay 816-739-1129 johnsains@aol.com Marks JEWELERS BASS PLAYER 205 - Help Wanted Quality Jewelers Since 1880 100% 130 - Entertainment Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swebell.net 200s Employment 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1 Dance lessons; ballet, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-227 男 女 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan www.greatcampsbob.com After School teacher Ages 6-9, April and May, Mon-Fri 3:00- 5:30; Wed. 1:00-5:30; Start now. Must have licensed care experience and 3 ed courses. Sunshine Acres 642. 822-232 BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. 205-Help Wanted --- Brookcreek Learning Center Teaching Assistant. Training provided. Must be energetic and share an enthusiasm for making a difference in the lives of young children. PT, mts. available. Apply 2010 Mt. Hoe Count: 855-0022 Cruise line entry level on board positions available, great benefits. Seasonal/year rd. 919-324-6934 www.cruisecareers.com Doormen and weekend bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 Iowa 120 - Announcements Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. F GPA, The Graduate & Professional Association of the University of Kansas, seeks a graduate or professional student as Financial Director. The successful candidate will be an independent, organized and motivated worker; possess business and/or financial knowledge and experience; strong people skills; budget experience; and the ability to multitask. Special job requirements include managing and reporting finances for GPA and 40 graduate student organizations. Position is a student/hourly, part-time, one year (reewable) term with start date May 5, 2003 (Pay approx $800/mo with institute/staff tuition rates.) PeopleSoft experience but not required. Please send letter of interest and resume to Financial Director Search Committee, cio Graduate & Profession, Association, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd, Rm 426, Lawrence KS 65045. GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS. COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865- 0855. Find it, sell it, buy it in the Kansan Classified or just read them for the fun of it F1 **Fraternities • Sororities • Clubs • Student Groups** Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program it works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 932-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com 120 - Announcements 205 - Help Wanted Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions Call 1-800-293-3865 ext $51. Full time summer maintenance technician needed for large apartment community. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Apply at 1301 West 4th and Nasmish. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com Graduate Student Hourly Position: *Student Success! Student Tolerance! "LeBiRiGY Trans" Issues Liaison *Responsibilities:* Serva as liaison to Queens and Alles. LBGT services of Kansas; serve as liaison to other campus offices and student organizations. Develop a variety of educational resources directed toward raising consciousness and increasing acceptance. Required Qualifications: Bachelor's degree and graduate status for Fall 2003 and Spring 2004 (Must be enrolled in at least 6 credit hours). Demonstrated ability to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian. especially those related to higher education. Demonstrated ability to work effectively with a variety of public and individuals. Availability to attend KU Queens and Allies meetings Thursday evenings. Ability to organize and work independent on assigned tasks. Position Start Date: On or about August 18, 2003 $5.50 per hour, 20 hours a week. Complete job description available in Student Development Center, 22 Strong Hall Application: Please submit a letter of application, resume, and names, addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses (if available) of two references to Marshall Jackson, Associate Director, Student development, 22 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 65045. Review of applications will begin on May 2; 2003. Position open until filled EOE/AA Application: Please submit a letter of Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/19. It's not too late to join the fun. For more info email staff@campinadu.com or complete application in staffarea.d www.campinadu.com Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evertons. Help wanted: Seeking self-motivated person for PT receptionist at Lawrence Airport. Phones, customer service, bookkeeping & cleaning. Requires knowledge of Microsoft Word & Excel. 1 to 2 eveings per week and 2 to 3 weeksend per month for year round. Pick up application BAM-4PM at the airport, 1930 Airport Road. Direct questions to james at 842-8000. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary. students well- comed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepro.com 205 - Help Wanted MOVIE EXTRAS/ MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450-day No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-888-243-0163. ex020 OFFICE HELP NEEDED OFFICE HELP NEeded Part-time work help needed (approx. 20 hrs/week, M-F, 1PM, S-PM); Duties are answering phone calls, data entry, data & customer service. Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Avamar, PO Box 3467, Lawrence KS 68046. Attention Trace EOE. STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD Schumm Foods needs a part-time office assistant who has prior office experience and good customer service skills. Start at $7 per hour. $8 per hour after a year. Apply at Schumm Foods at 719 Mass (above the Smokehouse). Great practical experience in all facets of a small business. Spring Break was awesome! STS America #1 & Student Tour Operator is now hiring on-campus reps for 2003-4. 1-800-648-4849 www.stsair.com Shipping position open immediately $8/hr 20 w/week. Choose your own hours. Must have own transportation: Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy lifting. Must be committed and dependable. Send letter and or resume with 3 references to EEI, P.O. Box 1304 Lawrence, KS 60044, EOE/AA (SHAB) SHAB is seeking diverse individuals in major, nationality, ethnicity and experience for the 2003-2004 academic year. Board members shall advise & counsel the Walkins Administration on matters pertaining to the program on health care and education for all students of the University of Kansas, SHAB is a Student Senate Board appointed board. MAKE A DIFFERENCE pick up an application at the Student Senate Office on the 4th Floor of the Kansas Union or Watkins Health Center on the second floor Administration Office. Summer staff needed: Camp Wood YMCA Elmdaie, KS. Counselors, wranier, leadership director, specialty/trip camp coordinator, evening cook, 620-273-8641 or campwoodbldg.com/buildgonet. The Mass, St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Deli or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). Attention College Students. What are you doing for the summer? No one hiring? We are! Find out how you could make $2,800 monthly this summer*Call 1-833-1833. BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great pay Call 1-800-806-0862 ext 1422 Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469- 5554. > 205 - Help Wanted 手拉手 手拉手 手拉手 KANSAS GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Univ.of KS. West Campus; currently has several student positions available. For job duties, requirements, deadlines, and online applications visit http://www.kgs.ksa.edu/. GeneralJobs.html or contact Annette 684-2152. h@kgs.ksa.edu. Applications also available at 324 Hambleton Hall, AVE/OE. Leasing Agents Leasing Agents Energetic, outgoing personalities needed. Part time, flexible schedule, weekend hrs. Apply in person at Parkway Commons. 3601 Clinton Parkway Move in-coordinator needed. Begin immediately. Must be available to work 20-40 hours per week through the summer. Must be dependable and organized. Stop by Meadowbrook Apts. or call 842-4200. Stop! Are you hardworking? Athletic minded? Outgoing? If you have answered yes, we may have a position for you. - Starting at S450 wk + bonuses * Entry level positions * Company training * Opportunity for medical & dental * Rapid advancement + bonuses For interview time please call 785-843-8246 205 - Help Wanted 205 - Help Wanted 手拉手 手拉手 手拉手 手拉手 手拉手 手拉手 手拉手 FedEx Ground After-Class workout. First-Class pay. Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 - Weekly paycheck - Tuition Assistance - $.25 raise every 90 days for a year - 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week - $10-11/hr starting pay - $100 new hire bonus - paid vacations and holidays - Need ability to load, unload, and sort packages. 205 - Help Wanted Treats THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Office of Admissions & Scholarships - KU has an entry-level opening for an Admissions Counselor. This position will participate broadly in the general work of the Office, including representing the University in visits to secondary schools, community colleges and college fairs, conducting on-campus group information sessions, contacting prospective students in the recruiting region, and coordinating special recruiting programs. Extensive travel and some evening and weekend work required. - QUALIFICATIONS: Candidate must be able to effectively organize time and tasks, and be willing to travel by automobile or plane to any city or region assigned. Candidate should also be able to demonstrate strong oral and written communication skills and the ability to effectively work with diverse student population. A Bachelor's degree by the time of appointment is required. An understanding of the academic programs and services offered by the University of Kansas is preferred. - To apply submit a resume, cover letter and the names and phone number of three references to: Admissions Counselor Search Committee, c/o Office of Admissions & Scholarships, KU Visitor Center, 1502 Iowa, Lawrence, KS 66045-7576 --- - The application priority deadline is April 25, 2003 but applications will continue to be accepted until the position is filled. EO/AA Employer MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 CLASSIFIED 205 - Help Wanted 7B --- Small well-established Financial Office is seeking a well-organized individual wishing to learn and grow with the business. People skills, computer skills, and attention to details extremely important. Position includes communicating with clients with respect to their small business needs, preparing monthly "books", preparing business and personal income tax returns and general accounting office duties. Small office environment requires individual with flexible attitude. Required computer skills. Proficient in Windows '98, Microsoft Office Suite: Excel, Word, Outlook and Internet research. Send resume to P.O. Box 235, Bonner Springs, KS 66012, Attn: Jane. Experienced gymnastic instructors needed. Part-time morning or evening hours. Experience working with children preferred. Call Tern 913-649-5554. 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale --- S Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext. 4565 JAYHAWK COLLECTOR'S TREASURE Signed 1937 first edition of "Better Basketball" by Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, Book bears the authenticated signature of the legendary coach, with inscription, "Lawrence, Kansas, June 14, 1938." This gem goes to the highest bidder. (816) 221-5851. 360 - Miscellaneous $ $ $ $ $ CDs, games, and movies. CHEAP! @ www.orbitused.com. 405 - Apartments for Rent 400s Real Estate 1 & 2 BR apts, in nice houses Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings. $425.841-3633. 1-1 BR Apt. Next to Campus. Avail. Aug 1. 1346 Ohio $490 per month. Utilities paid. Call 550-4260 1 BR apt for sublease, avail. June 1st, opt. lease for fall. Across from stadium, guaranteed parking. $425/month. water/ rashpaid. No pets. Elizabeth. 834-694- 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. Great location. 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. pets$16/mo Avail. Aug 19-824-4242 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-441-4169 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. $415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, central air. Available mid-May or June 1st.Call 211-7736. 3 BR apts. FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Call 785-748-9807 7 BR house, 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown. $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Call 505-0426 Avail. 8/1. Quiet, no smoking, no pets, 6th and Kasold. 2 BR, 1.5 BA $685/month plus security deposit. 1-year lease, 500-6812. Avail. Aug. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated old house, 1300 ft. Mort. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique box, No pets. $440/mo. Call 841-1074. Avail. Aug; Small 1 BR apt, in renovated older house, 8th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets $450 Call 841-1074 Avail, August 1st. 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher. 829 Alabama. $110/month. Call 843-8540 Ext. 21. Available in August. 1, 2 bdrm. Close to GSP/Corbin between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841-1207 405 - Apartments for Rent 1. BR $450/mo. Avail Aug 1. New carpet, vinyl, hardwood floors in BR. Very cute/nice; 730 Arkansas, Call 843-8540 ext 21. 1.2-3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. Available August 18, 841-6254 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU builte laundry facility CA84-001-001 PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt. Homes Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1.2.3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firmanagementinc.com VILLAGE SQUARE apartment Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon Atmosphere: 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3 Bedrooms W/D,all appliances Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. ^{90}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Blue Mead Management, Inc Apartments & Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ◆Washer & Dryer ◆Fully Equipped Kitchen ◆Serving Bar - Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Call 840.9467 for an appointment Blue Moon Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 405 - Apartments for Rent 405 - Apartments for Rent Avail. Aug. Nice 2 BR room in renovated old house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, floor A/C. 10th & NY No pets. $250, Call 841-1074. 3 BR apts, 1.1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances, W/D hook up, Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. Newl. 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo. plus deposit. Call 550-4148. MASTERCRAFT Available now, May or June 1. Very nice, remodeled, spacious top floor 1. BR apts. 3. and Emery. No smoking. $415 plus utilities. 850-8111 or bq41-3192 WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Hanover Place 14th & Mass*841-1212 designed with you in mind. Campus Place Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Regents Court 19th & Mass·749-0445 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 Tanglewood West Hills Apartments NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Tuckaway Equal Housing Opportunity MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm 2600 w 6th Street - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom - Reasonable Rates - Great Location Near Campus Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street Open House Monday - Friday 1:00-5:00 HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri 405 - Apartments for Rent --- www.tuckawaymgmt.com Washer/Dryer Alarm System tuckaway has two jobs; hot tubs, basketball court, fitness center and gated entrance Tuckaway at Briarwood Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 Fully Equipped Kitchen Tuckaway has two pools, - Digital Cable & Internet 405 - Apartments for Rent Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Aven June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paill $35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $600 On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 1712 OHIO Await, Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt, DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site 38 BRA 2 $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 5339 www.appartmentalnance.net CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block Michigan Call 843-4090. Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $955-1050, NO PETS: 841-5533 Attention seniors & Grad students Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Canyon Court Luxury Apartments Now Leasing for Spring 2003 - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool & Hot Tub - Storage & Mobility * High Speed Internet Connections * Security Systems Available * Small Pet Welcome - Basketball Court - Basketball Court 842-3280 www.firstmanagementinc.com HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 1,2,3,Bedroom - 1,2,3,Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 www.firstmanagementinc.com 6th & Iowa 1,2,&3 - Spacious, Luxury Apts Bedroom Apartments -6 mo. leases avail *Spacious, Luxury Ap* *All appls. + W/D* *Water paid* *Caterer guest kit* Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN THE LEGENDS L est here 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com NOW LEASING May 2003 FUELY FURNISHED 3, 3 & A BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ACC KEEPED, NO DESTRIES NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS. NO HASLEY WASHER AND DRIVER IN EVERY UINT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BB AREA EQUILIUM FITTED PINNELS (785) 856-5800 GARAGES & CARPORTS | CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HIGHER GAME-ROOM | COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUWEELOW BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING CORNER STREET Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bed rooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample parking, on-site laundry. Call 843-4090. Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship. Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apt. 2727 Amidon. 838-8302 Save Your Money! Now signging I *y* LEA's lease starting May/ June/July/Aug. No smoking pets. Extra nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appliances, low utilities, A/C, bus route to $405/mo. Spanish Crest Apts. 814-8688. Town home-3 bedroom. 2 bath, WD, fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/operator, pet. Sublease 6/1-7/31 $650 766-5080. Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hights Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road, 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday, Call 841-3800. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 BK. Arkansas. 843-4090. Available June 1, one bedroom apt at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd.$490 per month.W/D hookups. No pets.749-7744 or 760-4788. Attractive studio apt. near KU at 945 Mou avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study. $400, gas & water paid. No pets on smoking. Call 749-1061. Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer 1 Bedroom Specials Avail CHASE COURT - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Fireplace - Washer/Driver - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - On KIJ Bus Route - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome - On KU Bus Route 1942 STEWART AVE. Model Open Daily! 843-8220 www.firstmanagementinc.com SUNRISE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic on 6th St.) - Luxurious 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Townhouse VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. - Garages; w/d Hookups * Microwave Ovens * Some with Fireplaces * On KU Bus Route - Swimming Pool - Tennis Courts OPEN: MON-FRI 10-12 & 1-5 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismithi 842-5111 colony@jkks.com www.colonywoods.com 1&2Bedrooms - On RO Bus Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - Exercise room * Now Leasing for Summer & Fall M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 415 - Homes For Rent 2 BR 1 BA nice house with one car garage, garage floors, fenced yard, porch with swing. $685.841-3633 anytime. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jaccuzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fenced landscaped backyard. $1450,841-3633 anytime. BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 or 766-6622 to 30:10 p.m. House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath CA/WD Included. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/mo. 218-4113 430 - Roommate Wanted z roommates needed for 5 BR house, 13th and Tenn. 3 floors, offstream parking. Megan 550-958 or Amy 764-0698 ASAP. Grade student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in, closet, W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 +1/2 unit Avail. B42-4540. Huge, new, 3 BR townhome 2.5 BA, FP, WD, DW, 300/mo, + 1/3 utilities. Call Aspira A913-789-8966. 4100 Clinton Pkwy or just read them for the fun of it 440 - Sublease Find it, sell it buy it in the Kansan Classified 1 BR, 2 BA at Aberdeen Apartments. W/Included iD. moable Available June 1- Dec. Please call 832-2458. 2 BR 2 BA apt, at Parkway Commons. Avail mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jesse at 312-9170. KEY TO HOUSE 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage, DW, Central Air, avail, mid-May. Call Adam 830-8076. 3 BR. 3 BA apt, Furn. WID, full kitchen + more. Avail. May-Aug. Rent $375+ util., water cable, paid Cam Amy 766-5199 4 Subleases needed, new 4 BR townhouse, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $132.50, lease through July 31, 816-5260- 6421 or 638-758-3505 or 620-340-3273. 40 MBA students need summer subleases for July. If interested e-mail italy@v3ku.edu. Female roommate want to share 4 BR apt. @ Jefferson Commons. Swimming pool. tst. rented for 785-218-5542 Beautiful 5 BR 2 BA house available for summer sublease. Close to St. St. and campus Rent negotible. Call 856-1022. Furnished Apartment for Sublease! Female roommate wanting to share a nice 3 BR town home in west Lawrence. Available May 1- Aug $275 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Julie at 933-2606. 48R, 2 BA, liv. rm, din rm, kitchen, patio (laundry fac. and pool on apartment compartment) Close to pool ('Orchard Corners') on the bus里. Starting May or neg. $216/mo. + until Cable and DSL. No furn. need; needed! Call Liz or Canda at (783) 958-3603 or leave a message. IBR in 2B8 apt. Summer Sublasel Right on campus. Available May or June $320/mo. Call Nicole 691-5204. Large 1 BR in 2 BR at Highpoint. Late May-July 31. Rent nego. WD, cable, internet ready. Great view. Call 312-7074 Need sublease to live w/ 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent paid.Call785-830-8003. PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has Full private BA, 749-6060. Roommate wanted for large 5 BIR house. Half block from campus. $315/mo. Call 393-3197 Sublease 1 BR api. next to campus. $460 + utils.Callison GTi at 913-558-3938. Summer sublease. 308 W. 16th Street. 4 BR, 2 BA. Good landlord. Nice front porch. Call 785-979-9617 or 785-331-6778 Offering $100 cash for signing sublease! 500s Services 505 - Professional --- TRAFFIC-DUTS-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matters/Residency issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DOLPH G. STROKE Donald G. Stroke Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation 510- Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-223-923 8B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY MONDAY,APRIL14,2003 SPORTS IT’S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. 7th & Florida 781-841-5255, man 639 or 640, van 100 SUNDANCE Roberton Apartment available on KU bus route On-site manager 24 hour emergency Maintenance models open daily Parking lot and parks Master suite & patio Master island & deck Regents Court Large 70'TH apartment opens north with Westgate and Ari Market decor Local makeover opportunities Relax and unwind EHO For more information call 811-T212-9444 Mon-Fri 10am Anno 10am And Thurs Orchard Corners 15th & Kasoki 719-4220 Now Leasing! Models open daily Roy CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Mangino said he knew that choosing between his Tar Heel alma mater and the program he has built at Kansas has been a constant source of stress for Williams lately, and he wanted him to know he had the support of the football team. "Ive had the good fortune to sit with coach Williams this week and tell him how I felt about him and his importance here." "I've had the good fortune to sit with coach Williams this week and tell him how I felt about him and his importance here," Mangino said. "I respect him, and any decision he makes coming up here in the future, but I want to let you know our football program, I'm speaking for all of Mark Mangino Kansas football coach Now that I'm honest, Y N the world do we have a rowing teeM? WHY don't we get an ICE HOCKEY team why'll were at it?? (I'm taykin' another shot for that) Wood CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B our players and coaches,we'd sure like to have coach Williams stay here at Kansas." Al Boal wasted a lot of money on football coach Mahk Mangiono's contract exstention, but the guy didn't even win a Big 12 game last season?!? Y does MAngino get a extension for sukking? (take a —Kansan sportswriter Jesse Newell contributed to this story. This story was edited by Amber Byarlay. sHot!) All theese ROOMERS about Roy leaving are STOOPID!!!! Y would ROy leave-!? Quit spreadin rumors, i haTe them!(take 2 shots) Y in the world did Owl Bowl get a stinkkin job here, anywho? Finish your bottle 4 that bone-head moov. I have NO more takeela. But its OKAy, becuz I'd rahter sleep rite now. Hope u enjoye d my gaeeme. - Wood is a Lee's Summit, Mo., senior in journalism. Scrimmage CONTINUED FROM PAGE 18 Whittemore ran fluidly when chased from the pocket and said his knee was not bothering him. Whittemore injured his anterior The first play of the second drive, Whittimore threw a 48-yard pass to Simmons in stride with a defender pinched closely to Simmons' side. Whittimore later finished the drive with a four-yard run that ended in a touchdown. This was after he decided to not pass the ball when he had the option. The first play of the first drive, Whittemore scrambled out of the pocket and hit wide receiver Mark Simmons for 21 yards along the sideline. He rifled a 16-yard pass to wide receiver Charles Gordon over the middle. He capped the first drive with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Simmons, who was in the corner of the end zone. Running almost full speed, Simmons caught the pass with one hand while dragging his feet into the end zone. Whittemore was helped by running back Clark Green on the drive, who ran for 25 yards on two carries. Receiver CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B It was no challenge for Whitte- more, who moved the offense with ease down the field, scoring touc- downs on both of his two drives. "Wide receiver play is getting better — many of those kids are stepping up," coach Mark Mangino said. "Mark Simmons is a talented young guy, Several of those kids are." Falling out of bounds and blanketed by two defenders, Simmons received a Whittimore pass with only his left arm, as he palmed the football with his out-stretched hand and tucked it into his body. Mark Simmons emerged as a standout in the practice. The 5-foot-11-inch, 175-pound sophomore caught four passes for 85 yards and also pulled in the catch of the day for the jayhawks. The addition of Lyonel Anderson will help the receivers as well. cruciate ligament late last season Brian Luke did not fare so well. In the drills before the scrimmage, Luke looked like the better quarterback. Whittemore's passes looked like teetering, wounded ducks. Luke threw bullets all over the field, tight-spiraled, fast and accurate. It was the same scene that many witnessed during spring practice. Once the scrimmage started and the players were put into game situations, it was another story. "I felt great today — I feel fullspeed." Whittemore said. Luke looked rattled and routinely overthrew open receivers. He threw an interception to linebacker Kevin Kane. When pressured, Luke panicked. When Whittemore was pressured, he became more dangerous and made big plays. That resilience coupled with his leadership ability is why Whittemore will start the 2003 season as Kansas' captain and starting quarterback. The other team captains are Adrian Jones, offensive tackle; Banks Floodman, linebacker; Travis Watkins, defensive tackle; and Zach Dyer, safety, as the special teams captain. The Jayhawks will open the 2003 season Aug. 30 at home against Northwestern. - Edited by Amber Byarlay The junior-college transfer from Rochester, N.Y., will give the Jayhawks an athletic target at tight end. "He brings a lot to the table." Whittemore said. "He's going to be an important weapon for us." Anderson, who was an allconference wide receiver at Alfred State College, is making the adjustment to wide receiver at the request of Mangino. The 6-foot-3-inch junior hopes his size and speed will create problems for opposing defenses at the tight end position. "I think it works to my advantage, being able to go against linebackers and safeties," Anderson said. "I feel like once two-a-days start, and once I learn all the offense, I should be able to hold my own." — Edited by Brandon Gay Tennis CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Haylock fell to Maria Rosenberg 7-6 (3) 6-4 giving her a 10-7 record when playing at No. 3 singles. Senior Kim Lorenz also won a two set match against Castillejos, 6-3, 6-3, at No. 5 singles. "I think we had an opportunity to beat this team but everyone is not playing up to their abilities," Lorenz said. By losing to its third straight Big 12 Conference opponent, Kansas drops to 7-10 overall and 3-7 in the Big 12. The Jayhawks will finish the regular season at home next Saturday against the No. 30 Texas A&M Aggies. Edited by Michelle Burhenn APRIL Tuesday April 15,2003 Vol.113 Issue No.134 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Legend Lost [Picture of a man in a striped shirt, touching his cheek with his hand]. A teary eyed Roy Williams leaves the Allen Fieldhouse locker room after a team meeting. Jared Soares/Kansan Williams leaves one hill, heads for another By Doyle Murphy By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter Three years ago, Roy Williams said he couldn't tell his players he was leaving them for North Carolina. Yesterday, he found a way. Williams met with his players for half an hour yesterday afternoon. When he emerged from the locker room, he had tears in his eyes and few words for reporters. "I don't expect you to understand," Williams told the cluster of reporters. "There will be a press conference later on tonight. At that time things will come out." Williams had yet to say that he was leaving. Instead he said that the press conference was at 9:30 p.m. — eastern time. When asked why he referenced the For more coverage on Williams' departure see page 1B eastern time zone, he said, "It's their press conference." The message was clear: The former Jayhawk coach was once again a Tar Heel. Williams returned moments later to bid farewell to the Kansas basketball reporters. He asked that cameramen turn off their cameras and others turn off their tape recorders. "This has been a special place," he said. "I sincerely appreciate the way you've treated me from day one." The two meetings were Williams' way of letting the reporters know his intentions without spoiling his press conference announcement in Chapel Hill, N.C. SEE WILLIAMS ON PAGE 6A ROY WILLIAMS' COACHING CAREER 1968: Williams plays his freshman year at North Carolina as a non-scholarship player. 1973-1978: Coaches at Swannonaa, N.C. Owen High School. He also coached football and golf and was athletic director for two years. 1978-1988: Becomes assistant coach at UNC under Dean Smith. July 8,1988: Former Athletics Director B July 8, 1988: Former Athletics Director Bob Frederick hires Williams as Kansas Nov. 25, 1988: Wins first game as a Jayhawk. Nov. 11, 1989: The Jayhawks defeat UNLV 91-77, marking the first victory over a No. 1 team during William's tenure. men's basketball coach 1991: Kansas clinches a share of the Big Eight conference title and earns its first Final Four berth under Williams. The team lost the national championship game to Duke 72-65. March 13, 1992: Earns 100th victory. Jan. 28, 1996: Reaches 200 victories faster than any coach in Big Eight history. 1997: Williams' squad finishes the season with one regular season loss and a perfect conference record, clinching the Big Eight title. Jan, 24, 1998: Sets a Kansas record of 56 consecutive home victories. Feb. 20, 1999: Reaches 300 victories faster than any coach in NCAA history faster than any coach in NCAA history. ■ July 6, 2000: Turns down coaching job at UNC and announces he will remain Kansas men's basketball coach 2002: The Jayhawks become the first Big 12 Conference team to go undefeated, then advance to the Final. Four for the first time since 1993. Kansas lost to Maryland 97-88 in the semifinal. Jan. 15, 2003: Earns 400th victory. April 7, 2003: Loses to Syracuse 81-78 in the national championship game. April 11, 2003: Receives the Legends of Coaching award. April 14, 2003: Accepts job as North Carolina men's basketball coach. Exit draws mixed reactions from former players Bv Shane Mettlen By Sasha Matteen smettlen@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Shortly after Roy Williams told his team he would no longer be the Jayhawks' coach, the ball was bouncing on James Naismith Court again. Former Kansas player, Jeff Boschee, was in the Kansas locker room when Williams addressed the team and looked dejected while shooting around after the meeting. "It's a tough pill to swallow." Boschee said. "It's a sad day for Kansas basketball." While Boschee said he did not feel betrayed by Williams' decision, other former Jayhawks had more mixed emotions. "I feel a little rejected to be honest with you," Kevin Pritchard, who was a member of Williams' first Kansas team, said. "My heart hurts. The hardest thing is that this affects so many people." Brett Ballard, who, along with Boschee, played on the 2002 Kansas Final Four team, said he was also shocked at the decision. "I'm disappointed, but I appreciate the opportunity coach Williams gave me," Ballard said, adding that he felt sympathy for the current players. Ballard and Bosche agreed that Kansas basketball would continue to be successful in the post-Williams era. Pritchard and Mike Maddox, who both played for Williams and Larry Brown during their Kansas careers, were even more optimistic about the future of the program. "Everybody needs to remember KU has been playing basketball for 105 years," Maddox said. "We have been good for a long, long time. We just need to find a coach that fits in with the program." Pritchard, who coached the American Basketball Association's Kansas City Knights to a league championship, said he would "love" to be a member of the Jayhawks next coaching staff, and that the University should act quickly in hiring a new coach. "We can't wait a week or 10 days to do it," he said. — Edited by Leah Shaffer . 47 L 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front TUESDAY,APRIL 15,2003 News briefs CORRECTION Friday's The University Daily Kansan contained an error. The article, "KUnited wins," stated Chris Cardinal was a freshman. Cardinal is a sophomore. CAMPUS Descendant donates poet's personal items A descendant of German poet and writer Ernst Moritz Arndt donated a collection of Arndt's letters and personal items to the University of Kansas. The gift, valued at $1 million, will be added to materials at the Max Kade Center for German-American Studies. The items are the only known private collection of Arndt materials, said William Keel, chairman of the University's Germanic languages and literatures department. "He was an important literary and political figure in the 19th century," Keel said. "Many people consider him to be the father of German unity." Keel said it was a coincidence that the University asked Walter Earheart to be a guest professor this year. Earheart arrived from the University of Ernst Moritz Arndt in Germany before the University knew of the donation. Nicole Roché Forum panelists to discuss aftermath of war in Iraq The University of Kansas Office of International Studies will host a forum today from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union to discuss the war in Iraq and its aftermath. The panelists will discuss the role of the United Nations, the United States and other countries in Iraq, and opinions of the war from around the world. Diane Fourny, a professor of French and European studies will be on the panel. "I'll be giving a French perspective on the consequences of the war, and postwar — especially since the U.S. is looking at other regimes in the region," she said. Fourny said the topics were still relevant because she said U.S. officials were reportedly discussing toppling other Middle East regimes. Also in attendance will be representative faculty from the history, international studies, political science, military science and law departments. Faculty members will give presentations pertinent to their fields and take questions from the gallery. The forum is free and open to the public. JJ Hensley NATION Five college students die in suspicious fire Sunday COLUMBUS, Ohio — An off-campus house where five college students died in a fire on Sunday had at least six working smoke detectors and four fire extinguishers that worked but had not been used, an attorney for the owner said. The fire killed two Ohio State students and three Ohio University students visiting from Athens, about 65 miles from Columbus. One student remained in critical condition yesterday. The cause of the fire won't be released until today, police said. Records show that the house had passed its annual city inspection last April and was due for another inspection next month. NorthSteppe Realty manages the property for owner Michael Stickney of West Oakland Rentals. "We've done everything that we're supposed to have done to protect these children, and, yet, this still happens," said attorney Douglas Graff, who represents both companies. "If this was a purposefully set fire, which is what we believe, no place is safe enough." Graff said investigators asked questions about utilities, such as gas and electric lines. However, he said, they were more focused on the suspicious nature of the fire and the burn pattern. Investigators were trying to determine whether an argument during the party or alcohol were linked to the fire. Authorities say the tentative cause of death was smoke inhalation and carbon monoxide poisoning. - The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00. News: Leslie Torrez and Heather Hopper Weather: Matt McClaskey Sports: Liz Godfrey kansan.com 907 On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to DON'T have time to read today's paper. I need to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU KENNEDY CENTER Eric Braem/Kansan Brandon "Bam-Bam" Roberts, Free State High School student and member of Lawrence's Buggin' Out crew, checks out the moves of rival Huascar "Waka" Alcantara, of Chicago's Brickheadz crew, during the one-onone b-boy fights at the Granada. The third annual Bulldog Battle, held Friday at the Pool Room and Saturday at the Granada, featured crews from as far as Milwaukee competing in breakdancing and popping and locking battles for $1200 in cash prizes. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture Sherry Velasco of Washington Dietrich Earnhardt of the Economics Department will give a Brown Bag Lecture on "The Effects of Ownership and Financial Status on Corporate Environmental Performance" from noon to 1 p.m. today at 318 Bailey. Call 864-4236. Watkins Health Center will sponsor a free runners' clinic from 1 to 4 p.m. today at the south entrance. Wear shorts and usual running shoes for a free evaluation of problems experienced by running, walking and aerobic exercise. Call 864-9592. University will give a lecture on "Sex, Race and Desire in Early Modern Spain" from 3:30 to 5 p.m. today at the Hall Center for the Humanities conference room.Call 864-4798. University Career and Employment Services will sponsor the work shop "Better Late than Jobless" at 3 p.m. today at Room 149 in the Burge Union.Call 864-3624. International Programs will sponsor a panel discussion on "Is This the New World Order? Perspectives on the War on Iraq and its Aftermath" from 4 to 6 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-6161. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will practice from 5:30 to 7 p.m. today at 207 Robinson. Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. University Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Rick Clock at 841-3148. The KU Chamber Choir will perform at 7 tonight with Gabriela Frank, art museum composer-in-residence, at the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4710. The KU Karate Kobudo Club will practice from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight at St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422 William Schulz of Amnesty International will give a lecture on "Tainted Legacy: 9/11 and the Ruin of Human Rights" at 7:30 tonight at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union. Call 864-9835. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will present "Faith Forum: A Liberal Take on Christianity" from 8:30 to 9:30 tonight in the ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. ON THE RECORD A KU employee told the KU Public Safety Office that someone took a television and cables from Oldfather Studios, 1621 West Ninth St., between 3:30 p.m. March 10 and 2:23 p.m. April 3, according to reports. The items were valued at $450. AKU employee told the KU Public Safety Office that someone stole padlocks, wiring for lights and damaged a light fixture between 5:30 a.m. April 2 and noon Friday at the Campanile, 1450 Memorial Drive, according to reports. Damage was estimated at $95. Et Cetera A fire broke out while crews were working on the roof of the Art and 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS60445. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-9467) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. Design building, 1467 Jayhawk Blvd. at about 2:20 p.m.Friday, according to reports. Battalion chief Rob Kort said the fire was extinguished before the Lawrence Fire Department arrived. Damage to the roof, including a plastic skylight, is estimated at around $1,000. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hint. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 60045 filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. JOB OPENINGS!!! KU Recreation Services has positions that need to be filled for the Fall 2003 semester. We are hiring several people...do you think you could fill a position? Stop by the 4th floor Kansas Union on April 15 & 16 between 11 am & 3 pm to fill out an application! University of Kansas Student Senate KU RECREATION SERVICES The University of Kansas The Commission on the Status of Women And the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center the WOMEN'S Recognition PROGRAM guest speaker The Honorable Julie A. Robinson U.S. District Judge Tuesday, April 15th, 2003, 7:30 p.m. Big 12 Room, Kansas Union Reception Following TUESDAY,APRIL15,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 3A Ryun urges crowd to research issues U. S. Rep. approves of coalition actions, urges war on terror By Jessica Hood jhood@kansan.com Kansas staff writer When introducing U.S. Congressman Jim Ryun, Chris Miller spoke of a picture in his office called Jayhawk Pride. Pictured is Ryun, who competed in the mile run as a Jayhawk and was a former record holder in the mile. "It is not often to you get to introduce someone whose picture hangs in your office," Miller, chairman of the Douglas County Republican Central Committee, said. Ryun is the U.S. Rep. for the 2nd district, which includes part of Lawrence. He is serving his fourth term in the House of Representatives. PETER HUGHSON Ryun focused on the war in Iraq during his speech to the College Republicans last night at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. About 30 people attended the event. "If Sept. 11 hadn't happened," Ryun said, "we wouldn't be where we are now." Ryun said he applauded what the leadership had done so far in the war. "It is a very just war if you look at what has happened," he said. "I very much support what we are doing there." The war is giving the Iraqi people an opportunity for selfgovernment, and it is continuing the process of working against and ending terrorism, Ryun said. He said it was important to remember those who gave their lives during the war. "Freedom is never free," Ryun said. "Someone always has to pay for it." An interesting aspect of this war he said, is the embedded reporters. Embedded reporters provide the opportunity to see first hand what is happening in Iraq. When asked about recent concerns about Syria, Ryun said before the United States goes, it has to finish what it has started in Iraq. But if it comes to it, the United States should step in. "Terrorism is the war of this century," he said. Ryun would like to see the number of the military increased. There are half the number of troops that the U.S. had in Desert Storm, he said. Ryun ended his speech with a challenge. Ryun encouraged the audience to become informed and find out about the issues. "Freedom is never free. Someone always has to pay for it." Jim Ryun U.S. Representative Ryun's wife, Anne Ryun, spoke about the lesson she had learned during her husband's time in Congress. "I've learned since Jim's been in Congress," she said, "there are two parties that care passionately about the country but they just have different philosophies on how it should be run." Erin Blocher, chair of the College Republicans and Lawrence senior, called Ryan a "great congressman and Jayhawk." "I'm glad part of Lawrence has Republican representation," she said. Edited by Jason Elliott Discussion offers tips for music careers bottleneck panel discusses success in music industry By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer In a discussion last night at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., about 70 people listened to a panel talk about ways for ordinary people to turn their recording dreams into a reality. "I made this new CD and I think it's hot," said one woman from the audience as she handed out her business cards and demos to the panel. Her move was met with approval. "That's just like me," said Miles Bonny CEO/Founder of LawrenceHipHop.com. "You need to get your music out there." The panel discussion was sponsored by the Chicago Chapter of the Recording Academy in partnership with the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, or ASCAP. The event covered a variety of subjects relevant for those attempting to break into the industry including marketing/promotions, budgets, the Internet and digital music, artistic development and production. "We've had some of these functions in Kansas City and through those meetings we've learned of an emerging music scene in Lawrence," said Tera Siwicki, regional project coordinator of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Inc. "We wanted to make our presence "We want to facilitate artists' careers to make them more successful." Shawn Murphy Shawn Murphy Midwest representative from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers known to Lawrence musicians." Panelists included Edwin Morales, a booking agent; Shawn Murphy, a Midwest representative from ASCAP; Chuck Chapman, owner of Chapman Recording studios, Jon Niccum, Online Entertainment Editor at the Lawrence Journal-World and local rapper Approach. Murphy, said the panel discussion was held to help artists. "We want to facilitate artists' careers to make them more successful," Murphy said. "We want to show these musicians how the industry has changed and how they can adapt. The panel emphasized the importance of a professional demo, the Internet and marketing during the discussion. "If you make an album, you've got to realize who your competition is," Chapman said. "If you spend $50 on production costs on your CD, it will not compete well with a CD that had production costs over 1 million dollars." "I've realized what I need to do to even have a chance at making it," Morgan said. "The panel was very helpful." George Morgan, Leawood senior, said the discussion was helpful for his music ambitions. -Edited by Leah Shaffer Moore backs Israel. Palestine awareness By Kelley Weiss kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writer U. S. Rep. Dennis Moore didn't want to talk about basketball last night. Moore (D-Kansas) said he had answered enough questions about basketball during the day. Instead, he signed a petition to raise awareness about relations between Israel and the United States. Moore signed the petition at the Hillel House, 940 Mississippi St., after he spoke to about 25 student leaders with Students for Peace, College Republicans, Concerned Active and Aware Students, Students for a Sensible Drug Policy and the KU Israel Alliance. He signed the petition to show his support for increasing awareness about the conflict between the Israeliis and Palestinians, and advocacy for Israel. Some of the subjects Moore touched on were his experiences while visiting Israel, the war in Iraq, terrorist threats in North Korea, preemptive war, the fate of the United Nations, anti-American sentiment and the USA PATRIOT Act. Moore started the discussion by sharing the positive experience he had when he visited Israel and the strong democracy he found there. A student question-answer session followed. Students asked Moore whether he thought the United States should interfere if Iran's government and economy deteriorated as a result of the war with Iraq. Students also asked how they could use their influence to raise awareness about Israel. Reactions after the discussion focused on diversity. PETER A. KNATHER Moore said he was pleased with the feedback he received after speaking with the students at the Hillel House. Moore "I was really impressed," M'ore said. "It was a very diverse group. I guess coming to this place I expected to see one perspective." Leo Khayet, Overland Park sophomore and KU Israel Alliance co-founder, also said the turnout of different student groups was impressive. "I think it really went well," Khayet said. "It's important that there were students from such a mix of organizations." Fallon Farokhi, Lawrence junior, said having the different student groups represented was a first. She said that although everyone attending the meeting was a student leader, they had never gathered in the same place. Rep. Moore said that after talking to the different student leaders who met at the Hillel House it reaffirmed to him that meeting with peers and discussing events was the best way to learn. Meghan Traxler, Dallas freshman and KU Israel Alliance member, said Moore's visit was a great start for the KU Israel Alliance. "This is just a stepping stone for what's to come," Traxler said. "It's inspiring that so early on we got Congressman Moore to visit." Edited by Andrew Ward PETER M. LENNON William F. Schulz Executive Director, AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL USA S Tuesday, April 15, 2003 7:30 p.m. University of Kansas · Student Union Ballroom + Unitarian Universalists. The Uncommon Denomination Q&A to Follow Dr. Schulz' Address Sponsored by: Area Unitarian Universalist Congregations www.uua.org Hosted by Hosted by Unitarian Fellowship of Lawrence www.uufl.net KU Student Chapter of Amnesty International www.amnestyusa.org Dr. Schulz will sign copies of his latest book, "In Our Own Best Interest," available for sale after the presentation IN DIESEL JEANS, LIFE IS BETTER hobbs. 700 MASS. "Take 5"...five minutes for 5% off on Fall '03 Books Preorder and Save an extra 5% Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill Economics 101 Preorder and Save an extra 5% FRESHwater Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill or click and save @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com * TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2003 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION TUESDAY,APRIL 15,2003 TA TALKIOUS Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 pr.khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning Jenna Goeplert and Justin Hemming managing editors 884-4894 or jgoeplert@kansan.com and ihenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kanan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 684-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news advise 984/7687 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7668 or mfisher@kansan.com Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com A word about Day on the Hill being canceled: SUA, do you have any idea how far KJHK could have stretched $30,000? They could have put on a hell of a show, and it's my opinion that you people just don't know what you're doing. 图 I was sitting in my apartment and there was a knock at my door, so I opened it, and there were two Mormons standing there. I talked to them for 20 minutes, but only because one of them was hot. though Williams has defined my concept of basketball, Kansas means everything to me. Williams and the crimson and blue have always been inextricably linked in my mind. His legend belongs to Kansas. True, he may go on to build a new legend at North Carolina, but it has none of the meaning in my mind without the Jayhawk. I am so proud of my mother. She was waving her palms of pride today during Palm Sunday. Way to go, Mom. My friend has a phobia of drive-thrus If I haven't seen it, and I haven't heard about it, and it's not in Minnesota, it doesn't exist to me. Me and my roommate were just sitting around wondering if a pig would eat bacon. It's approaching 1 a.m., and we have gone from studying for our anthropology test to taking pictures of ourselves making monkey faces. 图 Goodbye, Roy There are 114 episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer downloaded on my computer. Am I obsessed? Maybe. Maybe just a little. Fallon, if you don't marry that other guy, will you marry me? SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES **Maximum Length:** 650 word limit. **Include:** Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length; 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class_hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kanson.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Strauffer-Flint STINSON'S VIEW STINSON THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN (C) 2003 PERSPECTIVE Kansas basketball not the same without Williams at the helm There has never been basketball for me without Roy Williams. My dad a KU alumnus, brought My dad, a KU alumnus, brought me up on Kansas basketball. I would sit on the floor next to his reciliner and halfheartedly doodle little drawings on computer paper while Dad pounded on the arm of his chair in frustration, rocketed out of the chair to pace the floor in anticipation or jumped up and down in jubilation. Before I even understood the basics of the sport, I knew Roy Williams. His face means basketball to me and has since I was 8 years old. It was from Williams' great Kansas players such as Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan that I came to understand the rules of the game. It was from Williams' heartbreaking Final Four losses in 1991 and 1993 that I came to understand sportsmanship and graciousness. It was from Williams that I came to love Kansas basketball and everything it stands for. I won't lie — I'm no sports buff. In fact, I only tune in to SportsCenter between early October and late March. Basketball is and has always been the only sport I give a crap about, and Kansas is the only team I've ever backed. I didn't shed a tear when Kansas lost to Syracuse in the national championship game just over a week ago. It was only one game out of the 15 years I've cheered for the Jayhawks. Besides, Williams and his players' true class and dignity in the game's aftermath made me only more proud of the program and its history. And Williams and his teams can boast an illustrious history. Here's a quick glimpse at some highlights for sports illiterates like me: And that's why I knew I had to come to Kansas. It wasn't really a question. I couldn't have gone anywhere else. Final Four appearances in 1991, 1997, 2002 and 2003 A landmark 400 career victories GUEST COMMENTARY Amanda Sears opinton@hansan.com Zach Stinson for The University Daily Kansa It was from Williams' great Kansas players such as Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan that I came to understand the rules of the game. It was from Williams' heartbreaking Final Four losses in 1991 and 1993 that I came to understand sportsmanship and graciousness. It was from Williams that I came to love Kansas basketball and everything it stands for. A 62-game winning streak at home from February of 1994 to December of 1998 Going 16.0 in the Big 12 Conference in 2001-02 ■ Ranking in The Associated Press Top 25 poll for 145 consecutive weeks between 1991 and 1999. Williams' greatness and the greatness of his players emerge even through this tiny sample of the outstanding statistics the program has compiled during the last 15 seasons. But to see the coach who embodies the sport leave this program behind clogs my throat in a way cold numbers can't explain. I don't know how to say goodbye to Roy Williams,but I have to. Converting into a North Carolina fan simply is not an option. Because, even I'm not sure remaining true to Kansas works for me either. Williams is the program, and by leaving, he takes what the program stands for with him. He will likely take his coaching staff with him to North Carolina. And he's cast the future of players such as Keith Langford and recruit Omar Wilkes into doubt. It's not that I'm a fair-weather fan. I just don't know if I can stomach rooting for a team that is without what has always been its linchpin for me. At this point in time, it seems empty, incomplete. Maybe it's appropriate that, as I prepare to graduate and face having to act like an adult (by giving up drinking beer on Tuesdays, getting up before noon and keeping my checking account balance higher than $10), I give up this part of my childhood as well. Maybe it's appropriate that I let go of my soon-to-be alma mater more ways than one, by not only moving away from Lawrence, but also from the basketball program as well. I'll still have memories of drawing basketballs and players on the court, screaming at the television along with my dad and celebrating trips to the Final Four with friends. But without Williams, it just isn't the program I associate these memories with. It just isn't right. As Lewis H. Lapham said, "a man without a company name is a man without a country." Without Williams at Kansas, I feel like a woman without a team, and the feeling doesn't sit well. Sears is an Overland Park senior in journalism. She is Kansan opinion editor. EDITORIAL BOARD Williams' departure brings mix of emotion If you can't figure out whether you've loved Roy Williams for the past 15 years or hated him for the last 15 hours, you're not alone. The announcement that should have seemed inevitable has somehow blind-sighted Lawrence just one week after Syracuse did the same. With the fear of Lawrence residents finally the reality, Roy Williams' departure from KU leaves a mix of emotions. Whatever our emotions about Roy's departure, Roy has felt them too; and whatever baffled emotional state campus has been left in. Roy Williams has been there for weeks. Chancellor Hemenway told North Carolina chancellor James Moeser, "we are sending you a treasure." We couldn't agree more. And it's hard not to think North Carolina got the better end of the deal. KU is fortunate to have had Roy Williams for the 15 years that it did, but that fortune falls flat in filling the vacuum of coach Williams' departure. KU's basketball coach will be neither easily forgotten nor replaced. But no real Kansas fan would mistake Roy's departure as the end of KU basketball. To suggest as much forgets that Kansas basketbal transcends even Roy Williams the long history of basketball at the University of Kansas, from James Naismith to Phog Allen to Williams makes it melodramatic to assume the end. It does however make it all the more difficult to see him leave. Still, we wish Williams the best. Greg Holmquist for the editorial board 9 TUESDAY.APRIL 15.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A University budget fluctuations prevent printing numbers By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The unpredictable nature of the University's budget claimed an unseen victim last year: the University chose not to publish a working budget for the fiscal year 2003. Though reductions in funding were abundant throughout the University, the cost of putting out the thick booklet itself was not the reason that kept it from print, said Richard McKinney, assistant vice provost and budget director. Instead, continual fluctuations of the budget's numbers made printing them impractical. The numbers could have changed between the time the booklet was sent to print and the time it was released, McKinney said. "The numbers were so squishy that the value of the printed document wasn't reliable," he said. McKinney said the state made appropriations for the University budget in May but cut an additional $1 million in August and even more in November. "Due to all the uncertainty, we didn't publish," he said. The office did publish an updated list of salaries for 2003, McKinney said. For the most part, that list seems to have satisfied the curious types that come to the Spencer Research Library and Watson Library looking to comb the budget for answers, said Watson reference librarian Kathy Graves. She said people usually asked for the budget when they were really looking for faculty salaries. Watson does not have the salary information on hand, but it is housed at the Spencer Library. People are accustomed to going to Spencer for those kinds of documents, Graves said. The working budget has been published out of habit in the past, McKinney said. The information contained in the working budget is not available online or in any one place, but employees who need the information know they can access it through their computers, he said. "The major thing is the expenditures, and those are detailed in the annual financial report that comes out at the end of the year," McKinney said. - Edited by Lindsay Hanson Asian Week activities foster diversity By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Dragon dancing, Henna tattoos and a feast of Asian delicacies are a few of the Asian Week activities available to University of Kansas students this week. Andrew Tran. Overland Park freshman, performs a Dragon Dance yesterday on Wescoe beach during the annual Asian Festival. The festival is organized by the Asian American Student Union and the University of Kansas Student Senate. "The point of this week is to spread Asian culture on campus," Tiffany Lopez, Asian American Student Union president, said. "It's an Asian appreciation week. It think non-Asians would be interested in learning Asian culture." Dan Nelson/Kansan Lopez, Minneapolis senior, and other members of the union have worked on Asian week activities for almost the entire school year. Activities for the week include a Dragon Dance on Wescoe Beach, which was held yesterday, a Tai Chi demonstration on Wescoe Beach and a performance by Los Angeles-based Asian acting troupe Here and Now. "I'm really looking forward to seeing Here and Now," Victoria Lee, Olathe freshman, said. "We've heard a lot about them, but I've never seen them perform." "Asian Festival" April 14-19 Today: Hena tattoos from 11a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Kansas Union Lobby Asian Appreciation Reception 6 p.m. at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union Tomorrow: Here and Now performance 7:30 p.m. at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union Thursday: Japanese Calligraphy 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Kansas Union Lobby Booksigning and Video 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at Oread Books in the Kansas Union This week's activities will incorporate many of the University's smaller Asian groups, such as the Japanese Student Association, which is helping the Asian American Student Union by putting on a calligraphy demonstration. Friday: Tai Chi demonstration and table 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Wescoe Beach "It's pleasing that all these Saturday: Taste of Asia festival 5:30p.m. in Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Performances, including dancing and cultural presentations, start at 7:30 p.m. at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union groups are coming together to represent Asian culture," Tracey Hsiao, Wichita junior, said. "It just shows we have something in common even though we're all really different." The event that's required the most preparation this week has been the Taste of Asia festival. People can come and eat Asian cuisine for $7 a plate or pay $12 for two plates. Lopez said she was looking forward to the event, which will start at 5:30 p.m. Saturday at the Ecumenical Chris tian Ministries. "It's the main event," Lopez said. "It's the most time-consuming and it takes the most effort." — Edited by Melissa Hermreck Shooting kills one student in Louisiana The Associated Press NEWORLEANS—Agunman with an AK-47 rifle opened fire in a high school gym yesterday, killing a 15-year-old boy and wounding three teenage girls in a spray of more than 30 bullets that sent students scrambling for cover. Four suspects, ranging in age from 15 to 19, were arrested in a sweep of the neighborhood near John McDonogh High School. Police Chief Eddie Compass said he did not know if the suspects attended the school. Students said the shooting was apparently gang related and may have been retaliation for a previous fight. "They started shooting and I started running," said ninth-grade Garick Jacob, who was in the gym when the shooting began. "I was really scared." It was not immediately clear how the gun got through metal detectors and guards at the school. Students and school security officers said there was a hole in the fence near the gym. School board member Elliot Willard said students told him that the boy was the target and the girls were accidental victims. Charity hospital spokesman Jerry Romigsaid a 15-year-old girl had surgery because a bullet went through both her legs. The other injuries were not considered life-threatening. The elections commission voted unanimously that KUnited twice violated the elections code at a public hearing last night. The commission fined KUnited $13.50 total for the violations. By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The first complaint turned violation was filed by Scott McKenzie, Salina senior and Delta Force candidate who won a Junior/Senior CLAS seat. His complaint said KUnited's use of the Jayhawk on its campaign T-shirts violated 409.D.1 of the code. The section states that all campaign activities shall conform to the laws of the State of Kansas, city ordinances and all rules and regulations of the University. McKenzie said the use of the Jayhawk or any alteration required permission from the trademark office. "I think the usage is misleading because it implies a connection between the University and one Senate coalition," McKenzie wrote. "The symbol is highly recognizable and gives a confusing message to the student body." Catherine Bell, KUnited representative, said the coalition received verbal permission from the licensing office to use the Jayhawk and was unaware that written permission was needed. In an e-mail to Jake Preston, complaint adjudicator, licensing administrator Paul Vander Tuig wrote that he didn't know of any written permission to the coalition. Susan Elkins, elections commission member, said that organizational T-shirts must go through the University events committee for approval as well as having written permission from the trademark office. The commission voted 4-0 for the violation. KUnited was fined $12.50. After the vote on the violation, Andy Knopp, KUnited's student body president-elect, questioned the commission's decision. Later in the meeting, Brian Robinson, elections commission hearing board chairman, told Knopp that the commission felt disrespected by Knopp's questioning. "We wish that you had come to us in a proper way," he said. Knopp said he planned to appeal the violation to the University judicial committee. Kristan Seibel, Hays freshman and Delta Force candidate for a Freshman/Sophomore CLAS seat, filed the second complaint, which concerned section 409.D.2.The code states that campaign materials within student housing properties will be allowed with permission from the complex director. Seibel took a picture of a KUnited poster on a public wall on the eighth floor of McCollum Hall, which was not an area designated by the complex director as a place to post fliers. Knopp said no evidence showed that KUnited put the poster on the wall. The commission voted 3-0 for the violation after Elkins had left the meeting. KUnited was fined $1. Edited by Erin Chapman 2003 ASIAN FESTIVAL PRESENTED BY ASIAN AMERICAN STUDENT UNION THIRD FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18, 2003 MONDAY: DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCOE) TUESDAY: HENNA TATTOOS (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) ASAI APPRECIATION RECEPTION (6PAM AT KANSAS ROOM, KANSAS UNION) WEDNESDAY: "HERE AND NOW" PERFORMANCE (7:30PM AT WOODDRUFF AUDITORium) THURSDAY: "APANSE CALLIGRAPHY AND ORIGami (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) PROFESSOR POK CHI LAU BOOK SIGNING (5-6:30PM AT OREAD BOOK, KANSAS UNION) FRIDAY: "TAI CHI" DEMONSTRATION (11-1 AT WESCOE) SATURDAY. APRIL 19, 2003 a TASTE OF ASIA FOOD: 5:30PM AT ECM PERFORMANCES: 7:30 BALLROOM, KANSAS UNION STUDENT SENATE invent yourself. LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749-1912 CITY OF GOD (P) 4:00 6:45 8:30 ADAPTATION. 4:15 7:00 9:40 2 admissions for the price of 1 on Tues invent yourself. the collegiate inventors competition* A PROGRAM OF THE NATIONAL INVENTORS HALL OF FAME* PRESENTING SPONSORS UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE hp Invent $160,000 IN PRIZES! Enter Now Deadline: June 1, 2003 www.invent.org/collegiate Winners will also receive $2,000 to spend at www.hpshopping.com 1029 Massachusetts PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS ✩ Winners will also receive $2,000 to spend at www.hpshopping.com or gift Certificates to the HP Company Store at www.hpstore.com 841-Play hp Invent DEADLINE April 15 April 15 DEADLINE If you haven't filed your taxes yet, you may need to file for an extension or file late. Legal Services for Students STUDENT SENATE Jo Hardesty, Director • 148 Union • 864-566ᵃ --- TUESDAY,APRIL 15.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A University budget fluctuations prevent printing numbers By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The unpredictable nature of the University's budget claimed an unseen victim last year; the University chose not to publish a working budget for the fiscal year 2003. Though reductions in funding were abundant throughout the University, the cost of putting out the thick booklet itself was not the reason that kept it from print, said Richard McKinney, assistant vice provost and budget director. Instead, continual fluctuations of the budget's numbers made printing them impractical. The numbers could have changed between the time the booklet was sent to print and the time it was released, McKinney said. "The numbers were so squishy that the value of the printed document wasn't reliable," he said. McKinney said the state made appropriations for the University budget in May but cut an additional $1 million in August and even more in November. "Due to all the uncertainty, we didn't publish," he said. The office did publish an updated list of salaries for 2003, McKinney said. For the most part, that list seems to have satisfied the curious types that come to the Spencer Research Library and Watson Library looking to comb the budget for answers, said Watson reference librarian Kathy Graves. She said people usually asked for the budget when they were really looking for faculty salaries. Watson does not have the salary information on hand, but it is housed at the Spencer Library. People are accustomed to going to Spencer for those kinds of documents, Graves said. The working budget has been published out of habit in the past, McKinney said. The information contained in the working budget is not available online or in any one place, but employees who need the information know they can access it through their computers, he said. "The major thing is the expenditures, and those are detailed in the annual financial report that comes out at the end of the year," McKinney said. Asian Week activities foster diversity — Edited by Lindsay Hanson By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer PUBLIC LIBRARY Dragon dancing, Henna tattoos and a feast of Asian delicacies are a few of the Asian Week activities available to University of Kansas students this week. "The point of this week is to spread Asian culture on campus," Tiffany Lopez, Asian American Student Union president, said. "It's an Asian appreciation week. It think non-Asians would be interested in learning Asian culture." "Asian Festival" Dan Nelson/Kansan April 14-19 Today: Henna tattoos from 11a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Kansas Lobby Lopez, Minneapolis senior, and other members of the union have worked on Asian week activities for almost the entire school year. Activities for the week include a Dragon Dance on Wescoe Beach, which was held yesterday, a Tai Chi demonstration on Wescoe Beach and a performance by Los Angeles-based Asian acting troupe Here and Now. Andrew Tran, Overland Park freshman, performs a Dragon Dance yesterday on Wescoe beach during the annual Asian Festival. The festival is organized by the Asian American Student Union and the University of Kansas Student Senate. Asian Appreciation Reception 6 p.m. at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union "I'm really looking forward to seeing Here and Now," Victoria Lee, Olathe freshman, said. "We've heard a lot about them, but I've never seen them perform." - Tomorrow: Here and Now performance 7:30 p.m. at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union Thursday: Japanese Calligraphy 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Kansas Union Lobby Booksigning and Video 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at Oread Books in the Kansas Union Friday: Tai Chi Friday: Tai Chi demonstration and table 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Wesco Beach This week's activities will incorporate many of the University's smaller Asian groups, such as the Japanese Student Association, which is helping the Asian American Student Union by putting on a calligraphy demonstration. Saturday: Taste of Asia festival 5:30p.m. in Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Performances, including dancing and cultural presentations, start at 7:30 p.m. at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union "It's pleasing that all these groups are coming together to represent Asian culture," Tracey Hsiaw, Wichita junior, said. "It just shows we have something in common even though we're all really different." The event that's required the most preparation this week has been the Taste of Asia festival. People can come and eat Asian cuisine for $7 a plate or pay $12 for two plates. Lopez said she was looking forward to the event, which will start at 5:30 p.m. Saturday at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries. "It's the main event," Lopez said. "It's the most time-consuming and it takes the most effort." - Edited by Melissa Hermreck Shooting kills one student in Louisiana The Associated Press NEWORLEANS — Agunman with an AK-47 rifle opened fire in a high school gym yesterday, killing a 15-year-old boy and wounding three teenage girls in a spray of more than 30 bullets that sent students scrambling for cover. Four suspects, ranging in age from 15 to 19, were arrested in a sweep of the neighborhood near John McDonogh High School. Police Chief Eddie Compass said he did not know if the suspects attended the school. Students said the shooting was apparently gang related and may have been retaliation for a previous fight. "They started shooting and I started running," said ninth-grader Garick Jacob, who was in the gym when the shooting began. "I was really scared." Students and school security officers said there was a hole in the fence near the gym. It was not immediately clear how the gun got through metal detectors and guards at the school. School board member Elliot Willard said students told him that the boy was the target and the girls were accidental victims. Charity hospital spokesman Jerry Romig said a 15-year-old girl had surgery because a bullet went through both her legs. The other injuries were not considered life-threatening. Commission fines KUnited coalition By Gate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The elections commission voted unanimously that KUnited twice violated the elections code at a public hearing last night. The commission fined KUnited $13.50 total for the violations. The first complaint turned violation was filed by Scott McKenzie. Salina senior and Delta Force candidate who won a Junior/Senior CLAS seat. His complaint said KUnited's use of the Jayhawk on its campaign T-shirts violated 409.D.1 of the code. The section states that all campaign activities shall conform to the laws of the State of Kansas, city ordinances and all rules and regulations of the University. McKenzie said the use of the Jayhawk or any alteration required permission from the trademark office. "Ithink the usage is misleading because it implies a connection between the University and one Senate coalition," McKenzie wrote. "The symbol is highly recognizable and gives a confusing message to the student body." Catherine Bell, KUnited representative, said the coalition received verbal permission from the licensing office to use the Jayhawk and was unaware that written permission was needed. In an e-mail to Jake Preston, complaint adjudicator, licensing administrator Paul Vander Tuig wrote that he didn't know of any written permission to the coalition. Susan Elkins, elections commission member, said that organizational T-shirts must go through the University events committee for approval as well as having written permission from the trademark office. The commission voted 4-0 for the violation. KUnited was fined $12.50. After the vote on the violation, Andy Knopp, KUnited's student body president-elect, questioned the commission's decision. Later in the meeting, Brian Robinson, elections commission hearing board chairman, told Knopp that the commission felt disrespected by Knopp's questioning. "We wish that you had come to us in a proper way," he said. Knopp said he planned to appeal the violation to the University judicial committee. Kristan Seibel, Hays freshman and Delta Force candidate for a Freshman/Sophomore CLAS seat, filed the second complaint, which concerned section 409.D.2. The code states that campaign materials within student housing properties will be allowed with permission from the complex director. Seibel took a picture of a KUnited poster on a public wall on the eighth floor of McCollum Hall, which was not an area designated by the complex director as a place to post fliers. Knopp said no evidence showed that KUnited put the poster on the wall. The commission voted 3-0 for the violation after Elkins had left the meeting. KUnited was fined $1. — Edited by Erin Chapman 2003 ASIAN FESTIVAL PRESENTED BY ASIAN AMERICAN STUDENT UNION MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18, 2003 WEEKLY THROUGH FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18, 2003 MONDAY: DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCOE) TUESDAY: HENNA TATTOOS (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) AUSU APPRECIATION RECEPTION (6PAM AT KANSAS ROOM, KANSAS UNION) WEDNESDAY: "HEREANDNOW" PERFORMANCE (7:30PM AT WOODDRUFF AUDITORIUM) THURSDAY: JAPANESE CALLIGRAPHY AND ORIGIAN (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) PROFESSOR POK CHI LAU BOOK SIGNING (5-6:30PM AT OREAD BOOK, KANSAS UNION) FRIDAY: "TAI CHI" DEMONSTRATION (11-1 AT WESCOE) CATHERINE A. THROUGH FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18, 2003 SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 2003 a TASTE OF ASIA FOOD: 5:30PM AT ECM PERFORMANCES: 7:30 BALLROOM, KANSAS UNION STUDENT REPRESENTATION WEEK SENATE 1029 Massachusetts PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS invent yourself. the collegiate inventors competition A PROGRAM OF THE NATIONAL INVENTORS HALL OF FAME* LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749-1912 CITY OF GOD (P) 4:00 6:45 9:30 ADAPTATION. (P) 4:16 7:00 9:40 2 admissions for the price of 1 on Tues invent yourself. the collegiate inventors competition A PROGRAM OF THE NATIONAL INVENTORS HALL OF FAME* $160,000 IN PRIZES! Enter Now Deadline: June 1, 2003 www.invent.org/collegiate Winners will also receive $2,000 to spend at www.hpshopping.com plus Gift Certificates to the HP Company Store at www.hpsstore.com GRAND PRIZE $50,000 plus $10,000 to advisor 2 GRADUATE PRIZES $25,000 each plus $5,000 to advisors 2 UNDERGRADUATE PRIZES $15,000 each plus $5,000 to advisors If you haven’t filed your taxes ye you may need to file for an extension or file late. Legal Services for Students Jo Hardesty, Director • 148 Union • 864-5665 841-Play hp invent $160,000 IN PRIZESI DEADLINE April 15 April 15 If you haven't filed your taxes yet, you may need to file for an extension or file late. Legal Services for Students STUDENT SENATE M STUDENT SENATE --- 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WILLIAMS' DEPARTURE TUESDAY,APRIL15,2003 Mike Jered Soares/Kansan Boy Williams walks toward a chartered jet and waves goodbye to fans. Williams flew to North Carolina yesterday for a press conference announcing his acceptance of the job as basketball coach at the University of North Carolina Williams CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A A few of the Kansas players were less subtle. "Hell yeah, I'm surprised," sophomore forward Keith Langford said as he brushed past reporters. "I didn't come here for this shit. My future is uncertain. They're searching for a new coach. I don't know what my future is." where they boarded a private jet to Chapel Hill. Four hours later, North Carolina athletics director Dick Baddour officially announced that Williams was the next coach of the Tar Heels. Most left without saying a word, but Langford and his sophomore teammate, forward Wayne Simien both let the media know that they weren't happy with Williams' decision. WILLIAMS' COACHING CONTRACT For a man who had just landed what he described as his dream job, Williams appeared somber. At times, he became bleary-eyed as he used much of his speech to express his love for his players and Kansas. He said that Kansas and North Carolina were his favorite schools and leaving one dream job for Langford was one of the few players to respond to questions. "I gave my right arm for him; literally," Simien said. "I gave my right arm for that man." North Carolina Athletics Director Dick Baddour announced the following proposal for Coach Roy Williams' contract at the official press conference last night. The information is Williams wasn't around to hear Langford and Simien's comments. He and assistant coaches Joe Holladay and Steve Robinson had already left Allen Fieldhouse and were headed for the Lawrence Municipal Airport, preliminary as Williams has not signed a contract. Base salary of $260,000 for eight years equal to that of the student body A $25,000, taxable expense account Bonuses for an invitation to a postseason tournament, berth into the final eight in the NCAA Tournament, and a team graduation rate another was the hardest thing he had to do. Still, the North Carolina native said he knew that the opportunity to return to his Multiimedia compensation contract to be worked out later Doyle Murphy nome state, be near his son, Scott, and fulfill his dream to coach the Tar Heels was too good to pass up a second time. "Last time I decided to stay because it was the right thing," he said. "This time I decided to leave because it was the right thing." - Edited by Erin Chapman Earth Day April 22, 2003 ADOPT-THE-HILL CAMPUS CLEAN UP SATURDAY April 19th 1 p.m. at Weseoe Beach Commit Your Campus Organization to help keep KU CLEAN and GREEN For details, call 864-2855 Blue Mesa Management Now Leasing for August - Country Club Apartments: 512 Rockledge 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Apartments $675-695 Summer Tree West: 600 & 605 Eldridge 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Townhomes $595-$650 Troon Townhomes: 5111 Congressional Circle 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Townhomes $650 Single Unit: 3 Bedroom 3 Bath Townhome $1200 All Appliances · Cats Accepted Call (785) 840-9467 for appointments. Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Apartments & Town Homes TUESDAY,APRIL15,2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 7A Top of the HILI TOP OF THE HILL RESTAURANTS is KU students' chance to vote for the best of Lawrence. Fill out this form and return it to Room 119 Stauffer-Flint or visit Kansan.com to complete the online survey. Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. 2003 Best Mexican: ___ Best Chinese: ___ Best Breakfast: ___ Best Burgers: ___ Best Subs: ___ Best Italian: ___ Best Steakhouse: ___ Best Vegetarian: ___ Best Fizza: ___ Best French Fries: ___ Best Wings: ___ Best Buffet: ___ Best Ice Cream: ___ Best Custard: ___ Best Coffee House: ___ Best Atmosphere: ___ Best Delivery Service: ___ Best Bakery ___ Best Post-Party Food Restaurant: ___ Best Customer Service ___ Best KC Restaurant ___ Best Local Restaurant: ___ Best Overall: ___ BARS Best Sports Bar:___ Best Drink Specials:___ Best Martinis:___ Best Margaritas:___ Best Wells:___ Best Selection of Beers:___ Best Dance Club:___ Best Place to Play Pool:___ DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25,2003 BARS,continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTY SERVICES Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING BestTownhomes:___ Best Landlord:___ Best Neighborhood to live in:___ BestApartment Complex:_ SCHOOL Best Place to Study: ___ Best Bookstore: ___ Best Residence Hall: ___ Best Scholarship Hall: ___ Best Building on Campus: ___ Best Fraternity: ___ Best Sorority: ___ Best Student Organization: ___ THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS TUESDAY, APRIL 15,2003 Night CRAWLERS While most students are sleeping. LERS While most students are sleeping others are burning the midnight oil STANDARD Aaron Showalter/Kansan Pat Knobloch, St. Louis sophomore, works on drawings at night for an architecture class in Lindley Hall Annex. Architecture students regularly spend long nights on campus working on projects for classes. "I know guys that pull all nighters as many as two or three nights in a row when projects are due," Knobloch said. Above Leftr: Jeff Eisenbeis, Lansing senior works the late shift from midnight to 5:30 a.m. at the Hawk Shop. Eisenbeis has worked at the Hawk Shop since August and hates the boredom his job creates. At 3:27 in the morning the Hawk Shop had no customers and was quiet except for Eisenbeis' Interpoel cd playing in the background. By Kevin Wiggs Photos by Brandon Baker kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer While some students doze in their warm beds or party with friends, others fight off drowsiness for the sake of their grades. It's 2 a.m. and students use the night to toil over their projects, papers or professions in secluded corners of campus. Their lives are anything but ordinary, finding time for occasional naps while struggling against unorthodox adversaries: sunlight, noise and the activity of the campus community. The Race Car Kids Take a trip into 1055W Learned Hall and you'll run into 18 senior mechanical engineering majors who use the night to build a race car. The group, hidden in the Learned Hall garage, works to build a Formula-1 style car for its senior project, which will compete against other universities at a race sponsored by the Society of Automotive Engineers on May 14. About 140 teams participate, and the KU team has placed in the top 25 for the past four years. The car must be completed early enough so it can undergo a month of testing before the race. Students work on different sections of the car day and night as they listen to James Brown and eat pizza and cookies in the dirty concrete garage. Because of their deadline, they must work on the car constantly, even making trips between classes to do whatever they can. Ben Brown said he chose the formula car project because it would give him an experience he might never have again. "When we're done I get to drive this thing at 100 miles per hour," said Brown, Haven senior. Some students have had to establish new sleep habits to avoid a common enemy — sunshine. "I've started sleeping in my closet," said Patrick Nuss, Shawnee senior. "I crawl in there and listen to National Public Radio." The students admit to having problems attending class. Many stopped going at one point or another throughout the semester. But they don't look for pity. "People can tell when I walk into class that I've been up all night, but I don't say anything," Brown said. "I take more pride in Brandon Baker/Kansas TOUGH Paul Sedlacek, Topeka senior, Marcus Stice, Burlington senior, Ben Brown, Haven senior and Lindsay Straghan, KU grad pause to chat after connecting the chassis and frame of the formula car. The KU Motor Sport Team worked Sunday night till 5:30 in the morning when they finally decided to call it a night. getting it done rather than the night of sleep I just missed." Staying up all night can make it easier to get to an early class, rather than trying to sleep for a short time. "You hit a groove—it's easier to keep going than to try to sleep for an hour," he said. "It's better to have early classes so you can just go straight there and then crash." As Bethany Anderson, Andover senior, said, "I'm not staying up all night every night to take second place." The mechanical engineering students became so used to pulling all-nighters that the group from five years ago made T-shirts that read "Formula Car What Happens Without Sleep — What a great way to ruin a relationship. "The saying remains this year's unofficial team slogan. While late nights and long hours may benefit the night crawlers' grades, it can lead to physical harm. Attention, memory and reaction time were all affected by lack of sleep, said Mark Raskind, president and chief scientist of Alertness Solutions and member of the National Sleep Foundation's board of directors. While one night of significant sleep loss could affect alertness the next day, sleep loss over many nights was a problem that should be dealt with, possibly with the help of a professional, said Rosekind. Across the street from Learned Hall and the senior engineers is the Lindley Annex, filled with young architecture students who are just as willing to jeopardize health in exchange for good grades. Lindley Annex is the classroom and work area for students in Architectural Graphics and Design, a six credit hour class for beginning architecture students. "While we may recognize these symptoms, we do not always associate them as being symptoms of sleep loss," Rosekind said. According to the National Sleep Foundation, although sleep needs vary for everyone, most adults need an average of eight hours of sleep per night. Late Nights in Lindley The walls are covered in spray-paint and marker, with obscene words and pictures all around. The word "BOOB" is Maryna Silchenko, Lawrence junior, is in her second year in the School of Architecture. When they got close to a deadline the fun started, she said. spray-painted on a window and a Christmas tree stands on top of an air duct. "People get pissed off and stuff starts to fly around the room," she said. "It's funny to see how people react to frustration." Since she quit smoking she relies on coffee and exercise to stay up. "I try to go to the gym, even in the middle of a project," she said. "It lets me come back refreshed. But once I leave this place I don't want to come back." Arjun Bhat, Chesterfield, Mo., sophomore, has spent as many as 50 consecutive hours awake when he took No Doz with a can of Red Bull. Silchenko said that when she stayed up all night she couldn't think straight the next morning, and it caused her to skip classes. "It was the worst day of my life," he said. "It was a ride of waves and crests, but I was okay the next day." "There are some weeks when I won't get more than four hours of sleep," she said. "I just try to take naps when I can and sleep all weekend." She has a boyfriend, but busy schedules can get in the way. "We fight a lot because we don't see each other enough," she said. "It's really hard. We try to make time to see the other, but it's the time when I just want to sleep." Her boyfriend is a graduate student in architecture, he shares her lack of time and odd hours. reationships between architecture students are common in the Lindley Annex. "Lots of people hook up in the studio," Silchenko said. "We spend so much time here, and we don't see anyone else." Evenings at the Union One of the few buildings on campus open 24 hours a day is the Kansas Union. Students studying late at the Union sometimes wander into the Hawk Shop for a cup of coffee or a sugar-packed treat to maintain energy. Students come in and out to use the computer lab, or for a quiet place to study. From inside the Hawk Shop, you can barely tell it's dark outside — with the bright neon signs illuminating the room like a supermarket. Evenings at the Union Jeff Eisenbeis, Leavenworth post-bachelor student, works there on Sunday and Wednesday nights from midnight to 5:30 a.m. While it's quiet most of the time, occasionally he has someone cause a scene. He once had an elderly woman begin an argument about politics. She became so upset she slammed her water on the counter and began cussing at him. "I thought I was gonna have to throw down," he said. "That was a rare angry person, I mostly just see the few night owls that are here all the time." When he gets bored he rolls a cigarette. When he gets tired he drinks coffee. He drinks an average of five cups a night, but he's not worried about the possible effects of caffeine or lack of sleep. INADEQUATE SLEEP SYMPTOMS Dozing off while engaged in an activity such as reading, watching TV, sitting in meetings or sitting in traffic Slow thinking and reacting Difficulty remembering or retaining information Narrowing of attention missing important changes in a situation Depression or negative mood Frequent blinking, diffi- culty focusing eyes, or heavy eyelids National Sleep Foundation He admits that the late hours are bad for his grades. "It's detrimental," he said. "When I go to class I'm not as mentally sharp as I should be, and I don't get as much out of class as I should." Eisenbeis said he could work days if he wanted, but he remained on the night shift because of the $1 per hour better wage that came with it. "I don't have a lot of fore-sight, it makes me take crappy jobs," he said. "I don't think I could take working here longer than a year. The hours are starting to get to me." Edited by Erin Chapman 9 Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS 1B WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY Ryan Greene rgreene@kansan.com Roy's choice can inspire others to go with dreams Dear Coach Williams. We've met only briefly, and I know that you're probably in Chapel Hill right now, so you can't read this. Either way, these are just some things that need to be said. I just saw the video of you tearfully addressing the local media, and all but giving away the fact that you're headed to North Carolina. I thought I felt a punch in the stomach when Kirk Hinrich's last-second three-pointer floated past the hoop a week ago. However, when I saw that tear-filled address to the media, I truly knew the feeling. There's no way to live down the loss of Roy Williams. See, the history of Kansas basketball has been hammered into my head in the past three years, but from what I do know, Kansas basketball is Roy Williams. Wait, Kansas is Roy Williams. As we see how hard it appeared for you to move away from your job as Kansas men's basketball coach,we can understand even more about how hard it was to turn down your mentor, Dean Smith, three years ago. Roy, no matter how much you have embodied in your 15 years as coach, the lesson you have taught me is invaluable. Loyalty is the most important moral value a human can have. You are always taught to be loyal to family, and North Carolina is your family, no matter what you have accomplished in Lawrence. I have never learned a moral lesson from any of my sports heroes, no matter how fascinated I was with them. You, however, have taught me that no matter how good of a situation you have found yourself in, and even when it seems that life can't get any better, you should always strive to fulfill your dreams. Probably not. Your dream was to be the basketball coach at North Carolina, and you've realized your dream. Will I realize my dream of suiting up for an NBA game? Most likely never. Will I realize my dream of teeing off some golf balls at home plate of Wrigley Field? Will I realize my dream of covering the Chicago Bulls for the Chicago SunTimes? Who knows, it could be a reality someday. My faith in this dream has now been boosted. Either way, Roy, you have taught me to dream, and that dreams can always come true. Brian Cassella/The Daily Tar Heel No matter who is coach next year, I will never forget the Texas game my freshman year when you threw your jacket while arguing a call. I will never forget your infamous expletive dropped after last Monday's game. Most importantly, I will never forget the class you carried yourself with, no matter how much adversity you faced. In an age where sports, even at the collegiate level, have become a business, you have shown me that there is still something pure that can be treasured. In all of my years idolizing athletes for what they've done on the field, it took you announcing your departure from Kansas to realize that you are the first true sports icon I have ever known. It's something that I have never said to a man besides my father, but Roy Williams, thanks for the memories and I love you. Sincerely, Ryan Greene Greene is a Vernon Hills, Ill., junior in journalism PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES Roy Williams, former Kansas men's basketball coach, addresses the audience at a press conference yesterday in Chapel Hill, N.C. Williams announced his acceptance of the vacant coaching position at North Carolina. At 11 a.m.today, Drue Jennings, interim athletics director at Kansas will hold a press conference to discuss the search for a new men's basketball coach. University reacts Students respond to Williams' departure with anger, dismay By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer He's not staying. And it hurts. Word of Roy Williams' departure for North Carolina hit hard and fast yesterday afternoon. Reactions ranged from well wishes to the departing Williams to anger and bemusement. Trey Allen, Wichita freshman, had just gotten back from playing basketball at Robinson Center when he heard the news. "I could feel that something probably happened when I got back," Allen said. "There were some people outside of Templin and you could just tell." Maggie Richter, St. Louis freshman was walking home from class when she The mood on campus has taken a sharp turn in the last few days. Jubilation from Kansas' tournament turned first into disappointment at a championship game loss to Syracuse and now into outright bitterness after the loss of Kansas' talisman coach. "I'm shocked and upset," said Kadi Kerr, Prairie Village junior. "It's really disappointing." learned that Williams would be leaving for North Carolina. "After what he said after the final game, I'm really surprised," she said, alluding to Williams' much publicized post-game comments to CBS reporter Bonnie Bernstein. Many students feared Williams' departure would lead to a down period for Kansas basketball. Coupled with the loss of senior duo Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich to the NBA, Williams' departure will cause immediate problems next year. Dan Gwartney, Kansas City, Kan., junior said. "I think it's going to be really bad for the team," he said. "We're basically losing the main guys. It's going to have a serious effect on morale." Other students, such as Collins Wade, Monroe, La., junior, said Williams' departure wouldn't hamper the Jayhawks' future. "It's not like KU basketball is going down the drain." Wade said. "If he was really dedicated, he would have stayed here." Patrons at Buffalo Wild Wings, 1012 Massachusetts St., watched Williams' North Carolina press conference live on the big screen. As Williams addressed the media, patrons went silent. When the press conference ended, most lamented Williams' departure. "Roy Williams brought pride and stature to the Kansas program and to the Big 12 in general," said Stacey Witter, a visiting Oklahoma City, Okla., native and Sooner fan. "We've been proud of that." Witter said he was worried that the program would not be as successful as it was after Larry Brown left following the 1988 season. "This is a different instance." he said. "They didn't win a national championship. They are losing two stars. Quite frankly, they need a power coach." Others watching Williams' press conference on the big screen weren't as worried about Kansas basketball's future. "I feel like the program has had a lot of tradition before Roy came along," Joe Caldwell, Lawrence resident, said. "It's big enough to survive his leaving." Jesse Newell contributed to this story. — Edited by Erin Chapman Heard on the Court Compiled by Henry C. Jackson Jayhawks sound off about coach Roy Williams' departure PETER MCKINNEY "I gave my right arm for him, literally. I gave my right arm for that man." Wayne Simien Sophomore forward "Hell yeah, I'm surprised.I didn't come here for this shit." Keith Langford A. D. E. Keith Langford Sophomore guard "The guy's had a dream his whole life, and now he's got a chance to realize it. You can't fault him for that." Brett Olson Senior forward "I'm sure you can imagine it was not a good time in there." Stephen Vinson Freshman guard P MATT E. HAWKS "It's sad for the program and the players who are here. It's tough for them." Jeff Boschee class of 2002 "I don't care, we're going to win the national championship anyway." Aaron Miles Sophomore guard A. R. Envisioning the future of KU basketball Hemenway to move fast to discover replacement; several coaches on list By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com kansas staff writer As Roy Williams prepared for his speech at the North Carolina press conference last night, Chancellor Robert Hemenway started preparing the basketball program for life without Williams. Hemenway said in a prepared statement that it was important to move on with preparations. "KU has a tradition second to none in college basketball." Hemenway said. "We intend to talk to the very best coaches in the country about this opportunity, and we will make a decision quickly." At 11 a.m. Drue Jennings, interim athletics director, will hold a press conference to talk about the search for a coach. The search will be led by Jennings with assistance from Hemenway and senior athletics department administrators. Andy Katz, reporter for ESPN, speculated that several coaches mentioned over the last few days include Bill Self, Illinois, Mark Few, Gonzaga, Tom Crean, Marquette, and Mark Turgeon, Wichita State. Self was an assistant coach on Kansas' Self Few 1985-1986 Final Four team under Larry Brown. Self did not return phone calls last night. Another coach with Kansas blood, John Calipari, removed himself from job rumors. Calipari said he was happy at Memphis. "I came to the University of Memphis to rebuild a winning basketball program, and it is my intention to stay here until we get the job done," he said. Calipari was a Kansas assistant coach under Brown from 1982-1985. Tubby Smith, Kentucky coach, said he was happy where he was and did not wish to leave. Crean TREVOR DUNN Williams said at the press conference that he wanted to PETER LEE Turgeon Hemenway said moving quickly was in the best interest of the program to keep players. bring his assistant coaches to North Carolina provided none of them took the Kansas coaching job. If they don't get the job, the new Kansas coach will have to supply a new staff. "Our foremost concern right now are the players, both the ones returning and the ones joining the team next season," Hemenway said. Keith Langford, guard, said he was caught off guard by the change. "Hell yeah, I'm surprised. I didn't come here for this shit," Langford said. "My future is uncertain. They're searching for a new coach. I don't know what my future is." Wayne Simien, forward, said he did not like the decision. "I gave my right arm for him, literally. I gave my right arm for that man," Simien said before saying that he would return. "Yeah man, I'm back." Kansas has a top-five recruiting class featuring McDonald's All-Americans David Padgett and J.R. Giddens. None of the four recruits have said whether they would leave. Aaron Miles said the change would not affect the team's goals. "I don't care, we're going to win the national championship anyway," Miles said. Edited by Jason Elliott --- 0 "When this thing is over with completely, the next press conference I will ever be involved in will be the one that either I'm fired or I retire." Roy Williams, at a July 2000 press conference announcing he was staying at the University of Kansas Inside Sports 2B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS COMMENTARY Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Mixed ideas after transfer to Tar Heels I don't even know what to write. I can't sustain a thought for more than about three seconds right now. My thoughts are coming in short, uncoordinated bursts. Roy Williams was never a god to me — I pride myself on not having heroes — but he was my favorite coach in all of sports. Here are the shots being fired in my mind's breakneck battle of emotion: Williams is getting to realize his dream. How nice. Most people never get to live out their dreams. He won't die with any regrets. What a crock. Roy went back on his word before he took the North Carolina job. Anyone remember this quote: "There will be no more jobs"? That was Roy Williams in July 2000, just after he turned down the Tar Heels. So, by showing interest in the Carolina job, he was flushing his own promise down the toilet. We shouldn't be to surprised that "I'm staying" turned out to be a crock too. Graves, resist the comfort food. You know you can. ■ Keith, you have every reason in the world to leave. I'd tell you to stay anyway but that would be selfish. My favorite Kansas victory under Roy was in 1991 versus Arkansas in the Midwest Regional Final. Kansas erased a large deficit against Nolan Richardson's "Forty Minutes Of Hell" defense and cruised into the Final Four with a 93-81 victory. Roy is SO not getting a future fieldhouse named after him. I've never heard Bill Self say "dadgummit." That would be a refreshing change. Roy's down-home, media-pandering schick got old sometime around his 11th year. All the people who thought Roy was an infallible symbol of loyalty and ethics should learn a valuable lesson here: Blind hero worship shouldn't be showered on anyone in the sports world — ever. Don't deify people you don't know. Williams is human, and humans break promises. Kansas was Roy's long-term relationship, but North Carolina was the ex-girlfriend he never could get out of his mind. I'm really not bitter. The man won 418 games and gave me a highlight reel of great childhood and early adulthood memories. He doesn't owe me anything, and I don't owe him anything. We won before Roy, we won with Roy and we'll continue to win after Roy. The sky isn't falling. Relax, wipe away your tears and start dreaming tonight about beating Roy's baby-blue ass in the 2004 national championship game, because it could happen — and it will. Berlin is a senior in Journalism Free for All I had a dream that Roy Williams and I had a baby, and he wouldn't let me see her until I was finished with my homework. hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. After seeing Roy Williams use his powers to get Al Bohl fired, if I was coach Mangino, I would support him, too. hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. Hey, I was just wondering if anybody else read the Kansas State Collegian's e-column about Roy should move by Chris Shank. What crap is that? hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. My roommate and I are glued to our computers waiting for the latest on Roy's, like, staying here or going to North Carolina. It's driving us nuts. Like, stay here. I wish I had the GPA to get in to Duke so I could be North Carolina's big rival for the next three years. hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. Dude, I'm pissed. First of all I'm watching Jeopardy and it gets cut in and Roy is leaving. First of all, I miss Roy Williams and now I miss Jeopardy. I'm pissed. --hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. 图 Hey, Roy, thanks for all the memories. We'll miss hearing you say "freakin'." Roy you said that this question was put to rest three years ago, and quote: your mentors taught you that loyalty was most important. And you wouldn't leave Kansas for your dream job at North Carolina. You've let us down. hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. Roy, three years ago you said the only way you'd leave Kansas is if you got fired or died. I don't see either of that happening. You have betrayed your fans and athletes. hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. I just wanted to say that next year when we win the national championship, we're going to rub it in Roy's face. He's stupid for leaving. hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. Memo to Roy Williams: You don't spell loyalty U-N-C. --hoy, I've detended you since the day you came here 15 years ago and I have to say I have never felt so disrespected. 编 How do you hire a new coach without an athletics director? Isn't that his job? I just read on ESPN that Roy's leaving to go to UNC. We're screwed. Totally, wholly and thoroughly screwed. We're going to suck now. --went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Today the Jayhawk cried. We love you and we'll miss you, Roy. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Hey, Roy, thanks a lot, man. You really did a lot to this campus who was depressed because we lost. Thanks a lot, Bye. Now that Roy Williams is leaving, what are we going to call Late Night? You can't say 'Late Night with Bill Self.' And what are we going to well before the games? You can't say, "Bill, Bill, Bill." "And 'Bill's Place?' That just sucks. Roy, I can't believe you're going to let us down like this after 13 or 14 years. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Roy Williams, I would like to punchasize your face. 二 went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Hi, Roy Williams. I just wanted to let you know that you're not my grandpa anymore. So see you later. Get out of Kansas. Hey, I got a KU basketball signed by Roy Williams. Does anybody want it? Man, I'm jinxed. I don't give a shit about Roy Williams, either went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the --went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the That hurts, Roy. That hurts real bad. Roy Williams is a sell-out, but now we can get a coach that doesn't cry like a little girl every time he on TV. We need Rick Pitino. I hope that nobody at KU has respect for Roy Williams anymore. Anybody who goes back on their word like that is an asshole. 图 Ruck Foy. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Say it ain't so, Roy. Please. Say it ain't so. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Roy, I hope you enjoy Dean Smith's shadow. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Roy, if you're looking for a national championship, you're not going to find one at North Carolina. We've been devoted to you for 15 years and this is what we get? Thanks a lot, Roy. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Despite my hatred for Roy Williams, I hope that none of the basketball players are planning on leaving. We couldn't bear the loss. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Yeah, I work at a gas station, and if you could go ahead and not come in and tell me what you think of Roy Williams I'd really appreciate it. Thank you. Michael Jordan for basketball coach. Bullshit. Roy Williams doesn't give a shit about North Carolina. went, I guess we now know what Al Bohl feels like about being crushed like a dove. Roy has not only crushed Al Bohl, he crushed a University, a basketball team, a town, a state and the University of the Please don't transfer, Keith Langford. 图 director Al Bohl's best move? Kansas nation. So I guess we all know what Al Boh's going through right now and I hope Kansas can rebuild and put together a winning team. Our father who was a badass, Roy Williams was thy name. But now he's gone, the tradition doesn't live on, in Lawrence is a will in Chapel Hill. director Al Bohl's best move? Yeah, I was just wondering if I could get my sports pass money back for next year. Yeah, that's it. 图 I already hate our new coach, unless his name is Rick Pitino. director Al Bohl's best move? director Al Bohl's best move? I'd just like to say to hell with Roy, let's get Mark Few in here from Gonzaga. He'll win us a national championship, no problem. Roy, did you make a mistake and what you meant to say was, "I don't give a shit about Kansas?" director Al Bohl's best move? North Carolina is an evil empire, and Roy is now their coach. So suck it, Roy. You coach the evil empire. It's not that we lost a great coach. But now we know that all Roy Williams is or ever was is average. director Al Bohl's best move? B This is a sad, sad day that Roy's leaving as coach. But on a lighter note, at least I hear that Bobby Knight's looking for a new place to go and we're one of his top five choices. Woohoo! director Al Bohl's best move? Yeah, I hope we play Roy next year and beat the tar — get it? — the tar out of UNC. 图 Two words: Ruck Foy. So the verdict's in. Roy's a turncoat. You know, Michael Jordan's not doing anything right now, so how about we recruit him for Roy's position. Roy who? TUESDAY,APRIL 15,2003 director Al Bohl's best move? (wailing) Why, Roy? Why? director Al Bohl's best move? Oh, I get it, Roy. What you meant to say was, "I could give a shit about the 13 players in the locker room." So I guess we feel pretty dumb for firing Bohl, now, don't we? 图 director Al Bohl's best move? Roy's Boys? If you go, just remember this: Larry Brown left and we persevered, and we'll persevere still. Thank you. director Al Bohl's best move? Roy, thanks for not winning the championship and disgracing everybody at this school that loved you. director Al Bohl's best move? Roy, it sucks that you're leaving. I wish that we could have had a big gold ring going away present for you, but I'm sorry. You'll always be in our hearts. We love you, Roy. 图 Hey, Roy, so much for your so-called integrity, huh? director Al Bohl's best move? This is a plea to all the members of the KU men's basketball team. Guys, please stick around. Don't desert us like Roy did. SEE SPORTS FREE FOR ALL ON PAGE 3B CORRECTION Yesterday's The University Daily Kansan contained two errors. The article "Scrimmage shows promise" stated that Bill Whittemore injured his anterior cruciate ligament injury during the 2002 season. Whittemore injured his medial collateral ligament. The article "Tracksters qualify for Regionals" stated that T.J. Hacker won in the triple jump. He won in the high jump. POLL What was former Kansas athletics Hiring baseball coach Ritch Price Log on to Kansan.com to cast your vote Hiring baseball coach Ritch Price His best is yet to come: moving out of Lawrence TODAY Kansas Athletics Calendar Firing football coach Terry Allen Beer before football games TOMORROW Baseball vs. Avila, 6 p.m. at Hoglund Ballpark Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Softball vs. Arkansas; 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. at the Kansas softball field THURSDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium FRIDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 6:35 p.m. in Norman, Okla SATURDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 2 p.m. in Norman, Okla. Softball at Texas, noon and 2 p.m. in Austin, Texas Rowing dual with Kansas State, in Manhattan tennis vs. Texas A&M, noon at the Robin's sports courts Women's Golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. ROWING Varsity 8 boat wins gold; team to dual Wildcats next The 2nd Varsity 8-woman team of juniors Sara Kilbride, Krys Corbett, Laura Adamson and Beth Olson; sophomores Erin Hennessey and Ashlea Kramer; seniors Lauren Royall, Galina Levin, and Sarah Sikes captured the gold medal in the grand finals Sunday at the Knecht Cup in Camden, N.J. with a time of 7:19.06. The team beat out Buffalo and West Virginia. The Varsity 4-woman squad took fifth place in the final. In the Novice 8-woman grand final, Kansas finished in third place at 7:18.03. The Jayhawk Novice 4-woman team captured third place at 8:43 behind second place Wichita State. Kansas rowing team will compete this Saturday in a dual meet against Kansas State at the Kansas Cup in Manhattan. Jason Hwang Free Runner's Clinic! Sponsored by the Physical Therapy Department at Watkins Memorial Health Center All KU students, faculty and staff are invited to attend Watkins Memorial Health Center south entrance (Inclement weather site: Physical Therapy Dept. 2nd floor) Tues. April 15 1:00-4:00pm Wed. April 16 9:00-11:00am Wear your shorts and usual running shoes for a free evaluation of problems experienced by running, walking and aerobic exercise. This clinic is staffed by physicians and physical therapists. (Aerobic stress test not included.) There is a charge for supplies, if needed. To register, call 864-9592 (appointments preferred) Meet the Author. Dreams of the Golden Mountain -BOOKSIGNING Dreams of the Golden Mountain, (20% Off with student ID) -VIDEO SCREENING- Tell Grandma About Langston Hughes 6 KU Professor Pok Chi Lau Photographs the lives of Asian Americans and explores multiculturalism. An Asian American Festival Event! THURS. April 17th 5:00-6:30pm 785-644-4341 orebookoa@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 jeyhawka.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fri. 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays . 1969 YEAR Oread Books All profits support student programs, services & facilities 4. TUESDAY,APRIL 15,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Sports Free for All CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2B --conferences at the end of the season. Yeah, my new favorite team is going to be whoover is playing North Carolina. Good luck to all the other ACC teams. I hope you bash North Carolina. conferences at the end of the season. Dear Roy, I hope you have three straight losing seasons and they fire you. 图 Roy, Roy, Roy. What are you doing? I respect you, so I respect your decision. But I'm very disappointed in you, very disappointed in your decision. You have done so much for us and you're making us lose our tradition. So now you're going to give it in Chapel Hill? Why can't you give the press conference here in your home, your town, Lawrence, where we love you. They are not open-armed for you there. We love you. Come back. Please. conferences at the end of the season. Hooray for Lata Night with Bill Self! Yeah conferences at the end of the season. Now I feel like I can't even call this team KU, because Roy is KU. We have to give it a different name. It's just not fair to call it KU after Roy leaves. conferences at the end of the season. Again, two things. One, hire Rick Pitino. That sounds like a good idea. Number two: Ruck Foy. conferences at the end of the season. conferences at the end of the season. Good luck to Roy Williams at North Carolina, but bring back Larry Brown. conferences at the end of the season. We hate Roy. He's a punk. conferences at the end of the season. I can guarantee one thing. We'll probably be getting a coach that's won as many national championships as Roy has — zero, I hope North Carolina rots in hell. Roy Williams leaving is all Quin Snyder's fault. conferences at the end of the season. For the basketball team guys, you've got an entire University and an entire state standing behind you. We will be here for you guys. We're not going anywhere. We'll be there next year to cheer for you, and it's going to be your national championship year. Bank it. conferences at the end of the season. Danny Manning for head coach. Seriously. conferences at the end of the season. conferences at the end of the season. Roy, although I don't agree with the decision you made, I have a lot of respect for you and I wish you the best of luck in your future. And no matter what, the Jayhawks will always be No.1. conferences at the end of the season. Miles, you've got the right idea. You guys can do it by yourselves, without Roy. Just go and win your national championship and prove to him that you guys are really the best team there is in the nation. 图 I swear to God, if I see one article in the Kansan tomorrow that we should thank Roy Williams for his time that he put in here, I will personally beat that person. I swear to God. I'm going to petition to get Dean Smith kicked out of the Kansas basketball hall of fame. He's a traitor and I hate him. Anybody know how I can get a transfer to UNC? conferences at the end of the season. conferences at the end of the season. Hey, I say we give Bobby Knight a call. We could use some emotion on our team. Bye, Roy. We sure will miss you. conferences at the end of the season. conferences at the end of the season. Hey, Roy, if you were going to leave, the least you could have done is won us a national championship. Oh, wait! Choke! Roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Way to go, Hemenway. Now Roy is gone, too. conferences at the end of the season. 图 Three years ago, Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich were worth staying in Kansas for, but now Langford, Miles and Simien are not worth staying in Kansas? Roy, for a guy who claims to be classy, that's quite a double standard, don't you think? 图 conferences at the end of the season. Roy, you made my grandma cry. And I'm not too happy, either. 图 I decided earlier that, if Roy Williams left KU, I would cry and drink my sorrows away. Well, guess what. Roy just left, and I'm crying and drinking my sorrows away. Hey, at least now we don't have to deal with those weepy press --conferences at the end of the season. how to get Billy Donovan. Roy, I hope your North Carolina program is a complete failure. You know nothing of loyalty. You had it all here, buddy. how to get Billy Donovan. I have just one thing to say. Wanda's got him whipped. And on the seventh day, Roy Williams said,"Screw you guys. I'm going home." how to get Billy Donovan. Yeah, this is to coach Roy Williams. Roy, you are now Fredo from Godfather, because you are now dead to me. --how to get Billy Donovan. Roy, how could you do this to me? I was a KU fan since I was 4, and now all the sudden you're walking out? I feel like I'm getting a divorce. At least we still have Mark. how to get Billy Donovan. Al Bohl was right. Ruck Foy. --how to get Billy Donovan. how to get Billy Donovan. Roy Williams, you liar. Turns out you did give a shit about Carolina after all. I don't know about you, but right now, I don't give a shit about Roy. how to get Billy Donovan. how to get Billy Donovan. My girlfriend left me, my best friend left me, my roommate's leaving me, and now Roy's leaving me. Man, have I had a bad week. 图 how to get Billy Donovan. Thanks a lot, Hemenway. Now who's going to fire you? All we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. now. Thanks, Bob. All we want to do is see Roy, and all Yeah, I'm sitting here waiting for Roy's press conference to come on and meanwhile they're torturing me with this program about a woman obsessed with asparagus. Go to hell, asparagus lady. I want to watch Roy. now. Thanks, Bob. now. Thanks, Bob. Think of what you could do with 26 acres of asparagus. Hi, we were just sitting here watching the asparagus special on channel 6 and we were just wondering why asparagus makes your pee smell. Does Roy Williams have stinky pee when he eats asparagus. now. Thanks, Bob. --now. Thanks, Bob. Roy is gone. The curse is finally over. I can't wait for Billy Donovan to bring a championship to Lawrence. Hi. I don't know what's worse. Roy leaving or watching a 25-minute exposé on asparagus and all that you can make from it. now. Thanks, Bob. 图 Roy, have a good time in Carolina, you dirtbag. And guess what, baby. Rick Pitino is coming to KU. Go KUI! Chicks dig me. now. Thanks, Bob. We fired Al Boht. Let's finish the job and fire Chancellor Bob. Chancellor Bob, yeah, I blame you for the mess that our athletics department is in Dadgum. Freakin' dadgum. 图 图 I hate North Carolina and I hate Roy Williams. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. Yeah, I never thought I'd see the day, but now I'm a Duke fan. Suck on that, Roy. 國 two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. Hey, Roy, I hope you never win a national championship. Yeah, yeah. Mangino, thanks for trying to get Roy to stay and doing a little shout-out there. But now your job is to call for Chancellor Bob to resign or be fired or something. Hey, Roy, we gave you a chance. We believed in you when no one else did and this is how you repay us? Thanks a lot. And I'm being sarcastic when I say thanks a lot because I'm not thankful for anything that you've done for us. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. Hey, it's 9 and this conference that Roy's supposed to be holding in North Carolina still isn't on yet. Come on, North Carolina. Get your shit together. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. Yeah, I like how Roy leaves us and then just flies off in the middle of the night. Doesn't even have the stones to tell us at KU. He has to fly out to UNC before he can do it. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. BASEBALL Diamondbacks lose 5-3 to Colorado Rockies PHOENIX — Larry Walker drove in four runs with his first Cruz (3-0), who was supposed to be Colorado's long reliever but moved into the rotation because of injuries to Denny Neagle and Denny Stark, scattered four hits in 5 scoreless innings. Diamondbacks rookie Lyle Overbay homered leading off the The 30-year-old right-hander struck out three and walked three in a tough pitching matchup with Arizona's Byung-Hyun Kim. mth against Dan Miceli to ruin the shutout bid before Jose Jimenez came on to get two outs for his fourth save in as many chances. single and pinch-hitter Mark Grace had a sacrifice fly, but Jimenez struck out Steve Finley with the bases loaded to end it. Craig Counsell added an RBI The Associated Press THIS WEEK at the GRANADA SIN FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN DESTINATION: Spring Break Granada Every Thursday $2 Double Wells "It's like Spring Break, Cancun every week." $3 Red Bull & Vodkas Bring your student ID for 1/2 off cover! 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink DJ Nick Riddell Anything But Joey & SATURDAY Ultimate Fakebook all ages! ranada V The New www.thegranada.com kansan.com LF THE FIRST SPRING BREAK REALITY MOVIE! NO SCRIPTS. NO ACTORS. NO RULES. APRIL 25 ONLY IN THEATRES FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE REAL WORLD REALCANCUN BROOKLYN/MURRAY FILMENGINE AMERICA ONLINE KEYWORD: THE REAL CANCUN www.therealcancun.com NEW LINK COMMENT S Summer at KU in KC KU Edwards Campus Celebrating 10 years in Greater Kansas City Undergraduate Program Going home to KC this summer? The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. Enroll Today! Call (913)897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu KU ' Summer Semester begins June 3 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 2 TUESDAY,APRIL15,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Sports Free for All CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2B Yeah, my new favorite team is going to be whoever is playing North Carolina. Good luck to all the other ACC teams. I hope you bash North Carolina. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Dear Roy, I hope you have three straight losing seasons and they fire you. 图 Roy, Roy, Roy. What are you doing? I respect you, so I respect your decision. But I'm very disappointed in you,very disappointed in your decision. You have done so much for us and you're making us lose our tradition. --roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. So now you're going to give it in Chapel Hill? Why can't you give the press conference here in your home, your town, Lawrence, where we love you. They are not open-armed for you there. We love you. Come back. Please. --roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Hooray for Late Night with Bill Self! Yeah! --roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Now I feel like I can't even call this team KU, because Roy is KU. We have to give it a different name. It's just not fair to call it KU after Roy leaves. 图 roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Again, two things. One, hire Rick Pitino. That sounds like a good idea. Number two: Ruck Foy. Good luck to Roy Williams at North Carolina,but bring back Larry Brown. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. We hate Roy. He's a punk. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. I can guarantee one thing. We'll probably be getting a coach that's won as many national championships as Roy has — zero. I hope North Carolina rots in hell. Roy Williams leaving is all Quin Snyder's fault. 图 For the basketball team guys, you've got an entire University and an entire state standing behind you. We will be here for you guys. We're not going anywhere. We'll be there next year to cheer for you, and it's going to be your national championship year. Bank it. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Danny Manning for head coach. Seriously. 图 roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Roy, although I don't agree with the decision you made, I have a lot of respect for you and I wish you the best of luck in your future. And no matter what, the Jayhawks will always be No. 1. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Miles, you've got the right idea. You guys can do it by yourselves, without Roy. Just go and win your national championship and prove to him that you guys are really the best team there is in the nation. I swear to God, if I see one article in the Kansan tomorrow that we should thank Roy Williams for his time that he put in here. I will personally beat that person. I swear to God. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. I'm going to petition to get Dean Smith kicked out of the Kansas basketball hall of fame. He's a traitor and I hate him. Anybody know how I can get a transfer to UNC? roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Hey, I say we give Bobby Knight a call. We could use some emotion on our team. Bye, Roy. We sure will miss you roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. Hey, Roy, if you were going to leave, the least you could have done is won us a national championship. Oh, wait! Choke! Way to go, Hemenway. Now Roy is gone, too. --roy didn't make Kansas a winning program. Kansas made Roy a winning coach. three years ago, Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich were worth staying in Kansas for, but now Langford, Miles and Simien are not worth staying in Kansas? Roy, for a guy who claims to be classy, that's quite a double standard, don't you think? three years ago, Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich were worth staying in Kansas for, but now Langford, Miles and Simien are not worth staying in Kansas? Roy, for a guy who claims to be classy, that's quite a double standard, don't you think? Roy, you made my grandma cry. And I'm not too happy, either. --conferences at the end of the season. conferences at the end of the season. I decided earlier that, if Roy Williams left KU, I would cry and drink my sorrows away. Well, guess what. Roy just left, and I'm crying and drinking my sorrows away. Hey, at least now we don't have to deal with those weepy press conferences at the end of the season. --all we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. I have just one thing to say. Wanda's got him whipped. Roy, I hope your North Carolina program is a complete failure. You know nothing of loyalty. You had it all here, buddy. And on the seventh day, Roy Williams said, "Screw you guys. I'm going home." . Yeah, this is to coach Roy Williams. Roy, you are now Fredo from Godfather, because you are now dead to me. 图 Roy, how could you do this to me? I was a KU fan since I was 4, and now all the sudden you're walking out? I feel like I'm getting a divorce. all we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. At least we still have Mark. all we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. Al Bohl was right. Ruck Foy. all we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. Roy Williams, you liar. Turns out you did give a shit about Carolina after all. I don't know about you, but right now, I don't give a shit about Roy. all we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. My girlfriend left me, my best friend left me, my roommate's leaving me, and now Roy's leaving me. Man, have I had a bad week. all we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. Thanks a lot, Hemenway. Now who's going to fire you? all we want to do is see Roy, and all we can get is nothing but asparagus. Enough with the damn asparagus. how to get Billy Donovan. All we want to do is see Roy, and all now. Thanks, Bob. Yeah, I'm sitting here waiting for Roy's press conference to come on and meanwhile they're torturing me with this program about a woman obsessed with asparagus. Go to hell, asparagus lady. I want to watch Roy. now. Thanks, Bob. Think of what you could do with 26 acres of asparagus. now. Thanks, Bob. Hi, we were just sitting here watching the asparagus special on channel 6 and we were just wondering why asparagus makes your pee smell. Does Roy Williams have stinky pee when he eats asparagus. now. Thanks, Bob. now. Thanks, Bob. Roy is gone. The curse is finally over. I can't wait for Billy Donovan to bring a championship to Lawrence. Hi. I don't know what's worse. Roy leaving or watching a 25-minute exposé on asparagus and all that you can make from it. now. Thanks, Bob. Roy, have a good time in Carolina, you dirtbag. And guess what, baby. Rick Pitino is coming to KU. Go KU! Chicks dig me. now. Thanks, Bob. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. Dadgum. Freakin' dadgum. --two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. 图 I hate North Carolina and I hate Roy Williams. = Yeah, I never thought I'd see the day, but now I'm a Duke fan. Suck on that, Roy. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. Hey, Roy, I hope you never win a national championship. Yeah, yeah. Mangino, thanks for trying to get Roy to stay and doing a little shout-out there. But now your job is to call for Chancellor Bob to resign or be fired or something. Hey, Roy, we gave you a chance. We believed in you when no one else did and this is how you repay us? Thanks a lot. And I'm being sarcastic when I say thanks a lot because I'm not thankful for anything that you've done for us. two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. Hey, it's 9 and this conference that Roy's supposed to be holding in North Carolina still isn't on yet. Come on, North Carolina. Get your shirt together. Yeah, I like how Roy leaves us and then just flies off in the middle of the night. Doesn't even have the stones to tell us at KU. He has to fly out to UNC before he can do it. --two homers of the season and Nelson Cruz became the fourth Colorado pitcher to win three games in April as the Rockies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-3 last night. BASEBALL Diamondbacks lose 5-3 to Colorado Rockies Cruz (3-0), who was supposed to be Colorado's long reliever but moved into the rotation because of injuries to Denny Neagle and Denny Stark, scattered four hits in 5 scoreless innings. PHOENIX — Larry Walker drove in four runs with his first Diamondbacks rookie Lyle Overbay homered leading off the The 30-year-old right-hander struck out three and walked three in a tough pitching matchup with Arizona's Byung-Hyun Kim. ninth against Dan Miceli to ruin the shutout bid before Jose Jimenez came on to get two outs for his fourth save in as many chances. single and pinch-hitter Mark Grace had a sacrifice fly, but Jimenez struck out Steve Finley with the bases loaded to end it. Craig Counsell added an RBI The Associated Press THIS WEEK GRANADA at the WEDNESDAY SIN DESTINATION: Spring Break Granada FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN "It's like Spring Break, Cancun every week." Every Thursday $2 Double Wells $3 Red Bull & Vokas Bring your student ID for 1/2 off cover! DJ Nick Riddell Anything But Joey 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink SATURDAY Ultimate Fakebook all ages! 8& S Granada www.thegranada.com kansan.com A APRIL 25 ONLY IN THEATRES NO SCRIPTS. NO ACTORS. NO RULES. FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE REAL WORLD THE FIRST SPRING BREAK REALITY MOVIE! REALCANCUN BROOKLYN/MORNING FILMENGINE AMERICA ONLINE KEYWORD: THE REAL CANCUN www.therealcancun.com NEW LANE, CONCUN KU Edwards Campus Celebrating 10 years in Greater Kansas City Summer at KU in KC KU Edwards Campus Undergraduate Program Going home to KC this summer? The University of Kansas Edwards Campus undergraduate program offers an excellent, affordable opportunity to get ahead this summer. Enroll in any of our junior or senior-level courses. Enroll Today! Call (913) 897-8400 or visit edwardscampus.ku.edu KU Summer Semester begins June 3 12600 Quivira Road Overland Park, KS 66213 . 4B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2003 JAYHAWKS IN THE PROS By Ryan Greene rgreene@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter With the NBA regular season winding down, the Kansan will give weekly updates on what former fayhawks have been up to in the professional ranks. If you would like an update on a former Hawk who's not listed, e-mail requests to rgreene@kansan.com Paul Pierce — Boston Celtics The Celtics secured a playoff The Celtics set spot last week, but they're still working for a good position with just a couple games left on BOSCH CRAFTS the schedule. The Celtics went 2-2 last week as they struggle to find consistency, but Pierce is regularly scoring near his average of 26.1 points per game. Pierce showed his durability in Saturday's 89-86 defeat to Orlando. In that game, he scored 25 points and grabbed nine rebounds, despite being knocked out of the game shortly because of a twisted ankle. Jacque Vaughn — Orlando Magic The Magic hold the advantage in the Eastern Conference playoff standings after going 5-1 last week, but Vaughn's numbers leveled off. In three contests, Vaughn combined for 14 points and 15 assists. Vaughn did, however, keep his assists to-turnover ratio looking nice by committing only eight turnovers The Mavericks fell from the top spot in the Western Conference Raef LaFrentz — Dallas Mavericks last week, and they're struggling to get back after losing three of their last four games. LaFrentz, however, is on a DINGORIA scoring tear. In the team's past four games, LaFrentz has averaged 16.3 points per game, including a 26-point outburst against the Lakers on April 8 and then 21 against Utah on Friday. In the four-game stretch, LaFrentz has shot an outstanding 56.3 percent from the field. Scot Pollard—Sacramento Kings Although Pollard appeared to be one of the most consistent KINGS Sacramento performers upon his return from his back and hand injuries, his playing time has suddenly dwindled. In three games last week, Pollard averaged only 13 minutes per game, totaling 9 points and 13 rebounds. Sprinkled in was a scoreless outing on Thursday against the Lakers. Greq Ostertag — Utah Jazz Lately, Ostertag's rebound numbers have been optimum. In Niche games, Ostertag averaged 7 points and 12 rebounds per JAZZ game the kind of numbers Utah needs if it wants to make it deep in Danny Manning — Detroit Pistons (Did not play; placed on injured list on April 8) the Western Conference playoffs Drew Gooden — Orlando Magic (Did not play; sprained big toe, knee tendinitis) A READER'S REQUEST "I know he never officially was a Jayhawk, but I think people would be interested in how DeShawn Stevenson is doing in the NBA," — Ross Lippincott Following the 2000-2001 season, a popular saying around town was "Man, if only we had DeShawn Stevenson." Stevenson originally committed verbally to Kansas but decided to bail and take the NBA money. In the 2000 NBA draft, Stevenson felt to being picked late in the first round until the Utah Jazz swiped him as the 23rd pick. Experts at the time thought he would gain from the experience of guys such as Karl Malone and John Stockton, but Stevenson's first three NBA seasons have shown little growth, if any. Stevenson has never averaged more than 4.9 points per game and this season has scored in double-figures only three times with his role as a bench player. Stevenson's rookie contract expires after this season, so it will be interesting to see where he lands in the free agency pool. He is still young at 22 and will most likely have an extended stay in Utah or a good look somewhere else. next week's update — Mark Randall U.S. Olympic Committee starts major transition The scandal-ridden organization got into its latest mess in part because the volunteers and paid staff couldn't get along. The board unanimously approved a motion in support of the initial restructuring proposal, but then the political posturing started up again. FORT WORTH, Texas - A day after an in-house task force proposed the most sweeping changes in the history of the pointing and political maneuvering; U. S. Olympic Committee, its members began jockeying for position in the new leadership structure. directors and eliminating the 21-member governing executive committee. It's exactly the response Colorado Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell expected from a group known for its finger- The task force recommended trimming 114 spots off the 123-member board of The Associated Press bers began to realize the chair had been pulled from beneath them. Responses were positive after the presentation Saturday, but the tone was decidedly different a day later as mem- Ser Serving KU Automotive DON'S Auto Center, Inc. since 1974 A.S.E. 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DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 INC *Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT HISTORY OF THE CITY OF BROOKLYN 1850-1940 - Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 $3.00 Cosmos & Martinis $2.00 Wells 12:03 $2.00 Wells -1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 Fat Tire pints for $2.00 *Fat Tire 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 0 山 TUESDAY,APRIL 15,2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Heard on the Hill Compiled by Henry C. Jackson Who do you think the next men's basketball coach at the University of Kansas should be? PETER GREENSTONE "Bill Self would be a wonderful candidate." Collins Wade, Monroe, La., junior "Maybe the Illinois coach, I guess." Kadi Kerr, Prairie Village junior SPORTS Diregummers "I think Tubby Smith from Kentucky is the way to go." Dan Gwartney, Kansas City, Kan., junior Joyce "Coach Holladay would be a good replacement." Dani Davey. Overland Park junior GILFIELD E. T. Thomas, Kansas City, Mo., junior PENN STATE UNIVERSITY "I like Tom Crean. He and Roy are friends." "I have no idea." 1 Maggie Richter, St. Louis sophomore Tommy Ogara, Winnetka, Ill. sophomore Jordan plays his final game WASHINGTON — Michael Jordan received a U.S. flag from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to begin a night that ended with yet another loss in his final home game as an NBA player. The Associated Press Jordan received a mild pregame ovation and a larger one afterward as he scored 21 points with eight rebounds in a 93-79 loss last night to the New York Knicks. Allan Houston scored 23 points to lead the Knicks, who tied the Wizards for ninth place in the Eastern Conference — something that will matter only on draft lottery day. After the game, Wizards owner Abe Pollin donated 50 computers to each of Washington's 18 public high schools. The computer labs will be named after Jordan. Jordan did not address the crowd before leaving the court. The Wizards lost their final five home games and will finish at least six games under .500. Washington ends its season Wednesday night at Philadelphia. Jordan come out firing, taking nine shots in the first quarter, but he once again he couldn't make the difference on a team with uneven talent and questionable chemistry. In the fourth quarter, typically Jordan-time, he scored just two points and left the game for good with 2:02 to play. As Jordan sat, the MCI Center crowd rose to its feet and cheered and chanted for 2 minutes,45 seconds — a sharp contrast to the token ovation he received when the starting lineups were announced. Rumsfeld received a loud ovation before presenting Jordan with a flag that flew over the Pentagon on the one-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. The two shook hands and chatted briefly, and Jordan cradled the flag in his right hand, with his head bowed, as the national anthem played. Jordan's introduction lasted just 25 seconds, with the cheers not much louder than the ones for Rumsfeld. It was some 3 1/2 minutes shorter than the one he received in his final game at Chicago earlier this season. Jordan himself tried not to make a big deal out of the game, with the greater focus on Wednesday's season finale. "It's just another night, really," Jordan said after the morning shootaround. "I know that this is my last home game in Washington, D.C., and that is something I definitely will treasure, but I woke up this morning and I thought that there was this certain feeling that I should be feeling — and I had breakfast, coffee, did my normal stuff — and nothing seems out of the ordinary." LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. Hosanna Hosaana Easter! April 20 Performances from Jesus Christ Superstar at the 11:15 service. Plymouth UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 925 Vermont Street www.plymouthlawrence.com Every Sunday 9:30 Traditional Worship 12:15 Saturday Worship Plymouth UNITED NATIONAL CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 925 Vermont Street Every Sunday 9:30 Traditional Worship 11:15 Contemporary Worship Sweeney helps Royals' streak The Associated Press CLEVELAND CLEVELAND — Mike Sweeney was breathing easier, so he returned to the Kansas City lineup and really cut loose. Sweeney, recovered from the flu, hit a three-run double and a solo home run as the Royals sought to start a new winning streak yesterday with a 12-4 victory over the Cleveland Indians. "It felt good to come through when the club needed me," said Sweeney, who snapped a 1-for-17 slide with a bases-loaded double. "It was a sigh of relief." Tucker was the third batter and second Royals player hit in the game, one day after the "I've never been thrown out before and the reason I'm mad is there was no warning." Sadler said. "I truly didn't hit him on purpose. I'm a situational lefty trying to get a lefty hitter out, not hit him and load the bases." The Royals' 10-1 start is the best in team history through 11 games. "It's nice to see the boys came back right away," manager Tony Pena said. "This game was like opening day again." Ken Harvey, Brent Mayne and Michael Tucker also hit solo homers for Kansas City, which had its season-opening nine-game winning streak snapped Sunday by the Indians. Cleveland first-year manager Eric Wedge got his first ejection in the top of the eighth inning after reliever Carl Sadler was tossed for hitting Tucker with a pitch. teams had words and were warned for throwing close to hitters. Two pitches after Carlos Febles lined a two-run single off Sadler to put the Royals ahead 8-4, the left-hander hit Tucker in the right arm with a 1-0 pitch. Plate umpire Jerry Crawford immediately ejected Sadler. Wedge came out to argue and was tossed. "Carl didn't have very good command," Wedge said. "The umpire's point of view I think was coming off last night. My point of view was my guy was struggling." Sadler threw just 11 pitches three for strikes. Pena agreed "There's no bad blood," Sweeney said. "We're here to play baseball, not fight," he said. The Princeton Review Space is limited. Call to register today! MCAI is a registered trademark of the American Association of Medical Colleges AAAMC. The Provision Research is not affiliated with Princeton University or AAMC Free Practice MCAT Test April 26, 2003 University of Kansas KU Memorial Union 9:00am - 2:00pm EAT and The Lawrence Arts Center The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams Directed by Paul Stephen Lim Scenic Design by Kaye Miller Lighting Design by Lee Saylor Original Music by Karl Ramberg 8 PM April 16, 17, 18 2:30 PM April 19 Tickets (785) 843-2787 $6 students $8 seniors $10 others Lawrence Arts Center 940 New Hammond Featuring Amy Devitt, Aron Carlson, Jacqueline Grunan, Jeremy Auman, John Younger, Karl Ramberg, Mic Cirou, Brenna Dalderrph, Ryan Fleming, Brian Gray and Paul Sheoulberg. Stage Manager: Kirby Fields. You could be selected as the UCES Intern of the Month! Rate your experiences to help your fellow internship-seeking peers. It's easy, Just go to our website! While you are there, join the Internship Listserv Share your knowledge and get tips on: • Networking into full-time • Dealing with your supervisor • Skill building Internship Contest For students with Interships during the past year (Summer 2002, Fall 2002, or Spring 2003) 2 Categories to Enter • Internship Poster • Internship Portfolio see website for details 2 Winners in each category! U C E S university career and employment services 864-3624 DEADLINE: www.pipelineproductions.com LEGENDARY LOCKS LEAD AND DIGGEA TUESDAY APRIL 15TH TOOTS AND !MAYTALS WITH SPECIAL Guests THE YARDS APPEARING AT THE BOTTLENECK 777 MIDDLEMURCH LAWRENCE, KS Tickets available through ticketmaster.com FRIDAY APRIL 18TH FULL FEATURE with GRASSHOPER TAKEOVER 8TH WAVE @ BOTTLENECK www.pipelineproductions.com LEGENDARY ROCK STREET AND WODAIM TUESDAY APRIL 15TH TOOTS AND I'MAYTALS WITH SPECIAL RESENT THE YARDS APPEARING AT THE BOTTLENECK HOTEL LAWRENCE, KS Include and send through IGRAPHY@FOX.COM FRIDAY APRIL 18TH FULL FEATURE FOR GRASSHOPPER TAKEOVER ON 6TH WAVE @ BOTTLENECK SATURDAY, APRIL 19TH conner getaway driver capsules aprilswitch Bullseye THURSDAY, MAY 1ST COMING SOON TO BOTTLENECK 721 NEW MAPSHEE LAWRENCE, MA MAIRY APES BMX WITH TWO DOVELBLY TUESDAY, APRIL 29TH CROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED FARMER'S BALL FINALS ON SATURDAY APRIL 26TH WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30TH DJ PAC MAC BETHAL APPROACH AND ARCHETYPE FOR A FULL LISTING OF ALL UNCOMMITTED College Students & Teachers: LOOKING FOR THAT PERFECT SUMMER JOB? QUINTILES With a little help from Quintiles, you can maximize your income AND- your summer fun! Participate in a clinical research study and Earn Up To $1000 or More! You may qualify if you've - A healthy adult, age 18 or older - A healthy adult, age 1 - Taking no medications - Taking no medicine * No more than 30 lbs overweight QUINTILES WILL BE ON THE 4TH FLOOR OF THE KANSAS UNION ON WEDNESDAY,APRIL 16TH FROM 10:00AM-3:00 PM. - Available for in-house stays or outpatient studies - Available for in- outpatient studies - No more than 30 lbs over weight - Possible for in-house staff or Stop by for information on current & upcoming OutPatient, Weekend & Short-Term Trials! Plus... You could earn $100 for referring a friend who completes a study with us! Call for study details! O Join the Search for Better Health LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five $1.50 well LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU II SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • SUGARS • POOL * must be 21 to enter 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE 6B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAY,APRIL 15,2003 TODAY TOMORROW THURSDAY 78 58 chance of afternoon thunderstorms 68 38 possibility of showers 63 40 cooler and cloudy TODAY TODAY 78 58 chance of afternoon thunderstorms TOMORROW 68 38 possibility of showers THURSDAY 63 40 cooler and cloudy — BRANDI GUNTER, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE MASKED AVENGERS by Matt Sevcik & Max Krentzer, for The University Daily Kansas I'm kind of nervous. I'm meeting Daisy's parents tonight, and her dad is a Colonel. Hello there son, Glad you could make it for dinner. rainy 云 I'm kind of nervous. I'm meeting Daisy's parents tonight, and her dad is a Colonel. I'm kind of nervous. I'm meeting Daisy's parents tonight, and her dad is a Colonel. Hello there son. Glad you could make it for dinner. HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 15) You're independent, but don't be an isolationist this year. A good coach can help you achieve your goals. Sure, this could involve a change in how you see yourself. Let go of those old limitations and your old ego. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. Delegating could cost you more than expected, but don't be too quick to volunteer for everything Let somebody help in order to avoid burnout. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 5. Allow your creative impulses to take over. Finish the design you've been working on, and the rest will be easy. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is an 8. The upcoming full moon should be lots of fun for you and somebody you love. Be careful, though. You're liable to make a commitment you'll have to keep. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a5. Tensions are mounting, and you'll soon find that a change at home must be made. Stop putting up with something you hate, and get yourself something you like. Lee (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is an 8. You're a pretty good scholar (sometimes more than others), and you should learn easily now. You do have to set priorities, though. You can't learn it all at once. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 6. They say that if you follow your dream, the money will follow you. Amazing as it might appear, that could actually happen now. But don't burn all your bridges. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is an 8. It's best to not talk about money now, though most other subjects are fine. What you think is not enough may be too much to someone else. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 5 If others have trouble deciding, that task may fall to you. Wait till you've heard all the options. There should be time for that Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is an 8. You'll have an opportunity, as the moon goes full, to reassess your priorities. The more you learn, the more you'll value what you already had. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 5. The situation is unstable because someone won't make up their mind. Your suggestion won't go over now, though. Save it until Thursday. Aquarius (Jan, 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 9. All of a sudden your heart has wings. Is it the full moon? Maybe Talk it over tonight, in private, with a person who makes you laugh. cases (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is 5. Worrying about money doesn't seem to bring any more of it your way. Relaxing might be a big help, though, since it unleashes your creativity. Crossword ACROSS 1 Doc's org. 4 Vow 8 Efflike person 14 Wager 15 Entreaty 16 Longshoreman, at times 17 Occupied a chair 18 Sassy 19 Pierce 20 Mythical horned beast 22 Tide type 23 Disavow 24 Fine leather 28 Hang in loose folds 29 Fam. member 30 Rub out 31 Understanding between nations 34 Connections 35 Kind 38 Bars 40 Journalist Hentoff 41 Wander about 43 Muddles 45 Grinding tooth 47 Flock leader 48 Union branch 52 Western Hemisphere 54 On fire 55 Sacred image 56 Christmastide burner 57 Order of business 60 Theater box 61 Anger 62 Makes merry 63 Particular periods 64 Fire 65 Red tablewine 66 Golf standards 67 Advanced in years DOWN 1 Nonsensical 2 More malicious 3 Region around Athens 4 Adversary 5 Wide-awake 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 04/15/03 $ \textcircled{c} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. 6 Gull relative 7 Derby or Homburg 8 More crafty 9 Scented hair dressing 10 Harmonious relationship 11 Actress Lupino 12 ___ Aviv-Jaffa 13 Bard's before 21 Cod or Hatteras 22 Quack medicine 24 Movie houses 25 Conceited 26 On the bounding main 27 Snug retreat 29 More than two 32 Actor Hunter 33 Printer's measures 35 "My Friend" 36 Weaver's machine 37 Leafy vegetable 39 Altruistic 42 Seafarer F L A T S P P A M C R O W E R I L E A L L Y R A C E R R E L B E N E E R D O W E L L A L E U T D R I E S A D E K E E P I N G T A B S O N M A E D R A G S O N S H A G Y E T A R R V E Y E S E S S E A M E D A L N E S T O R A N Y S E L L E L E G I E S I A N R O L L E R S K A T E R S O A T L E T H E T R E A T S T I L E T O E D A R I A L O V E S E D D Y W I N Y O M E N S E A S E L E S S Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 44 Lone 46 Conundrum 49 Parti-colored cat 50 Without principles 51 Map key 53 Seaside 54 Boring tool 56 Exercise system 57 Circle segment 58 Solidify 59 Marie Saint 60 Track circuit Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment in a school or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept Classified Policy I 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements H advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. Wanted: Papa Roach concert pictures/ video with kid on stage. Will pay! 816-739-1129 jmaging@sdo.com Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4264 markinsc@swbell.net 130 - Entertainment --- Dance lessons, balletroom, latin, and swing. Sundays night 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, reception etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass.311-2227 --- Men and Women 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.preatschools.com 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted Attention College Students. What are you doing for the summer? No one thing? We are! Find out how you could make $8,200 monthly this summer. Call 1-866-1633. Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-329-3985 ext. $31 Bartender Trainees needed. BARTENDER POSITION BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great pay Call 1-800-806-0082 ext 1422. No experience necessary. students well cured and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277 9787. www.collegepo.com Brookcreek Learning Center Teaching Assistant. Training provided. Must be energetic and share an enthusiasm for making a difference in the lives of young children. PT. u.m.shs available. Apply 200 Mt. Hope Court. 855-0022 Hundreds of painter positions available Cruise line entry level on board positions avail... great benefits. Seasonal/year rd. 941-329-6434. www.cruiseleaders.com Exotic dancers, Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7800 or 1-785-221-5900. Doormen and weekend day bistender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 Iowa All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, 205 - Help Wanted GPA. The Graduate & Professional Association of the University of Kansas, seeks a graduate or professional student as Financial Director. The successful candidate will be an independent, organized and motivated worker; possess business and/or financial knowledge and experience, strong people skills, budget experience, and the ability to multitask. Specific job requirements include managing and reporting finances for GPA and 40 graduate student organizations. Position is a student/hourly, part-time, one year (renewable) term with start date May 5, 2003 (Pay approx $800/mo) with instate/staff tuition rates). PeopleSoft experience recommended but not required. Please send letter of interest and resume to Financial Director Search Committee, co/graduate & Professional Association, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd, Rm 426, Lawrence, KS 66045 Graduate Student Hourly Position: 120 - Announcements **Leaching traits Issues Lesson** **Responsibilities:** Serve as liaison to Queens and Allies. LBGT services of Kansas; serve as liaison to other campus offices and student organizations. Develop a variety of educational resources directed toward raising consciousness and increasing acceptance bisexual and transgender persons. Required Qualifications: Bachelor's degree and graduate status for Fall 2003 and Spring 2004 (Must be enrolled in at least 6 credit hours). Demonstrated ability to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian. Students of all ages participate, especially those related to higher education. Demonstrated ability to work effectively with a variety of publics and individuals. Availability to attend KU Queens and Allies meetings Thursday evenings. Ability to organize and work independently on assigned tasks. Position Start Date: On or about August 16 2003 $8.50 per hour. 20 hours a week. Complete job description available in Student Development Center. 22 application, resume, and names, addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses (if available) of two references to Marshall Jackson, Associate Director, Student development, 22 Strong Hall University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 86045, *Design* of applications will begin on May 2, 2003. Position open until filled. Application; Please submit a letter of EOE/AA Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-463-7490, ewarnings.com Have fun teaching tennis, baseball or basketball this summer. Work with kids in the beautiful mountains of Massachusetts. Salary, room, board and complete travel. Dates 6/21-8/18. It's not too late to join the fun! For more info email staff@campwinado.com or complete application in staff area of campwinado.com. BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles: 785-754-3649 Leasing Agents Energic, outgrowing needs needed Part time, flexible schedule, weekends Apply in person at Paraway Commons. 3601 Clinton Parkway Fr LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at Gri Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature, sports, challenge course; dance and drama). Early June mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Call 393-778-0109 x281 or email rhondel@asnme.com 120 - Announcements H Fraternities • Sororities • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program! It works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 205 - Help Wanted 手拉手 一起走 Move in coordinator needed. Begins immediately. Must be available to work 20-40 hours per week through the summer. Must be dependable and organized. Stop by Meadowbrook Apple, or call 842-4300. --members shall advise & counsel the Watkins Administration on matters pertaining to the program on health care and education for all students of the University of Kansas. SHAB is a Student Senate Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED, PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865-0956. MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-2777 in 1020 OFFICE HELP NEeded Part-time office help needed approx. 20 hr/week. M-F, I-PM, S-FM) Duties include answering phones, filing data in customer service. Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Avamar. PO Box 3467, Lawrence KS 60046 Attention Tracy EOE Schumm Foods needs a part-time office assistant who has prior office experience and good customer service skills. Start at $7 per hour. $8 per hour after a year. Apply at Schumm Foods at 719 Mass (above the Smokehouse). Great practical experience in all facets of a small business. Small well-established Financial Office is seeking a well-organized individual wishing to learn and grow with the business. People skills, computer skills, and attention to details extremely important. Position includes communicating with clients with respect to their small business needs, preparing monthly "books", preparing business and personal income tax returns and general accounting office duties. Small office environment requires individual with flexible attitude. Required computer skills: Proficient in Windows 98, Microsoft Office Suite: Excel, Word, Outlook and Internet research. Send resume to P.O. Box 235, Bonner Springs, KS 60012. Anjane (SHAB) STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD SHAB is seeking diverse individuals in major, nationality, ethnicity and experience for the 2003-2004 academic year. Board MAKE A DIFFERENCE pick up an application at the Student Senate Office on the 4th floor of the Kramer Union of Watkins Administration Office SUMMER IN CHICAGO! Childcare and light housekeeping for suburban Chicago families. Responsible, low-rom-smoker. Call Northfield Nannies (847)501-5354 Summer to remember in woods of Maine Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialis and cabin counsellors. Have fun be outdoors and make a difference. 6/18- 8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call colleen1914-835-5800. The Mass. St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house) X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale --- 99 S Don't forget the S Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 801-391-3323 ext.4565 20% student discount when placing a classified. With proof of KUID TUESDAY, APRIL15, 2003 CLASSIFIED 305 - For Sale THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7P $ JAYHAWK COLLECTOR'S TREASURE: Signed 1937 first edition of "Better Basketball" by Forrest C. "Phog" Allen. Book bears the authenticated signature of the legendary coach, with inscription, "Lawrence, Kansas, June 14, 1938." This gem goes to the highest bidder. (816) 221-5851. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up, Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. HOTEL 400s Real Estate 403 - Apartments for rent 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 & 2 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings,$425,841-3633 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @843-4000. 1 BR $450/mo Avail Aug 1. New carpet, vinyl, hardwood floors in BR. Very cute/niece! 730 Arkansas. Call 843-8540 ext 21. 3 BR apts. 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W:D hook up. Very nice, all smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9907 Great 3BR's Recycle Your Kansan 3 BR apts. FP. skvights. 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. Calls 765-748-9807 3 BR, 2 bath, 1 garage. New! 804/806 New Jersey St. $950/mo. plus deposit. Call 550-4148. 7 BR house. 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown. $1800 per month. Avail. Aug. 8. Call 550-452-062 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Avail. Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated old house, 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C. 10th & NY no pets. $520 Call 841-1074-1. Avail. Aug. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated old house. 1300k. Pel- mont. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique box. No pets. $440/mo. Call 841-1074. Avail. August 1st. 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washar. Dryer/Dishwasher. 829 Alabama. $1100/month. Call 843-8540 Ext. 21. Avail, Aug. Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house. 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets. $450. Call 841-1074. Available in August. 1, 2 bdrm. Close to GSP/Corbin between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841-1207 Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Briartown. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emmy Rd. $490 per month. W/D hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 740-4788. Available now, May or June 1: Very nice, remodeled, spacious top floor 1. BR apts. 9th and Emery. No smoking/pets. $415 plus utilities. 500-8111 or 841-3192. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets. phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 BK, Arkansas. 843-4090. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom. 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-4090. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 4th floor between Naismith & Ocudahl $41,553 405 - Apartments for Rent Great location. 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. $610/mo/Aug. 1842-4242 1-1 BR Apt. Next to Campus Avail. Aug 1 1346 Ohio. $490 per month. Utilities paid. Call 550-4264 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus Available August. Call 913-441-4169 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. $415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0428 MASTERCRAFT WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Campus Place 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass*841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 Regents Court Regents Court 19th & Mass·749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity 2600 w 6th Street Tuckaway Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENT? APARTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools hot tubs, basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness www.tuckawaymgmt.com call 838-3377 Blue Mosa Management Inc. Apartments & Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments *Washer & Dryer *Fully Equipped Kitchen *Serving Bar Blue Menu Management Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price carw 19th 54th Suite 101 405 - Apartments for Rent Call 840.9467 for an appointment 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 CHASE COURT 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quick setting, swimming pool, KU bus rite, laundry facility, Call 843-0011. New leasing for fall 2003 1 & 2 Bedroom - Washer/Dryer 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - Fireplace - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Model Open Daily! - Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE PARKWAY COMMONS www.firstmanagementinc.com Now leasing for fall 2003! Luxury Apt.Homes 1. 2.3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Models Open Daily 842-3280 Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Soul Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. ^{90} }savings on select units with new 12 month lease. Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com --- Now signing YR, 17 leases starting May June July Aug. No smoking pets. Extr nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low vents, A/C, bus route & more $405/mo. Spanish Coast Plaza 841-8868 405 - Apartments for Rent Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample parking on-site laundry. Call 843-4090. Save Your Money! Avail. 8/1 Quiet, no smoking, no pets, 6th, & Kasell, 2 BR, 1.5 BA $685/month plus security deposit, 1-year lease, 500-8812 Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath. W/D. fireplace, kitchen appl, garage/operator, no pets. Sublease 6.1/7-31/3 $500 766-5080 1,2,&3 JEFFERSON COMMONS Bedroom Apartments - Spacious, Luxury Apts • All appls. + W/D • Water paid • 6 mo. leases avail. 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. Canyon Court FOX RUN FUNDING BOSTON OPPORTUNITY Brand New - Individual Leases - Cable plus HBO - Resort-style Pool Plaza - 24 hour Fitness Facility - On KIU bus route 700 Comet Lane HIGHPOINTE Brand New Luxury Apartments - Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome Now Leasing for Fall 2003 Leasing for Spring 2003 • Pursuit Idm • Washer/Dryer • Swimming Pool & Hot Tub • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Garages Available • High Speed Internet Connections • Security Systems Available • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 842-3280 www.firstmanagementinc.com 6th & Iowa 1012 Emery Rd 841-3800 Stop by and find out for yourself! 405 - Apartments for Rent Apartments 24 hour fitness hall On KU bus route - Washer/Dryer in each unit - Internet access in each room - Tanning Bed - Computer Center www.jeffersoncommons.com Located just behind SuperTarget 842-0032 West Hills NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED L 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 carro apar special Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes - Reasonable Rates *Washers/Dryers* *Dishwashers* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Fireplaces* *Cooling Fans* - Digital Cable & Internet Open House Monday-Friday 1:00-5:00 - Great Location Near Campus Lorimar & Courtside - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom at about nur by diphone! Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes - Mother-Dryers * Dishwashers * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Fireplaces * Ceiling Fans 4100 Clinton Parkway For More Info: 785-841-7849 405 - Apartments for Rent Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship, Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295 Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon 839-8302 2727 Amidon 839-8302 Moving to Wichita? Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hale Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $335. Water paid. High-speed internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. 1:2.3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. Available August 15, 841-6254 1712 OHIO Attractive studio apt, near KU at 945 Md. avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study $400, gas & water paid. No pets or smoking. Call 749-0166. Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR4 apt, DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site, 3BR 2 BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 5533 www.apartmentslawinence.com VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Now Leasing! A Quiet, Relaxed close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net COLONY WOODS 1&2Bedrooms 1301 W.24th & Naismitht 842-5111 colony@akxs.com www.colonywoods.com 1 & 2 Bedrooms • On KU Bus Route • Indoor/Outdoor Pool • 3 Hot Tubs • Exercise Room • Now Leasing for Summ - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 THE LEGENDS L NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROWS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ALL INCLUDED UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND DRIVER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPPED FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPORPS / CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY GUEGE HOME GAME / COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNHEART BROADBAND HD SCIEED HTTP (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING Need a place to live next year? LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - car ports - full size washer / dryer Townhomes - approx. 1600 sq feet Williams Pointe Tonehouse - paid cable (ext. basic) 415 - Homes For Rent - full size washer / dryer - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - 1421 sq feet Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 Houses 2 BR 1 BA nice house with one car garage, wood floors, fenced yard, porch with swing. $685.841.3633 anytime. 4 BR, 2 1/2 BA, great area, large deck, fenced yard, 2 car gar, family room, DW, AC, hookups, many fans, attic fan, No dogs $1000/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. B42-1375 10 a.m.-6 p.m. or B42-3556 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Eldridge. Avail. Aug. 1. Well-maintained. 2-car gar. DW, W/D, AC, 1300 sq. ft., room provided. No dogs $875/mo. 842-1376 10 a.m.-6 p.m. or 842-355. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jacouzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fence landscaped back yard. $1450,841-3633 anytime. House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath CAWD In- cluded. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100-201 mg-411 389 BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$110 plus utilities. Application & Deposit 7.49-7297 or 7.66-6862 between 6:30 to 10 p.m. 430 - Roommate Wanted 2 roommates needed for 5 BR house, 13th and Tenn. 3 floors, off-street parking. Megan 550-9596 or Ama 764-0698 ASAP Huge, new, 3 BR townhome 2.5 BA, FP, W/D, DW, 300/mo, +1/3 utilities. Call Aspir A913-758-8956, 4100 Clinton Pkwy 440 - Sublease Key House 1 BR, 2 BAT at Aberdeen Apartments. WD included. $525/mo Available June 1- Dec. Please call B32-2458. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, central air. Available mid-May or June Ist.218-7736 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons Avail. mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus, Garage, W/D, Central. Air avail, mid-May Call Adam 830-8076. 3 BR, 3 BA apt. Furn. WD full kitchen + more. Avail. May, Aug. Rent $375+ util., water, cable paid. Amy. Kee 765/519 4 Subleases needed, new 4 BR town- house, 3 BA, 2 car garage, WD, rent $312.50, lease through July 31, B16-5260 6421 of 638-5785 or 3502 of 340-3273. Beautiful 5 BR 2 BA house available for summer sublease. Close to St, St. and campus Rent negotiable Call 856-1022 Female roommate wanted to share 4 BR apt. @ Jefferson Commons. Swimming pool. lst mo rented pad. 785-218-5542 Female to sublease BR in 2 BR apt. $240 + low util. May 1? Baliary views the stadium. Free cable. 312-9390 Furnished Apartment for Sublease! 48R, 2 BA, lv rm, din rm, kitchen, patio, (laundry lac, and pool on apartment close). Close to campus ("Orchard Corners") on the bus lee. Starting Mid May or neg. $168 mo+. iuill Cable and DSL. Now turn. needed! Call Liz or Canda at (785) 838-3083leave a message. IBR in 2BAPt. Summer Sublease! Right on campus. Available May or June. $320/mo. Call Nicole 519-5204 Need sublease to live w/ 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent paid. Call 785-830-8003. PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR du plex. Each has full private BA 749-6060. Roommate wanted for large 5 BBR house. Half block from campus. $315/mo. Call 393-3197 BUSINESS 500s Services --- Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233 kansan.com 8B = THE UNIVERSITY DAJYKANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY SPORTS TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2003 PARADE FOR THE EARTH 07/15/2014 10:00 AM EARTH DAY PARK Saturday, April 19th 11:00 a.m. - Parade begins at 11:10 and Massachusetts St. and travels to 7th St. Come to watch or come to walk! Earth-friendly creatures encouraged! Noxon - 40 m. - Celebration in South Park In the west side of Noxon, St. Come party, peruse play, and participate in this curry fun festival! Live music, creative activities, and giveaways will entertain you as we celebrate our home. planetEarth Register at: ParadeForTheEarth@lawrencek9.org More Earth Day Activities listed at www.lawrencek9.org --erick recalled. "Then he started talking about Roy Williams." Over 10 toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 10" Pizzas 2 toppings $10.99 2 drinks Home of the Pocket Pizza 749-0055 704 Mass. Need a Job? PUBLIC RECORDS BOSTON BARTENDERS SCHOOL of AMERICA BE A BARTENDER! - Hands on training activities - National Alcohol Awareness - Special student discount - Hands on training/niteclub setting - National Alcohol Awareness Certification - Certification - Super job placement assistance - Conveniently located in downtown Kansas City CALL TODAY! 1-816-221-8555 www.bostonbartender.com S Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew FRY WAGNER MOVING & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Freelance Employment Opportunity Employer $ The Associated Press $s$ Jayhawks KANSAS Holiday Drum Conference Center Lawrence, Kansas Remembering Roy's arrival Editor's note: The following story was released by The Associated Press on July 9, 1988, when the University of Kansas announced the hiring of Roy Williams as coach of the Kansas men's basketball team. Roy Williams became the seventh head basketball coach at the University of Kansas in 1988. Williams came to Kansas from North Carolina where he had been an assistant to Coach Dean Smith since 1978. He replaced Larry Brown who left to coach in the NBA after leading Kansas to the 1988 NCAA Championship. Williams accepted the head coaching position at North Carolina yesterday. The Associated Press Two transplanted Jayhawks—North Carolina coach Dean Smith and former Kansas coach Dick Harp—helped lead Kansas to Roy Williams as the successor of Larry Brown. Athletic Director Bob Frederick relied on their recommendations in making the decision to hire Williams, an assistant at North Carolina for the last 10 years. "Dick Harp and I both love KU, and we both know Roy better than anyone," Smith, who played for Kansas' 1952 NCAA champions, said. "On one hand I hate to lose Roy. But if I have to, I'm glad it's to KU. I'm delighted for both Roy and KU. There's no doubt in my mind that Roy will do an outstanding job." Harp, now an administrative assistant at North Carolina, began the campaign for Williams before the position ever opened. Smith continued the push a day after Brown resigned to join the San Antonio Spurs. Frederick had both played for and served as a graduate assistant on Harp-coached Kansas teams in the early 1960s. Frederick was in Springfield Mass., in May for the induction of former Jayhawks Clyde Lovellette and Ralph Miller into the Basketball Hall of Fame. He sat beside Harp at the banquet. "Dick said to me. 'If you ever get into a situation where you need a coach, we have a tremendous young man on our campus,'" Frederick recalled. "Then he started talking about Roy Williams." After Brown left Kansas for the NBA on June 15. Fredrick called Smith to offer him the job. "He told me it would be hard to leave a school where the building is named after you," Fredrick said. Frederick asked Smith whether there were any candidates he could recommend."He told me Roy Williams was soon going to be one of the best coaches in America," Frederick said. Williams said he thought his chances were slim. "Kansas is a great opportunity, and I knew a lot of people might have to turn this job down before it ever got to Roy Williams," he said. One by one, the premier candidates dropped out. Bobby Cremins of Georgia Tech. Eddie Fogler of Wichita State, Gene Keady of Perdue and Mike Krzyzewski of Duke said they weren't interested. Gary Williams of Ohio State and Charlie Spoonhour of Southwest Missouri State withdrew their names from consideration after discussing the position with Frederick. Williams, 37, postponed a fourday vacation in Bermuda to fly to Kansas City and was offered the job late that night. He becomes the seventh coach in the 90-year history of Kansas basketball, signing a four-year contract worth $78,000 annually. "It if doesn't bother Bob Frederick," Williams said of his lack of head coaching experience, "it doesn't bother me." Frederick said Williams' past recruiting success weighed in the decision to hire him. Williams said he thought Kansas was behind in its recruiting efforts this summer and that he planned to begin a recruiting evaluation trip. Frederick also praised Williams for his reputation for integrity and organization and noted the parallels between the playing styles of North Carolina and Kansas. Williams was a head coach of Charles D. Owen High School in Sawainnanoa, N.C., for five years (1974-78) and of the North Carolina junior varsity for eight years (1979-86). He was elevated to chief recruiter on Smith's staff in 1986 when Fogler left to become the head coach at Wichita State. "Last night they told me Kansas wins national championships every 37 years," Williams said. "I don't know if I can last that long, but I'm sure going to try." MASTERCRAFT APARTMENTS IT'S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. conservation story such as this River Cove by Lauren Beistroff Conservation Story Campus Place APARTMENTS Fitness cen 4 bedroom / 2 bath with loft 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Open mon - fri 9AM - 5PM partments available for summer 2003 By J.J. Hensley hensley@microsoft.com 4 bedroom / 2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath furnished and unfurnished apts. available fully equipped kitchens gas, heat and water gas, heat and water private balconies and patios off street parking 24 hour emergency maintenance On site manager SUNDANCE 7th & Florida 785. 841.5255 mon-fri 9AM-6PM sat. 10 AM-5 PM Now leasing for fall 2003 Studios 1 BR, 2 BR, 3 BR w/2 baths & 4 BR w/2 baths Gas heat & water Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves w/d in select Apts Private balconies & patios Furnished Apt. Available on-site laundry facility on-site laundry facility pool on KU bus route On-site manager 24 hr. emergency Maintenance models open daily! Wednesday April 16, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 135 Today's weather 70° Tonight: 40° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-1010 info@usnews.com THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN World's top athletes compete in 76th annual Kansas Relays KA 713 p. 3B Team parade canceled Roy Williams' departure leads players to stop event By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The loss of men's basketball coach Roy Williams was more effective than the possible bad weather in helping Kansas basketball players decide to cancel a parade that was scheduled for tomorrow in downtown Lawrence. Peggy Johnson, Lawrence business owner and parade organizer, said team members agreed in a meeting late last night that they did not want to have the parade based on the circumstances. The parade, which will not be rescheduled, was to have honored Williams and the team for their national runner-up title. Kathleen Sebelius was going to be in Lawrence for the parade, Johnson said. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce helped organize the parade, which would have included the team and coaches, bands and floats. Gov. The chamber and the University of Kansas organize a parade for the men's basketball team each time the team makes it to the Final Four or beyond. She said she received numerous calls yesterday from Kansas fans expressing support for the team. "We've had a ton of calls from people that were sorry the boys didn't want a parade because they really wanted to celebrate a great, great season." Johnson said. Larry Showalter, Ingalls senior, said he thought the parade should still be held. "We're celebrating the players and what they achieved in the basketball season, not just Roy," Showalter said. "The focus should be on the players now." The basketball awards ceremony planned by the Williams Fund of the KU Athletic Corporation will still be held at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Lied Center. The public is welcome to attend the event. Mitch Germann, director of media relations at KUAC, said Williams would be attending the banquet. Doors will open at 6 p.m. and tickets are $5, with a purchase limit of four tickets. Tickets can be picked up at the Williams Fund office, 105 Parrot Athletic Center. Edited by Julie Jantzer Roy Williams KANSAS 1999 KU WILLIAMS BASKETBALL CAMP Photo illustration by Scott Reynolds/Kansan Local businesses such as the Salty Iguana and Applebee's Neighborhood Grill and Bar are leaving Roy Williams memorabilia up on their walls for now. Roy leaves traces everywhere Coach's leaving affects Lawrence businesses, sales By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer After Roy Williams announced his decision Monday night to leave the University of Kansas and the Lawrence community, area businesses prepared for the change. Local businesses had to make decisions regarding Williams memorabilia and other lingering reminders at their establishments. "We're going to have a contest to rename the Roy sandwich," said James Langford, owner of Mojo's, 714 Vermont St. "We can't have it named after the coach of North Carolina." While waiting for a new name, the sandwich is called the Carolina Pulled Pork, Langford said. Other area establishments including the Salty Iguana, 4931 W. Sixth St., and Applebee's Neighborhood Grill & Bar, 2520 Iowa St., have decided to leave memorabilia hanging for the time being. A representative from Applebee's said that the restaurant had one photograph of Williams hanging on the wall and it would be staying. "We have his signature painted on the wall," said Mary Rellihan, a Salty Iguana bartender. "For the time being we're going to leave it up. It's part of the mural." Pohl and Kent Dobbins, 831 Vermont St., decided to pull its Sunflower Cablevision commercial that featured Williams. The office of optometrists Charles "There is just too much hurt," said Mickie Nodolf, office manager. "We don't need that." Another local business is trying to help angry fans express themselves by producing T-shirts bearing anti-Williams sentiments, including phrases SEE BUSINESSES ON PAGE 8A Chancellor denies report of applying for new job By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer With the recent firings and resignations in the Athletics Department making headlines, some members of the University of Kansas community have begun to question Chancellor Robert Hemenwav's job security. The Board of Regents, who has the ability to fire chancellors and presidents of universities, has not considered firing the chancellor. "Ive heard nothing of the type," Dick Carter, director of external relations for the Regents, said. "Nothing like that has even reached our office." PETER R. GREEN Hemenway was not available for comment because of Hemenway recent changes in the Athletics Department. This speculation follows rumors and media reports linking Hemenway to the presidential vacancy at Indiana University. The Indiana presidency became vacant in January when Myles Brand left the position to become president of the NCAA. Reports in The Kansas City Star had claimed that Hemenway had applied for the job and News Radio 980 KMBZ, a Kansas City area station, confirmed the presidential search committee contacted Hemenway. The firm conducting the search for a new president at Indiana, Baker-Parker Inc., contacted about 300 possible candidates. Hemenway, University chancellor since 1995, told the Lawrence JournalWorld that a representative from BakerParker called him two or three months ago about the position because he had been nominated by a member of the search committee, but he wasn't interested. The chancellor told the Lawrence Journal-World he was not looking for another job and planned to retire from the University of Kansas. The Indiana search committee had scheduled interviews yesterday, today and tomorrow in closed-door meetings at the Westin O'Hare Hotel in Chicago. The committee will interview 10 to 12 candidates for the presidency and select five to seven finalists to meet with the full Indiana University Board of Trustees. The names of the these candidates are not yet available. The search committee wants to hire a new president by July 1. Edited by Julie Jantzer Fitness center closes, leaves members seeking new club By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Bv.JJ Henslev Total Fitness Athletic Center closed yesterday,leaving almost 1,000 members looking for someplace else to stay fit, according to former employees. Former Total Fitness employees said the proverbial handwriting had been on the gym wall for weeks, prompting club members to flee and workers to abandon attempts to lure new members to the club. "I pretty much stopped doing sales Paul Sandburg, Paola senior and personal trainer, worked on the club's last night of business Monday. He said a few of his clients switched to Lawrence Athletic Club, 2108 W. 27th St. and 3201 Mesa Way, after a letter was issued to all members alerting them that the club's owners were looking to sell Total Fitness, 2339 Iowa St. like a month ago or whenever that letter came out," said Jennifer Devlin, Lawrence senior and Total Fitness employee. "There were people buying memberships up until then though." Still, some members were caught off guard by the club owners' decision to close. "I knew they were looking for someone to buy them," said Erin Maike, Alma junior and Total Fitness member. "I never heard any details, never received any letters or phone calls or anything. I'm paid up for four months and haven't gotten any money back." Total Fitness owner Martin Tuley could not be reached for comment yesterday. A person who answered the phone at Total Fitness yesterday afternoon said "I'm just here to let the cooler guys in right now and I don't want to get into that," she said. former members had been taken care of. How the club exactly had taken care of its members remained unclear, however. Former Total Fitness employees said the Lawrence Athletic Club had been contacted about a membership agreement that would allow Total Fitness members to work out at LAC, but no deal could be reached before Total Fitness closed. Total Fitness provided this type of help when Sixth Street Fitness, 2500 W. Sixth St., closed about a year ago. The gym allowed month-to-month customers from Sixth Street to continue their membership agreements at Total Fitness, Devlin said. As of last night, Total Fitness had found no such kindred spirit. Officials at LAC, the city's only other coed gym other than Robinson Gymnasium on campus, would not return calls for comment on the issue. 6. Edited by Julie Jantzer 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front WEDNESDAY,APRIL 16,2003 News briefs CAMPUS Student Senate positions open; applications are due on Friday Applications for Student Senate executive staff and transportation coordinator are available and due at 5 p.m. Friday at the Senate office, 410 Kansas Union. Any student may apply for positions of student executive chairman treasurer, assistant treasurer, executive secretary. Student Legislative Awareness Board director and community affairs director and transportation coordinator. Anyone applying for the treasurer position is encouraged to have an accounting background, said Diana Rhodes, staff secretary. Positions are paid. Interviews will be held next week. For more information, stop by the Senate office or call 864-3710. Cate Batchelder STATE Kansas woman may have SARS after recently traveling to Asia TOPEKA — A second suspected case of a contagious respiratory illness has been identified in Kansas. The latest case involves a woman in northeast Kansas who recently traveled to Asia, the state Department of Health and Environment said yesterday. The woman was not hospitalized and has apparently recovered, KDHE said. SARS — severe acute respiratory syndrome — was recently discovered in southeast Asia. It is thought to be caused by a previously unrecognized coronavirus, the same type of virus that causes common colds. It is most likely spread the same way colds are spread. Symptoms of SARS include fever, shortness of breath, coughing, chills and body aches. A south-central Kansas man was previously identified as the first suspected case of SARS in the state. He was hospitalized but has recovered. More than 150 deaths have been reported by health officials worldwide There have been more than 190 suspected cases in the United States but no known deaths. NATION Fatal house fire at Ohio college caused by arson, authorities say COLUMBUS, Ohio - A weekend fire that killed five college students in a house near Ohio State University was arson and the deaths are being treated as homicides, investigators said yesterday. Authorities had not determined a motive and have no suspects, Detective Mike McCann said. A $15,000 reward was being offered for information leading to an arrest. Investigators wouldn't comment on what evidence was gathered. The fire began early Sunday during a birthday celebration. Witnesses said there was an argument during the party, but McCann said authorities did not believe it "had a huge amount" to do with the fire. The fire in the three-story brick house near campus killed two Ohio State students and three students from Ohio University. Two more students remained hospitalized Tuesday. one in critical condition. Investigators ruled out an accident after scrutinizing a charcoal grill, kerosene tiki torches that had been on the wooden front porch, and gas and electrical lines leading to the house. High school boy gunned down, found with loaded gun on body NEW ORLEANS - A loaded handgun was found yesterday on the body of a 15-year-old boy who was gunned down in a high school gym, according to police who say they believe the attack was retaliation for an earlier slaving. Police did not know how Jonathan Williams got the gun past metal detectors into John McDonogh High School, where four young men burst into the gym Monday and opened fire with an AK-47 rifle and at least one handgun. Capt. Marlon Defillo said the 9mm pistol was found in the coroner's office, when Williams' body was undressed for the autopsy. It will be tested to learn if it had been used in any crimes. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. News: Curtis Dixon and Joy Larson Weather: Tim Bush Sports: Brian Bruce On KJHK,90.7 FM,listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. kansan.com 2017 KYRU Don't have time to read today's paper! Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU PUBLIC FIELD STUDIO To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Students walk by the recently planted red and yellow tulips in front of Smith Hall on April 9. Kelley Weiss/Kansan Kansas bill to extend gambling delayed TOPEKA—Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said yesterday she has not given up on her proposal to expand legal gambling in Kansas, a key element of her plan for balancing the state budget. Dodge City, with local voter approval. Sebelius has proposed allowing slot machines and other electronic gambling devices at the state's five dog and horse tracks and permitting a casino in But the Dodge City provision was not included in a bill endorsed by a Senate committee to permit slot machines at tracks where voters in the surrounding county and adjacent counties approved. The bill remains in limbo during an extended recess that ends April 30. Before the break, Republican legislative leaders unsuccessfully sought a promise from gambling proponents to agree to put the issue to a single Senate vote this year. Expanding gambling was part of Secius' $405 million package for balancing the budget and averting a projected $225 million deficit in the state's $10 billion budget at the end of the next fiscal year. - The Associated Press ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor a free runners' clinic from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.today at the south entrance of the center.Wear shorts and usual running shoes for a free evaluation of problems experienced by running, walking and aerobic exercise.Call 864-9592. Kansas Relays will begin at noon today at Memorial Stadium. Contact KU Athletics at 864-3355. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor University Forum at noon today at the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. C. Shaffia Laue will lecture on "High Drug Costs: What Can a Consumer Do?" Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 7 to 8:30 tonight at room 207 in Robinson Center. Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. Et Cetera English Alternative Theatre and Lawrence Arts Center will present the play The Glass Menagerie at 8 tonight at Lawrence Arts Center,940 New Hampshire St. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kanan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 66045 filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan On Campus is printed on a space available basis. 1000 THE WORLD'S FINEST STAR 1960 PETER ROBERTS What's the buzz about? student union activities The University of Kansas, Level 4, Kansas Union. 785 864 SHOW. www.suaevents.com WWW.SUAEVENTS.COM Fast. Easy. Just click. Browse for upcoming events You receive a free movie voucher when you fill out a survey. You can register to win $100 worth of free Southwest tickets when you fill out a survey. The prize will be announced at the April 25th Tunes @ Noon JOB OPENINGS!!! KU Recreation Services has positions that need to be filled for the Fall 2003 semester. We are hiring serveral people...do you think you could fill a position? Stop by the 41st floor Kansas Union on April 15 and 16 between 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to fill out an application! WEDNESDAY,APRIL16.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Law regulates medical records By Nikki Overfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer University of Kansas students can expect to do a little extra reading and writing the next time they go to the doctor or get a prescription. Starting Monday, all medical patients now have to read a notice about their right to medical privacy and sign a form giving consent to their doctor to use their records for medical purposes. These new regulations are mandated under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. "A large part of HIPAA is to let people feel better informed and let them know really what their rights are," said Carol Seager, director of administration at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Although the legislation is just taking effect, most health care providers have been operating by most of these standards already, including Watkins, Seager said. In the past, medical privacy standards were handled by states, but this federal legislation will even out the standards for all states, she said. "For us, here, there really isn't a lot of change," she said. The notice of privacy practices that will be given to patients informs them of the their rights regarding their medical information. These rights include: ■ the right to inspect and copy medical or billing records the right to amend records if the patient thinks they contain errors or are incomplete - can errors or are incomplete - the right to accounting and disclosures of who has seen the patient's records the right to request viewing restrictions the right to request confidential communications the right to a paper copy of the notice The only new additions with HIPAA are the right to amend and the right to an accounting of record disclosures, she said. The notice also explains what a health care provider can use a patients' records for with given consent, Seager said. Those uses are treatment, payment and health care operations, she said. All patients will only have to sign the form once per health care provider, Seager said. Mike Johnson. Lawrence senior, is experiencing the effects of HIPAA first hand. Johnson delivers prescriptions to elderly people for Jayhawk Pharmacy. Johnson has to give the patients the form that Watkins has that explains their privacy rights. For example, the pharmacy can't disclose the medicine they are taking or their condition, he said. Then they have to sign the form before giving them their prescription. "I had to try and explain to old people that they aren't signing away their life," he said. Johnson said he knew it would get better because patients only had to sign the form once, he said. But for now he has to keep explaining medical privacy rights to patients as he delivers their prescriptions. "It's making my day a lot longer," he said. Edited by Michelle Burhenn YANK Recognition night honors women By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Mary Lee Hummert, interim vice provost of student support (right), receives one of the University of Kansas Women's Hall of Fame awards from Fouzia Haq, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Hummert was one of the women honored at the Women's Recognition Program yesterday at the Big 12 room in the Kansas Union. Pilar Pena/Kansan Women leaders at the University of Kansas have something in common with astronaut Neil Armstrong, said U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson at a Women's Recognition Program last night. Both have made a lasting impression that inspire future leaders. Robinson used the comparison of Armstrong's footprints on the moon, which will remain imprinted in lunar soil for millions of years, to describe the women's impact on the University and the community. The annual ceremony, hosted by members of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, honored more than 30 women for their contributions to the University and the Lawrence community. Five women, who were KU graduates or faculty or staff members, were inducted into the KU Women's Hall of Fame, a tradition that began in 1970. One of the Hall of Fame inductees, Mary Lee Hummert, interim vice provost of student support, said she thought the excellence of women at the University created a legacy. "I believe that the footsteps we are making here today will make it easier for others to accomplish what we have not yet been able to accomplish," she said. The ceremony recognized stu The University's legacy of women leaders dates back to 1873, when Flora Richardson became the first female graduate from the University. Richardson, who died in 1924, received an award last night for being an outstanding pioneer woman. dents in many categories, including community living organizations, community service, athletics and international and nontraditional students. An eight-member selection committee composed of student leaders across campus reviewed the application and recommendation letters of each woman nominated for the award. Fouzia Haq, president of the Commission on the Status of Women, which is run through the "It shows the high standard set and the high caliber of undergraduate women at KU who do a lot that goes unrecognized." Sellers said. Amber Sellers. Wichita senior who is a representative for the National Panhellenic Council at the University and a selection committee member, said deciding on award recipients was difficult. "I believe that the footsteps we are making here today will make it easier for others to accomplish what we have not yet been able to accomplish." Mary Lee Hummert interim vice provost of student support Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, received the award for outstanding student leadership. Haq, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said she appreciated the award more because of her previous involvement as a selection committee member. "Since I've played an active role in the commission, it's different receiving this award because I truly know how phenomenal it is," she said. "There are so many 2003 INDUCTEES TO THE KU WOMEN'S HALL OF FAME Joyce Castle, professor of music and dance Mary Lee Hummert, interim vice provost of student support Martha Langley, finance director of Hilltop Child Development Center Toni-Marie Montgomery, dean of the School of Fine Arts Cora Lee Price, assistant professor emerita of classics amazing women on campus. There has never been an application we get where a woman is not qualified." About six past inductees of the KU Women's Hall of Fame came to this year's ceremony. — Edited by Leah Shaffer Need a Job? BOSTON BARTENDERS SCHOOL OF AMERICA DONALD J. 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Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! 638 Massachusetts 932 CAFE 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE The devotion known as "Stations of the Cross" is an adaptation of a custom widely observed by pilgrims to Jerusalem, the offering of pravers at a series of places in the city traditionally associated with Jesus Christ's passion and death. Station I: 9:15am Jesus is Condemned to Death Station II: 9:30 Jesus Takes Up His Cross Station III: 9:45 Jesus Falls the First Time Under the Cross Station IV: 10:00 Jesus Meets His Mother Station V: 10:15 Simon of Cyrene is Forced to Take Up the Cross Station VI: 10:30 Veronica Wipes the Face of Jesus Station VII: 10:45 Jesus Falls a Second Time Station VIII: 11:00 Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem Station IX: 11:15 Jesus Falls a Third Time Station X: 11:30 Jesus is Stripped of His Garments Station XI: 11:45 Jesus is Nailed to the Cross Station XII: 12:00pm Jesus Dies on the Cross Station XIII: 12:15 The Body of Jesus is Placed in the Arms of His Mother Station XIV: 12:30 Jesus is Laid in the Tomb stations of the cross: The trial and execution of Jesus Christ, 14 scenes from the Last Day VIII. Twente Hall VII. Watson Library Anschutz Library Blake Hall VI. V. Budig Hall Marvin Hall Lindley Hall Fraser Hall Stauffer-Flint Hall Wescoe Hall IV. III. II. jayhawk boulevard Danforth Chapel IX. X. Spooner Hall XIII. Lippincott Hall XIV. Bailey Hall Strong Hall Snow Hall Chi Omega Fountain I. XII. Dyche Hall Vietnam Memorial Smith Hall XI. KS Union Good Friday, April 18th A pilgrimage through KU Campus, beginning at the Vietnam Memorial at 9am, following the traditional Stations of the Cross. Join the pilgrimage as your schedule permits. People are encouraged to walk the entire pilgrimage, or just some of the pilgrimage.. Sponsored by: Apostolic Catholic Church, Lutheran Campus Ministry (ELCA), Ecumenical Christian Ministries (PCUSA/Presbyterian, UCC/United Church of Christ, Brethren, Quaker), Canterbury House (Episcopal), and United Methodist Christian Ministry. Call ECM 843-4933 for more information. 4 4A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor editor 864-4854 or kkender@kansan.com **Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning** managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepfert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com **Leah Shaffer** readers' representative 864-4810 or ishaffer@kansan.com **Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson** opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com **Eric Ketting** business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com **Sarah Jantz** retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com **Malcolm Gibson** general manager and news adviser 864-7687 or mglsbs@kansan.com **Matt Fisher** sales and marketing adviser 864-7686 or mflisbs@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Election outcome shows need for change The sidewalk chalk proclaims it - election time has come and gone. It's time for a quick election wrap-up. Voter Turnout. Last week, 3,719 students cast their votes — 14 percent of the student body. Hmmm. KUnited = greek. It's no secret that KUnited has a blatantly progreek slant, but it has taken things a tad too far this time, providing buses to the polls from fraternities and sororities, (promising a free pizza party to the fraternity and sorority that cast the most votes), and having coalition meetings at Greek houses. The areas that Delta Force dominated — graduate, non-traditional, fine arts — are those that are not traditionally greek. Now that fraternity and sorority members are considered to be "off-campus," KUnited has dominated that race as well. That's not to say that everyone elected was greek, though, roughly two of five, or 40 percent, of those elected are greek. Ideally, all senators will represent the entire KU community, not just the 20 percent who are Greek. Social Welfare is socially acceptable. Congratulations to students in the school of social welfare, who elected two senators last week. That's two more than they have representing them in Senate now. This change is especially important in light of the recent actions of the Legislature in regard to Dennis Dailey's "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life" class, which may revoke funding for the school. Online, but still on site. Online voting is cool. Only being able to vote at eight polling sites on-campus is not so cool. There was a severe lack of communication before and during the election about the location of polling sites, causing confusion among students. Next year, voting should be online and unrestricted to both encourage and permit greater student participation. Delta Force's potential. We still support Delta Force's platform, believing that it's more specific, more achievable and more applicable to all students. Though Delta Force's campaign could have been more organized, we hope that both coalitions will be able to work together to make the University a better place. KUnited elections code violations. On a sad note, KUnited coalition members were soliciting in GSP Hall on Wednesday. There are better ways to reach your constituents than harassing them late at night. That's not cool Period. To all the candidates: Thanks for a great campaign. We hope that all candidates will continue to be active on and off campus. Jennifer Wade for The University Daily Kansan Lauren Stewart for the editorial board REALITY CHECK ...AND WHO IS OPPOSED TO THIS BILL WHICH PROHIBITS LORD WADS KNIGHTS OF THE CRUSADE FROM BRINGING THEIR WEAPONS TO SENATE MEETINGS? NAY! NAY! STUDENT SENATE NAY! NAY! JWADE PERSPECTIVE Dedication made Senate elections a smooth success across the board The 2003 Student Senate elections presented many new challenges for the Elections Commission. New legislation created an entirely new voting system. Online candidate workshops emerged from 2002 Task Force recommendations. The Elections Commission Web site expanded greatly to accommodate the needs of candidates and students interested in the elections. The positive efforts of those working to address these challenges resulted in an election that ran so smoothly that the dean of students' office staff, who in previous years had to troubleshoot whenever problems with the elections occurred, were able to sit back and relax. This success is because of the efforts not only of Student Senate and the Elections Commission, but also of those working in Academic Computing Services, Instructional Development and Support, and the dean of students office. In December, just before winter break members of Student Senate and the Elections Commission approached ACS with the task of designing an online voting system. The deadline for the completion of the system was Feb.12, when Student Senate would be testing the system and approving its use for the upcoming elections. Excluding winter break, ACS had approximately a month to build an online voting system; their only guidelines being those set by the paper ballot elections of previous years. Dave Gardner, together with ACS staff Aaron Brown, Ed Payne and Patrick Fehr, began work immediately. When the commission went to them with the challenge of determining how to incorporate write-in candidates on the ballot or requesting that the system be able to compile polling site statistics, ACS answered their questions and made the changes. ACS provided all the computers used at the polling sites, and together with Facilities and Operations and Student Housing staff, set up the sites at 8 a.m. on the days of the elections. With the help of Networking and Telecommunications Services, ACS rewired sites that previously could only support a student ID card reader, making them able to support several computers that would be used for voting. During the elections, ACS prepared for any number of calls they could receive about errors in the system. These calls never came. The system worked great, turning out results in a matter of seconds. The people at ACS worked long hours and even received calls at home to guarantee the success of the elections. Craig Gerdes, instructional designer with the Office of Instructional Development and Support, assisted the Elections Commission in designing an online candidate workshop, presented on the KU blackboard. Craig made it possible for those running for office to complete the mandatory workshop from the comfort of their homes. The online workshop was an amazing success, with more than 90 percent of candidates opting to visit the blackboard rather than walk to the Union on a Friday afternoon to listen to a workshop taught by the Elections Commissioner. Thank you to everyone whose hard work contributed to the success of this year's elections. You have been a part of a major positive change in the electoral system at the University. The election could not have happened without your help. The dean of students' office served as "election headquarters" during the elections. Their staff received all the candidate paperwork (just ask anyone who ran for Senate — there is a lot), answered questions and welcomed visitors as deadlines came and went. Their patience while their office space was steadily invaded was amazing. Ruth Stoner, assistant dean of students, was an excellent resource for the elections commissioner regarding past elections, and was always there to assist her with encouraging remarks and a positive attitude. In addition, Jeff Markovich, dean of students office staff member and Web site coordinator for the elections commission put forth extraordinary efforts in improving the elections commission Web site. Thanks to his expertise, students were able to submit debate questions online, have their questions about the elections code interpreted online, and see election attack at the click of a button. Jeff was bombarded with e-mails from the elections commissioner about Web site updates that required immediate attention. He dealt with these e-mails quickly and efficiently. Courtney Wachal was the 2003 Student Senate elections commissioner. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Give the man some respect I just wanted to write someone at The University Daily Kansan about the lack of respect being shown to Roy around town right now. Although most of it is from the public and is word of mouth, isn't that a part of Kansas basketball? I mean, sure, this is terrible. Coach Williams is leaving for UNC, and we're losing probably the best coach in college basketball. I can't imagine how his players feel and what is going to happen next year. Yes indeed, this is not something anybody here at the University wanted to see happen. But while it sucks that Roy is leaving, hearing things like "I'm glad I didn't buy basketball tickets for next year" or "Thanks alot, Roy" is really making me angry. That man gave us 15 years of his life and he worked his ass off every day for Kansas and his players. It's his life. If he wants to coach at his alma mater, if he wants to be near his family, if he wants to go back to his home, he should be free to do so without ridicule from those who should support him as they have for 15 years. Those people should not act like a bunch of fair-weather fans. The decision itself must've been hard enough for the guy, just let him be. Roy, thanks for a great 15 years, you rock and will always be remembered here. Why leave now? Jason Sanders, Derby junior in chemistry When is it appropriate to start wondering how much the University of Kansas meant to Roy Williams? I can't help but wonder if the team was nothing more than figures. How many times did you get to the Final Four? How many points did one of your guys score? How much money can one school offer you to make you break your promises? So, why, after working so hard to create this program, why leave now that it's so near its pinnacle? Why didn't Roy Williams leave in 2000? What made 2003 so distinctive? Did all of his favorite players leave, making it OK? I listened to the FOX press conference and realized I no longer respected this man. I couldn't help but feel betrayed and let down, and I am not a member of the team. Roy went to school in North Carolina, he coached as an assistant there for 10 years, but it was in Kansas that he made his home and it was in Kansas that we loved him. I have no desire to know his true reasons for leaving, because they will only seem petty. I do want to know why, after getting so close to winning the NCAA championship, he left to rebuild a weaker team. He was loved and respected for all he had done here and he claims to still love the University. I had never watched a college basketball game until I came here. What stood out was the way Williams coached his team. The players made the effort to win because Roy knew how to reach them. The players that made the biggest difference in the championship game are those who are still here. Graves, Langford, Miles and Lee — these men are KU basketball. Simien is still here. We are just as strong today and in the games to come as we were with Roy Williams. It's just too bad that Roy couldn't see that. Our time will come, have no doubt. Our time will come. I want to see only one other game coached by Roy Williams. I want to see when North Carolina takes on and we kick their asses. Last week, Roy was the best thing to happen to Kansas basketball. Today, should I still care for Roy Williams after all that he has done or should I focus on the man I saw on FOX who gave up the past 15 years for a new salary? I guess it's not really worth my time. It is only basketball, isn't it? Maria Rossman, San Jose, Costa Rica senior in psychology Free for All Call 864-0500 For more comments, go to www.kansan.com Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansas editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. There's a guy on eBay selling his virginity. 雨 图 How come in every period-related commercial, women are bowling? I don't get it. Whoever thought up online enrollment should be shot. I used to hate it when aunts and grandmads would come up to me at weddings and pinch my cheeks and say, "You're next, you're next!" Well, they stopped doing that when I started to do it to them at funerals. 图 B Since when is it elite to use any drug, let alone cocaine? --- This is to the guy who had an issue with KJHK's "Jazz in the Morning" program. Jazz did not stop in 1965. It's still evolving. You just haven't been listening. 图 If I was castrated, what reason would I have to live? 简 I've been around for a long time, and the way to get the ladies? Two words Star Wars. I decided that if I could be anything, I'd be a clitoris, because the clitoris is the greatest part of the human body. - Do you suppose that preacher on Wescoe Beach could get me Kirk Cameron's autograph? 告 No wonder I was having so much trouble. I was using the wrong hand. This is to the snob who called about the jean shorts. You're right, this isn't seventh grade. It's college, and I came here to get an education, not to make a fashion statement. Take all that nonsense, along with your SUV, fake boobs and cancer skin and go back to OP. - SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. When speaking of ejaculatory emission in the past tense, is it "came" or "cummed"? The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, email the readers' representative at read- GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansas will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTG E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Staffer-Flint WEDNESDAY,APRIL16,2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A LAST CALL HAWK Blue Moon PRODUCTIONS Presents Wednesdays TONIGHT Hawk Rock makes Wednesday night debut and will continue every wednesday night from here on out at Last Call, Lawrence's Newest and Hottest Dance Club and Bar. FEATURING Resident DJ Jab Money Lawrence's best Mainstream Hip Hop & Top 40 DJ 1st 25 to enter will receive free drink Prize There will also be Other Prizes, Giveaways, and Competitions all night long. Drinks Specials include: $2.00 cover - $3.00 Doubles - $1.50 Anything Other Great nights at Last Call include: Thurdays - $1.75 Pints and $1.50 Shots Fridays - Lady's Night no Cover for the lady's as well as $2.00 Corona's & $2.25 Smirnov Saturdays - $3.00 Double Red Bull Vodka's & $4.00 Pitchers. Doors open at 8:00 p.m. 729 New Hampshire (785)838-4623 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 SA = THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN ADVERTISEMENT NEWS NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 Speaker addresses problems of rights of political prisoners By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The executive director of Amnesty International discussed human rights and the plight of political prisoners at the Kansas Union Ballroom last night. Amnesty International faces a tough task in trying to help those people, said Bill Schultz, who has been the human rights organization's executive director for nine years. "I've heard from certain pollsters that 31 percent of all Americans worry about if heaven is boring," he said. "It is our job to make sure that somewhere in that litany of worries we find a place for human rights." Amnesty International is an organization with more than 2 million members in almost 150 countries. Schultz said. Founded in London in 1961 to save two people imprisoned for toasting freedom at a bar, Amnesty International is now a Nobel Prize-winning organization for human rights. Schultz spoke on the rights of people and how Amnesty International fought for those rights. He said the United States did not handle the terrorist conflict properly. "The way to beat the terrorists is not by being a bully," he said. "It is by becoming a model of justice." After Schultz's speech, the audience asked questions. Questions focused on his opinion on the war in Iraq to "what can I do" type questions. Afterwards, he chatted with people and signed copies of his book, In Our Own Best Interest: How Defending Human Rights Benefits All Americans. The speech was sponsored by the Unitarian Universalists of Lawrence and Kansas City. Schultz formerly was president of the Universalists, so he made a logical choice for a speaker, said Elizabeth Collins, co-leader of young adult Unitarian Universalists Collins said the event wasgeared to teach people about human rights, a relevant topic today. "This is all part of a media campaign in the Lawrence and Kansas City areas to make our religion better known," Collins said. "It focuses on a search for individual truth. It is a very liberal version of Christianity. Some people have those types of beliefs, but don't want the Christian dogma." Matt Schwabauer, Lawrence Free State High School senior, said he attended because he received extra credit in his politics class for writing a short report over the speech. "I didn't know that much when I came here and I really learned a lot," Schwabauer said. "It was just interesting to see a different perspective from the mainstream media." The attendees included a few other high school and University students but was mostly an older crowd. Amnesty International is dedicated to freeing prisoners of conscience, gaining fair trials for political prisoners, ending torture, political killings and disappearances and abolishing the death penalty throughout the world. The crowd gave Schultz a standing ovation after he explained the purpose of Amnesty International. "Amnesty International exists to keep the Angel of Death waiting," Schultz said. "It allows the children of life to finish the great and glorious dance." Edited by Jason Elliott The Associated Press Iraqis met under American auspices to shape a new government yesterday and said "the rule of law must be paramount" following Saddam Hussein's fall. In a war dividend, U.S. officials said they had taken Palestinian terrorist Abul Abbas into custody in Baghdad. New Iraqi government discussed Four weeks after U.S.-led forces unleashed their assault, President Bush promised to "liberate every corner" of Iraq and American troops hastened to redeem his pledge. Marines solidified their grip on Tikrit, Saddam's hometown, and American officials said fighting had ended in Qaim, a town near the Syrian border. Acting on a tip, commandos searching a home in Baghdad found a weapons cache with a sizable chemical laboratory and documents they said were instructions on making chemical and biological weapons. They also reported finding a bomb concealed inside a bottle, another in an umbrella and a third in a telephone. The U.S.-organized meeting on a new government drew scores of Iraqis to a gold-colored tent erected in Ur—birthplace of the biblical patriarch Abraham — and anti-American protest in a nearby city. "No to America and no to Saddam," chanted thousands of Shiite protesters in Nasiriyah, exercising their new freedom of speech to object to the imminent creation of an American interim governing authority. Inside the meeting. White House envoy Zalmay Khaillzad said the United States has "no interest, absolutely no interest, in ruling Iraq." He added, "We want you to establish your own democratic system based on Iraqi traditions and values." A 13-point statement released after the session envisioned a democratic country where "the rule of law is paramount." It said Saddam's "Baath party must be dissolved and its effects on society must be eliminated." Abbas, the leader of a Palestinian group that killed an American on the hijacked cruise liner Achille Lauro in 1985, was captured by U.S. commandos on Monday, U.S. officials disclosed. It wasn't immediately clear whether the paper was drafted by U.S. officials in advance of the meeting. A number of his associates also were detained during raids at several sites around Baghdad, these officials said on condition of anonymity. Abbas, whose name actually is Mohammed Abbas, led a faction of the Palestine Liberation Front, a Palestinian splinter group. His faction was in Tunisia until the attack on the Achille Lauro, after which it relocated to Iraq. Leon Klinghoffer, an elderly American, was shot and tossed overboard in his wheelchair during the hijacking. There was no major combat during the day, but at least 10 Iraqis were reported killed and 16 injured in a clash between U.S. Marines and a stone-throwing crowd in Mosul in northern Iraq, The New York Times reported. Lt. Cmdr. Charles Owens, a spokesman at U.S. Central Command in the Persian Gulf, denied reports that U.S. troops shot into the crowd but said he didn't have other details about the incident. While anti-American sentiment flared in Iraq, U.S. forces also won cooperation from civilians eager to restore order and vital services. Holy Week Schedule Monday, 4/14 + Communical Penance 7:00 p.m. Holy Thursday, 4/17 7:30 p.m. Good Friday, 4/18 7:30 p.m. Easter Vigil Sat., 4/19 9:00 p.m. Easter Sunday, 4/20 8:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center 1631 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 785-843-0357 www.st-lawrence.org mark. AVON Job Opportunity For Fall 2003 Are you a beauty junkie? Are your friends even bigger beauty junkies? Are you looking for ways to make extra cash and learn new marketing skills? Students want for you to meet mark, the hot new beauty line from Avene especially for today's young women. We are looking for two young, outgoing female students to represent mark on your campus. If selected you'll be one of only 100 Campus Ambassador nationwide. Here what's required if you're interested in working with mark: • Host a series of parties, paid by mark, to introduce the brand • Distribute product samples and promotional materials on campus • Sell mark products to your fellow students on campus *Take part in an all expenses paid, two-day off training session for you and your fellow Campus Ambassadors, where we travel recently about the MILKA (212) 687-0196 www.maryannslibrary.com AMT Agency Charlotte Maiden e-mail: mark.hirsch@amptagney.com fax: 012-703-2196 Businesses can visit us at Facebook.com/amttagney If you are excited by the idea of putting your perpetual and beauty skills to work, wedge the your magazine. IN DIESEL JEANS, LIFE IS BETTER hobbs. JOB MASS. It's BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass Lawrence, KS WINGS ONG WERKSHIP 10¢ W...W...WINGS! TONIGHT! Get 'em While They're HOT (9pm-9pp) SPECIAL WINGS SERVED ONLY ON WEDNESDAYS! "ORIGINAL" or Red Hot "Ass Burners!" $2 RED BULL/ VODKAS & $1.50 U-CALL-IT! "Always the ‘Best’ Specials, Always the ‘Most’ Fun!" Student Recreation Fitness Center 42 Foot Climbing Wall 15,000 square feet of cardiovascular and resistance training machines Check every Wednesday for our Check every Wednesday for our weekly ad and prize drawing. Bring your answer to 208 robinson or Burge Fitness Center and the winner will receive a prize. KU RECREATION SERVICES STUDENT SENATE Name:_ Phone #: E-mail:_ Answer: ΣΚ SAND VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT Open to ALL KU students April 26th,10am-5pm Robinson Sand Volleyball Courts $60 per six person team/T-shirt included Prizes Benefits Alzheimers Association and Research Call Stephani Almai or email stephani@ku.edu earth day celebration Saturday, April 19th Tuesday, April 22nd Earth Day Speaker: James Kunstler 11AM - Parade begins at 11th & Massachusetts St SPM - "Development In Lawrence" discussion Lawrence Public Library SPM - "Development 8PM - "The Paving of America" lecture and book signing Kansas Room of Kansas Union 11:30 AM - 4 PM - Celebration at South Park on the west side of Mass. St. KU ENVIRONS STUDENT SENATE Ro Livingstone Recycling and Resource Conservation Advisory Board Children's Activities Accoustic and Bluegrass Music featuring Mark Lyda (11:30AM) Prarie Acre (1PM), and $2 Show Revival Story (2PM) Food, and Environmental Organizations! WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Top of the HILI TOP OF THE HILL is KU students' chance to vote for the best of Lawrence. Fill out this form and return it to Room 119 Stauffer-Flint or visit Kansan.com to complete the online survey. Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. 2003 RESTAURANTS Best Mexican:_ Best Mexican: ___ Best Chinese: ___ Best Breakfast: ___ Best Burgers: ___ Best Subs: ___ Best Italian: ___ Best Steakhouse: ___ Best Vegetarian: ___ Best Pizza: ___ Best French Fries: ___ Best Wings: ___ Best Buffet: ___ Best Ice Cream: ___ Best Custard: ___ Best Coffee House: ___ Best Atmosphere: ___ Best Delivery Service: ___ Best Bakery ___ Best Post-Party Food Restaurant: ___ Best Customer Service ___ Best KC Restaurant ___ Best Local Restaurant: ___ Best Overall: ___ BARS Best Sports Bar:___ Best Drink Specials:___ Best Martinis:___ Best Margaritas:___ Best Wells:___ Best Selection of Beers:___ Best Dance Club:___ Best Place to Play Pool:___ DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25,2003 BARS,continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTY SERVICES Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING BestApartment Complex:___ BestTownhomes:___ Best Landlord:___ Best Neighborhood to live in: ___ SCHOOL Best Place to Study: Best Bookstore: Best Residence Hall: Best Scholarship Hall: Best Building on Campus: Best Fraternity: Best Sorority: Best Student Organization: Best Place to Study THANKS FOR VOTING! NAME: ___ PHONE: ___ BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas 8A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 PARADE FOR THE EARTH EARTH DAY PARADE Saturday, April 19th 11:00 a.m. - Parade begins at 11th and Massachusetts St, and travels to 7th St. Come to watch or come to wad! Earth-friendly costumes encouraged. Noon – 4 p.m. Celebration in South Park on the river side of Mass. St. Come party, pense, play, and participate in this purely fun festival! Live music, creative activities, and giveaways will entertain you as we celebrate our home planet Earth. Register at: Parade for TheEarth@LawrenceKS.org More Earth Day Activities listed at www.LawrenceRecycles.org sponsored by: The Recycling & Resource Conservation Advisory Board and the KU Environr EAT and The Lawrence Arts Center present The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams Directed by Paul Stephen Lim Scenic Design by Kaye Miller Lighting Design by Lee Saylor Original Music by Karl Ramberg 8 PM April 16, 17, 18 2:30 PM April 19 Tickets (785) 843-2787 56 students 58 seniors $10 others Lawrence Arts Center 940 New Hampshire Jared Soares/Kansan Featureting Amy Devitt, Aron Carrson, Jacqueline Grunnan, Jerry Annusan, John Younger, Karl Ramberg, Mick Cree, Brina Baldwain, Ryan Fleming, Brian Gray and Paul Shaulheng. Stage Manager; Kirby Fields. I guess Roy really does I DON'T GIVE A SH*T ABOUT NORTH CAROLINA But EFFEK- I still don't Victory Sportswear has sold more than 2,000 shirts since Roy Williams announced yesterday that he was leaving the University of Kansas to coach basketball at the University of North Carolina. Businesses CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A such as "Benedict Williams," "Wanted: A coach that gives a sh*t* about Kansas," and "I guess Roy really does give a sh*t* about North Carolina, but I still don't." The T-shirts, produced by Victory Sportswear, 721 E. Ninth St., went on sale yesterday morning. "Right now we've sold over 2,000 shirts," said Larry Sinks, the owner of the company. "There are three different ones. We had more ideas but some went a little overboard." The shirts are on sale in Lawrence for $10 at Victory Sportswear, C & G Auto Sales, 308 E. 23rd St., and Browns Shoe Fit Company, 829 Massachusetts St. They are also available in Kansas City at Inside Edge Tickets. Edited by Anne Mantey Ordinance in question after rider convicted TOPEKA — Riding his bicycle was supposed to be a way to avoid drunken driving, but Robert Hackett ended up with a DUI conviction anyway. Now, the Kansas Supreme Court is considering whether to repeal part of the Wichita ordinance that prosecutors convicted Hackett of breaking in 2001. Hackett's attorney, Gary Owens, argued before the court Monday the city ordinance conflicts with state law, which is supposed to apply to motor vehicles. A decision is expected by May 30. Owens argued that "devices moved by human power" are excluded by state law governing Officials investigate identities of bodies The body and that of an infant boy were found a few miles from the Berkeley marina where Peterson's husband told police he had gone fishing on Christmas Eve. The Modesto woman was due to give birth to a boy in February. Modesto police said they could not reveal any information while authorities in Contra Costa County, where the body was found, perform DNA tests. MODESTO, Calif. Investigators said yesterday that it may take weeks to determine whether the body of a woman that washed up on a Northern California shoreline is that of Laci Peterson, the expectant mother who disappeared on Christmas Eve. Authorities do not know the cause of death or whether there is any relationship between the woman and the baby, whose bodies were found about a mile apart. The Associated Press vehicles. But Wichita Assistant City Attorney Sharon Dickgrafe countered that a state statute allows local authorities to adopt other traffic regulations that do not conflict with state law. The Associated Press 2003 ASIAN FESTIVAL PRESENTED BY MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18,2003 PRESENTED BY ASIAN AMERICAN STUDENT UNION MONDAY: TUESDAY: DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCOE) DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCO) WEDSDAY: HENNA TATTOOS (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) AASU APPRECIATION RECEPTION (GPM AT KANSAS ROOM, KANSAS UNION) WEDNESDAY: "HEREANDNOW" PERFORMANCE (7:30PM AT WOODDRUFF AUDITORIUM) THURSDAY: JAPANESE CALLIGRAPHY AND ORIGAMI (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) PROFESSOR POK CHI LAU BOOK STING (5-6:30PM AT OREAD BOOK, KANSAS UNION) DAY: "TAI CHI" DEMONSTRATION (11-1ST AT WESCO) SATURDAY. APRIL 19,2003 TASTE OF ASIA FOOD: 5:30PM AT ECM PERFORMANCES: 7:30 BALLROOM, KANSAS UNION a STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts MASTERCRAFT IT'S YOUR APARTMENT YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. Tanglewood Tanglewood Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished studios. 1and 2 bdrm apartment homes. Hanover Place Hanover Place Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! --- Orchard Corners Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! Models open daily Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY Andy Samuelson asamuelson@kansan.com Students still fans despite Roy's leaving There's no place like home Roy Williams is home. More importantly, Kansas basketball fans know their home is Lawrence. The situation solved itself Monday. Williams provided Kansas with 15 years of hard work and wonderful accomplishments. Every Jayhawk owes him a thank you. But that's it. In the end, Williams couldn't deny his dream. his dad or Dean. "The factors for me leaving — my dream," said a surreal-looking Williams sitting in front of the numbing colors of North Carolina on Monday evening as he took the head coaching position in Chapel Hill, N.C. "Another factor is my family. The last time I made the decision not to come, some people got very upset with me, and I had a hard time understanding because I gave up more than anybody else did. Because I gave up the opportunity to be with my family. "And then the last factor for going back; These are my roots." Kansas, however, will not let its program become uprooted by one storm, no matter how strong Williams — who holds Kansas' highest-ever winning percentage .at. 805,418 wins and four Final Fours — was. "KU has a tradition second to none in college basketball," said Kansas Chancellor Robert Hemenway in a statement released late Monday night, as he had already begun his search for the Jayhawks' next coach. Basketball flourished at Kansas when the game's inventor, James Naismith, passed over his leadership role to Phog Allen. William O. Hamilton became the successor to the supreme Allen, recording twice as many wins as losses in 10 years. There were tough times under both Dick Harp and Ted Owens. Still the pair combined to win 469 games or 64 percent of the time. Larry Brown brought a boost and the title. Yes, maybe the Golden Age of Kansas basketball was the last 15 years under Williams' winning ways. Or maybe it lies ahead. Perhaps under the coaching of Bill Self, Tom Crean or Mark Turgeon. Mark Turgeon. Nevertheless, Kansas basketball is a product that a coach is only part of. The letters across the chest will always outweigh the letters of a single person's name. "I'm still a Jayhawk," said outspoken graduate Scot Pollard, still reeling from Monday's shock. And Kansas basketball is still a family. There's no place like home. Looking for a new Jayhawk Basketball coach search bit of buyer's market By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter "Let's face it," Jennings said. "This is a lit One day later, Kansas was still there— even if Roy Williams wasn't. With the former Kansas coach's announcement of his departure for North Carolina less than 24 hours old, Drue Jennings, interim athletics director, was left to put the loss in perspective. He fielded reporters' questions for 30 minutes yesterday morning, saying that Williams would be missed, but the Jayhawks were far from busted. years. The committee will request input from the University of Kansas Athletics Corporation and basketball players during the decision process, Jennings said. tle bit of a buyer's market for us, and I don't mean to sound cocky about that, but we do have a very fine program. We have a fine University to sell and that's reflected in the level of interest that has been shown by the people who have contacted us already." Jennings said numerous coaches and coaches' representatives had already contacted the Athletics Department about the vacancy, but he refused to say who they were or whom they might be talking to in the future out of respect to potential candidates. Jennings, Chancellor Robert Hemeway, Senior Associate Athletics Director Richard Konzem and Associate Athletics Director of Communications Doug Vance are the four men in charge of selecting Kansas' eighth basketball coach in 105 Surrounded by reporters immediately after Jennings' press conference, sophomore forward Keith Langford wasted little time in offering his coaching preference. "Personally, I would rather have somebody within the Kansas family take over the job, but obviously it's not really my say," he said. "There's not a lot of people that I would say that I would definitely stay and play for." When asked for whom he would stay at Kansas, Langford didn't hesitate to say, "Coach Holladay." A longtime assistant to Williams, Joe Holladay made the trip to Chapel Hill. N. C., for his boss' press conference. Williams said that he would like Holliday to join his staff at North Carolina if he were not offered the Kansas job. Langford was also asked about playing for former Williams assistant Neil Dougherty. "I'd definitely play for Neil," he said. "But who's to say he wouldn't leave next time another job opens up?" Samuelson is a Wichita senior in journalism. Sophomore guard Michael Lee told reporters from the The University Daily Kansas and KUJH that he would remain a Jayhawk regardless who coaches the team. "I don't know," he said. "I don't want to play for any other coach, honestly, but that's out of my control now." Jeff Jacobson/KUAC Edited by Julie Jantzer THE JUMPING CAGE Doug Reynolds, Kansas assistant track and field coach, winds up for discus toss in the newly constructed throwing ring northwest of Memorial Stadium. Reynolds is one of the top throwers in the nation and will compete in the Kansas Relays this weekend. Past' Hawks, nation's elite compete at Kansas Relays By Shane Mettlen smettlen@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The 76th running of the Kansas Relays will once again feature some of the top names in track and field. Mile runner Alan Webb will headline this year's crop of participants. "Alan is one of track and field's household names," said Meet Director Tim Weaver. "When ESPN breaks into SportsCenter to show your race live on national TV, as they did for Alan at the Pre Classic, you know that you are one In 2001, Webb became the first high school runner since former Kansas track star Jim Ryun to run the mile in under four minutes. ournalism. of the biggest figures on the track landscape." "Leo is just getting out of spring ball and it depends on what kind of condition he's in," Redwine said. "I don't know what shape he's in so after spring ball we'll be able to determine exactly what he's able to do." Webb will have formidable competition in the Glenn Cunningham Invitation Mile, to be run Saturday. Former Kansas All-American Charlie Gruber is slated to run against Webb.The two ran against each other at the indoor U.S. Championships two months ago, with Gruber emerging victorious. Olympian Calvin Davis, who trains with the Jayhawks, will be the favorite in the 400 meter hurdles, but Kansas coach Stanley Redwine is not sure if Leo Bookman, the NCAA indoor 200 meter champion and Jayhawk football player, will compete. Other events will also feature some of the world's top athletes. Former Iayhawk and NCAA champion Scott Russell and Nebraska's Carl Meyerscoff will compete in the throwing events and are expected to be Olympians for Canada and Great Britain, respectively. Kansas assistant coach Doug Reynolds is also one of the nation's top For more on the 76th running of the Kansas Relays see pages 3B and 4B throwers and will compete. - Edited by Jason Elliott Coaches sound Off Kansas coaches sad but accept Roy's decision Compiled by Ryan Greene "I'm disap pointed he left, but I have great respect for his decision." BROOKLYN, N.Y. Mark Mangino Football coach PETER M. C. SMITH "Sometimes in life we have to make decisions that are not only best for ourselves,but also best for our families as well. So I support his decision and wish him and his family the best." PAMELA SMITH Marian Washington Women's basketball coach Not only did he support the women's golf program but his staff did as well. We want to wish him the very best and look forward to the future of Kansas basketball." Megan Menzel Women's golf coach SEE COACH ON PAGE 8B Baseball team comes out swinging, outlasts Avila By Daniel Bork dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter After a five-game road trip to Western Illinois and Texas Tech, the Kansas baseball team returned home last night in impressive fashion by defeating Avila University 8-5. Senior Pat Holmes got the start on the mound for Kansas and lasted only three and a third innings allowing six hits and 2 earned runs. Holmes was relieved by freshman Don Czyz in the fourth, and Czyz pitched five and two-thirds innings With the victory, Kansas improved its record to 29-15, and Avila dropped to 27-8. allowing three hits, no earned runs and striking out five batters. Czyz earned the victory and improved his record to 2-2 on the season. Against Baker University on April 8. Czyz got the start and lasted only two innings and was credited with the loss. Kansas wasted no time getting on the scoreboard — the Jayhawks registered 3 runs in the bottom of the first inning. With two outs and no runners on base, junior first baseman Ryan Baty drew a walk. He was "I felt pretty good out there tonight," Czyz said. "I needed a chance to redeem myself and I got that. Last week, I didn't have my stuff. To come out today and throw good was big." followed by senior designated hitter, Kevin Wheeler, who tripled, which scored Baty. After Wheeler, junior right fielder Matt Tribble walked and put runners on the corners for senior left fielder Casey Spanish. Spanish delivered a single into the outfield, which scored both Wheeler and Tribble. Spanish was thrown out on the play trying to advance to second base. "He is a huge spark plug in the middle of the lineup," coach Ritch Price said. "Not only is he physical with the bat, he can really run. He is a very talented young man." Spanish ended the game 2-for-4 with 2 runs batted in and is currently leading the team in batting average at .406. Trailing 5-1 in the fourth inning, Avila put together a rally to score 4 runs and tie the score at 5 a piece. In the inning, Kansas committed two of its three errors in the game and also walked one batter. After breaking the tie in the sixth inning and scoring one run, Kansas scored 2 insurance runs in the eighth to secure the victory. The victory was Kansas' fifth in six games. The Jayhawks swept a doubleheader from Western Illinois on Thursday, then took two out of three games from Texas Tech. "This past weekend, I really thought we took a big step forward," Price said. "We competed at the highest level. In my opinion, this past series was ever more important than the LSU series earlier this year." KANSAS 8 - AVILA 5 The Jayhawks will return to the playing field this weekend when they travel to Norman, Okla., to face the Sooners in a three-game series that begins Friday night. Edited by Christy Dendurent Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 -R H A Avilia 0 0 1 4 0 0 1 0 -5 9 3 Kansas 3 0 2 0 0 1 0 2 X -8 10 3 Ichkari Pat Holmes (3/1) Dani Cryz (5/2-3) Avilla-Reed Reid (8) Win - Cryz (2-2) Save - Cryz (5-2) Save None SPORTS "It's going to be awkward to say the least." Wayne Simien, sophomore forward, on former Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams' attendance of tomorrow's banquet --- "It is going to be awkward to say the least." 3B Milerace.sh 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS COMMENTARY Inside Sports SPORTS COMMENTARY By Chris Bridney Washington Post 80m www.post.com Jessie Newell jnewell@kansan.com Fans mourn ask questions one day after It was a sad day on the campus on the University of Kansas. People were down yesterday. You could just feel it. They were quiet. Heads were down. "It's a little quiet even though it's a gorgeous day," said Jacob Wener, Minneapolis, Minn., junior. "Definitely somber." "It's been a tough a week," said Chris Burt, Great Bend junior. Indeed, it has. A week ago, Kansas lost a game. Monday, it lost a hero. "It's hard to get mad at somebody that you've looked up to and admired for a long time." said Alex Gholson, La Crosse, Wis., freshman. That, however, is what fans are being forced to do. Posters on campus announce Roy as "Mayor of Betrayalville." Chalk messages include, "I guess Roy doesn't give a shit about KU either." But more than anything else right now, they are alone. Fans are bitter. They are angry. They are crushed. "He told us three years ago he wasn't going to leave Kansas unless he got fired or he retired, and neither of which happened," said San Cawthorn, a1999 KU graduate. "I feel somewhat deserted by the man." The sad thing is, Roy Williams was a very easy person to believe in. The recruits believed him when he said he was staying. His players believed him when he said they were the most important to him. And the fans believed him when he said he would retire a Jayhawk. I guess this is what a belief in someone brings you. There was something about his southern drawl and clean language that just made you want to trust him. Fans are now left with so many ques tions but few answers. "How are you going to drop everything that's been built up?" said Will Bricker, Baldwin City sophomore. "Three years ago you said you'd stay for the players, so how do you think that makes your current players feel?" said Alnee Garcia, Lawrence senior. Many Kansas students can hardly remember a time without Williams. "I don't think anyone can replace Roy," said Amanda Vossen, Wichita sophomore, "but I think we'll still go on and have a strong program." A strong program, but one that will definitely never be the same. Heroes don't just come along every day. Softball looks to bounce back After Texas A&M swept her team over the weekend, Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said her team needed to get its feet back underneath it. today's doubleheader against Arkansas at 3 p.m. offers a great opportunity to do just that as the Jayhawks take on a struggling non-conference squad after being handed at least one loss by all six Big 12 teams they have faced. Newell is an Emporia freshman in journalism. The Jayhawks and Razorbacks come into the games both near the cellar of their respective conference standings. Kansas (22-15 overall, 2-9 Big 12 Conference) has lost four in a row and Arkansas (19-28) has lost 15 of its last 20 games and is riding a three-game losing streak as it sits in 10th place of the Southeastern Conference out of 11 teams. remains in eighth place in the Big 12 out of 10 teams. The team's trip to Lawrence is just part of a huge road swing as it closes out the season playing 10 of its last 12 games away from Fayetteville, Ark. and a .328 average and senior Julie Young with 38 hits, 22 RBI and a .299 average. The 'Hawks will next be in action in a doubleheader at Texas, starting at noon on Saturday, for their final road trip before heading back to Jayhawk Field for games against Missouri. University of Missouri-Kansas City, Nebraska and Baylor to close out the regular season. As a team, the Razorbacks have managed only a .239 batting average, but some members of the squad have still posted solid statistics, including senior Kim Eiben with 43 hits, 18 RBI Junior Heather Schlichtman leads the Arkansas pitching staff with a 2.67 ERA and 128 strikeouts. The Razorback rotation has a combined ERA of 3.21. Steve Schmidt Chancellor Bob, this is all your fault. I want you to know that. I hope you know that This is all your fault. You are a complete and utter failure. Free forAll Why would you even want to go to UNC? They're a bunch of idiots, a bunch of babbling idiots. supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. --supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. People keep asking me how come I'm not upset about Roy leaving. The answer is simple. I have a little more faith in our players, and I don't think a lot of people do. I just wanted to thank Roy Williams for deserting his Lawrence family. 脑 --supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. I think Roy is a traitor and a hypocrite who went back on his word, and I'm personally glad that he left KU because we don't need a coach like that. To the basketball players, I'm very sorry for what happened, but the next coach will be better and will support you better. supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. Does anybody else think it's necessary to maybe rehire a certain someone that possibly was fired because of a certain someone who just left KU? supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. Picture this. 2004 Final Four: Kansas Jayhawks vs. Tar Heels. What sweet revenge it will be to beat the Tar Heels 图 Koy, what makes you think that those thugs at North Carolina aren't going to screw you over the way they screwed Matt Doherty over? supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. Our coach asks us to have a class act during the Final Four. We had a class act, but he left without a class act, so now I say weiot. Roy, you betrayed us; everyone at KU, everyone in the state of Kansas. We = They're not your players anymore, Roy. They're not yours. They've never been yours, they've always been KU's. Wanda Williams is the Yoko Ono of college basketball. supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. --supported you, but you let us down and KU basketball will always be the best with or without you. You can't take a good team with you. Wayne gave you his right arm. Roy. What more could he have given you? You just turned your back on him. North Carolina sucks. Quin Snyder's better than Roy. - I just want everyone to know that I hate North Carolina and Dick Baddour more than I hate Syracuse and Carmelo Anthony and Texas and T.J. Ford. 图 You say you're leaving for North Carolina for your family, so does that mean you love your son more than your daughter, who doesn't want to leave Lawrence at all? Ruck Foy. Bring on Bill Self! 图 图 Roy Williams is the only thing that made me go to KU. Roy Williams is the only thing that's gonna take me away from KU. This sucks! --- As of right now, I don't give a bleepity-bleep about Roy Williams. 题 Yeah, tomorrow is my birthday, too, Roy. Thanks for ruining it. - Obviously one thing Roy Williams didn't learn from Dean Smith was a thing called loyalty. 图 As if my life could get any worse: KU lost the national championship, I lost a friend of mine to a car accident, and now I find out Roy Williams isn't coming back next year. Thanks a lot, Roy. Roy, you can leave your sunglasses in Lawrence, because you're going to be in Dean Smith's shadow for the rest of your career. --- Life after Roy: here's to a 2004 championship. Let's go Jayhawks. The University's behind you. 图 Our new basketball coach needs to be Kirk Hinrich. Everyone vote Kirk. Listening to Roy talk about going to North Carolina is like finding out that your dad cheated on your mom and then having to listen to him brag about how great life is going to be with his new family. - I'm crying right now because I feel like my dad just left me. 图 Thirteen guys in the locker room he loved? Roy had two guys he liked and eleven guys he was ready to ditch. Good riddance. --- Last Monday my friend and I were bawling our eyes out because Roy Williams didn't win it all. This Monday we're bawling our eyes out because we feel like there are knives in our backs. I've developed a deep and abiding hatred for North Carolina. - - Roy, I just want you to know that we are behind you 100 percent, and that KU basketball will live on without him. We love you! Roy, don't try to talk about how much you loved being at Kansas and how much you learned here. We don't want your mercy bones. --- I'm officially a Duke Blue Devil fan. - This message is for Chancellor Hemenway Don't screw up hiring a new head coach. Get Tom Crean from Marquette - All I have to say is, Langford, please don't pull a Roy on us. Wow, I never thought that in one night I'd become a Duke fan. Duke Blue Devils! Yeehaw! WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 - - Graves, let's talk about it. Roy's gone, fro out the hair, keep dunkin'. That's right, Gravy Train. 图 Don't nobody diss my state like that and get away with it. - This day has been like finding out that Santa Claus in the mall is just some homeless guy who needs some cash. There's nothing special about Roy Williams after all. 图 I never thought I'd be using the names Benedict Arnold and Roy Williams in the same sentence. - Does this mean we won't have the Roy Williams basketball camp this year? 图 SEE SPORTS FREE FOR ALL ON PAGE 4B POLI kansan .com What was former Kansas Athletics Director Al Bohl's best move? ■ Firing football coach Terry Allen ■ Beer before football games ■ Hiring baseball coach Ritch Price ■ His best is yet to come; moving out Hiring baseball coach rather than his His best is yet to come: moving out of Lawrence Log on to Kansan.com to cast your vote. Kansas Athletics Calendar TOMORROW TODAY FRIDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Softball vs. Arkansas, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. at the Kansas softball field Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 6:35 p.m. in Norman, Okla. SATURDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 2 p.m. in Norman, Okla. Rowing dual with Kansas State, in Man-hattan Softball at Texas, noon and 2 p.m. in Arlington, Texas Tennis to Texas A&M, noon at the Robinson courts Women's Golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. SUNDAY Baseball at Oklahoma, 1 p.m. in Norman, Okla. Women's Golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. NBA Jordan to exit from NBA play, confronts franchise turmoil WASHINGTON — Michael Jordan surely expected a different ending, not a finale amid the turmoil of his selfassembled, crumbling team. Jordan finishes his NBA playing career — part three — in Philadelphia tonight. His Washington Wizards teammates will probably try to send him out a winner, but there's no telling what to expect after the tongue-lashing some players got from coach Doug Collins at Jordan's last home game. After Monday night's 93-79 loss to the New York Knicks, Collins criticized some players for showing "insidious" disrespect to the coach. He implied it could lead to a roster purge in the offseason. Caught off guard by the remarks, Jordan supported Collins but said the timing or method might not have been the best. At least this is helping the 40-year-old Jordan with one wish: He didn't want a big, somber fuss over his retirement. Instead, he's got a big mess. His next job probably will be to fix it and continue his quest to turn around a franchise that hasn't won a playoff game in 15 years. The Associated Press Register Your Internship You could be selected as the UCES Intern of the Month! Rate your experiences to help your fellow internship-seeking peers. It's easy, Just go to our website! While you are there, join the Internship Listserv Share your knowledge and get tips on: • Networking into full-time • Dealing with your supervisor • Skill building Internship Contest For students with Interships during the past year (Summer 2002, Fall 2002, or Spring 2003) 2 Categories to Enter • Internship Poster • Internship Portfolio see website for details 2 Winners in each category! UCES university career and employment services 864-3624 DEADLINE: APRIL 30th Wednesdays at Henry T's Bar & Grill Hot Wings 25¢ Hot Wings 6 pm-Midnight Happy to be back with our old price $2.25 Domestic Longnecks Every Wednesday Only at Henry T's 3520 West 6th Street 785-749-2999 Y WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 --- SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Mile race,shot put events highlight Kansas Relays By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The 76th Annual Kansas Relays will take place tomorrow through Saturday. Meet director Tim Weaver said at a press conference that the relays were a three-ring circus. "It's just a four-day carnival, with all sorts of things going on," Weaver said. Kansas coach Stanley Redwine echoed Weaver's feelings and said he was excited about the Kansas Relays and what they brought for the community. "Since coming here, it's been a community event, and we love to have the community out to support us." Redwine said. Two key events to watch for this year are the mile and the shot put. The Invitational mile will feature Alan Webb, who Weaver said was a household name in track and field. Webb holds the national high school record for the indoor and outdoor mile races. "We have a number of international athletes as well who will round out that field." Weaver said. "We'll probably build it up to eight or so competitors, all of whom have gone under four minutes or will be right around that four-minute mark." Former Kansas runner Charlie Gruber will be one of the athletes in the mile. The shot put will feature Nike's Kevin Toth, Missouri's Christian Cantwell and Nebraska's Carl Meyerscoff. All three of these athletes have thrown over 70 feet in this event. Jeff Jacobsen/KUAC "For those who saw it last year at the U.S. Nationals, when three big guys like that really get putting that shot out there, it's a pretty exciting show," Weaver said. Redwine said he was happy to see the competition from this meet come from all around the country. When he first came to Kansas, the Relays were limited to only midwest athletes and schools,he said. "I think that colleges know there has been really good competition here, and so colleges go where there is going to be good competition," Redwine said. 1713 Scott Russell, Kansas track and field volunteer assistant coach, threw the javelin for the Jayhawks from 1998 through 2002. He will be a competitor at this year's 76th Annual Kansas Relays. — Edited by Anne Mantey KANSAS RELAYS SCHEDULE WEDNESDAY APRIL 16 Jim Bausch Decathlon/Candace Mason Heptathlon 10:00 a.m. Decathlon, 100 Meter Dash 10:30 Heptathlon, 100 Meter Dash 10:45 Decathlon, Long Jump 11:15 Heptathlon, High Jump 12:35 p.m. Decathlon, Shot Put 1:45 Heptathlon, Shot Put 2:25 Decathlon, High Jump 3:15 Decathlon, 200 Meter Dash 4:30 Decathlon, 400 Meter Dash HISTORY The Kansas Relays, which begin today, are among the nation's premier track and field competitions and have been that way since 1923. April 20, 1923 — The first Kansas Relays were held at the University of Kansas. John Outland, a former All-American lineman at Penn in football and former coach of the football team, encouraged basketball coach and athletic director Phog Allen to start the event. More than 600 athletes competed from across the country. 1920s and 1930s — Former Olympian and Jayhawk Glenn Cunningham won the mile every year from 1934 to 1935 and the two-mile from 1932 to 1936. Many notable people served as referees and officials including James Naismith, former Kansas basketball coach and the inventor of basketball, Adolph Rupp, former Kansas basketball player and coach of Kentucky from 1930 to 1972, and Knute Rockne, football coach of Notre Dame from 1918 to 1931. 1950s and 1960s — Kansas athlete Al Oterer won consecutive shot put titles at the Relays from 1956 to 1958. He went on to win four consecutive Olympic gold medals in the discus in the 1956, 1960, 1964 and 1968 Olympics. 1962 The first women compete in the Relays. 1966-1971 — Jin Ryun won four Kansas Relays most outstanding performer awards in 1966, 1967, 1969 and 1971. He also still holds the Kansas Relays' record for the mile with a time of 3:54.94 in 1967. Ryun is now a U.S. representative for Kansas. 1970s and 1980s — Famous Olympians such as Bruce Janner, Merlene Ottey and Naval El Moutawakal all competed at the Relays. EL MONTAVAKER on compulsory education 1989-1999 — The high school division of the Kansas Relays moved to Olathe East High School because of construction at Memorial Stadium. Chris Wintering Social events planned to draw people to Relays By Jessica Palimonio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer In order to compete with the other large relays around the country the Kansas Relays are attempting to improve the social events calendar surrounding the event. Committees have been formed to plan on- and off-campus events throughout the weekend. Tony Daniels, associate director of multicultural affairs, stepped up to help plan events for the "1st Annual Relayz Weekend." The Kanzaz Relayz group has planned off-campus and after party events. "We wanted to offer a social component to really put the relays out there," Daniels said. The group planned concerts and events at places like Buffalo Wild Wings, Abe and Jake's Landing, and the Holiday Inn Holidome. The group said it hoped that the social events would draw people out to the relays in spite of this. "We want to pack the stands with people supporting the KU Track and Field program, and while they're in town come on out and socialize," Daniels said. All of the elite athletes and the men's basketball team have been invited to take part in the events. The relays week committee is also planning events before and during the events on campus. On Friday afternoon the group is holding a concert on the Hill with bands "Sounds Good" and "Anything but Joey." Friday evening, TC, disc jockey for Nelly and the St. Lunatics, will be performing at the "Celebrity Jam." Group member Ann Hermann, St. Louis junior, said the group was hoping to draw a lot of KANSAS RELAYS SOCIAL EVENTS Thursday Friday Out of the Blocks Party at Buffalo Wild Wings, 1012 Massachusetts St., featuring recording artist "The One" from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Concert on the Campanile Hill near Memorial Stadium featuring "Sounds Good" and "Anything But Joey" at 3:30 p.m. "Celebrity Jam" at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive, featuring a performance by TC disc jockey of Nelly and the St. Lunatics from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Saturday Kids Zone activities during the days events. Relaxy After Party at Abe and Jake's Landing, E. 6th Street, at 8:30 p.m. Relayz Concert at Holiday Inn Holidome at 10 p.m. people to the concert because local high school students didn't have class on that day. The group is also organizing a Kids Zone throughout the events Saturday. Herrmann said Kids Zone would add to the family atmosphere and keep younger fans entertained throughout the events. This will include large blow-up toys such as "the moon walk" and EA Sports events and games. Daniels said everyone was working hard to make sure everything was done well so the social atmosphere could become a regular part of the relays. — Edited by Julie Jantzer THIS WEEK at the GRANADA WEDNESDAY THURSDAY SIN (service industry night) $2 ANYTHING DJ Free cover with proof $2 DOUBLE CALLS DJ Nick Riddell FRIDAY SATURDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas Anything but Joey Ultimate Fakebook Blue Mesa Management Now Leasing for August Country Club Apartments: 512 Rockledge 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Apartments $675-695 Summer Tree West: 600 & 605 Eldridge 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Townhomes $595-$650 - Troon Townhomes: 5111 Congressional Circle 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Townhomes $650 Single Unit: 3 Bedroom 3 Bath Townhome $1200 All Appliances • Cats Accepted Call (785) 840-9467 for appointments. Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Apartments & Town Homes 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN S Red Lyon Tavern WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 944 Mass. 832-8228 SPORTS ZEN ZERO an Asian Noodle Shop & Thai Restaurant Dumplings, Satays, Salads, Noodles, Curries & Vegetarian Dishes Introducing Our Lunch Card... Buy 10 Lunch Entrees & Get 1 FREE! Up to a value of $6.95 Sun.Mon~ 11:00 AM-9:00 PM. Tues.Sat~ 11:00 AM-10:00 PM. Downtown • 811 Massachusetts • 832-0001 Free For All CONTINUED FROM 2B Part of me wants to move to North Carolina, live there for 15 years and pretend like I love them, and then move back to Kansas. 图 Forget Mack Fizzou. Here's a new t-shirt idea: Money Talks, Roy Walks. I just want to say I love Roy Williams, and I've got nothing but the most respect for him. Jim Boeheim deserves to win a national championship because he knows what it means to be loyal to a school. Late Night with Bobby Knight? I like the sound of that. I still say we win the big one for Roy. Of course, I mean it a little differently this time. can we handle in one week? How much more disappointment can we handle in one week? Why do I feel like Roy Williams has asked me for a divorce? Jerod Haase, C.B. McGrath, stay at KU. Stay true to the crimson and blue. Rock chalk, Jayhawk. All 1/3 lb. charbroiled burger platters only $3.95 MASS. STREET DELI INC. 941 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 AM - 9 PM SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY 11 AM - 9 PM THURSDAY - SATURDAY I'd just like to say that I'm a fourth-year engineering student, and I'm transferring to the University of North Carolina. --me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. values to $0.00 Let's see how many bad Mondays KU can have in a row. Hey Roy. I hope you enjoyed your win over Mike Krzeyzewski this year. I bet it's the last one you get for awhile. Let's see if the fans at North Carolina are as forgiving as we at Kansas were. Hey Roy, I just wanted to say thanks for 15 great years and good luck in Chapel Hill. We can do better than Bill Self. Get us a big name, because we deserve it. me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening --me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. I guess Allen Fieldhouse isn't Roy's house. 图 me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. Yeah, I just wanted to congratulate Roy Williams on having one of his biggest dreams come true. Not everyone gets to realize their biggest dreams, and I wish you the best of luck, Roy. North Carolina, you homewrecker! me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. 2100 E.West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 80024.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) 图 So Roy leaves and we're all pissed off, but Quin Snyder for coach? You've got to be kidding me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. To all those people who are disrespecting Roy, I wish they would remember what he did for us and our program. He put us in the national spotlight again. I, for one, will always love Roy, and I'm proud to say that my second favorite team now is North Carolina. 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE The Titanic sunk April 14, 1912. Coincidence? I think not. me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. I just told my two-and-a-half year old that you were leaving, and she started crying. Thanks, Roy. me. You all had to be out of your daggum minds. color nails wading texture massage color nails wading texture massage color nails wading texture massage color nails wading texture massage color nails wading texture massage Hair Experts Design Team SCHOONERS · COCKTAILS · CIGARS · POOL Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Chancellor Bob, get it right. We're not sending North Carolina a treasure. We had a treasure. All we're sending to North Carolina is Roy Williams. 图 ball job every coach covets. Self once was an assistant coach there and has roots in the Big 12 Conference, having played and coached at Oklahoma State. --ball job every coach covets. Self once was an assistant coach there and has roots in the Big 12 Conference, having played and coached at Oklahoma State. ball job every coach covets. Self once was an assistant coach there and has roots in the Big 12 Conference, having played and coached at Oklahoma State. Hey, we made it farther without Drew Gooden, and we're gonna make it farther without Roy Williams. You can't stop a Jayhawk. Rock chalk, baby. Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID Sunday Monday $3.00 Premiums $3.00 Bldd. Schooner Don't bag. You've been dumped. He ain't comin' back. LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five $1.50 well Wednesday $1.50 wells Roy's message to the KU basketball team: Screw you guys, I'm going home. must be 21 to enter Self says he's happy as Illinois head coach URBANA, Ill. — The University of Illinois thought enough of basketball coach Bill Self to reward him in December with a contract extension that will pay him $5 million if he stays all five years. Self says he's happy at Illinois, and his team is gaining stature season by season. But Kansas is a college basketball job every coach covets. Self once was an assistant coach there and has roots in the Big 12 Conference, having played and coached at Oklahoma State. It seems like a natural fit, and several reports have Self as the top candidate. The question is whether Self would want to return to those roots now to replace Roy Williams and leave behind what he is building in Champaign-Urbana. "We're on the cusp of doing something great here," Self said before the team's annual postseason banquet last night. He also said the Jayhawks have yet to come calling. If they do, Self certainly will listen. If the job is offered, his decision won't be easy. "I don't know what I'd tell them." he said. "There is a ton of incentive to stay. My family's happy, I'm happy and we're going to be good (next year)." Williams would be a tough act to follow. He leaves a 15-year legacy that includes five seasons with 30 victories or more, nine conference championships,14 straight NCAA tournaments and four Final Four appearances. At Illinois, Self won a share of the Big Ten title in his first two seasons. The Associated Press kansan.com student union activities The University of Kansas 785-694-SHOW www.suaaventis.com UPCOMING EVENTS WEDNESDAY 7:16 AM kansas union gallery Lindsey Alonzo, Morgan Carper, & Ingaard Helms an exhibition of three designers 9:00 am-4:00 pm through May 6th kansas union, level 4 kansas union Gallery THURSDAY 157 AM FEATURE FILM Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auctionton 5 FRIDAY 18 PM FEATURE FILM Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, Level 5 MUSIC TIME FEATURE FILM tunes @ NOON Isoia 12:00 pm Union Plaza TUESDAY 88m TERRY TURKEY sua committee meetings 5:00, 6:00, 7:00 pm Kansas Union check sua office for meeting locations and times. open to all! earth day paper making, flower planting and more! Kansas Union Events 1:100 am-3:00 pm kansas union, level 4 Hawks Nest Events 5:00 pm-8:00 pm kansas union, level 1 TENNIS CLUB ALL tickets for movies are $2.00 at THE HAWK SHOP, LEVEL 4 KANSAS UNION OR FREE WITH AN SUA MOVIE CARD. questions about these or other SUA events? CHECK suaevents.com or call THE SUA OFFICE at 864-SHOW --- Over 40 Toppings to choose from!!! .357 Special RUDY'S PIZZERIA Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping $5 medium 1 topping $7 large 1 topping Open 7 days a week 749-0055 704 Mass. COUPON FREE CELERY Limit One Coupon. Stick Per Customer. Expires 4/20/02 PRICES GOOD APRIL 16 THRU APRIL 22, 2003 THURSDAY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ LB. FRIDAY SPECIAL JALAPENOS 78¢ LB. COOK'S BONE-IN SHANK PORTION HAM 77¢ LB. HONEYSUCKLE FRESH TURKEYS 87¢ LB. NORBEST TURKEY BREASTS 99¢ LB. FARMLAND WHOLE BONELESS HAM 98¢ LB. HORMEL SPIRAL SUCED HALF HAM 179 LB. BONELESS BEEF RUMP ROAST 158 LB. Fresh MORE OXERS 99¢ BONELESS BEEF RIB ROAST 468 LB. CALIFORNIA STRAWBERRIES 598 EA. Fresh ASPARAGUS 128 LB. Red Seedless or Thompson SEEDLESS GRAPES 99¢ LB. All Purpose Runslet POTATOES 20 LB. 199 EA. Golden Ripe PINEAPPLES 299 EA. Blue Bunny ICE CREAM 1.2 GAL. DELICIOUS PREMIUM 2/$5 Double 16-PRIES POWDER 12 LB. FOR 6.99 LB. BASK 61-70 CT. IQF RAW SHRIMP 2 LB. BASK 61-70 CT. 698 EA. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES One 24-Hour Lease WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT 5B Cloudy with Thunderstorms. TODAY TOMORROW FRIDAY 70 40 thunderstorms partly cloudy 62 38 65 50 scattered thunderstorms and wind TODAY 70 40 thunderstorms and wind TOMORROW 62 38 partly cloudy FRIDAY 65 50 scattered thunderstorms —WWW.WEATHER.COM HOUSE by Brian Godinez, for The University Daily Kansan LISTEN, BUDDY- YOU DON'T WANNA EAT ME. I'M DOIN YOU A FAVOR... GIMME ONE GOOD REASON, SQUIRT. HERE'S 3. AND STD YER BLUFFING. FEEL LUCKY, PUNK? YER BLUFFING. FEEL LUCKY, PUNK? LISTEN, BUDDY- YOU DON'T WANNA EAT ME. I'M DOIN YOU A FAVOR... GIMME ONE GOOD REASON, SQUIRT. HERE'S 3. STD AND YER BLUFFING. FEEL LUCKY, PUNK? HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 16) You're smart this year and getting smarter, though you may feel as dumb as dirt sometimes. That's OK, and it's actually part of the learning process. Your brain is resting and absorbing. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 6. Complete as many of the tasks on your list as possible. If a job no longer needs to be done, it's OK to count it as completed. Something more important deserves attention. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 5. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is an 8. Strangely enough, you could get to be the spokesperson for your group. The others can't go straight to the bottom line and explain it as well as you can. There may not be enough money, or maybe there's some other reason to wait. No need to be discouraged, though. True love will find a way. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 6. Once you get your place all fixed up, it'll be the perfect setting for romance. Thursday and Friday are better for that. Concentrate on your decor now. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is an 8. Your communication skills are good now, but don't spend all day talking. There's plenty of other work to be done, and some of it is important. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 5. Don't spend all your winnings in one place. Save some for later. Get something nice for a loved one, too, and something else nice for yourself. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is an 8. You're over here, and someone you care about is over there. New technology and old friends help you keep the connection. So call already! Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 5. Hotter heads want to take action, but let them convince you first. You want to make sure you get the very best return on your investment. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is an 8. You're eager to take off but unsure of the direction you should take. Put a lid on that energy, but be ready in case you have to move quickly. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 5. Try not to lose your temper when those around you are losing theirs. That'll give you a slight advantage, and that ought to be enough. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is an 8. A little good-natured kidding could do you a world of good. Don't take yourself too seriously. You heal when you laugh at old fears. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 5. Help out a friend if you can, but don't let that take up all of your time. You also need to keep taking good care of yourself. Crossword ACROSS 1 Mexican money 5 Chums 9 Plots of land 14 Poetic tentmaker? 15 Landed 16 Puppeteer Lewis 17 Skirt type 18 Farm outbuilding 19 Turning point 20 Most senior 22 Vent 24 Give up 25 Genetic letters 26 Honorable citations 28 Speak haltingly 31 Calendar abbr. 32 Possesses 33 Kind of lens 39 Expression of distaste 40 Fine 41 Super serve 42 Accountable 44 Small, brown bird 45 Dashed 46 Most uneasy 48 Reporter's coworker 53 Poetic contraction 54 Actor Baldwin 55 Tennis shot 56 Thawed 59 Slightly adhesive 61 Address for a Friend 63 Carpenter's groove 64 Host 65 Discard 66 Major Hoople's oath 67 Lion's laments 68 Meal scraps 69 Mus. sample DOWN 1 Apple or quince 2 Runner Zatope 3 Indiana shore 4 Positions properly 5 Byrone 04/16/03 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | 22 | | 23 | 24 | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| 28 29 | | | | 30 | | 31 | | | | 32 | | | | 33 | 34 35 | | | 36 37 38 | 39 | | | 40 | | | | 41 | | 42 | | | 43 | | | | 44 | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| 45 | | | 46 | 47 | | | | 48 49 50 | | | 51 52 | 53 | | | | 54 | | | 55 | 56 | | | 57 58 | 59 | | | 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | | 64 | | | | 65 | | 66 | | 67 | | | | 68 | | 69 | | | 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 The Greatest 7 Spring bloomer 8 Impassive 9 Small viper 10 "The Jungle" location 11 Spoke wildly 12 Wear away 13 Web spots 21 Posed 23 Cooked with dry heat 26 Where the action is 27 Desi's love 28 Chesterfield 29 Minnesota pro 30 Everlasting 34 Sci. class 35 Burstyn or Barkin 36 Lineage 37 Frosts 38 Piece of copper? 40 Bosc or Anjou 43 Tow truck 44 Brandished 47 Turn to the right! Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. A M A O A T H S P R I T E B E T P L E A L O A D E R S A T P E R T I M P A L E U N I C O R N N E A P R E C A N T C O R D O V A N D R A P E S I S E R A S E E N T E N T E T I E S I L K T A V E R N S N A T R O A M B E M U S E S M O L A R R A M L O C A L A M E R I C A S A F L A M E I D O L Y U L E L O G A G E N D A L O G E I R E R E V E L S A G E S C A N C L A R E T P A R S O L D 48 Provide food 49 Crockett's last stand 50 Holy city of Islam 51 Slogan 52 Detest 56 Military meal 57 Mild, yellow cheese 58 Extinct bird of Mauritius 60 Absolutely! 62 Approx. Serving IN DIESEL JEANS, LIFE IS BETTER hobbs. 700 MASS. The Fun is a Click Away Optional Campus Fees is now integrated with Online Enrollment. Sign up for Options during online enrollment. Optional Campus Fees Sign Up Instructions: 1 Sign In enroll & pay 2 Click Enroll and Pay 2 Click Liron and Pay 3 Click Learner Services 4 Click Academics or Finances 5 Click KU Optional Fees 5 Click KB Optional Fees 6 Select your Options 7 Click yellow Save button LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749 1612 CITY OF GOD (p) 4:00 8:45 9:30 ADAPTATION. (p) 4:15 7:00 9:40 $1 Free State Draws on Wednesdays "DO NOT CLICK ON BACK ARROW IN WEB BROWSER" Hosanna SLAB, BOCO, Tradition Keepers, Jayhawker Yearbook, KU on Wheels, All Sports Combo, All-Arts Package, Parking, Career Services, SUA Movie Card, Park & Ride Easter! April 20 Performances from Jesus Christ Superstar at the 11:15 service. Plymouth CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Every Sunday Every Sunday 9:30 Traditional Worship 11:15 Contemporary Worship www.ku.edu/~options KANSAN everyday JUAN MAYORAL THE FIRST SPRING BREAK REALITY MOVIE! NO SCRIPTS. NO ACTORS. NO RULES. APRIL 25 ONLY IN THEATRES REALCANCUN FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE REAL WORLD THE REAL CANCUN www.therealconcun.com NEW LINE CINEMAS Course conflicts? conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses KU ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. THURSDAYS $150 U-CALL-ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea--EVERYTHING! $200 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! ALL WEEKEND $200 DOMESTIC TAPS $250 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! LIVE MUSIC April 18th Distance every to Empty Saturday DJ MARLON MARSHALL & friends NOT. FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLUCE! PYRAMID at the walk-up window HOT, FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE!! PYRAMID at the walk-up restaurant open 7pm M-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS LAWRENCE'S 1016 Mass. FATS'S LAWRENCE'S 1016 Mass. 6B = THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY,APRIL 16,2003 What others are saying about Williams' departure Following are excerpts from editorials and sports columnists' comments about Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams' decision to return to North Carolina after 15 seasons with the Jayhawks: Editorial, The Lawrence Journal World: Many were surprised by the manner in which Williams handled the coaching questions and, justified or not, the coach lost some respect along with a certain amount of sheen from his highly polished image. If the ties to North Carolina were so strong, why did he need to drag out announcing his decision for such a long time? Why not come clean with Kansas officials and basketball fans sooner and say he was planning to accept the UNC offer to succeed Matt Doherty, supposedly one of Williams' close friends? For months, Williams had told close associates there could be no negotiation or compromise concerning the situation with Athletic Director Al Bohl and that university officials would have to decide which man they wished to retain, Williams or Bohl. Some now will suggest Williams might have stayed in Lawrence if KU officials had acted sooner, but that's highly questionable. Bohl has been fired, but Williams, too, will be leaving. Now it is important to remember that no one is indispensable. The KU coaching position is one of the top jobs in the country. The university has enjoyed a proud record over the years, and there is no reason to believe this winning tradition won't continue. Many highly successful coaches will be interested in the KU job; and once the new coach is named, it is important for all fans to give their support and backing to the new staff. There is bound to be much debate over why Williams left, what might have been done differently to keep him as the Jayhawk coach and many other facets of the story. It's all history now, and the No.1 job facing the KU athletic family is to select a first-class coach and a first-class individual to take over the basketball reins in Allen Fieldhouse. Bob Lutz, The Wichita Eagle; Kansas basketball players should not waste one second feeling sorry for themselves about Roy Williams' departure for North Carolina. He dissed them by leaving in the manner in which he did. He talked non-stop about loyalty for 15 years, then left Lawrence with his tail between his legs to catch a plane to Chapel Hill. Williams' last act at Kansas, which was to bolt without an explanation to the fans who made his life in Lawrence heavenly, will make people question his sincerity. But it couldn't be better for the team. KU's players have a cause to rally around. They have extra motivation for next season and seasons to come. They should want to show Coach Roy that he made the biggest mistake of his life by choosing his roots over his branches. the jayhawks' players, even with all of the uncertainty that faces them, to pick up and leave KU the way their coach did. That's the cowardly way out. Kansas' players should be hopping mad, and it sounds as if at least some of them are. wayne Simien, who missed most of his sophomore season with a lingering shoulder injury, indicated his anger by saying he gave his right arm for Williams — literally, since he played less than half of KU's games with a shoulder injury. Point guard Aaron Miles told a Kansas City radio station that he is more determined than ever to win a national championship. Simien, Miles and Keith Langford, who will be the leaders of KU's 2003-04 squad as juniors, should get on the phone as soon as possible and tell Williams' four recruits for next season, two of whom are McDonald's All-Americans, to honor their commitments. Joe Posnanski, The Kansas City Star: OK, so now it's time to explain how I missed that badly, how I wrote that Roy Williams would stay at Kansas, no doubt, no question, no hesitation. You may have heard the news. He didn't stay. He gathered his players together for a half-hour Monday, said goodbye, cried, hopped on a private jet to Chapel Hill and said that it was good to be home. That's a wrap, folks. It was a nice 15 years. Thing is, Roy Williams isn't the person I thought he was. I'm not saying he's a better person or worse. He's just different. The Roy Williams I gotto know could never have left his players at Kansas. Never. Three years ago, when North Carolina called the first time, I told people he would stay. "He can't leave those players." I said. I was right then. But something happened in three years. Something hard to explain. Maybe it had something to do with a good man, Bob Frederick, getting pushed out, and a used-car salesman, Al Bohl, taking his place. Maybe it was the feelings that hit a man at 50, those feelings of "Is this all there is?" Maybe it was his sense that the spotlight simply wasn't bright enough in the Midwest. He would mention that sometimes. "It takes a lot," he said, "to get noticed here." Whatever, the Roy Williams I got to know never could have done what this Roy Williams did the last few weeks. He was remarkably mum when one of his best friends, Matt Doherty, got shoved out the door at North Carolina. There was no outrage. There was no sympathy. Shoot, a coach gets fired anywhere in America, and Roy Williams is usually one of the first to send a press release saying that it's a shame a good man lost his job. But when it was Doherty, one of Roy's most loyal friends, one of Roy's most ferocious defenders, Williams had nothing at all to say. What does it mean? Nothing good. Nothing good at all. I never thought Roy Williams was capable of letting his friend toss and turn and then taking his job. I just didn't think he had that in him. Kansan Classified Y 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Business Personals 115 On Campus 120 Announcements 125 Travel 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted X 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 310 Computers 315 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness A 400s Real Estate 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 440 Sublease A man is sitting at a desk. 500s Services 500s Services 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services Classified Policy The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or intent to make any such preference,lim itation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 100s Announcements 1 120 - Announcements Wanted: Papa Roach concert pictures/ video with kid on stage. Will pay! 816-739-1129 xmjsiding@aol.com 1 Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swbell.net life SUPPORT HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 785/841-2345 www.hqcc.lawrence.ks.us Kansan Ads Work For You 125 - Travel Study Abroad in Madrid, Spain Request a Free Catalog. (800) 266-4441. Or Visit www.GoWinCFA.com 125 - Travel Experience Life Abroad Fall 2003. CEA awards over $60,000 in scholarships. Apply by April 30th. wwwGoWithCEA.com 130 - Entertainment Dance lessons, ballet, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-2297 男 女 1 120 - Announcements 200s Employment Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-219-5900. BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. 人 人 人 人 人 205 - Help Wanted 205 - Help Wanted Get Paid For Your Opinion! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com Dependable, trustworthy female needed to assist wheelchair user. Emmets, transportation and light housekeeping. Must like dogs. Call 832-0527 1 120 - Announcements BASS PLAYER Fraternities • Sororites • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program! It works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com Spring Break was awesome STS Americas #1 Student Tour Operator is now hiring on campus reps for 2004-3 8:00-6:49 - 8489.www.stsavail.org I will follow the instructions to create a simple line drawing of people holding hands. The design should be symmetrical and visually appealing. Please use lines that are clean, straight, and evenly spaced. No additional text or decorative elements are required. TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINEI PLAY & COACH SPORTS HAVE FUN- MAKE $ 5 Openings in ALL TEAM & IN-DIVIDUAL SPORTS ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS Camp.Hike, Ropes/Rock- Climbing, Ice Roller, Hockey, Office/Secretaries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUNDRY, Travel ONLINE APPLICATION: www.campcobbossee.com or call (800) 473-6104 Graduate Student Hourly Position: MOVIE EXTRAS MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450-day No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277, as20 "LesBlayGay trans" issues Launion Responsibilities: Serve as liaison to Queers and Allies. LBGT services of Kansas; serve as liaison to other campus offices and student organizations Develop a variety of educational resources directed toward raising consciousness and increasing 205 - Help Wanted Summer to remember in woods of Maine Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialis and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6-18- 8/16 Visit www.campandro.com or call collect 614-835-5600 Required Qualifications: Bachelor's degree and graduate status for Fall 2003 and Spring 2004 (Must be enrolled in at least 6 credit hours). Demonstrated ability to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian. especially those related to higher education. Demonstrated ability to work effectively with a variety of publics and individuals. Availability to attend KU Queers and Alles meetings Thursday. Ability to organize and work independently on assigned tasks. Position Start Date: On or about August 18, 2003. $8.50 per hour, 2 hours a application, resume, and names, addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses (if available) of two references to Marshell Jackson, Associate Director, Student development, 22 High Hall, Kansas, Lawrence KS Application: Please submit a letter of beek. Computer jobs need in Student Development Center, 22 Strong Hall University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 60045. Review of applications will begin on May 2, 2003. Position open until filled. week. Complete job description available in Student Development Center, 22 GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED, PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-885-0856. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers, Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Hundreds of paintir positions available No experience necessary, students welcomed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277-9727. www.collepo.com Leasing Agents Emergency, bringing personnel needed. Part time, flexible schedule, weekends. Apply in person at Parkway Commons, . 1903 Clinton Parkway OFFICE HELP NEEDED OFFICE HELP NEEDED Part-time office help needed approx. 20 hr/week, M-F 1 PM - 5 PM) Duties include answering phone calls, filing data, entry & customer service. Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Avamar, PO Box 3447, Lawrence KS 65046. Attention Tracy, EOE. Schumm Foods needs a part-time office assistant who has prior office experience and good customer service skills. Start at $7 per hour. $8 per hour after a year. Apply at Schumm Foods at 719 Mass (above the Smokehouse). Great practical experience in all facets of a small business. Small well-established Financial Office is seeking a well-organized individual wishing to learn and grow with the business. People skills, computer skills, and attention to details extremely important. Position includes communicating with clients with respect to their small business needs, preparing monthly "books", preparing business and personal income tax returns and general accounting office duties. Small office environment requires individual with flexible attitude. Required computer skills: Proficient in Windows '98, Microsoft Office Suite: Excel, Word, Outlook and internet research. Send resume to P.O. Box 235, Bonner Springs, KS 66012, Attn: John. 205 - Help Wanted STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY BOARD (SHAB) SHAB is seeking diverse individuals in major, nationality, ethnicity and experience for the 2003/2004 academic year. Board members shall advise & counsel the Watkins Administration on matters pertaining to the program on health care and education for all students of the University of Kansas. SHAB is a Student Senate Board appointed board. MAKE A DIFFERENCE pick up an application at the Student Senate Office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union or Watkins Health Center on the second floor Administration Office BARTENDER POSITION CONTENDENT POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours. great pay. Call 1-800-806-006 ext 1422. Cruise line entry level on-board positions avail, great benefits. Seasonal/year rd. 941-329-6343 www.cruiseservice.com 1 000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan www.greatcamp jobs.com Doorman and weekend d bartender needed, apply in person. Must be 21 Bubba's 2228 Iowa. kansan.com GPA, The Graduate & Professional Association of the University of Kansas, seeks a graduate or professional student as Financial Director. The successful candidate will be an independent, organized, and motivated worker; possess business and/or financial knowledge and experience; strong people skills; budget experience; and the ability to multitask. Specific job requirements include managing and reporting finances for GPA and 40 graduate student organizations. Position is a student/hourly, part-time, one year (reewable) term with start date May 5, 2003. (Pay approx. $800/mo. with instate-staff tuition rates.) PeopleSoft experience recommended but not required. Please send letter of interest and resume to Financial Director Search Committee, c/o Graduate & Professional Association, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd, Rm 426, Lawrence, KS 66045. The Mass, St. Lt. is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). 205 - Help Wanted Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext 531 --- Attention College Students What are you doing for the summer? No one hiring? We are! Find out how you could make $2,800/month this summer.Call 832-1833 X 300s Merchandise --- 305 - For Sale S Cases from $800. Police Impounds! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 801-391-3323, ext.4565 JAYHAWK COLLECTOR'S TREASURE Signed 1937 first edition of 'Better Basketball' by Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, Book bears the authenticated signature of the legendary coach, with inscription, 'Lawrence, Kansas, June 14, 1938.' This gem goes to the highest bidder (816) 221-5851 MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1031 Haskell 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent Avail. Aug. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated old house 1300 kilb. Vermont Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique tub. no pets. $440/mo. Call 841-1074. Attractive studio apt, near KU at 945. Mo- avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking Good place to study. $400. gas & water paint. No pets or smoking. Call 749-916-6. WEDNESDAY.APRIL16.2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 bpt. ABt, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807 7 BR house, 2 baths central A/C. Close to KU and Downtown.$1800 per month. Avail. Aug. B. 615-0426 1 & 2 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings. $425-525, $41-3633. 1.2.3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. Available August 15, 841-6254 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Avail. 8/1. Quiet, no smoking, no pets 6th & Kasloid. 2 BR, 1.5 BA $685/month plus security deposit. 1-year lease. 500-8812. 3 BR. appliances 1.1/2 BA, PF, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances, WD hood up. V nice. No smoking. Not pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 Avail. Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house, 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, fans A/C. 10th & NY. No pets. $499. Call 814-1074. Avail. Aug. Small 1 BR apt, in renovated older house 5th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets. $450; Cali 841-1047. Available in August: 1. 2 bdm. Close to GCP/Corb/
between campus and down- town. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841- 1207 Available now, May or June 1. Very nice, remodeled, spacious top floor. 2 BR apts. 8th and Emery. No smoking/pets. $415 usages. 501-811 or 641-3192. 1 BR $450/mo Avail Aug 1. New carpet, paint, vinyl hardwood floors in BR. Very cute/nice! 730 Arkansas. Call 843-8540 ext.21. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On Northside of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841, 5533 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 8 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample parking on-site laundry Call 843-4090. Great3BR's Nearly new 3BR tripleplex in 3 great locations available. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NO PEXT. B41-5533 Save Your Money! Tuckaway Now signing 1Y LErs starting May! June/July Aug. No smoking, petrieve. nice, well-kept 2B BRs. Quiet, all appliance, low utilities, A/C bus route & more $405 mo. Spanish Great Apts. 841-6888 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs,basketball court, fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness 105 - Apartments for Rent call 838-3377 HOME Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship, Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices, Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295 Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. 838-8302 www.tuckawaymgmt.com Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hits Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3600. Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath, W/D. fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/opener, no pets. Sublease 6/1-7/31 $550 786-5080 Avail, August 1st 1,3 BR 2.5 Bath Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher 824 Alabama $1100/month; Bk炉 843-8540 Ext.21). Great location, 1801 Mieselssippi, 3 BR, in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. $610/mo. Avail. Aug 1-842-4242 Available June 1, one bedroom apt. at Briarstone. Great neighbor campus at parked 10 Emery Field $490 per month W/D hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. CLOSE TO CAMPUS Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870; 900 Block Mcallan Call 843-409-800 HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES Now Leasing for Fall 2003 - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom * Washer/Dryer * Fireplace * Swimming Pool * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com Bedroom Apartments 1,2,&3 Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. - Spacious, Luxury Apts. • All appls. + W/D • Water paid • 6 mo. leases avail. 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com FOX RUN SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic on 8th St.) xurious 2, 3, & 4 - Luxurious 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Townhomes! - Garages; wd hookups * Microwave Ovens * Some with Fireplaces * On KU Bus Route 841-8400 or 841-1287 OPEN: MON-FRI 10-12 & 1-5 - Tennis Courts - Now Leasing For Fall 2003 - Swimming Pool 405 - Apartments for Rent 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w microwave, porches patios, and security 900 BK, Arkansas 843-4090 PARKWAY Luxury Apt. Homes FACILITY BUILDING FINAL BIDDING OPPORTUNITY JEFFERSON COMMONS Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1,2,3 Bedroom • Pool Canyon Court - Washington - Fitness Center - Basketball Court - Security Systems Models Open Daily 842-3280 - Individual Leases - Cable plus HBO - Resort-style Pool Plaza 24 hour Fitness Facility On VX1 route 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Brand New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing for Spring 2003 VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool & Hot Tub close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route West Hills Now Leasing! - Carriage Number • High Speed Internet Connections • Security Systems Available • Small Pet Welcome - Fitness Center - Basketball Court Need a place to live next year? A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. village@webserf.net 842-3280 - 4 bedroom/3 bath find out for yourself! Stop by and LeannaMar Townhomes - full size washer/dryer - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - Garages Available You've heard the name. You've heard it's the place to live... williams Pointe Townhomes - approx. 1600 sq feet - paid cable (ext. basic) 842-0032 - car ports - full size washer/ dryer 1012 Emery Rd 841-3800 - 1421 sq feet Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 Apartments Washer/Dryer in each unit Internet access in each room Tanning Bed Computer Center www.jeffersoncommons.com Located just behind SuperTarget - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom 405 - Apartments for Rent NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED - Great Location Near Campus - Reasonable Rates - Digital Cable & Internet Open House. Monday-Friday 1:00-5:00 405 - Apartments for Rent 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus rtl, laundry facility Bq43-0011. Avail Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apl DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site, 38B BR 2A 900, 4BR 2 B AA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841-5538 www apartmentlawenance.com 1712 OHIO 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhomes. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 911-431-4169 2-Studio Apts. Next to Campus. 1346 Ohio St. $415 per month. Utilities Paid. Call 550-0426 Recycle Your Kansan parity check Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes Washer/Dryers* *Dishwashers* *Microwave* *Patios* *Fire Places* *Ceiling Fans* ome enjoy a timeless community with no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 Blue Mea Management, Inc. Apartment & Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Ants - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 *Washer & Dryer* *Wash and Dry* *Fully Equipped Kitchen* *Serving Bar* Blue Moss Management, Inc. Carson at an Affordable Price 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL L BDR $400 1 BDR $400 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 4 RDR $840 IUGE, QUET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON-FRI 9A LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME MASTERCRAFT WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Campus Place Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 Regents Court 15th & Kasold·749-4226 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 19th & Mass·749-0445 ♦ 405 - Apartments for Rent uth & Arkansas·749-2415 OPENHOUSE --- Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Some with fireplaces and Garages Tanglewood 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790 $^{90}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm www.lawrenceapartments.com Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. Equal Housing Opportunity For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway - Washer/Dryers * Dishwasher * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Fire Places * Ceiling Fans CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - Fireplace - Windows/Ds - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome Model Open Daily! 1942 STEWART AVE. 843-8220 www.firstmanagementinc.com COLONY WOODS 1&2Bedrooms - OffRo Bus Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - 3 Hot Tubs - ExerciseRoom *Exercise room* *Now Leasing for Summer & Fall* M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 THE LEGENDS L Est. 2003 NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2,3 & BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES WASHER AND DRYER FOR EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BAKETBALL & BBQ AREA EQUILIED FURNITURE FITNESS CENTER ALL PARTY LOCATIONS GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGGE GAME ROOM COMPLETE & CRAFT ARM SUNLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 415 - Homes For Rent 410 - Condos For Rent Very nice condo. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eilei at 841-4470. اون دختر اون دختر --- 2 BR 1 BA nice house with one car garage, garage floors, fenced yard, porch with swing. $685. B41-3633 anytime. 4 BR, 2 1/2 BA, great area, large deck, fenced yard. 2 car garage, family room, DW, AC, hookups, many fans, attic tan. No dogs. $1000/mo. Avail. August 1, 842- 1375 10 a.m.-6 p.m. or 842-2556. 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Eldridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained 2-car garage, dishwasher, WD, AC 1300 i.c., tower provided. No dogs. $875/mo. Call 842-1760 17 am.-6 p.m. or 842-3556. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jaccuzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fenced landscaped back yard, $1450, 841-3633 anytime. 120 Roommate Wanted House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath. CAWD included. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/mo. 218-413 BIG 5 B HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 / 766-6622 from 6:30-10 p.m. 2 roommates needed for 5 BR house. 13th and Tenn. 3 floors, off-street parking. Megan 550-9596 or Amy 764-0698 ASAP. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 843-354-540. 12 440 - Sublease Grad student seeks female roommate Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet. W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2util Avail Aug. 842-4540. Key House 1 bedroom at 527 California. Washer-dryer. Nice neighborhood. Call 841-5533 for information. 1 BR, 2 BA at Aberdeen Apartments W/D included. $525/month. Available June 1. Dec. Please call 832-2458 3 BR Townhouse, BIG. NICE. CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage. W/D. Central air avail. mid-May Call Admon 830-8076. 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail, mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. 3 BR 3 BA apt. Furn. W/D full kitchen + more. Avail. May-Aug. Rent $375+ used, water cable paid. Call Amy 768-5199. 4 Subleaseers needed, new 4 BR townhouse, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $13.12/kg, lease through July 31, 81-6520- 6421 or 838-578-3505 or 820-340-3273. Beautiful 5 BR 2 BA house available for summer sublease. Close to Mass. St. and campus. Rent negotiable. Call 856-1022. Female roommate wanted to share 4 BR apt. @ Jefferson Commons. Swimming pool. lt mo rentpaid for:785-218-5542 Female to sublease bedroom in 2 BR apt. $240 + low util. May 1? - Balcony views the stadium. Free cable, 312-9390 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, central air. Available mid-May or June 1st Call 218-7736. Furnished Apartment for Sublease! Furnished Apartment for Subuser 4BR, 2BA. liv. rm. din. kitchen, patio, (laundry fac. and pool on apartment complex) Close to campus ("Orchard Corners") on the bus live. Starting Mid May or neg. $216/mo. +Util. Cable and DSL. No turn need: needed Call Liz or Canda at (783) 938-3683 or a message. I BR in 2BR apt. Summer (Subjectless! right on campus. Available May or June. $320/mo. Call Nicole 691-5204 Need subleaser to live w/ 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent. call Paill.785-830-8003 PERFECT SUBLEASURE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duple. Each has Full private BA. 749-6060. Roommate wanted for large 58R house. Half block from campus. $315/mo. Call 393-3197 500s Services 510 - Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233. 8B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2003 LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!" 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. Earth Day April 22, 2003 ADOPT-THE-HILL CAMPUS CLEAN UP SATURDAY April 19th 1 p.m. at Wescoe Beach Commit Your Campus Organization to help keep KU CLEAN and GREEN For details, call 864-2855 Coach CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B PETER WALKER "I'm sad for KU,I'm sad for our fans,and I'm sad for our basketball players. On the other hand, I'm going to wish coach Williams good luck. There's nothing like a homecoming of sorts when going back to your alma mater." Tracy Bunge Softball coach "First and foremost I'm a basketball fan and I'll miss YONKELEHMAN watching his teams Ray Bechard Volleyball coach programs." play. Coach Williams truly cared about KU student-athletes from all our different athletic C. H. BURNS "I am dis appointed for KU and our athletic department but certainly am happy for coach Williams. As a friend, I know what he went through.The public can't imagine all the help that he has been to all of us at KU." Williams did what was best for himself and his "I think coach Ross Randall Men's golf coach family. The university will miss him, but I believe we Y will hire someone who will do a great job, just as he did." Stanley Redwine Track and Field coach PETER MCKENZIE "I am very happy for coach Williams and his family,but I am also sad for us. Kansas basketball has a long, rich history, and I am sure we will get a new coach who will take us to new heights." Clark Campbell Swimming coach Umpire attacked by angry fan The Associated Press CHICAGO—Umpire Laz Diaz was attacked by a fan who came out of the stands during last night's game between the Kansas City Royals and Chicago White Sox in an eerie reminder of what happened near the same spot last year at Comiskey Park. security and players rushed to "I'm physically OK," Diaz said after the Royals won 8-5. "I think you should talk to the other guy and see how he's feeling." Immediately after Carlos Lee flied out to end Chicago's eighth inning, a man ran on the field and tried to tackle Diaz, wrapping his arms around the first base umpire's legs. the aid of Diaz, who served in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve. The fan was quickly taken away. "When I looked over, there was one of the fans from the stands and I just got him off me," Diaz said. "I just turned around and got him off me. The good hand-to-hand combat they taught我 worked." It was the first appearance by the Royals in Chicago since former first base coach Tom Gamboa was pummeled by a father and son who came out of the stands last Sept.19. Before this game, Gamboa tried to downplay his return to the field where he was attacked seven months ago. "I haven't given it a thought really." Gamboa said at the time. "Lightning doesn't strike twice." But it did — about 100 feet from where Gamboa was attacked. And it happened at the ballpark where the All-Star game will be held July 15. "We spoke about it in the locker room, this is where Tom Gamboa got attacked. We thought nothing was going to happen, but it was full moon out there," Diaz said. Gamboa is now the Royals' bullpen coach. He thought security was tighter for his team's return. "Oh yeah, the assistant to major league security was at the game tonight. He told me before the game that they had beefed up the security, but the fans will always outnumber the security force, so there is only so much they can do," Gamboa said. First Management Living Communities. "We do!" Live with the best. First Management Living Communities. Live with the best. Highpointe 6th and Iowa 1-2 & 3 Baths Fireplace Washroom/Direct Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court On KK Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 Chase Court 19th and Iowa 1 & 2 Baths Fireplace Washroom/Direct Swimming Pool Fitness Center Walking Distance to KK Oh KK Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 1-2 & 3 Baths Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Gated Entry High Speed Internet Connection Security Systems Available On KK Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apts 1-2 & 3 Baths Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Gated Entry High Speed Internet Connection Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 832-8805 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL OTHER LOCATIONS Abbots Corner 410 W. 18th St Applecroft 1735 W. 19th St Canyon Court 700 Cobert Long Carson Place 11211 Louisiana Chamberlain Court 1733 Ohio Hawthorn Houses 3600 W. 24th Hawthorn Townhomes 23027 Hawthorn Dr. Melrose Court 1605 Tennessee Oread Apartments 1201 Oread Parkway Townhomes 1620 W. 22nd Regency Place 1301 Louisville Stadium View 1040 Mississippi HOURS Mon-Fri: 9-6 Sat: 10-4 Sun: 12-4 CUT IT OUT! Campus coupons coming soon to a Kansan near you Grad Fest 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore Make your first step down the hill a “red carpet one” Featuring: • Custom Embossed Announcements from $99¢ • choose paper, typeface, print color, and special messages • 24-48 hr turnaround • Complete Regalia from $19.95 • Masters Regalia w/hood $42.90, Doctoral Regalia w/hood $49.90 • “Dad of a Grad”/“Mum of an Alumni” tees $14 • Diploma Frames from $99.95 • Free ‘03 graduation tshirt (with $50.00 order) • Online ordering @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com www.jayhawkbookstore.com • 1420 Crescent Rd • 843-38 Highpointe Chase Court Parkway Commons 8th Street Central Line Lancaster Hall Canvon Court Highpointe 6th and Iowa 1,2, & 3 Bdrm Fireplace Washroom Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 Chase Court 19th and Iowa 1 & 2 Bdrm Fireplace Washroom Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Walking Distance to KU On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 1,2 & 3 Bdrm Washroom Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available Gated Entry High Speed Internet Comnections Security Systems Available On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apps 1,2 & 3 Bdrm Washroom Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available High Speed Internet Comnections Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 832-8805 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL OTHER LOCATIONS Abbotts Corner 410 W 18th St Applecroft 1230 W 19th St Canyan Court 700 Comet Lane Carson Place 1121 Louisiana Chamberlain Court 1733 Ohio Hawthorn Houses 3600 W 24th Hawthorn Townhomes 2300 North Dr Melrose Court 1005 Tennessee Oread Apartments 1201 Oread Parkway Townhouses 1330 W 22nd Regency Place 1301 Louisiana Stadium View 1040 Missouri HOURS Mon-Fri: 9-6 Sat: 10-4 Sun: 12-4 185 USS X y Thursday April 17,2003 Vol.113. Issue No.136 Today's weather 65° Tonight:45° --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Lawrence's music scene remains independent from industry Jayplay kxplay WAKARUSA PUNX LAWFIELD, NJ 0732 Lawrence music: Agents need not apply p.8 KU: Williams violated NCAA rules By Shane Mettlen smettenk@kansan.com Kansan Sportswriter Officials at The University of Kansas have filed a complaint against North Carolina men's basketball coach Roy Williams. Director of compliance, Janelle Martin, said the University had gone through the "proper channels" dealing with the possible NCAA violations. "We addressed coach Williams' comments on a couple of different SportsCenter segments," Martin said yesterday. Williams was interviewed Tuesday on the ESPN program and made a reference to David Padgett, a Kansas signee. Williams said he did not believe Padgett should be "stuck out there" in Kansas. He said he recognized that the NCAA's letter of intent stated that a player PETER PARKER Williams signed with a university rather than a coach, but Padgett should have "a window of opportunity" to reconsider his commitment. Padgett, along with Omar Wilkes. Jeremy Case, and J.R. Giddens, signed with Kansas while Williams was still the Jayhawks coach. Padgett had narrowed his choices to Kansas and North Carolina before choosing the Jayhawks. Williams' comments could be considered a violation of the NCAA's rules regarding tampering with another programs' recruits. Williams told WHB, a Kansas City, Mo., radio station, that his statements had been misconstrued and he was not attempting to sway Padgett or any of the other Kansas recruits to join him at North Carolina. "That's as far from the truth as it could possibly be." RoyWilliams UNC basketball coach "That's as far from the truth as it could possibly be," Williams said. Padgett and Giddens were both named to this year's McDonalds' All-American team, and with Wilkes and Case, made up one of the nation's most thought-of recruiting classes. Padgett is the only one of the four recruits who has not indicated he intends to honor his commitment to Kansas. Pete Padgett, David's father, said a decision would be made after Kansas selected a new coach. Under NCAA rules, a player who seeks a release from a letter of intent must be granted a full release by the institution to be eligible to play for another school right away. If the institution denies a player's request or grants for a partial release, the player must sit out for at least one season. - The Associated Press contributed to this story. - Edited by Melissa Hermreck KUnited cleared of soliciting charge By Cate Batchchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The Elections Commission voted 4-0 last night to clear KUnited of a violation concerning soliciting in GSP-Corbin Hall. Shelly Roben-Lojka, GSP-Corbin Hall complex director, filed the complaint. In it, she said several hall residents came to her April 9 and said KUnited coalition members had come to their doors and asked them whether they had voted. The coalition members said to vote KUnited if they hadn't voted yet and distributed campaign materials, she wrote. As complex director, she said her job was to be an advocate for students. KUnited brought in a crew to argue its side, including Student Body President Jonathan Ng, president-elect Andy Knopp, vice president-elect Catherine Bell, three GSP-Corbin eye witnesses and two other KUnited candidates. "It is very important that I be able to share the information that is given to me by students, whether positive or negative," she said. "I have to take them on their word of what they say and then in turn share that information." Ng said, as far as he knew, he and the two other KUnited candidates were escorted the entire time when at the residence halls that day. He denied distributing any campaign material, and said they only went to the rooms of women who knew their escort. In closing statements, "I think a couple things need to be pointed out here," Knopp said. "Number one, there's been no evidence presented here of any wrong-doing. You've asked us questions, and we've been completely forthright and have told you exactly what happened." BILL PASSED FOR CENTER The Finance Committee passed a bill 17-2 to create a student fee for the construction of the new Multicultural Resource Center. The fees will pay for half the $3 million construction. A confirmed donor has pledged $1 million. The full assembly will vote on the bill at next week's Student Senate meeting. Read more in Friday's The University Daily Kansan. Any possible violations stemmed from incidentally passing from floor to floor without an escort from the floor they were on, Knopp said. But on the floor in question, the fifth floor, the escort took the coalition members to friends' rooms and didn't talk about the elections. "We talked about Britney Spears," Kelly Kate Waldron, Corbin Hall escort and Aspen, Colo., freshman said. Knopp said any evidence against them was hearsay. "With all due respect to Shelly and with all due respect to the women of GSP-Corbin, I feel like the preponderance of evidence is on our side, that no wrong-doing was committed," Knopp said. Before the public hearing, five GSP Hall residents, including Kylie Battatlia, Tulsa, Okla. freshman, talked about how everyone was discussing the possible violation. "This has been the GSP drama," Battatlia said. I will not let you down. Edited by Melissa Hermreck Asian connection One of the members of the Here and Now Theatre Company performs in Woodruff Auditorium at the Asian American Student Union event. The performance challenged Asian stereotypes and racism through skits, stories and interactions with the audience. OLD HYU Renita Norman, Topeka sophomore, and Kriston Guillot, Shawnee freshman, have a discussion in the Office of Multicultural Affairs. Scott Reynolds/Kansan 'Billions of Words, Actions' University's minority recruitment goal clear implementing realistic methods still cloudy By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer As lunchtime nears, an office in Strong Hall springs to life. Crackling with discussion and bubbling with hard work, the office is a glimpse of what the University of Kansas could become. Two students sit in one corner huddled over a computer, struggling with online enrollment. At the front desk, another pair of students argue about sports while they leave a message for an administrator. "It's a hub for minority students," said Courtney Bates, a Chicago senior who has come to the Office of Multicultural Affairs since her sophomore year. "You can get help, and it's laid back." On a typical day, anywhere from 50 to 200 people come through the office looking for information or just hanging out. But do not be misled by the pleasant atmosphere: the Office of Multicultural Affairs is the center of a struggle. The struggle - to increase minority enrollment and provide a welcoming learning environment to students of color - starts here, in a relatively small office, tucked away in a corner on the entry level floor of Strong Hall. Increasing minority enrollment is a key part of Chancellor Robert Hemenway's push to make the University of Kansas one of the top 25 public universities in the United States. It's also a value that top administrators embrace on an emotional level. "It is important to me, as a minority graduate of KU with three degrees, to support diversity," said Janet Murguia, executive vice chancellor for University Relations. Increasing minority enrollment is a regular topic of discussion among the students who visit the Office of Multicultural Affairs. "People come here just to hang out, and it comes up," said Paul Trigozo, a Lima, Peru, freshman who works at the office's front desk. The office itself serves as a recruiting tool. When minority high school students take tours, they are usually brought to the office. "There are usually a couple of us sitting around," Bates said. "It shows them there's a place to go on campus." Of the 26,458 students who attend the University of Kansas, 2,606 of them are minorities. While minority recruitment increased in the Fall of 2002 from the previous year, minority recruitment SEE RECRUITMENT ON PAGE 6A V THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN * 3A The Inside Front 2A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 News briefs CAMPUS Community outreach group hiring for several positions Applications for positions at the Center for Community Outreach are available at the CCO office, room 405, in the Kansas Union. They are due at noon Monday in the same office. The co-directors have already been selected for next year. The co-directors are Kevin Hager, Shawnee sophomore, and Kaelyn Fox, Pittsburgh junior. Open paid positions include financial and communications directors. Open positions which include a $300 scholarship include all of CCO's project coordinators for projects such as Jubilee Cafe, Into the Streets and Concerned, Active and Aware Students. Each project has two coordinators. Interviews will be next week. For more information call 864-4073. Cate Batchelder STATE TOPEKA—Despite the lowering of the national terror alert status, Kansans should not let their guard down, the state's homeland security director said yesterday. Kansas security director tells citizens to stay alert Maj. Gen. Greg Gardner said that even with the success of U.S. forces in toppling Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein and detecting terrorists, conditions at home still merited monitoring. As Gardner spoke yesterday, Gov. Kathleen Sebelius was studying whether to relax security measures around the capital complex in downtown Topeka based on new information she had received. Currently, only one Statehouse door is open to the public. "What we're likely to do is reopen all the doors at the Capitol," Sebelius said. "We'd go back to a more open process, but encourage people to remain alert and observant of what they see around them." Sebelius vetoes tourism bill that would bar injury lawsuits TOPEKA—Gov. Kathleen Sebelius announced Tuesday she had sevetoed a bill shielding operators of farm tourism and horseback ventures from personal injury lawsuits. In a statement about her action Monday, Sebelius said she supported more tourism in Kansas but that protecting agricultural tourism operators against liability lawsuits would expose the public to unsafe equipment and conditions. The bill would bar members of the paying public from suing over injuries suffered while riding horses or taking part in farm or ranch activities, unless there were "willful or malicious failure to guard or warn against a dangerous condition." Current law immunizes property owners who allow their land to be used for recreational purposes, such as hunting, camping and fishing. The bill expands the definition of "recreational purposes" to include recreational farming and ranching activities. KDHE suspects second case of SARS in Kansas woman TOPEKA — A second suspected case of a contagious respiratory illness has been identified in Kansas. The latest case involves a woman in northeast Kansas who recently traveled to Asia, the state Department of Health and Environment announced Tuesday. The woman was never hospitalized and has apparently recovered, KDHE said. SARS — severe acute respiratory syndrome — was recently discovered in southeast Asia. It is thought to be caused by a previously unrecognized coronavirus, the same type of virus that causes common colds. It is most likely spread the same way colds are spread: More than 150 deaths have been reported worldwide. There have been more than 190 suspected cases in the United States but no known deaths. A south-central Kansas man was previously identified as the first suspected case of SARS in the state. He was hospitalized but has recovered. Symptoms of SARS include fever, shortness of breath, coughing, chills and body aches. Samples from both people have been sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for testing. KDHE said. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00. News: Ashley Earnest and Cary Dreher Weather: Matt Laubhan Sports: Zach Lee On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7, 8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. kansan.com 907 NUEVA Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith.Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU 2013 To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan Dustin Peterson, Denver senior, tosses balls at a target held by Ben Neis, Chipotle marketing coordinator, to win coupons for free burritos. The restaurant at Sixth Street and Monterey Way offered free burritos yesterday to the long lines of customers to give itself a test run before officially opening tomorrow. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Kansas Relays will begin at noon today at Memorial Stadium. Contact KU Athletics at 864-3355. Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Environs will host a Veggie Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. The Student Development Center will host a Nontrad Brown Bag Lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today in Alcove E at the Kansas Union. Contact Laura Morgan at 864-4064. Elizabeth MacGonagle of the African and African-American Studies Department, Ken Lehrentz of KU Libraries, and Ragan Buck, student, will discuss "Digitizing Popular Nigerian Literature" at noon today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union, Call 864-1064. Judith Williams of the African and African-American Studies Department will give a Merienda Brown Bag Lecture on "Teatro Experimental do Negro Performance, Political Power and Racial Identity in Brazil" at noon today at room 318 in Bailey Hall, Call 864-4213. Karen Gerety of the art museum will give a Tour du Jour lecture on "Modern Portraits" at 12:15 p.m. today on the fourth floor of the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4710. Adorian Ardelean, ecology and evolutionary biology student, will lecture on "Morphology, Variability and Systematics of the Sea Anemone Family Actinodendronidae" at 3:30 p.m. today at room 1005 in Haworth Hall. Call 864-5887. John Bridge of SUNY-Binghamton will give a geology lecture on "Depositional Models of Braided Rivers" at 4 p.m. today at room 103 in Lindley Hall. Call 864-4974. Reid Ewing of Rutgers University will lecture on "Taming Traffic and Sprawl" from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. today at room 412 in Lindley Hall.Call 864- 4281. Sarah Blake McHam of Rutgers University will give an art history lecture on "A New Reading of the Italian Renaissance: Pliny's Natural History and Its Influence on Artists, Patrons and Theorists" at 5 p.m. today at room 211 in the art museum. Call 864-4713. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will practice from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.; today at room 207 in Robinson Center. Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. The KU Karate Kobudo Club will practice from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight at St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422. STATE Wife of former POW awaits husband's arrival back home WICHITA — Two days after her husband was found alive in Iraq, Jessa Miller carries a cell phone with her constantly. This time, though, she is waiting for a call from the military telling her when she will be reunited with her husband, Army Pfc. Patrick Miller, one of seven former prisoners of war in Iraq. Tuesday. "She said it was like a bad dream and now it is over. It seems like a long three weeks of not doing anything but sitting by the TV watching and waiting for some word." "She doesn't mind this waiting. It was the other waiting that was hard on her," her cousin, Cheryl Phipps said Et Cetera The seven POWs were rescued Sunday by U.S. forces on the road to Tikrit, Iraq, and are now in Kuwait. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 68045. The University Daily Kensan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 66045 The University Daily Kansas (ISSN 0748-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Browse weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 68044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be nmed out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. FRIDAY DJ YOU DECIDE WHAT'S INSIDE. $3 Red Sun 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink Chipotle CHOICE BURRITOS. 9TH & MASS Academic Computing Services free computing workshops All workshops are FREE for KU students, staff and faculty, but REQUIRE registration for everyone. Register at www.ku.edu/aes/train or 864-0494. Workshop descriptions and schedule: www.ku.edu/acs/calendar Get help at questiontku.edu or call the ACS Help Desk at 864-0200. Directions & map: Become A Microsoft Office Specialist www.ku.edu/acs/directions Set yourself apart from your peers and get certified as a skilled desktop computer user in Microsoft Office programs. Certification is available to all KU faculty, staff and students. Each exam costs $65; fees must be paid prior to the exam you wish to take. To register or to find out more, visit www.ku.edu/acs/certification, send email to Excel: Charting Prerequisite: Excel: Introduction. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Tues., April 22, 9 a.m.-Noon, Budig Media Lab Flash: Introduction Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Wed., April 23, 2:30-5:30 p.m., Budig PC Lab Access: Introduction Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Thurs., April 24, 9 a.m.-Noon, Budig Media Lab Web Authoring: Cascading Style Sheets Introduction Prerequisites: Web Authoring: Foundations, Web Authoring: Introduction and Web Authoring: Intermediate. Requires registration for all. Thurs., April 24, 1-4 p.m., Budig Media Lab NEW! Microsoft Office Specialist Certification Exam Prerequisite: For KU faculty, staff and students only. Requires registration for all and a $65 fee. Mon., April 28, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Budig Media Lab UNIX Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all. Tues., April 29, 1:30-4:30 p.m., Budig Media Lab Excel: Data Management Prerequisite: Excel: Introduction. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Wed., April 30, 1-4 p.m., Budig Media Lab P THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Knowing rights can help tenants deal with landlords Whether you're plagued by leaky pipes or a sagging roof, an unreasonable landlord can make a living arrangement become, well, unlivable. Services such as the Off-Campus Living Resource Center and Legal Services for Students can help smooth a rocky relationship with your landlord — even if it means taking legal action. "It's the same as dealing with any rude person," Michele Kessler, associate director for Legal Services for Students, said. The best way to avoid a feud with your landlord, she said, was communication and information. rights and responsibilities as well as those of the landlord. The Tenant's Handbook, which is distributed by the Off-Campus Living Resource Center, outlines regulations from the 1978 Kansas Landlord-Tenant Act. Students should know their Responsibilities of the tenant — Comply with building and housing codes, keep premises clean and safe, keep plumbing fixtures clean, remove garbage and other waste material in a safe and clean manner, keep noise at a comfortable level so as not to disturb neighbors, abide by lease as long as it is not in conflict with the Landlord-Tenant Act, make sure check-in and check-out are performed, and pay rent on time. COMMON CENTS Nicole Roche nroche@kansan.com Responsibilities of the landlord Comply with building and housing codes; exercise reasonable care in maintenance of common areas, such as yards or outdoor hallways; maintain in good and safe working order all electrical, plumbing, heating, etc. provided by the landlord; provide outdoor trash receptacles; supply running water and reasonable amounts of hot water; provide written notice of rule changes; give reasonable notice before entering tenants' dwelling; show unit is clean and habitable before tenant arrives and provide check-in and check-out. Sam Pierron, director for the Off-Campus Living Resource Center, said the landlord was required to fix "anything that is central to the functioning of the apartment" as well as any appliances that came with the apartment. Kessler said landlords were required to fix a running toilet, but the tenant must pay the water bill unless the problem is not properly fixed. "If you let it run for six weeks and then decide to call your landlord, you'll be responsible for it,"she said. According to the Handbook, a landlord must correct a problem within 14 days of receiving written notice. At the same time, tenants have 14 days to fix a problem if they are in violation of the lease. Kessler said Legal Services for Students tried to work out the problem with the student's landlord before seeking legal action. Some situations, however, cannot be solved by a mere phone call. In 2000, landlords William and Mary Lemesany were sued for invasion of privacy after peepholes were discovered in apartments at Parkway Terrace, 2340 Murphy Drive. The six victims were awarded a total of $1.28 million and William was sentenced to 60 days in prison, according to the Laurence Journal-World. Kessler said in a similar instance, the student should notify the police and Legal Services as soon as possible. "Obviously," Kessler said, "you have a great case to not stay in that apartment." Roché is a senior in journalism. Contact her at nroche@kansan.com. Each week reporter Roché covers a different consumer issue. She is a Wichita senior in journalism. Old play updated with modern feel By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The English Alternative Theater and the Lawrence Arts Center will be giving Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie a few modern twists. Paul Lim, professor of English and the play's director, said although he made some changes, the spirit of the play remains the same. "Most productions of The Glass Menagerie are set in 1944, because it was the year the play premiered in Chicago," Lim said. "In our production the setting will be Amsterdam in 1983 with an older Tom Wingfield speaking from a gay bar." In the EAT-LAC production, two actors will portray Tom Wingfield, the play's main character, instead of just one. "Because it's a memory play and not real, we feel we can take some liberties," Kirby Fields, stage manager, said. "The lines are exactly what Williams "We now know Tennessee was a practicing homosexual. He came out of the closet in the early'70s,and there was no reason why we couldn't show that side of him in this autobiographical memory play." Paul Lim Professor of English wrote. We just divided Tom's lines into separate parts with the younger and older Tom." John Younger, professor of the classics who portrays the older Tom, said he mainly served as the narrator. "The opening lines of the play refer to Tom as a narrator and character," Younger said. "Lim took the more descriptive lines that Tom says and gave them to older Tom." entation was addressed in the play — again not a typical approach. "We now know Tennessee was a practicing homosexual," Lim said. "He came out of the closet in the early '70s, and there was no reason why we couldn't show that side of him in this autobiographical memory play." Lim said Williams' sexual ori- Lim said that his version of the play would feature music. "If you read the play it had music in it," Lim said. "We will have Karl Ramburg, a jazz musician, play a bartender in the gay bar, and under the bar he will play original compositions with a synthesizer." Lim will also use slides of Hollywood actors from the 1930s to the present to illustrate why Tom goes to the movies. In the play, Tom's father deserted the family years before, and Tom is indulging in escapist fare when he goes to the movies but and is looking for the absent father every time he gazes at the manufactured male icons. The Glass Menagerie ■ When: 8 tonight and Friday and at 2.30 p.m. Saturday ■ Where: Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. ■ Tickets: $10, $5 for students and $8 for seniors. Tickets are available at the Lawrence Arts Center and by calling 843-2787. Overall, Lim's approach to Williams' classic play impressed his cast and crew. "Paul had a vision on an interesting take on this production," Fields said. "It's shocked me that no one has attempted this before." The play will be performed at 8 tonight and tomorrow and at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday in the Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.. Tickets cost $10, $6 for students and $8 for seniors and are available at the Lawrence Arts Center and by calling 843-2787. Edited by Brandon Gay University committee to examine sex class The Associated Press TOPEKA—Acting on a formal complaint by a state senator, the University of Kansas plans to investigate a veteran professor's classroom conduct in an undergraduate course on human sexuality. Sen. Susan Wagle (R-Wichita) said yesterday that Chancellor Robert Hemenway told her a committee would probably be formed to investigate her allegations against Dennis Dailey. Wagle's complaint is the first against Dailey in the 20 years he has taught the popular class, according to University officials. Last month, Wagle successfully amended a state budget bill to deny funding to departments at public universities in which a professor buys "obscene" videos or shows them in undergraduate sexuality courses. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius has until April 21 to decide whether to strike the amendment. Wagle said Hemenway told her the University could not complete its investigation by that date. While the University will investigate Dailey, it supports him as it does all of its faculty. University representative Lynn Bretz said yesterday. On Tuesday, he told the Lawrence Journal-World,"My silence has served me well up to this point — it's even better now." As for the videos, Wagle said she was told they were made in "clinical" settings rather than movie studios or bedrooms. She wondered whether that fact would exempt them from the state's definition of "obscenity" and suggested that legislators should debate the matter. THIS WEEK at the GRANADA THURSDAY DESTINATION: Spring Break Granada Every Thursday $2 Double Wells DJ Nick Riddell “It’s like Spring Break, Cancun every week.” Bring your student ID for 1/2 off cover! FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink SATURDAY Anything But Joey Ultimate Fakebook all ages! HUMAN RIGHTS AND ETHICAL GLOBALIZATION The Stephenson Lectures in Law & Gov't presents Mary Robinson - First female President of Ireland (1990-1997) - United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997-2002) - Accomplished Human Rights lawyer THE LAW DEPARTMENT OF THE UNITED STATES HARVEY COOPER April 24,2003 7:00 pm 120 Budig Hall Contact Jennifer Colaner, Event Planner at (785) 864-4531 for more info. Sponsored by the University of Kansas School of Law Made possible by the Stephenson Lectures in Law & Government and the David H. Fisher funds HARSHEE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2003 Free for Ai By Nicole Renke prochaska.com Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish Kansas editors reserve the right to critic comments. Standerous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 面 Yoah, I'd just like to give a message to all the sunbathers out on the Oliver Hall lawn. It's overcast. Go home. 图 I just wanted to say that I parked behind Carnahr '0' Leary for five minutes because I had to go inside and pay 77 cents so I could enroll, and parking officer 604, who gave me a ticket in that time, I really hate you. I've been online enrolling for just over three hours. The longest time I've spent in line at Strong Hall was 15 minutes. This system sucks. 图 You know, Amanda Soars, Kansas Dis basketball existed before Roy self Williams, even if it didn't for you. the Kansas basketball will be good You again. You're not a woman without a team. Team. You have a team. The world the wheel not ended, and Roy's a dark couchbag. of spotted shark Dude's school is losing everything that Dudus was ever good about it. Day on the Hill because he injured Roy has left KU is "Tortunately the larnest school in the Big work2 Bo Duke." 图 Administrates the person with all the Buffy Napier software on their computer. I have 132 N Stormboard of Stargate SG-1, the entire troop to date of The Dead Zone, the 65 episodes of Babylon 5, 45 episodes of Earth; Final Conflict, and a bunch of miscellaneous movies, all totaling 83 digibits. So you can eat my nerdy dust. Muck the FPAA. 。 Why is it that all the instruments seeking intelligent life in the universe are pointed away from Earth? Happy 21st birthday to the honorable senator Andrea Hughey. Don't do anything that would embarrass your constituents tonight. 图 So does KUnited still love Roy now? 图 Hello, rain. Goodbye ugly sidewalk graffiti. You can say what you want about Day on the Hill, but don't you dare underestimate all the effort that SUA puts into programming on campus. We do so much that it's not fair at all to slander us like that. SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, email the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansas will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length; Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Staffer-Flint I don't want you hanging around with that jayhawk anymore, come on home. Yes, coach. Lance Monoley for The University Daily Kansan 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning 4 managing teams 864-4854 csn@swap.com and Jhunngwang@swap.com Leah Shaffer readers 'representative 864-450 or laffker@kansan.com PERSPECTIVE eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adauls@kansan.com Apparently, genetic material from human, pig and bird coronaviruses have combined to form this new organism. How the new virus actually causes disease is not fully understood. SARS, like the terrifying 1918 flu, is airborne and strikesyoung, healthy individuals as well as the elderly and infirmed. Like the 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson Sarah Jantz Matt Fisher Amazingly, the cause of SARS may already be known. Researchers believe the SARS virus is a new coronavirus, belonging to the same family that also causes the common cold. Rachel Robson opinton@kansan.com retail sales manager 864-4358 or adaleer@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson sales and marketing adviser 864-7564 or mtfalter@kansan.com general manager and new administrator 804-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com New disease warrants share of media attention disease. The misnamed "Spanish Flu" killed about 3 percent of the world's billion people. The cause of this pandemic was identified by researchers just last year. It is still unclear why that flu virus was so devastating. COMMENTARY CLARIFICATION An editorial in yesterday's paper needs clarification. The editorial, "Elections outcome shows need for change," stated KUnited coalition members were soliciting in GSP Hall. The members followed Student Senate code while in the residence hall. They were cleared of any election violation last night. War and pestilence have always been the major stories in human history. Innocent people are dying. Panic is spreading. Economies are collapsing. And I'm not talking about the war in Iraq. The spread of SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, threatens to be the most important happening of our lifetimes. The disease, which first infected humans late last year in southern China, has spread to thousands of people around the world. More than 150 people have died. There is no treatment for SARS, nor will one be available soon. SARS has a catastrophic potential belied by the scant attention paid to it by our war-obsessed American media. That's understandable. We've made the same mistake before. 1918 flu, SARS' death rate is thought to be at least 3 percent. Given the current world population, that could mean 200 million deaths, if SARS spreads to the same extent the 1918 flu did. This is why much of the world is more focused on SARS than on our military adventure in the Middle East. In March 1918, American newspapers were filled with coverage of the Great War. But a far more significant story was brewing. At Fort Riley, a soldier became ill and died of the flu. The sickness spread and within two years between 20 million and 40 million people around the world were dead of this The battle to understand the disease has not been bloodless. The World Health Organization scientist leading the investigation into SARS has died of it. Doctors and nurses of SARS patients are especially imperiled. The countries hardest hit by SARS have tried to halt its spread by control. Hospitals in Asia and Canada are shutting down. Schools are closed. Hong Kong, the apparent epicenter of the epidemic, fears economic collapse. It is unlikely that treatments for SARS will be devised soon. Designing drugs is a tedious and time-consuming process. Nearly a decade elapsed between the identification of HIV and the development of the first anti-retroviral drugs. Air-borne SARS could spread exponentially faster than body fluid-borne HIV can. ling human behavior. Entire apartment buildings have been quarantined. Travel has been discouraged. But public health measures are not perfect. A SARS patient in Ontario, Canada, broke his quarantine, feeling well enough to return to his job at Hewlett-Packard. Now one of his coworkers is hospitalized with SARS, and 197 other employees have had to be quarantined. Criminal charges against the workaholic are pending. The United States will not be free of this mess forever. About 200 Americans are now suspected to have SARS. War and pestilence are the major stories in human history, but the worst of these is pestilence. Infectious disease not violence, is, as always, the leading killer of humans. Dire predictions about SARS may prove untrue. The virus may evolve to a less virulent or transmissible form. But it may not, and we need to prepare now. Not only nationally, but right here on Mount Oread. Hope is not a plan. Robson is a Baldwin City graduate student in pathology. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Onewomandoesnotspeakforall Arrah Nielsen has failed once again to discredit feminism (The University Daily Kansan, 4.11.2003). She does, however, show that she can rely uncritically on a single flawed source for her argument, and that she can make sweeping, sarcastic generalizations. Most of Nielsen's points are lifted from Christina Hoff-Sommers's Who Stole Feminism? a book whose attacks on feminist misuse of statistics have been effectively repudiated. Nielsen has every right to be a sycophant for Hoff-Sommers, but that doesn't mean we have to be impressed or persuaded. In fact, Nielsen's parroting of her source proves only that her thinking is neither independent nor original — surprising, considering that Nielsen loathes feminists for what she sees as their conformism and groundthink Also, Nielsen conceals Hoff-Sommers's political agenda. Hoff-Sommers works with the American Enterprise Institute, a think tank whose members include political figures well-known for opposition to building on and sustaining the progress women have made. Rush Limbaugh is among the conservative celebrities to praise Who Stole Feminism? These facts do not of course invalidate Hoff-Sommers's arguments. But Nielsen has to be willing to face criticism for her conservative Republican connections, just as the feminists she opposes have to answer for their allegiance to liberal Democrats. Finally, there are Nielsen's broadbrush, unsupported claims, a staple of her writing. For example, "Most women have deduced (correctly) that modern feminism does not speak to them and has few solutions to offer them." No numbers, surveys, or studies to back this up — what a surprise. coming from a writer who claims to value statistics. Instead, we are left with the arrogance that makes Nielsen think she can speak for millions of women whose situations she knows only through reading a polemical book. Ray Pence, lecturer, American studies department Kansas still deserves support Dear Wayne Simien, Keith Langford, Aaron Miles, Michael Lee, Bryant Nash, Jeff Graves, Moulaye Niang, Jeff Hawkins, Brett Olson, Stephen Vinson, Christian Moody, Jeremy Case, J.R. Giddens, David Padgett and Omar Wilkes; You don't know me. I'm one of the cheering fans that have grown up on Kansas basketball and all it stands for. The one waving the wheat. The one echoing the Rock Chalk chant after another amazing win. The one that steps into Allen Field House and gets chills. The one that will bleed Crimson and Blue till the day I die. You see, Kansas basketball has a storied tradition and rich history too. And you're a part of that. And as one of the thousands that count themselves as KU baskeball fans, I just want to let you know that I will continue to support you and all that KU basketball encompasses. I understand that you must be going through an unimaginably difficult time right now, but know that you will always have the support of KU fans. I have no doubt in my mind that individually you are capable of great things. But together, you can accomplish anything you set your minds to. If it is the right thing for you to leave KU, I wish you well. But if you choose to stay, I'll be happy to cheer you on during one heck of a ride that is bound to be next season. Amy Kepka,class of 1997 Tradition will continue As a University of North Carolina alumnus who lives now in Chapel Hill, I wanted to express to all members of the University of Kansas community my thoughts on the Roy Williams move. Kansas has always been my second favorite program next to North Carolina. The Kansas program, as well as its fans, have always exhibited class and dignity while taking great pride in a program beyond reproach. Regardless of who is the coach, I have no doubt this tradition will continue. When the announcement came Monday, I admit I was immediately overwhelmed. However, within five minutes, my thoughts turned to those in the Kansas community and what the fans on the other end were going through. When we lost Dean Smith several years ago, our hearts sank much the same as some of yours have now. North Carolina was in desperate need of a man like Roy Williams. Matt Doherty had become as controversial at North Carolina as your former athletics director. If strong leadership was ever needed here, the time is now. I know that Roy Williams will be difficult to replace. Legends always are. Best of luck. My thoughts are with you. No matter what happens, I will be following Jayhawks' hoops the same as I do the Heels. Joseph Herrin, Chapel Hill, N.C. What about Matt? Former Kansas assistant Matt Dohert deserves a second opportunity to take the helm of a major basketball program. By hiring him, Kansas could turn North Carolina's loss into a substantial gain. One needs only to look at his resume to see that Matt Doherty has what it takes to be successful at Kansas. During the seven years he spent as a Kansas assistant, Doherty landed some of the nation's top recruits including Paul Pierce, Jacque Vaughn, and Raef LaFrenz. While he was at Kansas, his warmth also won him the affections of KU players and students. Since becoming a head coach, he has impacted college basketball. In a single season, he revived Notre Dame's basketball program, leading the Fighting Irish to their best record in 11 years. He then followed up the feat by becoming the first coach in Atlantic Coast Conference history to win the regular season title in his first year of conference competition. Doherty's past indicates that the circumstances surrounding his engineered departure from North Carolina are not an accurate reflection of either his abilities or character. The administration should consult former players like Jerrod Haase and C.B. McGrath, who, along with other recent alumni, could share personal accounts of experiences with Doherty and dispel myths coming out of the Carolina rumor mill. To discount Doherty because of his association with North Carolina would be short-sighted. After his tainted experiences with the Tar Heels, Doherty would likely be grateful for an opportunity to return a program whose players and fans understand that trips to the Final Four are not an entitlement. Carolina wasn't a fit for Doherty for all the reasons Kansas could be. Gillett Pionkowski, class of 2000 --- O THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Mishaps, beer entertain students as dirty laundry spins and cycles A By Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Brandon Baker/Kansan James Mostrom, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, sophomore, does his laundry at Duds' N Suds because it is close to his home on Sixth Street. While he waits for clean clothes, he said, he likes to go to Pyramid Pizza next door and get two slices of pizza and a root beer. While shirts, socks and unmentionables spin in the dryer, students find ways to pass the time — and get over the mishaps of laundry night. Jenna Rademacher and Matt Wilson, Dallas freshmen, spend Wednesday nights doing laundry together. Rademacher said she had never done her laundry until she came to college this year. "I called my mom the first time," she said. "She kind of walked me through it." She said she had caught on quickly, although an incident with a red shirt and a load of whites had been discouraging. Wilson said although doing laundry was relaxing, he missed having a free washer and dryer. "At home, you don't have to stick quarters in," he said. Jordan Day, Atlanta senior, said he passed the time at the laundromat by doing homework. Day said laundry was pretty self-explanatory — "You just lift the lid and see how to do it." Yet even he has had one problem. Someone once left bleach in the washer and he did a load of darks, leaving him with a bunch of spotted shirts. Day said he did his laundry at Duds' N Suds, 918 Mississippi St. because of the atmosphere. "If I'm not doing my homework," he said, "I can grab a beer." Adrienne Stallman, Naperville, Ill., senior and Duds 'N Suds employee, said the lau- dromat catered to college students by providing a study area. pool tables and a bar. "My friends are like, 'You guys have a bar in there?'" Stallman said. "But it's really boring sitting there doing your laundry." Stallman said about 20 to 30 people dragged in their laundry each night. She said that one time someone brought in three trash bags of laundry and was there for hours. Another time a man came in just to have a beer, shoot some pool and hang out. "He wasn't even doing any laundry," she said. Katy Kirkpatrick, Prairie Village senior, said that as a design student she often sketched while She said her girlfriend usually did their laundry, but now that she was out of town for the week, Kirkpatrick was left with the chore. She said lack of clean clothing drove her to it. "I guess I'm kind of like that loser bachelor guy," Kirkpatrick said. "But when the pink floral socks come out, I know it's time to do laundry." For some reason, Kirkpatrick said, she had a lot of laundry horror stories. One time, a leaking motor in a washer stained her entire load with oil. Another time one of her just-washed shirts ended up in a trash can at a laundromat — on top of a "poo- covered sock." And recently, at an unmanaged laundromat, a group of intoxicated men kept telling her she had "a real pretty waist." She said she hadn't gone back. Despite her experiences, Kirkpatrick said laundry nights were not completely awful. In addition to a love for folding clothes, she said, she looked forward to the clean clothes guaranteed after a night of laundry. "When you wake up the next morning, you have an infinite number of possibilities,"she said. "You can wear whatever you want." —Edited by Brandon Gay I became a woman who tucks her shirt in. 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Norman was recruited by the University when she was a high school senior. She said this personal approach encouraged her to attend KU. "It made me think they really want me here," said Norman, Topeka sophomore. For a process as difficult as increasing minority enrollment, the Office of Admissions and Scholarship's efforts are relatively simple. Extra telephone calls, postcards and letters from minority student leaders are the primary tactics to improve minority enrollment. One example is sending birthday cards to potential minority recruits. "We try to personalize recruitment," said Lisa Pinamonti, interim director of admissions and scholarships. Though everyone is free to use them, the birthday cards are primarily sent to students of color, said Claudia Mercado, assistant director of admissions and scholarships. Increased interaction with students is another focus. In the Office of Multicultural Affairs, administrators try to make students feel at home. Creating a welcoming, useful place will help more minority students feel comfortable at KU. The first step in making students more at home is making students focus on academics, said Robert Page, director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs. "It has to be the focus," Pages said. "Academic success, first and foremost." Page's office uses programs like HawkLink, which provides free tutoring and monitors the academic success of its participants. The admissions office does not break down its overall budget, so the Contributed ar amount of money it spends on minority recruitment specifically is unclear. The Office of Multicultural Affairs' overall budget is $363,770, with most of the money spent on HawkLink and staff salaries. HAPPY BIRTHDAY FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Birthday cards sent by the Office of Admissions and Scholarships are a way the University tries to attract minority students. Efforts to The University of Oklahoma, for example, has a slightly smaller overall enrollment than KU. At OU, 4,816 minority students were enrolled compared to 2,606 at KU. increase minority enrollment appear to be working. Though first-time minority enrollment dipped by 3.9 percent from the Fall of 2000 to the Fall of 2001, minority enrollment increased by 14.2 percent and a record 450 minority students enrolled in the Fall of 2002. When asked about diversity, Janet Murguia had a two-part response. 'A Personal Commitment' "There's no question that there's a commitment by the University to increase diversity," Murguia said. "But at the same time I have a personal commitment to promoting diversity at the University of Kansas." Growing up in the Argentine district of Kansas City, Kan.. Murguia is exactly the success story the University strives for: a Hispanic woman from a poor economic background rising to the upper echelons of the political and academic world. When she first came to the University as a student in the Fall of 1978, Murguia was paired to live with a student in Corbin Hall. "The young woman basically said she couldn't live with me because I was different," Murguia said. "She wanted a different roommate." Eventually Murguia joined a sorority — an experience she said was overwhelmingly positive. "The people in my sorority learned more about Hispanic culture, and I learned more about dealing with people who were different than me," she said. By partnering with the admissions department, the KU administration has recently reached out to minority candidates in areas populated primarily by minority students. The University sponsored an event in March for the first time called "KU in KC, K," Murguia's brainchild. The event featured recruiters and student leaders encouraging students in the Wyandotte County area, Kansas' poorest county, to come to the University. Dozens of potential applicants from the area attended the event. KU ranks in the lower third of the Big 12 in overall minority enrollment. "I think it sends an important message to have KU put an all out effort in that regard." Murguia said. Compared to KU's peer universities, the University is behind in the numbers side of minority recruitment. (Left) Even if OU's large Native American student population is not taken into account, it still has approximately 500 more minority students than KU. KU also has a lower percentage of minorities than the state of Kansas overall, when comparing the results of the 2000 Census and enrollment in the Fall 2002. Minority students comprised 9.8 percent of the student body in the Fall of 2002, while minorities composed 15.3 percent of the population in Kansas. Norman excels in the classroom, is a Kansas resident and, like many minority students, is dissatisfied with minority recruitment efforts. Renita Norman wants to help bring more minority students to the University. So, she plays an active role in KU's Black Student Union and works on the multicultural recruitment team. Norman's not sure what exactly the University should do, but she's convinced what's being done is not enough. "There's no magic serum," she said. "It's effort and time. But if everyone's gung ho about it, things would change a lot faster and it would move a lot quicker." "I see them trying to help this issue, to work on it," said Tran, a member of the Asian American Student Union. "But there's always room for improvement." John Tran, Overland Park junior, said the University's efforts were visible to minority students, but the perception that KU was not doing enough was hard to shake. 'No magic serum' "My theory is you can't complain about something if you're not going to work to fix it," she said. "Sometimes I feel the University doesn't think it's that big of an issue," she said. "We have billions of words they've said, but very few actions." Tran said he was particularly troubled by the lack of Asian representation in the KU Student Ambassadors program, which gives tours to potential students. "There's only about two Asian people represented," he said. "There's not even an Asianguy." Melanie Weiser, president of KU's Hispanic American Leadership Organization, focuses on the University's positive efforts toward minority recruitment, particularly the multicultural recruitment team that Norman works on. "I think they're making really great steps," Weiser said. "But there's always more that can be done." Scott Reynolds/Kansam As the assistant director of the Renita Norman, Topeka sophomore, discusses current issues during a Black Student Union meeting. Norman works on the University's cultural recruitment team. Office of Multicultural Affairs, Tony Daniels often makes recruitment trips on behalf of the University. On a recruiting trip to Summer Academy in Kansas City, Kan., he saw another problem with minority recruitment. "I talked to kids, and asked them why they weren't going to KU," Daniels said. "They told me KU wasn't giving them money." When asked what could be done better in minority recruitment, Daniels had a simple answer. "It's the money," he said. "The kids need more scholarship money." The University has no scholarships designated specifically for minority students. Robert Page said recruitment efforts needed to be increased in disenfranchised parts of the state, such as Kansas City, Kan., and western Kansas. "We've got to do a better job of telling these sides of our state that we are the premier institution in the state," Page said. University officials also need to be more direct about the low number of minority students on campus, Page said. "Sometimes I think we don't tell them about the barriers and challenges that they're going to face," he said. "We need to let them know that they are going to be the only ones on campus." What's Next? It will be hard to tell when KU has met its minority enrollment goal. "Our goal should be that we're going to do better every year," Murguia said. "It's hard to settle in on a specific target." Murguia emphasized the importance of numbers for the University, but she also emphasized the quality of the environment that minority students lived in. "We recognize we want to build on the diversity we have here," she said, "but as important as it is to talk about our numbers, I'm more concerned about our message. Our message needs to be that we'll welcome all students, but that especially students of color are valued here." Hemenway said he did not have a specific goal, either. "I believe we can do more," he said. "But I don't believe in quotas." Page says he has focused less on numbers than others in the University's administration. "We could have one C'Nea Hatches or one Mark Dupree or one Tiffany Lopez and they could change the world." Page said, in reference to Black Student Union vice president and president, Hatches and Dupree, and Asian American Student Union president, Lopez. "Yeah, it would be great to have more students of color on campus but if we bring in more students, we've got to do more," he said. Edited by Christy Dendurent TOMMY YUAN Rachel Balzer, Whitewater sophomore, works in the Office of Multicultural Affairs as an assistant. The office is a popular gathering place for minority students. Scott Reynolds/Kansan Distribution by race/ethnicity at the University of Kansas 2.8% 1.1% 3.6% 2.8% 6.2% 2.7% White Non-Hispanic Black American Indian Asian Hispanic Nonresident Alien Unknown 3.6% 2.8% IN DIESEL JEANS. 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Call to register today! MCAT is a registered trademark of the American Association of Medical Colleges (AAMC). The Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton University or AAMC --- THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Research focuses on literacy in Kansas City By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer She may be a Kansas City, Kan., native, but Kate Hays' research on literacy issues taught her about the city's literacy problems. Kate Hays and five other students did research along the Kansas-Missouri state line for a course in the public service and community leadership minor. Their study specifically dealt with workplace literacy in the Kansas City metropolitan area. Hays said though she grew up in Kansas City, she was unaware the city had literacy problems with English as a second language and special education. The students' work focused on groups that provided literacy services and how businesses used those services. To conduct their research the students teamed up with Kansas City Consensus last semester. The Consensus works to identify and research critical issues in the city, said Ginger Bohachick, the organization's executive director. This isn't the first time the Consensus has worked with students The students interviewed 40 literacy service providers; two main ideas emerged from these interviews. bohachick said the partnership with the KU students was successful. They found literacy service providers needed to cooperate more, and they found businesses didn't understand the length of time need to become literate. Nels Lindahl, Overland Park senior who worked in the study said a regional literacy center might be more effective in uniting literacy programs. This center would address literacy issues ranging from learning disabilities to immigrants. Lindahl said businesses came to literacy programs to help their employees, but they expected fast results. Lindahl said literacy was a difficult task that could take hundreds of hours to achieve. "Currently there is not a very effective flow of money," Lindahl said. "There are so many organizations competing for the same revenue streams. None of them can get together." In late May, the group's findings will be presented to the greater Kansas City community in the form of a written report. Kansas City Consensus will also host community meetings with literacy groups and local businesses to come up with solutions, Bohachick said. Ray Davis, public administration associate professor and project adviser said most people didn't realize one out of five Americans have some kind of literacy issue. He said it was important to fix this problem because jobs required higher levels of literacy in today's economy. - Edited by Amber Byarlay U.S., North Korea attempt talks to end standoff The Associated Press SEOUL, South Korea — The United States and North Korea will try to resolve their six-month standoff over Pyongyang's suspected nuclear weapons program in talks arranged by China, the communist North's closest ally, U.S. and South Korean officials said yesterday. The Beijing talks could happen as early as next week, officials said. Japanese media, citing unnamed sources, said they would start April 23. In Washington, Secretary of State Colin Powell said the agreement to hold talks was good news but added that an early breakthrough was not in the offing. "We believe this is the beginning of a long, intense process of discussion," Powell said in an interview with Associated Press Television News. "We will lay out clearly our concerns about their nuclear weapons development programs and other weapons of mass destruction, of their proliferation activities, missile programs," among other issues, he said. China will participate in the discussions, the first between Washington and Pyongyang since U.S. officials said in October that North Korea admitted running a clandestine nuclear weapons program. Washington has called for multilateral talks to resolve the issue, and renewed its promise yesterday to try to bring other nations especially South Korea and Japan into the talks. Pyongyang earlier insisted on negotiations only with Washington, but agreed last week to allow China at the table. The talks likely will cool tensions on the Korean Peninsula, roiled for months by sabre-rattling rhetoric from North Korea and massive, joint U.S.-South Korean military drills. Powell said the mood on the peninsula is one of relative quiet, adding that this could auger well for the talks. "We are hopeful that nothing will happen that would make the political environment difficult," he said. As for the North's penchant for delivering inflammatory statements, Powell said, "They seem to be not more provocative than usual. By the standards of normal discourse between us and the DPRK, it is relatively calm." Yet there is a sense of urgency about the situation because North Korea, already believed to have one or two nuclear weapons, could extract enough plutonium for several more bombs within months if it begins reprocessing existing stocks of spent nuclear fuel. North Korea has accused the United States of planning to invade once the war in Iraq is over. President Bush — who once described North Korea as part of an "axis of evil" with Iran and Iraq — has said he wants to resolve the nuclear crisis peacefully, but he has not ruled out a military solution. North Korea has a history of engaging in tough bargaining in prolonged negotiations. Powell has said the quick U.S. military success in Iraq may have influenced Pyongyang's thinking on opening diplomatic discussions. "The one thing that is absolutely clear, is that at whatever level it starts, and with whatever attendance, it has to ultimately encompass the views and thoughts of all the neighbors in the region." Powell has said. In Seoul, South Korean Foreign Minister Yoon Young-kwan welcomed the talks but demanded that the meetings be expanded in the future to include Japan, Russia and South Korea. Seoul and Tokyo are considered key donors for the aid package that likely would be part of any deal with the impoverished North. "It is of paramount importance that talks begin to lay the foundation for a peaceful solution to this problem," Yoon said. "But we won't share the burden resulting from any talks that we do not participate in." Japanese Prime Minister junichiro Koizumi welcomed multilateral talks. "It's good for talks to begin; the countries involved will work with North Korea," he said. "This is something Japan desires, too." China first proposed the three-way talks in March, and the United States accepted the offer after consulting with South Korea, Yoon said. North Korea agreed last week. South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun said he believed North Korea "will take the road of reform and openness, if economic aid and its political system are guaranteed." Chinese diplomats repeatedly have delayed a discussion of the crisis in the U.N. Security Council. Last week, after agreeing to discuss the topic in the council, China blocked a motion by Washington to condemn North Korea. China's involvement in the talks is a victory for the Bush administration. College president resigns BOISE, Idaho - The president of the University of Idaho announced his resignation yesterday following the release of an audit critical of financial decisions concerning a $136 million building project. Bob Hoover, the university's head for nearly seven years, said the resignation would take effect June 30. Hoover, 61, is on administrative leave while he recovers from prostate cancer surgery earlier this month. University Place a planned complex of offices, classrooms, laboratories and retail space in downtown Boise has been dogged by questions over money loaned by the school to the University of Idaho Foundation, which has funded the project. Critics contend that loaning public money to the foundation _ a quasi-private group _ was improper because it mixed taxpayer dollars with private funds and provided no control or accountability. "It is clear that I did not pursue my oversight of this project aggressively enough," Hoover said in a statement. The independent audit also blamed a university vice president who controlled accounts for both the university and the foundation for shaky financial decisions. "(Foundation) funding authorization was obtained after the fact, contracts were signed after the fact with retroactive dating," the report said. Anti-terror tactics under fire by critics The Associated Press VIENNA, Austria - Antiterrorism measures introduced since the Sept. 11 attacks are severely curtailing human rights and civil liberties in much of the world, a prominent watchdog group said yesterday. The measures often threaten freedoms because they are too broad, too vague and applied too arbitrarily, the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights contended in its report. "We are accomplishing the goal that (terrorists) are allegedly pursuing," said Aaron Rhodes, director of the Vienna-based federation. Limited breaches of human rights would be expected in an emergency situation, such as the period immediately following the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, Rhodes said. But governments in the post-Sept. 11 era have failed to "minimize the erosion of rights," he added. "Terrorist suspects have rights also," Rhodes said. "We are accomplishing the goal that (terrorists) are allegedly pursuing." Aaron Rhodes director of the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights Since Sept. 11, the report says, countries have increased powers of law enforcement and intelligence institutions; introduced measures allowing authorities to intercept private communications and search homes without safeguards; tightened border controls; introduced firmer asylum and immigration laws; and authorized registration and profiling schemes that appear to target certain groups because of their race, ethnicity or religion. Aging disorder linked to mutation in gene The group studied measures in 55 countries that are members of the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe a security organization which also includes the United States. The Associated Press WASHINGTON - A rare disorder that turns children into old people and often causes them to die in their teens has been linked to a single genetic mutation, a finding that may help science learn more about normal aging as well. The disorder, called Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome, is caused by a single "misspelling" or misplaced DNA molecule within the human genome that contains some three billion DNA units, said Dr. Francis Collins, head of the National Human Genome Research Institute and the senior author of a report appearing this week in the journal Nature. Victims of progeria appear normal at birth, but by 18 months begin to develop symptoms of accelerated aging. The skin takes on the appearance of the very old, bones become fragile and most of the children are bald by the age of four. The children never grow much taller than three feet. Their internal organs also quickly age and death is usually caused by heart disease or stroke at an average age of 13. Even as teenagers, said Dr. W Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome, a rare disorder that turns children into old people and often causes them to die in their teens, has been linked to a single genetic mutation, a finding that may help science learn more about normal aging. The disorder is caused by a misplaced DNA molecule within the human genome that contains some three billion DNA units. Ted Brown, the children with progeria will weigh only 30 to 35 pounds. Children with disorder, however, tend to have above-average intelligence, said Brown, a coauthor who has studied progeria for 20 years at the New York State Institution for Basic Research in Development Disabilities. John Tacket, a 15-year-old from Bay City, Mich., who has progeria, said at the news conference that he was just a regular guy who is "very content" even though he knows his disease is fatal. Tacket, who stands about three feet high, is a ninth grader who is a whiz at math and an expert pool player. He has a job as a cashier at Progeria affects only about one baby per 4 million to 8 million worldwide, according to the Progeria Research Foundation. The disease was first identified in 1886, but Brown said it has been difficult to study because "there are only a handful or so alive at one time." He said about one patient with progeria is born each year in the U.S. A scarf covered his bald head. But angina, a symptom of advancing heart disease usually seen in people in their 60s and 70s, is already causing him to limit some physical activities. Collins and his co-authors found the mutation on a gene called lamin A in DNA specimens from 18 of 20 progeria patients. A similar study, appearing in the journal Science, found the gene mutation in two progeria patients. a Bay City restaurant. Lamin A, or LMNA, has already been linked to six other diseases. The mutation and the effect is slightly different, on a molecular basis, in each of the diseases. Linking LMNA to aging, said Collins, means that studying the gene "may provide us with a bet- genetic complim progeria patients a parents. He said they found 18 of the patients shared the same mutation in the LMNA gene on Chromosome 1 The flaw, he said, was a substitution of single DNA base. The amino acid guanine is switched to adenine. "Initially, we could hardly believe that such a small substitution was the culprit," said Maria Eriksson, a researcher at the NHGRI and the first author of the study in Nature. "How could these bland-looking mutations lead to such terrible consequences?" Collins said that only recent advances in sequencing of the human genome, or genetic structure, enabled researchers to find the misplaced amino acid. Try an Italian Spritzer! La Prima Tazza Collins said that disease is not genetically inherited but develops "de novo," or new, in each patient. He said there is a suggestion that the progeria gene is transferred to the embryo through a flaw in the genes of the father's sperm. "Sparkling water with any flavor you desire." In the study, Collins said researchers looked at the genetic compliment of 20 progeria patients and their parents. Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE ter understanding of what occurs in the body as we all grow older." The Tea Shop Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew FRY-WAGNER MOVING & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Equal-Employment-Opportunity Employer An agreement by Federal Pet Lease $ $ Need a Job? BOSTON BARTENDERS SCHOOL OF AMERICA BE A BARTENDER! - Special student discount - Hands on training/niteclub setting - National Alcohol Awareness Certification - Super job placement assistance - Conveniently located in downtown Kansas City CALL TODAY! 1-816-221-8555 www.bostonbartender.com 8A= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 Methodist works to improve youth-pastor connections By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Every face in the crowd and every name in the phonebook has a story behind it. Every week, Kansan writer Megan Hickerson tells the story of a randomly selected KU student. Arthur Jones is working to improve the relationship between Methodist youths and their pastors. The Dallas freshman is a member of the General Board of Discipleship, a 13-year old national Methodist organization that provides resources to help church leaders encourage their congregations to be disciples of Jesus Christ. Jones is one of the youngest members of the organization to attend regular meetings. He was raised going to church every Sunday as a child. Although he was denied some things, such as watching The Simpsons, he appreciated his Christian upbringing. Jones said he planned on going into the ministry and becoming a pastor after college as his father did. Jones will be the fifth generation of Methodist pastors in his family. "My dad had such a good relationship with youth in the church," Jones said. Unlike his father, Jones said, the pastor at Trietsch Memorial United Methodist in Dallas communicated poorly with youths in the congregation. "My pastor is afraid of youth," Jones said. "The only time that a youth Bible study was held, he was shaking the whole time." Jones is trying to change this relationship. He attends youth ministry conferences six times a year, where he participates in discussions about improving the Methodist church. "The Methodist church began as a movement of young people who wanted to teach others about God," Jones said. "I want another movement to begin, whether they're old people, young people — it doesn't matter." Marynell Jones, Arthur's twin sister, sees many similarities in her brother and father. "Arthur and my dad are both good public speakers," Marynell Jones, Dallas freshman, said. "They have a way of getting the message across without being condemning." Jones rises early every Tuesday and Friday morning to volunteer at the Jubilee Café, 10th and Vermont streets, serving food to the homeless. "It really changes my sleep schedule but it helps me stay focused," he said. 1980 Dan Nelson/Kansan Edited by Andrew Ward Arthur Jones, Dallas freshman, is active in the youth ministry of the Methodist church. Jones comes from a long line of Methodist pastors and plans on entering the ministry himself. Architecture students design building interiors for agency By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Food normally doesn't appear on the resumes of most architecture students, but Kristin Winters, St. Louis senior, received "The whole enchillada" award and $100 for a project she designed for Van Go Mobile Arts. A panel of judges chose Winters' design us the best fit for the agency's goals among seven entries from University of Kansas students. Heather Hoy, development specialist for Van Go, said the company gave each student an award named after a foodlic che Twelve fourth-year architecture students in a computer-based architectural design class agreed to create design ideas for Van Go, 715 New Jersey St. to make use of a warehouse. Lynne Green, executive director of Van Go, approached the School of Architecture and asked whether students would be willing to help develop design ideas for the interior of the warehouse. Van Go made the assignment a competition and offered first- and second-place prizes. But each student in the class received a cash prize of at least $50 because of a $300 donation from Dru Sampson, KU alumna and Lawrence resident who viewed the students' presentations on Friday. Van Go is an arts-based nonprofit social service agency that employs high-risk youth in Lawrence to create artwork sold in the community. The agency owns part of the space in the warehouse and plans to raise money to purchase the rest of the space. Paola Sanguinetti, professor of architecture and urban design who teaches the class, said she consulted the students first to see whether they were interested. She said the class voted to take on the project to have a break from a semester-long class project. Students designed and submitted the projects individually or in groups in one week. They designed how the interior of the warehouse would look including walls, ideas for an art gallery space and functional workshop space. Winters said she tried to make her design as flexible as possible to allow for Van Go's changing needs. She said the class members thought their work was for a worthy cause, and Van Go appreciated the work students put into the projects. "It was really cool to have almost a real client, not someone who is into all the theory behind architecture," she said. Steve Mueller, St. Louis senior, worked with Adam Gumowski, Barrington, Ill., graduate student. The team tied Keith Van de Riet, St. Louis senior, for second place, and received $75. design used a sequence of frames that were incorporated throughout the building. Mueller said the two received the "Pie in the sky" award because their idea was interesting and attractive but not economically practical. Mueller said his design was presented first, and he thought Green was impressed with the presentations. "I think she was expecting chicken-scratch floor plans, and we came in with all these digital images," he said. "Her mouth was just hanging open for the entire presentation." Mueller and Gumowski's — Edited by Julie Jantzer FOREST BOUNDING OPPORTUNITY The Fun is a Click Away Orchard Corners Apartments A small community offering! Offer: - 2 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - 4 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - 4 BR - 2 Bath - Furnished & unfurnished apartments - Private patio or balcony - On KU bus route - Small pets welcome - On-site laundry - Friendly on-site manager - Dorm units available - Sparkling pool Models open daily 749-4226 15th & Kasold Mon. - Fri. 9:00 - 5:00 Optional Campus Fees is now integrated with Online Enrollment. Sign up for Options during online enrollment. Optional Campus Fees Sign Up Instructions: 1. Sign In enroll & pay 2. Click Enroll and Pay 3. Click Learner Services 4. Click Academics or Finances 5. Click KU Optional Fees 6. Select your Options 7. Click yellow Save button *DO NOT CLICK ON BACK ARROW IN WEB BROWSER SLAB, BOCO, Tradition Keepers, Jayhawker Yearbook, KU on Wheels, All Sports Combo, All-Arts Package, Parking, Career Services, SUA Movie Card, Park & Ride www.ku.edu/~options The devotion known as Stations of the Cross is an adaptation of a custom widely observed by pilgrims to Jerusalem, the offering of prayers at a series of places in the city traditionally associated with Jesus Christ's passion and death. Station I: 9:15am Jesus is Condemned to Death Station II: 9:30 Jesus Takes Up His Cross Station III: 9:45 Jesus Falls the First Time Under the Cross Station IV: 10:00 Jesus Meets His Mother Station V: 10:15 Simon of Cyrene is Forced to Take Up the Cross Station VI: 10:30 Veronica Wipes the Face of Jesus Station VII: 10:45 Jesus Falls a Second Time Station VIII: 11:00 Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem Station IX: 11:15 Jesus Falls a Third Time Station X: 11:30 Jesus is Stripped of His Garments Station XI: 11:45 Jesus is Nailed to the Cross Station XII: 12:00pm Jesus Dies on the Cross Station XIII: 12:15 The Body of Jesus is Placed in the Arms of His Mother Station XIV: 12:30 Jesus is Laid in the Tomb stations of the cross: The trial and execution of Jesus Christ, 14 scenes from the Last Day Twente Hall Blake Hall Fraser Hall Stauffer-Flint Hall Wescoe Hall Anschutz Library Budig Hall Marvin Hall Lindley Hall jayhawk boulevard Dantforth Chapel IX. Spooner Hall Smith Hall KS Union XIII. Lippincott Hall Bailey Hall Strong Hall Snow Hall Chi Omega Fountain Vietnam Memorial Good Friday, April 18th A pilgrimage through KU Campus, beginning at the Vietnam Memorial at 9am, following the traditional stations of the Cross. Join the pilgrimage as your schedule permits. People are encouraged to walk the entire pilgrimage, or just some of the pilgrimage. Sponsored by: Apostolic Catholic Church, Lutheran Campus Ministry (ELCA), Ecumenical Christian Ministries (PCUSA/Presbyterian, UCC/United Church of Christ, Brethren, Guaker), Canterbury House (Episcopal), and United Methodist Christian Ministry. Call ECM 843-4933 for more information. LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID SMOONERS • COCKTAILS • RUBARS • POOL 1009 MASS . LAWRENCE stations of the cross: The trial and execution of Jesus Christ, 14 scenes from the Last Day Twente Hall VIII. Blake Hall VII. Watson Library Anschutz Library VI. Fraser Hall V. Budig Hall Marvin Hall Lindley Hall Stauffer-Flint Hall Wescoe Hall IV. III. II. jayhawk boulevard Danforth Chapel IX. X. Spooner Hall XIII. Lippincott Hall XIV. Bailey Hall Chi Omega Fountain Strong Hall Snow Hall I. XII. Dyche Hall Vietnam Memorial Smith Hall XI. KS Union Good Friday, April 18th A pilgrimage through KU Campus, beginning at the Vietnam Memorial at 9am, following the traditional Stations of the Cross. Join the pilgrimage as your schedule permits. People are encouraged to walk the entire pilgrimage, or just some of the pilgrimage. Sponsored by: Apostolic Catholic Church, Lutheran Campus Ministry (ELCA), Ecumenical Christian Ministries (PCUSA/Presbyterian, UCC/United Church of Christ, Brethren, Quaker), Canterbury House (Episcopal), and United Methodist Christian Ministry. Call ECM 843-4933 for more information. THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A New bookstore adds touch of culture By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer David Wilcox's distinctive folk music plays softly while customers quietly sip coffee and converse. A young man peruses theology books while a middle-aged bald man chats at the register with an employee — all in all a typical day at Signs of Life. "Art, books, music and coffee, these are our passions," said manager John McClain. The new bookstore opened three weeks ago at 722 Massachusetts St., the former home of Danish Inspirations. The store is home to a variety of books, an espresso bar and an art gallery. The gallery and coffee bar opened about five to six weeks ago, McClain said. McClain began work on opening the store about a year ago with store owner Clay Belcher and gallery curator James Schaefer. "We want people to think about important ideas," McClaim said. He said he left his job in advertising to be a resource to the Christian community and to be a positive role in culture. "We really don't think of ourselves as a Christian bookstore," McClain said. "We're a couple of Christian guys; we love good books, good art and good music." According to McClain, about 70 percent of the books in the store fall under the genre of Christian Theology. Their music selection, which is growing, includes work from Christian, jazz, folk and Americana styles. The store also features live musical performers, such as a bluegrass group from Americana Music Academy. The musicians either perform in front of the large store-front windows or on a stage in the back. "I just like the atmosphere," said Mindy Young, Wichita senior and first-time customer. "It's wholesome, it's comfortable." McClain's wife, Kristen, liked the concept of combining an art gallery with a bookstore. "I think it shows that Christians have an interest in art and culture," Kristen said. At the heart of all this activity, the espresso bar, several tables, chairs and couches are spread out in front of the coffee counter. "We want to bring culture to downtown," McClain said, "We want to be part of that culture." McClain puts in about 50 to 60 hours a week running Signs of Life with Schaefer and Belcher. The store is open everyday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., except Sunday. The gallery's first show, "Light and Shadow Never Stand Still", opened March 7, and featured landscape work from a variety of artists including photographer Edward C. Robinson III, abstract artist George Wingate and landscape painter James Winn. Winn described his art in a pre- pared statement for the show. "My intention, the real subject, is an attempt to present the Sublime, to give the viewer a glimpse of the Transcendent nature." The gallery's next show will feature the work of Bruce Herman. The show will open Friday. Herman will be available to speak with at the opening from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., and he will be speaking at 8 p.m. on Saturday at the store. Schaefer said a great deal of Herman's work dealt with suffering. "He has made me realize, I would avoid suffering at all costs," Schaefer said, "It definitely pierced some darkness in my life." Schaefer said he was working on a list of philosophy, theology and art books that inspired the artists the gallery featured. He said he wanted to make the list available to customers. Signs of Life's peer bookstores have been receptive to the idea of a new Christian bookstore in town. Michael Martell, owner of the Catholic bookstore Lumena Books, 2201 W 25th St. Suite G, said he had heard rumors of a store opening downtown. Martel said now that the rumor has been confirmed, he would pay his fellow Christian book slingers a visit. Edited by Brandon Gay Testimony begins in CU dismissal case The Associated Press DENVER — Testimony has begun in the court case the former chief of the University of Colorado medical school, who was forced out of his chairmanship last year, brought against the school. dismissal from the administrative position. Robert Schrier still is a professor at the medical school but has gone to court in Denver to try to force the university to rescind his Phillip Wolf is another professor at the medical school and on Tuesday told the court that Schrier covered himself and the school in glory during the years he was in leadership. Wolf said during the 26 years Schrier was in the post, he raised millions in grant money and other funding. The program attracted the brightest faculty and residents, said Michael D. Iseman, another professor of medicine. And the dismissal tainted Schrier's stellar reputation, said Thomas Eugene Andrelli, chairman of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences department of internal medicine. "When an event such as this occurs people say, 'My goodness, here is a man who has done a spectacular job. Why has he been dismissed? Is there some kind of impropriety on his part?" Andreoli said. Schrier is asking U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Boyd Boland to rescind the dismissal. Schrier alleged that school administrators dumped him because he was vocal in opposing relocation of CU's medical school and hospital to the former Fitzsimons Army Medical Center site in Aurora. OK We Did It FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBITS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE C 75172181 G WASHINGTON, D.C. C 75172181 G SUPRESIDENT JOHN H. RADNER SECRETARY OF THE TRUMPSY ONE DOLLAR OK We Did It FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE C 75172181 G WASHINGTON, D.C. C 75172181 G ONE DOLLAR ANYTHING Fridays COME BACK! BACARDI FEAR FACTOR PROMO sports • music darts • billiards JACK FLANIGANS Bar and Grill Just off 23rd behind McDonalds ¢749-HAWK Fridays - 21 to Enter ANYTHING Fridays COME BACK! BACARDI FEAR FACTOR PROMO sports • music darts • billiards JACK FLANIGANS Bar and Grill Just off 23rd behind McDonalds #749-HAWK Fridays - 21 to Enter sports music darts billiards JACK FLANIGANS Bar and Grill kansan.com We Buy, Sell Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts SUNDSINCE 7th & Florida 7th & Formal NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Studios, 1BR, 2BR, 3 BR w/ 2 baths & 4 BR w/ 2 baths - Furnished Apt. Available - Furnished Apt. 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Plymouth UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 925 Vermont Street www.plymouthlawrence.com Every Sunday 9:30 Traditional Worship 11:15 Contemporary Worship Plymouth A CHRISTIAN CITY HIGHCHURCH Plymouth CONFERENCE CENTER UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 925 Vermont Street www.plymouthlawrence.com Every Sunday 9:30 Traditional Worship 11:15 Contemporary Worship Summit House Apartments Now taking applications for Fall 2003 - $475-490 • 1 BR & 1 BR Loft Apartment Available • Water and trash paid • Walking distance to Campus • Laundry facilities on site • Private off street parking • 24 hr. Emergency maintenance Call (785) 841-1429 for details Mon-Fri 9 am - 6 pm 1105 Louisiana EHO NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews INFOBANK Now. NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews kansan.com Gymnast's love for sport inspires club President of University organization looks to continue years of experience By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Standing tall at 4-foot-11 and wearing a size-3 shoe, Amy Postel sees many advantages to being small. "I'd get kids meals and kids movie passes until I turned 16," she said. "Being so short saves me money." Being slight also allowed the Dallas junior to excel at gymnastics. She is the president and founder of the KU Gymnastics Club. She has been involved in the sport since she was a child. Postel's parents enrolled her in a gymnastics class when she was 3-years-old, and she began competing seriously in high school. After a few gymnastics classes, Postel perfected handstands. "Iused to drive my parents crazy because I'll walk around the house on my hands until all the blood would rush to my head," Postel said. "I can stay up for about 10 minutes." Postel's parents were used to the five-hour drive from Dallas to Houston for their daughter's competitions in high school. Her father, Alan, reluctantly went to most of her tournaments. "You sit there for three hours to watch you daughter perform for five minutes," Alan Postel said. "I used to drive my parents crazy because I'll walk around the house on my hands until all the blood would rush to my head.I can stay up for about 10 minutes." Amy Postel Dallas junior "Winning wasn't as important to her. She just wanted to do her best." She wasn't ready to give up her hobby when she came to college. After having problems with liability issues, Postel finalized plans for the club in November. Alan Postel said he knew it wouldn't be long before his daughter got approval from KU Recreation Services. "If Amy really wants something, they might as well just give in to her at the start," he said. "She wasn't going to give up." The club now has 20 members. No experience is necessary to join it. For $15 a semester, members have access to the gymnasium in Robinson Center and equipment, and the remaining money goes to social activities for team members. Dan Nelson/Kansan Amy Postel, Dallas junior and KU Gymnastics Club president, practiced gymnastics in Robinson Center. Postel and other gymnasts formed the club last semester. Postel said she wanted to gain that would be above the groun more members and equipment for the club, including a foam pit —Edited by Amber Byarlay TANGLEWOOD APARTMENTS 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished Studios, 1and 2 Bedroom apartment homes. - Laundry facilities on site - Fully equipped kitchens (dishwashers*), disposal, stove, refrigerator, microwave) - Within walking distance to KU campus - Telephone and cable outlets in each bedroom Control Air - Central Air - On-sitemanager - Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 - 24 emergency maintenance Equal Housing Opportunity *Available in select units Hanover Place Apartments Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! 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(785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO 2003 STUDENT SENATE Brazilian Steak Salad Shrimp Tacos .Fish Tacos Steak Rice Bowl Brazilian Lemonade Horchata Suiza Enchiladas MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, APRIL 14-18, 2003 O Exp. 04/30/03 TASTE OF ASIA DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCOE) with the purchase of an entree SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 2003 TUESDAY: DRAGON DANCE (11-2PM AT WESCOE) TUESDAY: HENNA TATTOOS (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) AASU APPRECIATION RECEPTION (6PAM AT KANSAS ROOM, KANSAS UNION) WEDNESDAY: "HEREANDNOW" PERFORMANCE (7:30PM AT WOODDRUFF AUDITORIUM) THURSDAY: JAPANESE CALLIGRAPHY AND ORIGAMI (11-2PM AT KANSAS UNION LOBBY) PROFESSOR POK CHI LAU BOOK SIGNING (5-6:30PM AT OREAD BOOK, KANSAS UNION) AW: "TAI CHI" DEMONSTRATION (11-1AT WESCOE) FREE Soft drink a FOOD: 5:30PM AT ECM PERFORMANCES: 7:30 BALLROOM, KANSAS UNION FRI. & SAT. TIL 3 A.M. LA PARRILLA LATIN AMERICAN CUISINE Fresh. Authentic. Affordable. Good! 814 Massachusetts St - 841-1100 Open Daily for Lunch & Dinner Family-Style Pasta LA $2.00 Killian's Red Bud Light $2.50 Bloody Marys Wednesday MONDAY $2 off Big Pasta $2 off Schooners Weekly specials BAMBINO'S ITALIAN CAFÉ 1801 MASSACHUSETTS 832-8000 $1 Boulevard Draws $5 Pitchers $2 Wheat Bottles TUESDAY FRIDAY and Saturday $3 Jumbo (32 oz.) Margaritas NOW OPEN LATE $2 Bottles $2 Red Bull Vodka Live Music at 10:00PM thursday Sunday Hair Experts Design Team 100 - B.West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) THE UNIVERSITY TREATRE The University of Kansas The University Theatre and the Department of Theatre and Film Invite you to a Sneak Preview of KU Alumnus Neil LaBute new film they're back...! they're back...! welcomes our wonderful alumni for alums come home TV Nov 24, 27, 2019 The Shape of Things 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 25, 2003 Liberty Hall See our former students perform for open mic night immediately following the film General admission tickets are on sale through the University Theatre Ticket Office and at the door; for reservations, call 785/864-3982; all seats $10; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. For additional information call The University Theatre, 785/864-3381 Cash bar available at Liberty Hall THURSDAY,APRIL 17,2003 SPORTS Softball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A only two singles as she improved her record to 15-10. Bunge said her squad could not lean on Pierce's shoulders for a victory. "We can't only rely on Kara." Bunge said. "We need the offense." The victory marked the 200th for Kansas at Jayhawk Field, but the situation was far from rosy as far as Bunge was concerned. She said that if it weren't for the play of Frankenstein, Pierce and junior first baseman Leah Mountain the 'Hawks could have easily lost the final game. "Right now we have a lot of people not doing what they should be doing." Bunge said. Kansas will travel to Austin, Texas, Saturday for its final road trip of the season. The Jayhawks will take on the Texas Longhorns in a doubleheader starting at noon. Edited by Julie Jantzer Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY TOMORROW Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Men's basketball awards banquet, 7 p.m., Lied Center Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 6:35 p.m., in Norman, Okla SATURDAY Kansas Relays, Memorial Stadium Tennis vs. Texas A&M, noon at the Robinson courts Softball at Texas, noon and 2 p.m. in Austin, Texas Baseball at Oklahoma, 2 p.m., in Norman, Okla. Rowing dual with Kansas State, in Manhattan Women's golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. SUNDAY Baseball at Oklahoma, 1 p.m., in Norman, Okla. Women's golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. Firing football coach Terry Allen Beer before football games What was kansan.com Kansas athletics director Al Bohl's best move? Bohl's best move? Hiring baseball coach Ritch Price Beer before football games POLL ■ Hiring baseball coach Ritch Price ■ His best is yet to come: moving out of Lawrence Log on to www.kansan.com to vote. Free forAll in Roy Williams wants to go choke at North Carolina,let him go choke at North Carolina because frankly, I was getting sick of him choking here. in Roy Williams wants to go choke at North Carolina,let him go choke at North Carolina because frankly, I was getting sick of him choking here. How do you spell the future of KU basketball? Rick Pitino. A little message to Roy Williams: You don't know what you got 'til it's gone. in Roy Williams wants to go choke at North Carolina,let him go choke at North Carolina because frankly, I was getting sick of him choking here. Saddam fled from Baghdad, and Roy fled from Kansas. I now officially hate Mondays. I can't believe how Roy Williams sees Kansas as a stepping stone to North Carolina. To the basketball team: Remember, you guys are Kansas basketball, not Roy Williams. I hope you all intend to stay because we the fans support and love you. in Roy Williams wants to go choke at North Carolina,let him go choke at North Carolina because frankly, I was getting sick of him choking here. Roy. in Roy Williams wants to go choke at North Carolina,let him go choke at North Carolina because frankly, I was getting sick of him choking here. --the only address you need to know. This one goes out to all the people who were at the airport wishing Roy a fond farewell. That man betrayed you. You guys are idiots. You shouldn't have been there. Screw the only address you need to know. I feel like I've just been hit by a bus. A bus with a big UNC logo, driven by Roy Williams. the only address you need to know. Roy, your tears mean nothing. If you love Kansas so much, you should have just stayed. the only address you need to know. the only address you need to know. Does it make anybody else sick that Roy's on ESPN now, trying to recruit David Paddett away from us to go to UNC? You're pathetic and I hope you get fired after five years there, you loser. the only address you need to know. Hey Keith, don't go. You have to lead us to the national championship next year. the only address you need to know. Sayonara, Roy. Don't let the door hit you in the ass on your way out. You know, Roy Williams should put out an instructional sex guide called "101 Ways to Screw KU." the only address you need to know. You can't take away a man's dream. God bless you, Roy. the only address you need to know. The Kansan said that Williams left one hill for another hill. No, he left a mountain for a hill. A mountain. the only address you need to know. This is all Mama Phog's fault. 图 Yeah, I've got a serious case of the Mondays. the only address you need to know. 21 to Enter NO COVER! BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL FEATURING The AREAS LARGEST APPETIZER MENU! SERVED TIL CLOSE! Lawrence, KS 1105 Mass. Lawrence, KS COME IN TONIGHT FOR... $2 Pit-cheers while they last! NEW 2 triple wells 40 Taps with 28 Flavors Flowing. It's like a Kid in a Candy Store! $2 50 JUMBO LONG ISLANDS $2 U-CALL-ITS "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" earth day celebration 11AM - Parade begins at 11th & Massachusetts St Tuesday, April 22nd Earth Day Speaker: James Kunstler Saturday, April 19th 11:30 AM - 4 PM-Celebration at South Park on the west side of Mass. St. SPM = "Development In Lawrence" discussion Lawrence Public Library Children's Activities In Lawrence" discussion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN • 11A KU ENVIRONS STUDENT SENATE Recycling and Recycling and Resource Conservation Advisory Board Accoustic and Bluegrass Music featuring Mark Lyda (11:30AM) Prarie Acre (1PM),and $2 Show Revival Story (2PM) Food, and Environmental Organizations! LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 2858 Four Wheel Dr. Walk to Campus Campus Place APARTMENTS 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Apartments Available for Summer 2003 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft 4 bedroom/2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath - Fully Equipped Kitchens - Gas , Heat and Water - Furnished & Unfurnished Apt.available - Off Street Parking - 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance - On-site Manager - Private Balconies & Patios Call or stop in TODAY for private showing Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm EHO EAT THE LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER and. The Lawrence Arts Center present The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams Directed by Paul Stephen Lim Scenic Design by Kaye Miller Lighting Design by Lee Saylor Original Music by Karl Ramberg 8 PM April 16, 17, 18 2:30 PM April 19 Tickets (785) 843-2787 S6 students $8 seniors $10 others Lawrence Arts Center 940 New Hampshire Featuring Amy Devil, Arm Carrion, Jacqueline Grunan, Jerry Annua, John Younger, Karl Hamberg, Mick Crenn, Brenda Dalmau, Ryan Fimbing, Brian Gray and Paul Snellburger, Mage Manager, Kirby Fields. --- WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) 1520 wescoe 1520 WESCOE services available - copies - printing from disk or electronic file - full color printing - large format print - thesis and dissertation printing - uv lamination of large format prints - resume printing - binding services - transparencies 864-3354 open 7am-10pm FORALLYOUR PRINTINGAND BINDING NEEDS 1 --- 12A= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS EVERYTHING BUT ICE THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 Red Lapon Town FRAMEWOODS 6th Annual 1/2 OFF SALE SATURDAY ONLY • APRIL 19th 9:30 am - 5:00 pm • All in-stock regular priced pictures (framed or unframed) • Limited Editions • Posters FRAMEWOODS 819 MASSACHUSETTS 842-4900 SALE INCLUDES: • KU MEMORABILIA • JAYDREAMIN • REDLIN • DOOLITLE • ROSAMOND • EARNES • ETC. MISCELLANEOUS FRAMEWOODS 6th Annual 1/2 OFF SALE SATURDAY ONLY • APRIL 19th 9:30 am - 5:00 pm • All In-stock regular priced pictures (framed or unframed) • Limited Editions • Posters FRAMEWOODS 819 MASSACHUSETTS 842-4900 SALE INCLUDES: • KU MEMORABILIA • JAYDREAMIN • REDLIN • DOOLITITLE • ROSAMOND • EARNES • ETC. MISCELLANEOUS *CONSIGNMENT, SOME AUTOGRAPH MEMORBILIA & CUSTOM FRAMING EXCLUDED Register Your Internship You could be selected as the UCES Intern of the Month! Rate your expériences to help your fellow internship-seeking peers. It's easy, Just go to our website! While you are there, join the Internship Listserv Share your knowledge and get tips on: • Networking into full-time • Dealing with your supervisor • Skill building For students with Internships during the past year (Summer 2002, Fall 2002, or Spring 2003) Internship Contest 2 Categories to Enter • Internship Poster • Internship Portfolio see website for details www.ku.edu/~uces/internships 2 Winners in each category! U C E S university career and employment services 864-3624 DEADLINE: APRIL 30th Register Your Internship You could be selected as the UCES Intern of the Month! Rate your experiences to help your fellow internship-seeking peers. It's easy, Just go to our website! While you are there, join the Internship Listserv Share your knowledge and get tips on: • Networking into full-time • Dealing with your supervisor • Skill building Internship Contest For students with Interships during the past year (Summer 2002, Fall 2002, or Spring 2003) 2 Categories to Enter • Internship Poster • Internship Portfolio see website for details 2 Winners in each category! U C E S university career and employment services 864-3624 DEADLINE: APRIL 30th Problems to come for camp now that Williams has left By Nikki Overfelt overfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Your picture taken with Roy Williams: a priceless memory of going to the Roy Williams Basketball Camp. "Roy can no longer be on the first floor of our house," Andy Hickerson said her son told her. Not anymore, according to Jay Hickerson. May 2021 graduate. The status of the Roy Williams basketball camp is unknown at this time, Tami Hoffman, the camp's secretary, said. Hickerson's mom, Andy Hickerson, said her son went to the basketball camp the last year Larry Brown coached at the University of Kansas and the first year that Williams coached at the University. The picture of Jay Hickerson and Williams had always been proudly displayed in a downstairs room in the Hickerson's home in Mission Hills until yesterday, Andy Hickerson said. In its place she found a picture of her son and Larry Brown. Participants enrolled in the Roy Williams Basketball Camp this summer don't know who their picture will be taken with, if at all. "Everything is up in the air" she said. "We'll know more next week." She plans on notifying parents as soon as she has answers, Hoffman said. The camp is scheduled for June 15 to 19 and June 22 to 26. Both sessions are already full, with more than 500 boys in each session. Patty Noland, career development coordinator for the School of Journalism, made plans in December to send her 11-year-old son to the camp. He has attended the camp for the past two years. "We're really hopeful that it still happens," she said. "I know my son is very anxious because he still wants to go. His whole joy is just going to camp." Noland's son, Peter Fleuerbom, said assistant coaches should run the camp because Williams is gone. "Instead of having it be the Roy Williams Basketball Camp, it should just be the Kansas Basketball Camp," he said. Feuerborn is hoping he won't have to find another basketball camp to attend this summer. "I'd be pretty disappointed if they didn't have the camp," he said. Beau Jackson, Wichita senior attended the camp from fourth to sixth grade. Highlights of his time with Williams included meeting Michael Jordan and Danny Manning, he said. "It was three awesome experiences," he said. Jackson said the University should try to bring back more former players to offset the absence of Williams. "I think they should definitely still hold the camp," he said. If they cancel it, Jackson said, the people the making decisions will be sending the message that basketball at the University isn't as valuable without Williams. Jackson said he didn't plan on taking revenge on his three pictures with Williams. Edited by Amber Byarlay Malashock CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A talked about it Saturday, that it's really no good that I have a ball club that's really tight. It's tough when you start to get that way and start to notice every little thing that goes against you." Then, the Jayhawks dropped a game. And then another. And another. As the losses mounted — the Oklahoma losses started a 4-11 streak — the losses hurt the Jayhawks less and less. Losing, as the streak proves, really is contagious. That is, if you let it be, according to Bunge. "It's kind of like we're waiting for something bad to happen out there," Bunge said. "The bottom line is, and I Kansas showed the first signs of snapping out of its rut yesterday. After dropping the first of two games to Arkansas, the Jayhawks defeated the Razorbacks, 1-0, behind a complete-game two-hitter from Kansas junior pitcher Kara Pierce. It was Kansas' first victory in 11 days. Bunge's talks of playing loose obviously assisted a Kansas squad that played flawless softball in yesterday's second game. The 'Hawks did not commit an error. They didn't pound the ball at the plate, but they scored early after freshman infielder Destiny Frankenstein doubled. And Pierce made the run stand. And as quickly as the losing streak appeared, it may have vanished away yesterday. Trends can shift that swiftly just ask the Royals. Malashock is an Omaha, Neb., senior in journalism. As an engineer in the U.S. Air Force, there’s no telling what you’ll work on. (Seriously, we can’t tell you.) United States Air Force applied technology is years ahead of what you’ll touch in the private sector, and as a new engineer you’ll likely be involved at the ground level of new and sometimes classified developments. You’ll begin leading and managing within this highly respected group from day one. Find out what’s waiting behind the scenes for you in the Air Force today. To request more information, call 1-800-423-USAF or log on to airforce.com. U.S.AIR FORCE CROSS INTO THE BLUE U.S.AIR FORCE CROSS INTO THE BLUE TONIGHT AT LAST CALL Thursday Night Special $1.75 Pints & $1.50 Shots OTHER HOT NIGHTS INCLUDE: HAWK ROCK - Lawrence's Hottest Dance Party Wednesdays Friday Night LADIES NIGHT- No cover for ladies $2 Corona – $2.25 Smirnoff drinks Saturday Night $3 Double Redbull Vodka’s – $4 Pitchers Please Join us at Lawrence’s Hottest and Newest Dance Club/Bar!! Presented by Blue Moon Productions LAST CALL Doors open at 8:00 p.m. 729 New Hampshire (785)838-4623 LAST CALL LAWRENCE, KS DANCE CLUB & BAR TONIGHT AT LAST CALL Presented by Blue Moon LAST CALL Doors open at 8:00 p.m. 729 New Hampshire (785)838-4623 LAST CALL LAWRENCE, KS DANCE CLUB & BAR THURSDAY,APRIL 17,2003 ENTERTAINMENT ... THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 13A WEATHER TODAY TOMORROW 65 45 cool and partly cloudy Rainy day SATURDAY 7250 thunderstorms late in the afternoon Rainy day 65 44 scattered thunderstorms and showers TIM BUSH, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE DOCKBOYS by Scott Drummond, for The University Daily Kansan AFTER A TERRIBLE BREAKUP... JAY, YOU'VE GOTTA PULL YOURSELF OUT OF BED. GO AWAY. NO, SERIOUSLY, PUIPE, THERE COMES A POINT WHERE YOU JUST HAVE TO MOVE ON. MAYBE IT COULD HAVE BEEN SOMETHING SPECIAL, BUT THERE ARE OTHER FISH IN THE SEA. BUT NO FISH IS AS SPECIAL AS ROY!!! FOR CHRIST'S SAKE, MAN, IT'S JUST BASKETBALL! HOROSCOPES Today's birthday (April 17). You may have had to make your own decisions in the past. This year, you'll be more successful if you work with a partner. Kick ideas around, and give up the idea that you always have to be right. You'll get farther. Today's Birthday (April 17). Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 6. Put fun and games on hold for a while, and focus on finances. Check all your options carefully before you make your purchase. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. You're a very capable person, but that doesn't mean you have to do everything. Take care of yourself. Let somebody else take care of you, too. You'll like it. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 6. Jobs you've been putting off are coming due. Procrastination is no longer an option. This isn't easy, but it could be profitable. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is an 8. If your situation is slightly unstable, reinforce your traditions. Favorite foods and rituals calm you down and strengthen your resolve. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. Protecting your home is important to you, so don't hesitate any longer. Provide something that makes you more secure, even if it takes work. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 6. Stubborn heads may clash over how things should be done. Keep a low profile, and you'll come through lookin' good. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 6. Creative work can be rewarding, but it isn't always easy. If you run into a snag or two, hang in there. You're getting better. Scorpio (Oct.23-Nov.21). Today is a 7. You should have most of the jittery types settled down by now. Stay in control until you're sure how to proceed next. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 7. You're not very good at keeping secrets, but you can learn with practice. Do that now, as you listen and wait for another good deal. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. If you're in the market for true love, ask a friend to set you up. A connection made now through a friend looks like it could turn out quite well. If you already have true love, you could try the same idea in a business deal. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 6. Carefully review your work again, especially where money is concerned. If you do everything you promised, abundance can be yours. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a7. People can be very set in their ways and unwilling to even listen. If you find yourself in that situation, remember that love can get through where words fail. Crossword 04/17/03 ACROSS 1 JFK and RFK 5 Table prayer 10 Policeman's route 14 Sitar star Shankar 15 Scuttlebutt 16 Agatha's contemporary 17 Writer Bagnold 18 Egyptian port 20 Agape 22 Smart guy? 23 Electric bill abbr. 24 Ceremonial processions 26 Post-election largess 30 DEA workers 31 Wife of Osiris 32 Fast plane, briefly 35 "CHIPs" star Estrada 36 Scarlett's love 38 Second city of Nevada 39 Fraction of a joule 40 Spiral shape 41 Macho dude 42 Early bloomer 45 Chinese appetizer 48 "The West Wing" co-star 49 Fracture 50 Traditional ethnic cuisine 54 Secure, as hatches 57 Of India; pref. 58 Adams or Falco 59 Exhausted 60 Requirement 61 Lairs 62 Pays attention 63 Exxon, once DOWN 1 Make beer or coffee 2 Rajah's spouse 3 Roman poet 4 Second banana 5 Charts 6 Measuring sticks 7 End of grace 8 Actor Wally $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | | 15 | | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | | 18 | | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | | | | 22 | | | | | | | | 23 | | | | | 24 | 25 | | | | 26 27 28 | | | | | | 29 | | | | | | | 30 | | | | | | 31 | | | | | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | | | | | 36 37 | | | | | 38 | | | 39 | | | | 40 | | | | 41 | | | | | | | | 42 | | | | 43 44 | | | | | 45 46 47 | | | | | 48 | | | | | | 49 | | | | | 50 | | | | | 51 52 53 | 54 | | | | | 55 56 | | | | | 57 | | | 58 | | | | 59 | | | | | 60 | | | 61 | | | | 62 | | | | | 63 | | | P E S O P A L S A C R E S O M A R A L I T S H A R I M I N I S I L O P I V O T E L D E S T A I R C E D E D N A A C C O L A D E S S T U T T E R A U G O W N S T E L E S C O P I C F I E P E N A L T Y A C E A N S W E R A B L E W R E N R A N E D G I E S T C A M E R A M A N E E N A L E C L O B M E L T E D T A C K Y T H E E D A D O E M C E E T O S S E G A D R O A R S O R T S D E M O Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 43 Dealt with the snow 44 Fight units 45 Receded 46 Test result 47 Offer to a hitchhiker 9 Period 10 Madhouse 11 Miscalculated 12 Lavin sitcom 13 Asian trees 14 Nostrils 21 Temple team 24 Hey, over here! 25 Working away 26 Dundee dagger 27 One of Henry VIII's six 28 Not a duplicate: abbr. 29 Triangular road sign 32 Teamster's rig 33 Fly in the ointment 34 Bennett or Randall 36 Stir up 37 Anita or Benny 38 Create new parameters 40 Reduce air intake 41 Wolf's wall 42 Packing cases 1029 Massachusetts PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 844-Play 50 Irritated 51 Individuals 52 Keats works 53 Extinct bird of Mauritius 56 Utmost degree 56 "The ___ is cast" Spicy Red Wine Sauce!! Almost the Weekend Thursday Special!!! 167 Pizza 2 toppings 2 drinks OMD $10.99 price tax Open 7 days a week 749-0055 704 Mass. Voted Best Pizza LIBERTY HALL 644 MAPS 749-1912 CITY OF GOD (m) 4:00 6:45 8:30 ADAPTATION. (m) 4:16 7:00 8:40 Free lunch only. Students $4.00 today 1029 Massachusetts PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-Play LIBERTY HALL 644 MAE 745 TOI CITY OF GOD (n) 4:00 6:45 8:30 ADAPTATION. (n) 4:15 7:00 8:40 Today's time only! Students $4.00 today Womyn Unite! Take Back the Night! Where: (train park) When: Friday, April 18th Times: Pre-March Activities: 5:30 pm Speak-Out Circle: 7:00 pm March: 8:30 pm Women's Transitional Care Services, Rape Victims Survivor Services, The February F sisters Association Men Can Stop Rape, KU Student Senate Blue Mesa Management Now Leasing for August Country Club Apartments 512 Rockledge 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Apartments $675-695 Summer Tree West: 600 & 605 Eldridge 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Townhomes $595-$650 Troon Townhomes: 5111 Congressional Circle 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Townhomes $650 Single Unit: 3 Bedroom 3 Bath Townhome $1200 All Appliances • Cats Accepted Call (785) 840-9467 for appointments. Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Apartments & Town Homes --- 14A=THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KANSAS RELAYS THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2003 4. Cornhuskers lead first day of Relays It's the first day of the Kansas Relays, and the Cornhuskers are off to a great start. The only competitions today were the Jim Bausch Decathlon and the Candace Mason Heptathlon. The Nebraska athletes dominated the competition and are in the top three positions in both competitions. In the decathlon, Casey Thom is in first place after the first day with 3,726 points, Chris Richardson is in second place with 3,566, points and Jesse Colburn is in third with 3,475 points. In the heptathlon, Ashley Selig is in first place with 3,014 points, Casie Witte is in second with 2,811 points, and Sara Jane Baker is in third with 2,760 points. Chris Lockard is the only Jayhawk in the decathlon and is in 13th place with 1,885 points. In addition to the events today, it was announced that Adam Perkins, a senior at Liberty High School in Liberty, Mo., would compete in the invitational mile on Saturday. Perkins is one of the top prep-distance runners in the United States. He recently chose to forgo his senior season in high school to compete in invitational races at premier track meets around the country. KANSAS RELAYS SCHEDULE Today Jim Bausch Decathlon/Candace Mason Heptathlon Heptathlon 8:30 a.m. Decathlon, 110-Meter Hurdles 9 a.m. Heptathlon, Long Jump 9:15 a.m. Decathlon, Discus 10:40 a.m. Heptathlon, Javelin 11:15 a.m. Decathlon, Pole Vault 12:30 p.m. Heptathlon, 800 Meters 3 p.m. Decathlon, Javelin 4:20 p.m. Decathlon, 1,500 Meters Distance Carnival BUSINESS CENTRE 4 p.m. Women's Unseeded 800 Meters 4:15 p.m. Men's Unseeded 800 Meters 4:45 p.m. Women's Unseeded 1,500 Meters 5 p.m. Men's Unseeded 1,500 Meters 5:15 p.m. Men's Unseeded 3,000-Meter 4:45 p.m. Women's Unseeded 1,500 Meters 5 p.m. Men's Unseeded 1,500 Meters 5:15 p.m. Men's Unseeded 3,000-Met Steeplechase 5:30 p.m. Women's 3,000 Meters 5:45 p.m. Men's Masters Mile 5:55 p.m. Women's 5,000 Meters 6:20 p.m. Men's 5,000 Meters 7 p.m. Women's 10,000 Meters 7:45 p.m. Men's 10,000 Meters Hammer Events Noon Women's Hammer Throw 4:30 p.m. Bill Penny Men's Hammer Throw "We are pleased to be the first national-caliber meet to give Adam the opportunity to compete against some of the best milers in the country." Tim Weaver, Kansas Relays meet director, said. It was also announced that former Kansas pole vaulter Scott Huffman would be competing in the pole vault at the Relays. Huffman is a member of the KU Athletics Hall of Fame, a former American record holder and 1996 Olympic team member. "He's one of the most entertaining vaulters I've ever seen, and I know he'll put on a great show for all the fans on Saturday." Weaver said. "Until you've seen the 'Huffman Roll' live and in person, you haven't truly experienced pole vaulting." Today at Relays will be the Hammer Events, the Distance Carnival and the second day of the Jim Bausch Decathlon and the Candace Mason Heptathlon. - Chris Wintering NEBRASKA Brandon Baker/Kansan Sara Baker, Nebraska freshman, throws a shot put during the Kansas Relays. Athletes participating in the Relays competed on a high-school level and an Olympian-level yesterday. Kansan Classified 1 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Business Personals 115 On Campus 120 Announcements 125 Travel 126 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted NEW 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 310 Computers 315 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 438 Sublease The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality 400s Real Estate 家 B 500s Services Classified Policy 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to adverse any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, facial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, time 864-4358 tation or discrimination. nation of education are merely informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. TURNING TURNOUT 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements F1 Marks JEWELERS Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swbell.net life SUPPORT HEAD QUARTERS Counseling Center 785/841-2345 www.hqec.lawrence.ks.us life SUPPORT HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 130 - Entertainment Dance lessons; balroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy 1117 Mass 313,2227 男 女 205 - Help Wanted 200s Employment Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey www.surveydollars.com BARTENDER POSITION Average Rep makes $12-15/hr. Up to $1 Raise and full Medical & Dental Insurance 90 days. JOIN Our TEAM! Hours Monday- Friday 4-9pm. Please call & ask for Ann Or tax resume to 785-542-5611. AMERIUPREME WATER COMPANY 785-542-5600 BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift, Flexible hours, great pay. Call 1-800-806-0082 ext 1422. 120 - Announcements Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531 BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles.Call 785-749-3649. Cruise line entry level on-board positions avail. great benefits. Seasonal/year rd. 919-329-6343 www.cruisercareers.com Dependable, trustworthy female needed to assist wheelchair user. Errands, transportation and light housekeeping. Must like dogs.Call 832-0527. 11 Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Attention College Students. What are you doing for the summer? No one hiring? We are Find out how you could make $2,800/month this summer.Call 832-1833. F 120 - Announcements Fraternities • Sororities • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no rieks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program! It works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com 205 - Help Wanted Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-251-5900. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary, students well- comed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepro.com GPA, The Graduate & Professional Association of the University of Kansas, seeks a graduate or professional student as Financial Director. The successful candidate will be an independent, organized and motivated worker; possess business and/or financial knowledge and experience; strong people skills; budget experience; and the ability to multitask. Specific job requirements include managing and reporting finances for GPA and 40 graduate student organizations. Position is a student/hourly, part-time, one year (reewable) term with start date May 5, 2003. (Pay approx. $800/mo with institution staff rates.) PeopleSoft experience recommended but not required. Please send letter of interest and resume to Financial Director Search Committee, cio Graduate & Professional Association, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Bldd, Rm 426, Lawrence, KS 66045. 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampsjobs.com 205 - Help Wanted HAPPY MOMENTS Spring Break was awesome! STS #1 University #1 Student Tour Operator is now hiring on campus rep for 2003-4: 1-800-648-4949 . www.stsun.org 205 - Help Wanted Transportation Coordinator. Applications available in 410 Kansas Union. Due April 18 by 5:00 p.m. Call 864-4644 MOVIEEXTRAS / MODES NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277 ex 1020 The Mass. St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Dell or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). Small well-established Financial Office is seeking a well-organized individual wishing to learn and grow with the business. People skills, computer skills, and attention to details extremely important. Position includes communicating with clients with respect to their small business needs, preparing monthly "books", preparing business and personal income tax returns and general accounting office duties. Small office environment requires individual with flexible attitude. Required computer skills: Proficient in Windows 98, Microsoft Office Suite; Excel, Word, Outlook and internet research. Send resume to PO. Box 235, Bonner Springs, KS 66012, Attn: Jane. --- 205 - Help Wanted 205 - Help Wanted 1234567890 Summer to remember in woods cf Maine. Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6/16-8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call collect 914-835-5800. Personal Care attendant jobs available for the summer. Flexible schedule, no experience needed. $9/hr. 20-40 hrs/wk + nights. Must have own transportation. For info call 218-0753, leave message. TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS - HAVE FUN - MAKE $ 5 Openings in ALL TEAM & IN- DIVIDUAL SPORTS - ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS Camp/Hike, Ropes/Rock- Climbing, Ice/Roller Hiking, Office/Secre- taries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD LAUNDRY, Travel alliance ONLINE APPLICATION: www.campcoobbsosee.com or call (300) 473-6104 Leasing Agents Leasing Agents Energetic, outgoing personalities needed. Part time, flexible schedule, weekend hrs. Apply in person at Parkway Commons. 3601 Clinton Parkway Schumm Foods needs a part-time office assistant who has prior office experience and good customer service skills. Start at $7 per hour. $8 per hour after a year. Apply at Schumm Foods at 719 Mass (above the Smokehouse). Great practical experience in all facets of a small business. kansan.com Sales Career Opportunity $100,000 per year (our top performers care that) - Signing bonus up to $1000⁺ - 500 per week guarantee (while training) Did you make $15,000 last month? Do you want the opportunity? - paid vacations and holidays - Need ability to load, unload, and sort packages. - Great summer job for college grads - Flexible work schedule - 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week - $100 new hire bonus - Drug free environment - E.O.E. Employer - $.25 raise every 90 days for a year to schedule an interview 4 1/2 day work week - $ 10-11/hr starting pay - Tuition Assistance - Advancement opportunities 340 - Auto Sales FedEx Ground Call Jason Robinson @ 913-208-9952 - $100 bounty bin for professional equipment sales person with strong DOCUMENTATION track record. Repeated references. Must have a documented successful sales record, in any quality, to be awarded for $500 per week guaranteed. After-Class workout. First-Class pay. 205 - Help Wanted - Weekly paycheck Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 340-Auto Sales - --- --r2 Block House at 11:58 AM on Drive in A7 www.karlstreet.com 913-645-7986 ask for Danny and get a student discount www.karlstreet.com --- COUNTRY HILL 98 Mitzu Spyder $8950, 97 Seating Conv. 58950 97 Sebring Conv. S6950 96 Ford Mustang Conv. $5950 SPRING STUDENT 97 Honda Civic EX S6995 SALE! 00 Pontigc Sunfire S3950 02 Ford Mustang Conv. $4250 95 Honda Civic DX S4850 1/2 Block Eight of 1-35 on Johnson Drive in KC 913-345-7966 THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 15A 205 - Help Wanted --- GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865-0856. Graduate Student Hourly Position: "LesBIgGVaTrans' Leases Laison Responsibilities: Serve as liaison to Queens and Ailes; LBGI's services of Kansas, serve as liaison to other campus offices and student organizations. Develop a variety of educational resources directed toward raising consciousness and increasing acceptance. Required Qualifications: Bachelor's degree and graduate status for Fall 2003 and Spring 2004 (Must be enrolled at at least 6 credit hours). Demonstrated ability to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian. least 6 credit hours). Demonstrated ability to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons, especially those related to higher education. Demonstrated ability to work effectively with a variety of publics and individuals. Availability to attend KU Queens and Allies meetings Thursday evenings. Ability to organize and work independently on assigned tasks. **Position Start Date:** On or about August 18, 2003 $8.50 per hour, 20 hours a week. Complete job description available in Student Development Center, 22 Strong Hall. **Application:** Please submit a letter of application, resume, and names, addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses (if available) of two references to Marshall Jackson, Associate Director, Student development, 22 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 60455. Review of applications will begin on May 2, 2003. Position open until filed. EOE/AA X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale $ Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $355/month. Call 841-1074 Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 801-391-3232 ext. 4565. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance 192 & 98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stopby 1910 Haskell C 405 - Apartments for Rent 400s Real Estate 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, PS, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up V nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 > Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking.Call 749-2919. Avail. Aug, Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated old house, 1300 bld. Vermont. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique tub. No pets. $440/mo. Call 841-1074. Great3BR's Nearly new SBR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities $935-1050, NO PETS: 841-5533. Avail. Aug.; Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi; Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets; $450; Call 841-1074. Available in August, 1, 2 bdm. Close to GSC/Porbin between campus and downtown. No pets. 913-301-3553 or 841- 1207 Available now, May or June 1. Very nice, remodeled/ spacious top floor. 1 BR apts. 9th and Emery. No smoking/pets. $415 plus utilities. 850-311 or 841-319. CLOSE TO CAMPUS, 3 BR, 3 BA town-houses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas Bk.4-8009. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom. 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block Mall. Call 843-409-900. Save Your Money! Now signing 1Y RIRs starting May/ June/July/Aug. No smoking pets. Excuse, wait-k kept 2 BR apts. Quiet. all appliances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/mo. Spanish Civet Creams 841-6888. 405 - Apartments for Rent Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship, Quality Apartments, At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studios and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apt. 2727 Amidon. A83-8302 Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $353. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. Avail. Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, celling fans, window A/C. 10th & NY No pets. 9499 Cali B41-1074-1 Excellent location, 1341. Ohio/1104 Tennon. 2 BR in 4-plex. C/A, D/W, WD hook-ups, $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1. Nope. Patents 842-4242. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling: Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 4th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841.5533 VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic on 8th St.) Bedroom Townhomes - Garages; w/d Hookups* * Microwave Ovens* * Some with Fireplaces* * On KU Bus Route* - Swimming Pool OPEN: MON-FRI 10-12 & 1-5 - Tennis Courts 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living...on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Washer/Dryer Alarm Systemilly Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Tuckaway has two pools, not tubs,basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com 405 - Apartments for Rent FARMSTATE 1 & 2 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. With wood floors, high ceilings. $425-525. BM1-3633. Town home - 3 bedroom. 2 bath. W/D, fireplace. kitchen appl. garage/operator. pets. Sublease 6-1-731 856-756-5060 Avail, August 1st. 3 BR 2.5 Bath. Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher. 829 Alabama $100/month. Cali 843-854 Ext. 21. Great location. 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt. in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no beds. $650/mo Avail. 841-8242. Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample parking, on-site laundry. Call 834-4909. COLONY WOODS 1301 W 24h &Naismit 842-5111 colony@ixks.com www.collynwoods.com 1&2Bedrooms - 1 & 2 Bedrooms • On KU Bus Route • Indoor/Outdoor Pool • 3 Hot Tubs • Exercise Room • Now Leasing for Summer & Fall Canyon Court M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 700 Comet Land Brand New Luxury Apartments - 1, 2, 3 Bdrm * Washer/Dryer * Swimming Pool & Hot Tub * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Garages Available * High Speed Internet Connections * Security Systems Available * Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Fireplace - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer - Washer/Dryer - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Model Open Daily! - Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt. Homes - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Now leasing for fall 2003! THE LEGENDS L Est. 1985 Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Models Open Daily *FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS* *ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE* *STUDENT ONLY* NOW LEASING May 2003 ALL INCLUDE UTILITIES PACKAGE N OOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND DRIVER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BAKETTLE & BROAD AREA FULLY EQUIPPED FITNESS CENTER MARSHALS, CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM COMPLETE & CRAFT ROOM SUNLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 405 - Apartments for Rent LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 1 BR. $400/mo. Avail Aug 1. New carpet, paint, vinyl, hardwood floors in BR, Very nice/cute, 730 Arkansas, Call 843-8540 ext.21. 1,2,3 bedroom apartments. 1 block to KU. Available August 15. 841-6254 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail; for summer and fall. Airt setting, swimming pool, KU bus rte, laundry facility, Call 843-0011. Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt, DW, CA, microman, inlay, on site. 384 BR $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 5335 www.alpinasinlawrence.com 1712 OHIO 2, 3 and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August; Call 913-441-4169. Avail. 8/1. Quiet, no smoking, no pets, 6th & Kasold. 2 BR, 1.5 BA. $685/month plus security deposit, 1.year lease. 550-6812. 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. 4500 Qverland Dr. 843.4049 www.thefoxrun.com FOX RUN Blue Mesa Management Inc. Apartment & Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 • Washer & Dryer • Fully Equipped Kitchen • Serving Bar Blue Mea Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 1,2,3,Bedroom 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,& 3 Bedroom Townhomes Washer/Dryers* "Dishwashers* Microwaves* "Patios" Fire Places* "Fans For More Info: 785-841-7849 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 Need a place to live next year? no one lives above or below you. LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - car ports - approx. 1600 sq feet Williams Pointe Townhomes - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - full size washer/ dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) - 1421 sq feet Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 405 - Apartments for Rent BARN HOUSES 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580; 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670; walk to campus; fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1 bpt abt, Fp, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice, no smoking. No pets, 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807. Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. - Washer/Dryers - Dishwasher - Microwaves - Patios - Gas Fire Places - Ceiling Fans For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway 1,2,3 Bedrooms Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790 ^{10}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D, all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPENHOUSE 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 www.lawrenceapartments.com MASTERCRAFT Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes + Campus Place 1145 Loursiana*841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 ♦ ♦ Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 19th & Mass·749-0445 Regents Court Sundance 7th & Florida·841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 410 - Condos For Rent Very nice condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $59 a person. Call Eli at 841-470- 415 - Homes For Rent 2. BR 1 BA nice house with one car garage, wood floors, fenced yard, porch with swing, $685, 841-3633 anytime. 415 - Homes For Rent 1 BR, 2 1/2 BA, great area, large dock, enced yard. 2 car garage, family room. DW, AC, hookups, many fans, attic fan. No dogs. $1000/m. Avail. August 1, 842 17610 a.m. -6 p.m. or 842-3556. --- BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 usei- tilities. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 766-6662 between 6:30-10 p.m. 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Edridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained, 2-car garage, dishwasher, W/D. AC, 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/m. Call 842-1360 17 a.m., p.6 or m.842-3556. 4. BR, 3. BA, 3000 s of luxury, jacuzzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, ree room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fenced landscape back yard, k1450, 841-363 anytime. Avail. Aug. 1, 3 BR 1 BA house with W/D hookups, 1011 Illinois, $800 month. Call 218-3071. House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath CAWD Included. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/room 218-413 430 - Roommate Wanted 2. roommates needed for 5 BR house. 13th and Tenn. 3 floors, offstreet parking. Megan 550-9596 or Amy 764-0698 ASAP. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 843-5540. Grade student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home, Walk-in closet, WID and garage. No smoking.pets. $300 +1/2 util. Avail A84-4540. 1 bedroom at 527 California. Washer/dryer. Nice neighborhood.Call 841-5533 for information. 1 BR in 4 BR apartment. Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool. $370/mo. Leave message 785-691-1948 1 BR. 2 B AT Aberdeen Apartments. W/D included. $525/mo Available June 1: Dec. Please call 832-2458. 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail. mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9170. 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage. W/D. Central. Air avail. mid-May. Call Adam 830-8076. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer/dyer, dishwasher, central air. Available mid-May or June tat.C128-7736 4 Subleaseers needed, new 4 BR townhouse, 3 BA, 2 car garage, WD, rent $12.50, lease through July 31, 816-5120-6421 or 638-7580-3505 or 820-340-3273. 40 MBA students need summer subleases for July, if interested e-mail italy03@ku.edu Beautiful 5 BR 2 BA house available for summer sublease. Close to Mass. St. and campus. Rent negotiable. Call 856-1022. Female to subleave bedroom in 2 BR apt. $240 + low until May 1? Balcony views the stadium. Free cable, 312-9390 IBR in 2BAPt, Summer Sublease! right on campus. Available May or June. $320/mo. Call Nicole 619-5204. Need sublease to live w/ 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent paid. Cable 785-830-8003. PERfect SUBLEAVE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA. 749-6080. Roommate wanted for large 5 BR house. Half block from campus. $31/mo. Call 393-3197 Summer Sublease. Furnished 1 BD on Mass St. Wood floors, lots of natural light. $350 plus utilities. Lots. Call 830-9014. 会计专用 500s Services 510 - Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Montesson learning centers plus; broad curriculum, park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233. Find it, sell it buy it in the Kansan Classified or just read them for the fun of it tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com. or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 16A THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2003 COMMENTARY COMMENTARY Ryan Malashock rmalashock@kansan.com Softball sagas similar to Royals' start Winning is contagious. Nothing has made this sports trend more understandable than the current state of the Kansas City Royals. The penny-pinching, small-market Royals, which haven't posted a winning season since 1994, are 11-2 as of today, good for the best record in the American League. They've come out strong because they believed in themselves, won a lot of spring training games (they won Arizona's spring training Cactus League) and rode the positive momentum with the help of numerous young blessed pitchers, into Major League Baseball's first two weeks. That's how easy it is for winning to spill over on a day-to-day basis. On the contrary, the contagiousness of winning pales in comparison to that of losing. If winning is like a common cold, losing is like the stingiest strand of influenza. These Royals know the dark days, the depression, the pointed fingers and the ill tempers that arise during a losing skid. They've learned how to deal. But for those not familiar with such difficult times, the possibility of a team unraveling always exists. Here at Kansas, the softball team is going through one of those trying periods, and its coach is doing everything possible to ensure it bounces back. Tracy Bunge's softball team got off to an unprecedented start. Bunge's Jayhawks steamrolled through their first 20 games, winning 16. Confidence was high, and Kansas broke into the national polls. But then, on March 23, that all changed. That day, Kansas lost its second straight game to Oklahoma. The 10-0 pounding in Lawrence placed a doubt in the Jayhawks' minds, an inkling that maybe they weren't as good as their early-season success led them to believe. SEE MALASHOCK ON PAGE 12A Kansas eyes possible replacement Illinois OK's talks with coach Bill Self for Kansas position By Shane Mettlen smeltten@kansan.com Kansan Sportswriter The University of Kansas has attempted to contact at least one potential candidate to replace Roy Williams. Kansas has asked for and been granted permission to talk with Illinois basketball coach Bill Self regarding the Jayhawks' vacancy. "They did contact our athletic director at 9:30 this morning, informing us they would be contacting Bill Self," Illinois assistant athletics director Kent Brown said yesterday. Self, a former Kansas assistant under Larry Brown, left Illinois for a Florida vacation at 6 a.m. yesterday with his family. Rumors have swirled he would be a candidate for the Kansas job since Williams left the Jayhawks for the North Carolina Tar Heels Monday. Self has averaged 26 victories a season in three years at Illinois and took the University of Y. Self Tulsa to the Elite Eight round of the NCAA tournament before joining the Illini. "Certainly, I understand why there would be speculation, with my relationship with the University of Kansas in the past." Self said. "If they do call, I may say, 'Let's visit,' or after talking a few minutes I may say, 'I don't feel it.' I certainly wouldn't mislead anyone." terday that Kansas officials have also contacted Wichita State University coach Mark Turgeon, but Wichita State officials declined to comment yesterday afternoon. Turgeon is a Toppera native as well as a former Kansas player. Kansas interim athletics director, A. Drue Jennings, said a committee made up of him, Chancellor Robert Hemenway and associate athletics directors Richard Konzem and Doug Vance would act quickly in hiring a replacement for Williams. Lawrence Journal-World reported yes. Edited by Todd Rapp ARKANSAS Right fielder Nicole Deeter catches a foul ball hit by Nettie Fierros in the third inning. The Lady Razorbacks won the first game yesterday 5-1, while the Jayhawks took the second game 1-0. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansar Softball team wins ends losing streak By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswinter It took five games, but the Kansas softball team finally ended its losing streak with a 1-0 victory yesterday. Schlichtman did it all for the Razorbacks (20-29). On the offensive end, she went 2-for-2 with two singles and the game's first run in the third inning. She struck out eight 'Hawks in the one-hitter effort on the mound. The first game mirrored the other four games in the losing streak as the Jayhawks (23-16) gave up 13 hits Arkansas's season high.The Razorbacks took the first contest 5-1 after junior pitcher Heather Schlichtman threw a one-hitter. Freshman second baseman Jessica Moppin managed a single in the fourth inning, which drove home Kansas' only run as Melaney Torres reached home from second base. What makes Schlightman's accolades even more impressive is that she was just getting back up to speed after having surgery three-and-a-half weeks ago to repair a herniated disk. "She's hungry to play." Arkansas coach Carie Dever-Boaz said. "She single-handedly won the first game with her pitching and hitting." Senior pitcher Kirsten Milhoan took the loss, dropping her record to 8-6. Kansas coach Tracy Bunge complemented Arkansas on its play but also said the loss came largely from the Jayhawks' lack of play. KANSAS 1-ARKANSAS 5 KANSAS 1-ARKANSA5 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Kansas 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 - 1 1 2 Arkansas 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 - 5 13 1 Pitchers: Kansas-Kristen Milhoan(7) Arkansas-Heather Schlichtman(7) Win-Schlichtman(9-15) Save-None *oss-Milhoan(8-6) GAME 2 KANASAS 7 - TEXAS TECH 6 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Kansas 1 0 0 0 0 X - 1 2 1 Arkansas 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 2 0 Pitchers: Kansas Kara Pierce (7) Arkansas Blaine Woodward (6) Win-Pierce (15-10) Save-None Loss-Woodward (3-3) "I give them a lot of credit in the first game — they came out and swung the bats well," Bunge said, "but I was very disappointed with our effort in the first half. We played with no passion and no heart." Hits were hard to come by in the second game as both teams managed only two hits apiece. Freshman shortstop Destiny Frankenstein posted both of Kansas' hits with a leadoff double in the first inning, which turned out to be the winning run, and a single in the third. Kansas junior pitcher Kara Pierce worked quickly and efficiently allowing SEE SOFTBALL ON PAGE 11A Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets Feature Film Series THUR. 4/17/03 FRID. 4/18/03 7:00 • 10:00 pm WOODFUFF AUDITORIUM MUSIC HALL LEVEL 5 PARADE FOR THE EARTH Register More EARTH DAY PARADE Saturday, April 19th 11:00 a.m. – Parade begins at 11th and Massachusetts St. and travels to 7th St. Come to watch or come to walk. Earth-friendly events are encouraged. Noon—4p.m. Celebration in South Park on the west side of Mass. St. Come party, peruse, play, and participate in this purely fun festival Live music creative activities, and giveaways will entertain you near home: planet Earth At: ParadeForTheEarth@lawrenceKS.org Earth Day Activities listed at www.LawrenceRecycles.org The University of Kansas Alternative Breaks Invites you to attend the annual Multi-Media celebration Today! Thursday, April 17th 5:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Come see what Alternative Breaks has accomplished, thank our supporters, learn about the sites, and most importantly, stuff yourself with Chris Cakes (the best pancakes on Earth). Coca-Cola BASIC START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MASS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE FITCHER NIGHT TUESDAY-PIZZA & FITCHER NIGHT -14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THE STREET LIGHTHOUSE FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT INC. - Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 - $3.00 Cosmos & Martinis - $2.00 Wells T DELI INC. -1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 -Fat Tire pints for $2.00 --- 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 I A. Jayplay The University Daily Kansan April 17, 2005 WAKARUSA PUNX LAWRENCE, KS JO • KANSAS • AUG QJP 946 Peralta OSB • BALLISTIC • Lawrence music Agents need not apply p.8 SKATEBOARDING IS NOT A CRIME 2 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN INSIDE THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 Jayplay The University Daily Kansan 3 Campus With wamer weather, students head outside to study.Find out where the best spots on campus are. 3 Live music calendar Where to go,what to do 5 Shopping Garage sales provide cheap alternatives for students 4 Fashion Birkenstocks 6 Sex The disappearance of the sexual revolution. 6 Eat This Serve a Spinach and Bacon quiche at brunch this Easter. 8 Cover Lawrence Music: Is it an industry? 12 Film Anger Management alienates Sandler fans 13 Movies Around Town What's playing and where 14 Video games New Zelda game truly a 'link to the past' 15 Tongue in Beak Senior holds graduation press conference ALTERNATIVE TRACKS STILL LIFE TRANSLATION FUL 282 CAUGUCH MORRISON 8 Brandon Baker/Kansan Lawrence Music Forget the agent: Lawrence music scene is not an industry Coming next week... Tell us your news Contact Brooke Hesler at bhesler@kansan.com - Author William S. Burroughs and his legacy in Lawrence. Cover photo Brandon Baker P (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 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1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2190, 2191, 2192, 2193, 2194, 2195, 2196, 2197, 2198, 2199, 2200, 2201, 2202, 2203, 2204, 2205, 2206, 2207, 2208, 2209, 2210, 2211, 2212, 2213, 2214, 2215, 2216, 2217, 2218, 2219, 2220, 2221, 2222, 2223, 2224, 2225, 2226, 2227, 2228, 2229, 2230, 2231, 2232, 2233, 2234, 2235, 2236, 2237, 2238, 2239, 2240, 2241, 2242, 2243, 2244, 2245, 2246, 2247, 2248, 2249, 2250, 2251, 2252, 2253, 2254, 2255, 2256, 2257, 2258, 2259, 2260, 2261, 2262, 2263, 2264, 2265, 2266, 2267, 2268, 2269, 2270, 2271, 2272, 2273, 2274, 2275, 2276, 2277, 2278, 2279, 2280, 2281, 2282, 2283, 2284, 2285, 2286, 2287, 2288, 2289, 2290, 2291, 2292, 2293, 2294, 2295, 2296, 2297, 2298, 2299, 2300, 2301, 2302, 2303, 2304, 2305, 2306, 2307, 2308, 2309, 2310, 2311, 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2478, 2479, 2480, 2481, 2482, 2483, 2484, 2485, 2486, 2487, 2488, 2489, 2490, 2491, 2492, 2493, 2494, 2495, 2496, 2497, 2498, 2499, 2500, 2501, 2502, 2503, 2504, 2505, 2506, 2507, 2508, 2509, 2510, 2511, 2512, 2513, 2514, 2515, 2516, 2517, 2518, 2519, 2520, 2521, 2522, 2523, 2524, 2525, 2526, 2527, 2528, 2529, 2530, 2531, 2532, 2533, 2534, 2535, 2536, 2537, 2538, 2539, 2540, 2541, 2542, 2543, 2544, 2545, 2546, 2547, 2548, 2549, 2550, 2551, 2552, 2553, 2554, 2555, 2556, 2557, 2558, 2559, 2560, 2561, 2562, 2563, 2564, 2565, 2566, 2567, 2568, 2569, 2570, 2571, 2572, 2573, 2574, 2575, 2576, 2577, 2578, 2579, 2580, 2581, 2582, 2583, 2584, 2585, 2586, 2587, 2588, 2589, 2590, 2591, 2592, 2593, 2594, 2595, 2596, 2597, 2598, 2599, 2600, 2601, 2602, 2603, 2604, 2605, 2606, 2607, 2608, 2609, 2610, 2611, 2612, 2613, 2614, 2615, 2616, 2617, 2618, 2619, 2620, 2621, 2622, 2623, 2624, 2625, 2626, 2627, 2628, 2629, 2630, 2631, 2632, 2633, 2634, 2635, 2636, 2637, 2638, 2639, 2640, 2641, 2642, 2643, 2644, 2645, 2646, 2647, 2648, 2649, 2650, 2651, 2652, 2653, 2654, 2655, 2656, 2657, 2658, 2659, 2660, 2661, 2662, 2663, 2664, 2665, 2666, 2667, 2668, 2669, 2670, 2671, 2672, 2673, 2674, 2675, 2676, 2677, 2678, 2679, 2680, 2681, 2682, 2683, 2684, 2685, 2686, 2687, 2688, 2689, 2690, 2691, 2692, 2693, 2694, 2695, 2696, 2697, 2698, 2699, 2700, 2701, 2702, 2703, 2704, 2705, 2706, 2707, 2708, 2709, 2710, 2711, 2712, 2713, 2714, 2715, 2716, 2717, 2718, 2719, 2720, 2721, 2722, 2723, 2724, 2725, 2726, 2727, 2728, 2729, 2730, 2731, 2732, 2733, 2734, 2735, 2736, 2737, 2738, 2739, 2740, 2741, 2742, 2743, 2744, 2745, 2746, 2747, 2748, 2749, 2750, 2751, 2752, 2753, 2754, 2755, 2756, 2757, 2758, 2759, 2760, 2761, 2762, 2763, 2764, 2765, 2766, 2767, 2768, 2769, 2770, 2771, 2772, 2773, 2774, 2775, 2776, 2777, 2778, 2779, 2780, 2781, 2782, 2783, 2784, 2785, 2786, 2787, 2788, 2789, 2790, 2791, 2792, 2793, 2794, 2795, 2796, 2797, 2798, 2799, 2800, 2801, 2802, 2803, 2804, 2805, 2806, 2807, 2808, 2809, 2810, 2811, 2812, 2813, 2814, 2815, 2816, 2817, 2818, 2819, 2820, 2821, 2822, 2823, 2824, 2825, 2826, 2827, 2828, 2829, 2830, 2831, 2832, 2833, 2834, 2835, 2836, 2837, 2838, 2839, 2840, 2841, 2842, 2843, 2844, 2845, 2846, 2847, 2848, 2849, 2850, 2851, 2852, 2853, 2854, 2855, 2856, 2857, 2858, 2859, 2860, 2861, 2862, 2863, 2864, 2865, 2866, 2867, 2868, 2869, 2870, 2871, 2872, 2873, 2874, 2875, 2876, 2877, 2878, 2879, 2880, 2881, 2882, 2883, 2884, 2885, 2886, 2887, 2888, 2889, 2890, 2891, 2892, 2893, 2894, 2895, 2896, 2897, 2898, 2899, 2900, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904, 2905, 2906, 2907, 2908, 2909, 2910, 2911, 2912, 2913, 2914, 2915, 2916, 2917, 2918, 2919, 2920, 2921, 2922, 2923, 2924, 2925, 2926, 2927, 2928, 2929, 2930, 2931, 2932, 2933, 2934, 2935, 2936, 2937, 2938, 2939, 2940, 2941, 2942, 2943, 2944, 2945, 2946, 2947, 2948, 2949, 2950, 2951, 2952, 2953, 2954, 2955, 2956, 2957, 2958, 2959, 2960, 2961, 2962, 2963, 2964, 2965, 2966, 2967, 2968, 2969, 2970, 2971, 2972, 2973, 2974, 2975, 2976, 2977, 2978, 2979, 2980, 2981, 2982, 2983, 2984, 2985, 2986, 2987, 2988, 2989, 2990, 2991, 2992, 2993, 2994, 2995, 2996, 2997, 2998, 2999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 20 CLASSIC MOVE. KANSAN SAKAROFF'S the salon Voted "Best Salon on the Hill" by students head GAMES GRAHAM WEBB Nolita 12 E 8th St. • 841-4247 THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 CAMPUS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3 Best outside spring study spots on campus By Lindsey Ramsey Iramsey@kansan.com Jayplay staff writer Spring is here and students have taken to the outdoors. Campus offers plenty of spots for students who want to take those long study sessions outside. Kansas Union --- Patio The patio next to the second floor entrance provides tables and access to the Union's market. It is relatively quiet and because the platform is lowered, it is an excellent spot to people watch. Shade Situation: Adequate shade from the building. Wind Woes: Wind can whip down to where the tables are. Survey Says: "I prefer being outside because I like to eat outside. It is harder to study outside because of the wind or the temperature, but I like it," said Amanda Stinger, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Strong Hall Front Lawn The grassy lawn in front of Strong Hall gives an exposed atmosphere but studiers can lie in the grass. The activity at Wescoe Beach can provide some entertainment. Shade Situation: Some trees can provide shade, but that's about it. Bug Burdens: Ants everywhere by the trees. Survey Says: "It is pretty peaceful, and I have something to lean on, plus it is just nice to be out getting some sun," said Kristin Greenway, Lincoln, Neb., freshman. Budig Hall — Grass facing Wescoe Hall The side of Budig Hall provides a view of Wescoe Beach and a building to lean on. Shade Situation: Depends on the time of day. In the afternoon absolutely no shade is available. Temperature Trouble: The spot is very open and can get hot because of all the cement. Survey Says: "I can see everything that is going on,but I don't have to be in everything that is going on," Wade Kelly, Louisville, Ken., junior said. Wescoe Hall — Grassyhill behind Wescoe Terrace The hill behind Wescoe Terrace has a wall to lean on and trees abound. It is quiet and secluded, but studiers can still see what is going on. Bug Burdens: Where there are trees,there are ants and the occasional bee. - Wind Woes: On a windy day, the wind can be a problem here because of all the buildings. Survey Says: "I just came out because it is a nice day, and it is kind of quiet here. Usually it is too windy, but today it was nice," said Lisa Finholm, Overland Park freshman. Fraser Hall — Front lawn A popular spot for studiers, there are trees and plenty of room to stretch out. Shade Situation: Trees provide minimal shade. Distraction factor: This is a heavily populated area because classes sometimes meet out here, and students also have been known to play games here. Survey Says: "It is beautiful here because you can see everybody and everyone is happy because of the weather. There is good shade, and the Frisbee throwers are nice," said Erick Robinson, Miami, Okla., junior. Campanile Hill — Facing Potter Lake Shade Situation: No trees = no shade. This is one of the most picturesque places to hang out on campus. The hill faces Potter Lake, and it is quiet. Distraction factor: The bell tolls every quarter hour. Survey Says: "This is a really nice environment with Potter Lake and the bell charms are nice," said Noah Wood, Overland Park junior. Potter Lake — Water's edge by bridge Bug Burdens: Lots. The lake is practically always deserted so this is a place for studiers who like absolute quiet but still want to be outside. There is room to stretch out and trees to lean against. Shade Situations: Lots of shade around the water and by the trees surrounding it. - Edited by Erin Chapman Survey Says: "It is quiet except when the bell tolls, there are no people, and I can watch the fish and frogs," said Tasha Schultz, Salina sophomore. CALENDAR TONIGHT The Sites / Mr. Airplane Man at Replay Lounge Hairy Apes BMX / DJ Dovebelly at The Bottleneck Pocket Space at The Jazzhaus Ghosty / The Hardaways at The Eighth Street Tap Room In Kansas City... The Joe Fund / Mason Black at The Hurricane - Limbeck / Ilya / Eniac at The Brick Mark Reeves, 8 p.m. at Westport Coffee House Burning Mirror / Phantom Enemy at Davey's Uptown The Frogs / Fake Brain, 9 p.m. at Grand Emporium American Healthcare / Second Band, 10 p.m. at The Pyro Room TOMORROW Mark Gottschall, 6 p.m. at Pachamama's Spectre / Import Ants / H.G.B.R. Band, 9 p.m. at Stu's Midtown Tavern Distance To Empty, 10 p.m. at Fatso's - Full Feature / Grasshopper Takeover / 8th Wave at The Bottleneck Riva, 10:30 p.m. at Bambino's In Kansas City.. Pinmonkey, 7 p.m. at Beaumont Club Bloodthirsty Lovers, 9 p.m. at The Hurricane Michael Burks at Grand Emporium Schatzi / River City High at The Brick The Banjo Ghost / Severe Brothers / The Kemps / Greenville Bends, 10 p.m. at Davey's Uptown Peal / Cloudy & 47, 10 p.m. at The Pyro Room Joe Cocker at Ameristar Hotel & Casino - "The United Tour" feat. Bile / My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult / Pigface / Zeromancer / DJ Scary Lady Sarah, 7 p.m. at Uptown Theater SATURDAY Ultimate Fakebook / Anything But Joey / Key, 7 p.m. at Granada Theatre Crooked Fingers / The Baptist Generals at Replay Lounge Levee Town, 9 p.m. at Stu's Midtown Tavern Conner / Getaway Driver / The Capsules / April Switch at The Bottleneck No Lessons at The Jazzhaus Kinski/ Velareat Replay Lounge Chairsaw/Mass Cheir / New Morning In Kansas City... Anti Difranco, 8 p.m. at Uptown Theater Infestation of Ass / In Media Res / Texas Changing Weather / When Good Robots Go Bad / Nosegrind, 7 p.m. at Industrial Medical Center Waterdeep / Katy Bowser, 7:30 p.m. at The New Earth Coffee House Hearts to Waste / National Fire Theory / Elevator Division / The Trelese, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Red Elvises at Grand Emporium Citizen Band / Famous FM / North of Grand at Davey's Uptown The Band That Saved The World at The Hurricane SUNDAY Mooney Suzuki / Loudermilk / The Realistics, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck MONDAY Open Mic Night - Last Band Standing at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... Brodiokie at The Brick Pitchweekly's Best Karaoke 2002. Dissonance, A Dark Experimental Electronic Dance Night feat. Daniel Myer (of Hajjobt, Cleaner, HMB) / Solaris (Hard Techno / Power Noise) / Sacrifice (EBM) / Dj Phelyne (Jungle) / SVS (Dark Drum n Bass), 9 p.m. at Davey's Uptown TUESDAY Farmer's Ball Local Band competition Day 1 brought to you by KJHK at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... Club Wars Invitational Round feat. Alibi / Stonewalk / Everybody's X at Grand Emporium Emma Feel / Mr. Airplane Man at The Brick WEDNESDAY $2 Shoe Revival at Abe & Jake's Landing in the Pub Farmer's Ball Local Band competition Day 2 brought to you by KJHK at The Bottleneck Comedian Joey Alfino w/ Tri Point Paradox at The Jazzhaus In Kansas City... Merle Haggard, 8 p.m. at Ameristar Hotel & Casino Karla Michaels at John's Deck siang / silence fell, 7 p.m. at The Hurricane Anna Cole at Davey's Uptown Spring Annihilation Battle of the Bands feat. Tytus Layne / Terra Firma / Eye Theory at America's Pub Lucid Dream, 10 p.m. at The Pyro Room TH 4. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SHOFASHION THE UNIVERSITY THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 S Debating footwear and liberalism and town shopping Brandon Baker/Kansan Stacey Robertson, Lawrence resident, models a pair of Birkenstocks at Footprints. Robertson, a 2002 KU graduate, says that despite popular opinion, most customers are not hippies due to the high cost of the popular sandals. By Marissa Stephenson mstephenson@kansan.com Jayplay staff writer Are you wearing a pair of Birkenstock sandals today? If the answer is yes, do you consider yourself a liberal tree-hugging hippie? "I agree that Birkenstocks definitely have a more liberal stereotype attached to them," said Janette Yost, Moundridge sophomore and four-year Birkenstockwearer. "I have to admit that the reason I bought them was to fit a stereotype — a more organic look." Lisa Starr, Tonganoxie senior and a Birkenstock wearer since she was 13, said she could understand the stereotype. "I think it kind of fits. All the people I know wearing Birks are hippies," Starr said. When asked if she felt more liberal wearing her Birls, Starr responded with an enthusiastic, "Of course!" But does the shoe's liberal branding always fit? Mark Goode, Littleton, Colo., senior and president of the KU Democrats didn't see a connection. "In the 1960s, Birkenstocks were initially rejected from major stores in the United States. They were said to be an ugly shoe that women, the driving force in the shoe market, would never wear. The shoes finally found a market through health food stores, that, back then, were more hippieish." Ranney said. "Birkenstocks? I really don't know much about them," he said. "I've never owned a pair." Mic Ranney, store owner of Footprints, 339 Massachusetts, explained how the connection between Birks and hippies originated. Goode also added that his organization did not endorse Birkenstocks as their shoe of choice. Ranney says that all kinds of people are buying the shoes. "Come in here on Saturday. It won't be a bunch of hippies, you'll see grandparents, college kids and moms, too." Still, the stereotype lives on. Yost says she makes a connection between certain "When I imagine a 30-something woman in Lawrence wearing a long flowing skirt and dangling earrings — I imagine her wearing Birkenstocks," Yost said. clothing and Birkenstocks. label. Adam Box, Houston, Texas sophomore, and now a three-year Birkenstock wearer, thinks exactly opposite. Not everyone agrees with the hippie "If anything, I think Birkenstocks are a contradiction to the hippie-life. Their defiance of hippie-hood — I just can't see hippies paying that much for sandals," In the 1960s, Birkenstocks were initially rejected from major stores in the United States. They were said to be an ugly shoe that women would never wear. The shoes finally found a market through health food stores, that, back then, were more hippie-ish. Box said. Kevin Yessian, Ontario, Canada, senior and five-year Birkenstock wearer, says for him, wearing Birkenstocks has nothing to do with image. "The reason I'm wearing Birks now is because I got them brand new and free. When I was dog-sitting five years ago the dog ate my old sandals, so the owners bought me these Birks," Yessian said. Others see a tie between their Birkenstock and politics. Emily Thomas, Wichita senior and six-year Birkenstock wearer, said her Birks would affect her vote. "I voted for KUnited, and if I were wearing my Birks, I would feel a little uncomfortable doing that." Thomas said. "It's like the 'a square is a rectangle, but a rectangle doesn't have to be a square' thing. Many hippies own a pair of Birks, but you don't have to own a pair to be a hipie." Thomas said. And then there are some that couldn't care less about stereotypes - they just want to wear the shoes. Peter Granitz, Wauwatosa, Wis., sophomore is in that camp. Thomas also explained her philosophy on the Birkenstock hippie stereotype. "I think it's stupid. People who want to wear comfortable shoes, just let 'em," Granitz said. "And what stereotype? I mean, come on. My mom wears Birkenstocks." —Edited by Anne Mantey www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 SHOPPING THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5 Students rummage across Lawrence Garage sales around town provide cheaper shopping By Beth Braunsdorf bbraunsdorf@kansan.com Jayplay staff writer From plant holders to fax machines, students get good deals at garage sales. Students can find great items for their houses or apartments,or build their wardrobes — and it's a great way to make some cash and clear some space. "You can just walk around the student ghetto or drive into the richer neighborhoods and find great garage sales," said Britta Florman, Kirkwood, Mo., junior. "Plus, it's a fun thing to do on weekends." "My favorite garage sale find was a Macramé plant holder," said Florman. "It was cheap and functions, and you can't find one just anywhere." Although some people may be looking for household decorations, others look for specialty appliances. Heather Kolundzija, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore picked up a printer, fax machine and scanner while garage sale shopping at home. "I picked up these three items for $5, and they work," said Kolundzija. Kolundzija said she was a huge fan of garage sales. "On a scale from one to 10, I'd be an 11." While some hunt, others prepare their yards and garages for their own sales. According to the Neighborhood Resources Department for the city of Lawrence, the only stipulation for garage sales is that if you have a sign, it can't be blocking the right-of-way. No permit is needed. Kolundzija hasn't had a garage sale in Lawrence, but back in Illinois she made more than $100 selling old clothes and knickknacks at a combined family garage sale. Florman said she wanted to have a garage sale of her own, but doubted that she had enough items to sell. The drawback of having your own garage sale is the time and effort put forth, such as pricing items and setting up the sale. Jerad Pettus, Pittsburg junior, said he saw signs for garage sales on Highland Drive and the surrounding neighborhood in North Lawrence. "I've made plenty of great buys from lawn ornaments to kitchen appliances, and Pumas," said Pettus. Because Pettus lives in an apartment complex, a garage sale isn't too conceivable. "You can just walk around the student ghetto or drive into the richer neighborhoods and find great garage sales." Britta Florman Kirkwood, Mo., junior "When I was younger I'd sell baseball cards at garage sales," said Pettus. "But now I'm just happy finding cheap garage sale items." He said his favorite garage sale find was a cheese cutting board and slicer. As school ends and summer begins, more garage sales should appear in town. Students can find great items for their houses or apartments, or build their wardrobes — and it's a great way to make some cash and clear some space. — Edited by Julie Jantzer KANSAN read live learn www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com THUBSDAY.APBIL17,2003 MUSIC 6 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LIFESTYLE THURSDAY, APRIL 17,2003 Messages of sex no longer shocking What ever happened to the Sexual Revolution? COMMENTARY In the '60s and '70s, young men and women everywhere tore the nation apart by daring to demand the freedom to express their sexuality however they wanted. MENWAN Patrick Ross pross@kansan.com In a society still wallowing in the Cold War era, where "containing" Communism was America's democratic responsibility many young people felt smothered by the idea of another kind of containment that polarized gender roles and worked diligently to make every American a die-hard patriot. The Sexual Revolution of the '60s and 70s was intertwined with the Civil Rights Movement, Women's Liberation, Queer Liberation (just Gay Liberation then) and a strong and vocal movement against the war in Vietnam. Now, we find ourselves embroiled in another war that many people do not agree with, women are still objectified and objectify themselves, affirmative action seems to be in serious danger, and queer rights are tolerated at best, rather than accepted. So, where is that revolutionary spirit that regarded sex as a weapon and a freedom when today's youth still struggle to be heard? Beth Bailey, author of Sex in the Heartland which chronicles the events of the Sexual Revolution in Lawrence and at the University of Kansas, points out that the In a society still wallowing in the Cold War, many young people felt smothered by a containment that polarized gender roles and worked to make every American a diehard patriot. so-called revolution was made possible by several factors:a cure for venereal disease, the advent of the Pill and a move by the University administration to restrict the lives of students less. Sex was made safe by the first two and more acceptable, even unintentionally, by the third. Students frolicked naked by the Campanile, women demanded control of their vaginas and the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front formed to make sexual activity OK between two members of the same sex. Sex was everywhere. Sex was powerful. Horrified adults watched as the very fabric of the country's morals seemed to be dissolving around them. So what's changed? Nothing, really. We've just become more used to the messages of sex; our morals have changed. "There are many ways to formulate the problem our culture has created for itself, but one of the simplest is to say that we have lost the capacity for embarrassment," said Gilbert Meilaender, a professor of theology at Valparaiso University. Our society has become so inundated with sex at every turn,in magazines, movies, television and advertising, that we have stopped seeing it as shocking and just started accepting the imagery as normal. Certainly the days of naked "love-ins" on campus have dried up, but it's hard to imagine that in the 1920s dancing too close together with a guy could ruin a girl's "good name" and bring disciplinary action from the student's peers. Even though sex has become commonplace, it has also become dangerous. The onset of AIDS and other serious venereal diseases for which there are no cures has made sex the enemy once more, something to be feared or shunned. But the meaning behind sex and its use to those who understand it has not changed, we just have to be more careful. Sex was a tool for the revolutionaries three or four decades ago, and it can still be a tool today, not as a weapon but as a lens through which we can examine our society and decide what is or is not acceptable in the big picture of how America should be. Becoming comfortable with your sexuality and becoming comfortable with yourself as a sexual creature are the first steps to being able to effect positive change. Whether you prefer to wait until marriage or you enjoy sex whenever you can get it, whether you sleep with women or men, our sexuality is an integral part of who we are. We've grown up and can build on the primitive idea that sex can only be used to "piss off the grown-ups." But one positive realization the young warriors of the Sexual Revolution had, on purpose or quite by accident, was once you stop repressing yourself, it becomes that much easier to stop oppressing other people and an honest understanding begins to form. So, whatever cause you identify with, whatever notion you think everyone should understand, whatever you think should be done to make the world a better place, start with understanding yourself. Explore your intellect, explore your creativity and explore your sexuality. Own the fact that you are a sexual being and don't ever look back. Sex shall set us free. Ross is a Topeka freshman in journalism Quiche delicious idea for an Easter brunch Easter is this Sunday, and it is a perfect time to celebrate the love of family and friends by getting together and commencing the holiday with some delicious Easter eats. Events such as Easter are days to feast, and to feast is to live. Even though many do not celebrate such a holiday, it is important to believe that all holidays celebrate the love for one's self and the love of others. Holidays commence traditions and values that implicate faith, plus it rewards us with a celebration of food. The tastes of holiday treats like a slice of honey-baked ham makes life worth living for. Pamper yourself with good food this Easter Sunday, Christian or not. Life is too fast to miss out on any favorite indulgences. Serve with fresh squeezed orange juice, fresh fruit, a honey baked ham and you're good to go. Spinach & Bacon Quiche An Easter favorite, quiche, is a delicious brunch idea for any kind of gathering. Ingredients: 8 Slices of Bacon 1 frozen pie shell, thawed and pre-baked 3/4 cup of shredded Swiss cheese 1 bunch of spinach washed, dried & chopped 3 large eggs 1 cup of whipping cream 2 shallots minced Salt and pepper to taste Directions: Christina DiGiacomo cdgiacomo@kansan.com EAT THIS Events such as Easter are days to feast, and to feast is to live. 2. Thaw pie shell and bake as directed according to packaged directions. 3. Heat skillet or pan over medium high heat, add bacon and cook until 6. Pour into cooked pie shell and bake for 20 to 30 minutes or until brown on top. Check by inserting a knife into the quiche, and when it comes out clean, it is finished. 5. Whisk eggs and cream into a large bowl. Add cheese.Add spinach mixture and bacon to the egg mixture and fold together.Season with salt and pepper. 4. Add shallots to the same skillet or pan and cook for 2 minutes, then add spinach until wilted. Set mixture aside. bacon, crumble and set aside. DiGiacomo is a Apple Valley, Minn., senior in communication studies. She studied at Dante Alighieri cooking school in Florence, Italy. 1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Somewhat crispy. Drain off fat. Cool THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7 Concert spotlights new album,songs With its major label debut Antenna barely two weeks old, the Boston band Cave In attacked the stage of The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., with the uncharacteristically up-tempo opener "Penny Racer." The band was eager to show off the concise, melodic rock songs showcased on Cave In focused a majority of its hour-long set on the new material. Vocalist/guitarist Stephen Brodsky's pitch and delivery was flawless the entire night, demonstrated in the songs "Joy Opposites" and the falsetto of "Seafrost" Guitarist Adam McGrath showed boundless energy, swinging his guitar over his head while never missing a note of his effects-laden guitar work. REVIEW Nate Harold nharold@kansan.com ner J.anners Cave In was eager to show off the assist melodic cofield rock songs be one showcased on is most Antenna, focusing rhythm a majority of their as best hour-long set on on the new material. "Inspire." Fans of the band seemed polite and receptive to the newer songs but gave the most welcome response to songs from its 2000 album Jupiter. "Brain Candle;"the title track "Jupiter," and the stellar encore of "Big Riff showed that the group's unique blend of CAVE IN Where: The Bottleneck When: April 10 GRADE ...A hardcore elements, experimental sounds and space rock of old didn't go unappreciated. The crowd and the band were least interested in "Anchor," the lackluster first single from Antenna. The band didn't appear thrilled to be playing it, and fans seemed to nod their heads politely and collectively breathe sighs of relief when it was over. Cave In's performance was a great example of amazing music being overlooked, as The Bottleneck was nowhere near capacity. When originality is finally rewarded again in rock music, Cave In will no doubt turn more heads. Harold is a Weskan senior in communication studies. Sing the Sorrow by AFI Reviewed by Nate Harold nharold@kansan.com In "Dancing Through Sunday," off the band's Dreamworks debut, AFI vocalist Davey Havok wails, "And we dance in misery/ All lost in the arms of our misery." This passage summarizes the apparent intent of AFI with Sing the Sorrow: to exorcise the ever-increasing anguish of Havok's lyrics and provide the means for a danceable, cathartic release. Sing the Sorrow picks up where AFI's past two albums left off. With a love for mournful, flowery imagery propelled by the afi aggression of a veteran northern California punk rock band, AFI creates a sound that is difficult to classify. Despite the appearance of frontman Havok, AFI is not to be pegged as "goth punk" as so many critics label the band. With the punk rock toned down and more of an emphasis on the lyrics and melody, Sing the Sorrow could more easily be classified as a rock album with dark undertones. Songs such as the waltz-time "Silver and Cold" and the clean guitar and vocal track, "The Leaving Song," make an accurate description of the band more difficult. Although Havok's vocal abilities are more distinct than ever on this release, specifically his newfound impeccable pitch, at times they can detract from the songs. On the verse of "Death of Seasons," Havok's trademark high-pitched shout is changed into a strained scream. Although this vocal style is more popular than ever with the new breed of hardcore bands with vocalists who are more apt to pull it off, Havok should stick to his more familiar delivery. That's what originally set him apart from other vocalists in the genre. With super producers Jerry Finn and Butch Vig at the helm of Sing the Sorrow, great expectations rested on the band. The band's members deliver an album that sets them apart even further from their peers but can at times become repetitive and dull. But with the glimpses of the future we get with the standout tracks, AFI could easily make its next release more potent. 9O7 90 k j h xl 1. ELGUAPO ... Fake French KJHK Top 10 2. BLACK EYES ... Black Eyes 3. WHITE STRIPES Elephant 6. NOTWIST . . . Neon Golden 4. JAGA JAZZIST ... Animal Chin Various 5. SADDLE CREEK 50 Artists 7. THE FAINT . Danse Macabre Remixes 8. SCHNEIDERTM ... 6Peace 9. DEERHOOF ... Apple O 10. ADULT ...Anxiety Always THERE'S A BETTER WAY TO VENT. 20 SECONDS TO SPEAK YOUR MIND free for all 864-0500 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Brandon Baker/Kansen 8 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COVERSTORY THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2003 LAW Leave you WELCOME TO LAWRENCE: Leave your agent at the door Lawrence music could hardly be described as an industry. But maybe that's good. Brandon Baker/Kansan Massachusetts Street is warmed by the spring weather and local artists, like Sheri Martin who can fill the streets with their own music. By George Schulz gschulz@kansan.com Special to the Kansan Welcome to Lawrence. It's no music mecca. But it does all right. Yet sometimes the locals can't help but ask why Lawrence never became a major hub for the music industry. The tone of the question is often negative as if there were nothing else Lawrence could possibly aspire to. For some, it's the blessing of Lawrence to keep the artist in the musician. For others, it's an affliction that keeps the paycheck from the rock star. Generally, however, the locals tend to resent anyone perceived as a sellout, and that means big-time label contracts have to be sought elsewhere. "Lawrence is so welcoming to musicians, but it seems like you can only get to a certain point, and you can't go on past there," said John Momberg of the local band Kelpie. Other cities have beaten different paths. Seattle will be remembered for its fermentation of '90s grunge and its drug-addled, suicidal rock stars. Austin, Texas, will forever be haunted by the ghost of Stevie Ray Vaughn who stills wanders the halls of Antones, Austin's premier blues bar. On music row in Nashville, Tenn., Johnny Cash's sultry, baritone voice will forever ring out from the stained-glass windows he had installed in the Ryman Auditorium to give it the look of a chapel. "Lawrence is so welcoming to musicians, but it seems like you can only get to a certain point,and you can't go on past there." John Momberg Member of local band Kelpie Even Omaha, Neb., will forever be remembered as the emo metropolis of the Midwest as the high tide of its popularity pounds the shores of MTV and Spin magazine and prepares to fade away as quickly as it appeared. But Lawrence? Well, Lawrence will be remembered for many things but never for any one thing in particular. While some would like to see Lawrence achieve the status of an Austin or a Seattle, others say Lawrence is just fine where it is, and the limitations in place that keep the city's musicians humble should stay just where they are. Arthur Dodge, of the local band Arthur Dodge and the Horsefeathers, has tried before to leave Lawrence behind. Something to write home about He's lived in Austin and Nashville for short periods in attempts to better establish a solo career. Four albums later, he's back in Lawrence, driving a cab and playing The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., and the Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. "Austin was too god damn hot for me," Dodge said. "But there were more venues. I like playing shows there. But I think our punk bands are a little better than theirs." Of course there's more to it than the sti- CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2003 COVERSTORY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9 CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE fling, summer heat of Austin. Dodge said he once made $5 playing a show in Austin; hardly enough for a few gallons of gas. He spent the money on a drink. As for Nashville, Dodge said fierce competition among the droves of aspiring musicians killed any sense of creativity. Not to mention, as supply exceeds demand, the idea of steady pay becomes a joke. "You can make more money here than you can as a band in Austin," Dodge said. "And you're kind of spoiled if you grow up as a band here because you're not going to make shit in Nashville. It's so cheap here to make a living." Dodge added that industry executives in Nashville were afraid of anything cutting edge that might deviate from the main exports and investors wouldn't take the risk. "I saw some good stuff," Dodge said. "But there's no more good stuff there than "You can make more money here than you can as a band in Austin. And you're kind of spoiled if you grow up as a band here because you're not going to make shit in Nashville. It's so cheap here to make a living." Arthur Dodge Member of local band Arthur Dodge and the Horsefeathers anywhere else including here. But you have 100 guys with guitars and it's just fucking horrible." Colors of home Fans of music and the musicians themselves have learned to accommodate for the lack of big venues in Lawrence. Rather than give up, the locals just opened their living rooms, or began booking at smaller more intimate bars. That means no glitzy stage productions, but it brings the fans closer to the bands. "If you talk to most people who are going to house shows or Replay shows, that's all they want to see," said Peter Berard, an Overland Park junior, who DJs at KJHK. "I'm so spoiled from being able to stand close to the bands. When you go to big shows, you sort of feel alienated. The Lawrence thing isn't about spectacle with big shows and big lights." Berard helps book bands at the Pink House and the Halfway House, both wellknown for hosting regular shows, and the Replay Lounge through Front Room Productions. He said the amount of culture packed into Lawrence allowed local artists to network fast, and thus, put together diverse performances in more personal settings. That means the Lawrence cultural experience is more organic and less inclined to become a CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE Denis, a man who wasn't sure he wanted his last name published with this story sifts through records at the Love Garden. The Love Garden, 936 1/2 Massachusetts Street remains a constant outlet for music to thrive and remain independent in Lawrence ALTERNATIVE ALTERNATIVE SOUNDGARDEN STILL LIFE TELEPHONE STRANGLAB TPUL 282 COURTESY CAMERAS OLD MANNINGS TRADIES TAB 10 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COVER STORY THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 ON SALE NOW SUNAIYA Starla Benford Erin Moran From TV's Happy Days Amy J. Carle What Do Jayhawks Call Their Vaginas? THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets. www.ticketmaster.com 816-931-3330. The Lied Center Box Office; or 785-864-ARTS Service Charge may apply. Brandon Baker/Kansan Kandy the cat sleeps on a warm cd player upstairs at the Love Garden, Lawrence's oldest venue for used records, compact discs and tapes. STICK SLACKJAW MOLLY MCGUIRE Bush said he didn't mind playing and attending shows at smaller venues. That's the nature of Lawrence, and even bigger acts that play at The Bottleneck are closer to the crowd than they might be used to. chain of business deals. "Lawrence is snobby," Berard said. "Let's not kid ourselves. But not necessarily in a bad way. People in Lawrence are very punk-oriented, and if you believe in that, you don't really believe in making money on your music." "It's sad, but if you look at the bands that have gotten really big outside of here, like the Anniversary and The Get Up Kids, those few bands give up school and tour." "If you look at places like L.A. and Seattle that have been big music cities in the past—those are not college-town bands," Bush said. "The bands that start here are college kids, and college kids can't tour." Martin Bush of the local band Salt the Earth added that Lawrence bands had a more difficult time going on tour and delivering their sound to the rest of the country. CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE "The big venues that I've been to in the last year or so on the coasts seem to have a much more separated feeling going on," Bush said. "There's the crowd and the band, and it's a very divisive line. But in Lawrence, big bands play, and they walk around and talk to people and hang out. At least from what I've seen, that doesn't really happen in bigger cities." There are other more obvious reasons why Lawrence music can't compete. Invisible city Seattle, Nashville and Austin all have "If you look at places like L.A. and Seattle that have been big music cities in the past those are not college town bands," Bush said. "The bands that start here are college kids, and college kids can't tour." Martin Bush Member of local band Salt the Earth Austin recently determined its local music industry was worth about $616 million a year to the local economy. The Seattle and Nashville Chambers of Commerce were not aware of industry reports in their cities, but the idea of such studies gauging the value of local music are always being proposed. The mayor's office in Nashville still gets calls about conducting analysis of the city's music industry. But Lawrence would never consider analyzing local music in economic terms. It's not likely the Pink House or the Replay Lounge contribute significantly to the city's bottom line. But the intangible value of artistic expression contributes to Lawrence's immeasurable aesthetic. populations of more than 500,000 people. Lawrence barely reaches 80,000,and about one third of those people are rotating in and out of the city through the University. That means the more vibrant Lawrence culture becomes, and the less often local 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 COVER STORY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 11 CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE bands venture out into the clutches of the mainstream music industry, the more the city remains a secret. "That's what makes Lawrence a unique city as far as music goes," said Nate Harold of the local bands Kelpie and Getaway Driver. "It's just seems like nobody's trying to be the next big thing. Everybody's doing their own thing and they're content with being a secret." Indeed, author John Villani ranked Lawrence 15th out of 100 of the best small art towns in America. The National Endowment for the Arts ranked Lawrence 12th in U.S.cities with the largest percentage of professional artists. Harold, Weskin senior and Jayplay music critic, said Lawrence's modest size forced groups of artists to overlap and become a part of one another's respective medium. For instance, the Pink House aside from regular shows, is currently featuring an art exhibit. "If you go to the Replay, everybody there is an artist, writer or musician," Berard said. "It's interesting because we have this small town with all of these cultured outlets." But Lawrence's artistic community, including its music scene, still doesn't and likely won't ever resemble an "industry." A safe place Applying the word "industry" to music elicits the image of a Third-World peasant manufacturing thousands of identical rock stars, first reaching into a basket of appendages, then attaching them to a bony torso. Add tight jeans, a faded little league baseball jersey and a pair of dusty Chuck Taylor's — Presto! — rock star #39945 is born. But music doesn't work that way, at least not in Lawrence. There are, however, shortcomings to the tacit rules Lawrence places on local music. Brandon Hubbard, a KJHK DJ who books bands locally, said limitations on how much musicians can grow may lead to less opportunities for new musicians. "I think it's on the negative side for the most part," Hubbard, Lawrence freshman, said. "It's because Lawrence hasn't had a steady all-ages venue since the Outhouse. Limiting to an 18-and-over crowd "Although Lawrence has certainly had a few issues, its character seems more intact over a 10- or 20-year period," Myer said. "Some people I've met in Austin actually bow down to the altar of Lawrence." has definitely stifled younger musicians from getting an earlier start." Josh Myer Former Lawrence resident Hubbard said fans and bands in other cities tended not to move around as much based on their college and career agendas. While a constantly shifting local population means fresh blood for the city, Hubbard said he didn't think it was being taken advantage of. But in other cities, where more options may be available for artists, "the day job persists," as Josh Myer, a former Lawrence resident said. Myer moved to Austin for more opportunities in theater, but the high cost of living always looms. And Myer still extols the virtues of Lawrence. "Although Lawrence has certainly had a few issues, its character seems more intact over a 10- or 20-year period," Myer said. "Some people I've met in Austin actually bow down to the altar of Lawrence." So Lawrence may forever be the younger sibling of other music cities. But younger siblings are in a position to learn what mistakes to avoid. While the lines of cultural communication continue to link cities together, Lawrence still insists on playing by its own rules. "The regional aspect of music is unavoidable just because the people you see most often are people in your town," veteran rock producer Steve Albini said in an interview with Punk Planet magazine. "Now there's a much broader dissemination of information; these regional scenes don't necessarily have geographic boundaries. They have philosophical boundaries instead." www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com — Edited by Amber Byarlay 20" SPEAKERS Lots of powerful bass. Must sell, $150. Call 555-1212. If you've got it, we can sell it. Your run in The! 20" SPEAKERS Lots of powerful bass. Must sell, $150. Call 555-1212. If you've got it, we can sell it. Your ad runs in The University Daily Kansan and on kansan.com. Students receive 20% off. Call 864-4358 for details. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING MADE EASY WITH THE NEW WEEKLY SPECIALS YOURS TO KEEP ON THE RACK OF EVERY JAYPLAY KANSAN BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING MADE EASY WITH THE NEW WEEKLY SPECIALS YOURS TO KEEP ON THE BACK OF EVERY JAYPLAY 12 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FILM THURSDAY,APRIL17,2003 'Anger Management'a let down REVIEW The West Side Story favorite "I Feel Pretty" gets an Adam Sandler/Jack Nicholson makeover in Anger Management, an otherwise tame "Happy-Madison" production that has our generation's most beloved comedian getting a makeover of his own. Stephen Shupe sshupe@kansan.com As Dave Buznik, a repressed executive at a pet products company, Sandler reins in his usual shout for half tones and shy, mumbling intonations. The violence has been erased from his voice, as if the hyper-immediacy of his "Love Stinks" rendition in The Wedding Singer never existed. I don't know who wants to see a toned-down, half-assed Sandler. Either you dig his in-your-face style of physical threats as jokes or you don't. If his normal level is a bark, he barely manages a growl in Anger Management. After an airplane incident lands him in court, Dave is ordered to attend group sessions with therapist Buddy Rydell, played by Nicholson. Soon, the vitriolic Buddy has moved into Dave's apartment, an invasion of privacy that threatens to push Dave over the edge. Nicholson, in a performance inspired by Nick Nolte's crazed DUI mug shot from last September, seems amused that Sandler would try to act opposite him. His amusement is contagious. Sandler, though returns to his career-long impersonation of the nerdy kid in speech class who writes a joke and thinks his monosyllabic reading of it will make people laugh. There's more to like about Anger Management beyond Nicholson forcing Sandler to sing the Streisand-esque ditty "I Feel Pretty" in the midst of rush-hour traffic. John Turturro, the scene-stealing butler from Mr. Deeds, upstages Sandler for the second time in a row as Dave's "anger ally." (His timely letter to Geraldo Rivera reads, "You're gonna die, bitch.") And if we can't have Rob Schneider say it as he did in The Waterboy, a perfect substitute to deliver the "Happy-Madison" staple, "You can do it!" is Rudy Giuliani in one of the film's many celebrity cameos. Lame uplift fights for screen space with Sandler's patented vulgarity, so much that I got the feeling that director Peter Segal (Tommy Boy) had the project taken from his control. The film's opening is in the sketch-comedy spirit of Billy Madison, with a mentally handicapped girl slobbering and wailing for effect. But immediately after that, the action begins to streamline Sandler's familiar tricks. It's as if the opening was shot in a last-minute ditch to keep his fans from being alienated from the get-go. Anger Management's Manhattan backdrops are handsomely filmed — a considerable improvement on the student-film look of Sandler's worst movie, Little Nicky. But there's little to be said about a comedy that reaches its comedic nova with a fat kitty in designer clothes. ANGER MANAGEMENT ... C Starring: Adam Sandler, Jack Nicholson and Marisa Tomei Rated PG-13 for crude sexual content and language Playing at South Wind 12 Theaters, 3433 Iowa St. Everyone is slumming here. Consider their recent films, which represent some of the best of the decade: Sandler and Luis Guzman in Punch-Drunk Love, Nicholson and Harry Dean Stanton in The Pledge, Turturro in O Brother, Where Art Thou?, Kurt Fuller in Auto Focus, Heather Graham in From Hell, John C. Reilly in Gangs of New York and Marisa Tomei in In the Bedroom. It must have been time to pay the bills when these actors signed up for Anger Management,a promising casting coup that can't decide whether it's playing to the children of Eminem or Frank Sinatra. Shupe is an Augusta graduate student in journalism. kansan.com university kansan.com university daily kansan.com serving ku campus coupons apartment guide posters involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation weekly specials get involved valentine’s day gardens life bracket bash graduation all semester all the time alright THURSDAY, APRIL 17,2003 MOVIES AROUND TOWN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 13 The following reviews and summaries were written by Jayplay film critic Stephen Shupe unless otherwise noted. LIBERTYHALL Adaptation Grade: A- Charlie Kaufman's Mad Hatter idea to write himself into his own screenplay pays off in spades in Spike Jonze's latest comedic stunner. Nicholas Cage gives a blistering performance as the screenwriter hired to adapt Susan Orlean's The Orchid Thief, a decidedly non-cinematic book about flowers. Meryl Streep plays Orlean in some of the best sequences in the film, which feature an Oscar-winning Chris Cooper as a greasy horticulturist who journeys through the swamp lands to lift endangered orchids. Charlie's descent from artistic integrity to derivative hell is one of the movies' most memorable unraveling acts in years, and Adaptation's restless originality all but guarantees it cult status. Bend It Like Beckham (Opens Friday) Jess dreams of playing professional soccer just like her hero David Beckham, but her London-based Indian family has other ideas. She's expected to marry young in a lavish Indian wedding, and this more traditional path presents itself when Jess meets a soccer hunk named Joe (Jonathan Rys Meyers). Gurinder Chadha's acclaimed comedy of manners is gaining momentum as this year's mustsee crossover sensation. In Bulletproof Monk, Chow Yun Fat stars as a monk whose duty has been to protect a powerful ancient scroll. The film also stars Seann William Scott. Contributed art City of God Grade: A A modern masterpiece of epic scope and breathtaking energy, City of God is a violent plunge into a forgotten underworld the Brazilian slums that served as ground zero for drug trafficking through Rio de Janeiro in the '60s and '70s. Director Fernando Meirelles' astonishingly clear vision of this inescapable world is like an urbanized retelling of William Golding's Lord of the Flies, where savage boys quench the bloodthirsty beast within. Dizzying visuals, heartbreaking truths and surreal rock-and-roll flourishes make for an exhilarating and unforgettable film experience. SOUTH WIND 12 Bringing Down the House Grade: B whether Bringing Down the House, with Steve Martin as the Stuffy White Guy and Queen Latifah as the Loudmouthed Black Chick, reinforces racist stereotypes. But few can deny that the silverhaired prig and the brassy babe are a unique comic alloy. -KRT Campus Bulletproof Monk Grade: B Flying kung fu and an ancient artifact of great power figure heavily in this buddy pic starring Chow Yun Fat and Seann William Scott, but the Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon comparisons end there. American action directors have learned nothing from the karate lessons taught by the Hong Kong masters, so Bulletproof Monk wisely relies on Fat and Scott's richly comedic chemistry, which makes Adam Sandler and Jack Nicholson in Anger Management look like amateurs. The story turns overly serious in the unintentional Hannibal parody of a finale, in which a wheelchairbound psycho concocts an elaborate death trap, but it's already won sentiments by then. Scott, who looks stoned out of his mind in his first scene (how's that for method acting?), replaces Keanu as the movie's blank-dude embodiment of irreverence. If he had played Neo in The Matrix, instead of saying "Whoa" he would have said "Huh?" Dreamcatcher Grade: B- Four telepathic friends enter the snowy New England woods for a week end hunting expedition, only to be hunted themselves by little green men. At the heart of this Stephen King story is one of the more intriguing ideas about alien invasions ever, where interplanetary monsters draw upon dreams and hide behind the friendly-neighbors imaginings of such movies as Close Encounters of the Third Kind. In King's book, this concept was overwhelmed by a seemingly endless race against time, and Dreamcatcher's director, Lawrence Kasdan, possesses no other ambition than to film it faithfully. Some of the acting especially by Damian Lewis as a shape-shifting alien with a James Bond accent is fun. But the demands of big budget sci-fi creatures and special effects quickly take over the picture. Holes (not reviewed) Unlucky since birth because of an ancient family curse, Stanley Yelnats is wrongfully hauled off to Camp Green Lake to serve out a months-long detention sentence. The camp's spring-fresh moniker turns out to be misleading when Stanley and his fellow campmates - Squid, Armpit, ZigZag, Magnet, X-Ray and Zero - are forced to dig hundreds of holes in the desert for the menacing warden in a mass search for a mysterious hidden treasure. For the kids, though Sigourney Weaver as a villain sounds irresistible. Malibu's Most Wanted (Opens Friday) Rich white boy Brad "B-Rad" Gluckman's hip-hop lifestyle is seriously hindering his father's bid for governor. When Dad's campaign manager hires two thespians (Taye Diggs and Blair Underwood) to show B-Rad what gangsta life is really like, the prodigal son must prove that he's for real, yo. With Jamie Kennedy as B-Rad, whose maxim ("Don't be hatin'." ) is already a catchphrase at my house. There may be controversy about of great power figure heavily in this bound psycho concocts an elaborate 14 = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIDEO GAME THURSDAY, APRIL17, 2003 The legend of Zelda continues The next epic tale in The Legend of Zelda is now on the Nintendo Gamecube, complete with a new cast of characters and story. Because of the way the game's graphics looked, I had vowed not to play the game until it was reverted to its original look. One of the first few screen shots looked liked a finely done version of Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. After testing this game, I realized I would have been stupid not to play The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker. REVIEW NINTENDONINTELCONSOLE THE LEGEND OF ZELDA wind waker E Nintendo Chris Moore cmoore@kansan.com Contributed art The game starts out on how Hyrule was saved by the Hero of Time. However, when Ganon returned, the Hero didn't show up again. In the future, you assume the role of This game is basically the same type of game as the Nintendo 64's Legend of Zelda games. The only thing that is truly different is the story. This game literally is the "legend" of Zelda. Link, a boy living on Outset Island about to celebrate his coming of age. Per Island custom, Link is dressed in green that day. Suddenly, pirates show up, a gigantic bird kidnaps your sister and then the fun begins when you go on a mythical quest to save humanity itself. The game play is similar to Ocarina of Time and Majora's Mask. You can equip yourself with weapons such as the grappling hook and the Deku Leaf. A major difference is your fighting style. You now have an array of defensive moves at your disposal. When the A button is pressed at the right time you can unleash devastating counterattacks. This comes in handy when shielded enemies surround you. Also the method of traveling for the game is different. Instead of running or riding a horse through the field, you must take a boat to get to other islands. If you swim for too long, you will drown. Treasure hunting is important in the game. Once you get far enough in the game, it will become a necessity to find treasure. To navigate the way that you're going, you will be given a sea chart, but it is incomplete when you first get it. You must find a way to complete the chart. By completing the chart, islands are shown and it becomes easier to find treasure chests on LEGEND OF ZELDA: THE WIND WAKER ... A. Now available for GameCube Rated E for Everyone Sells for an average retail price of $50 the chart. The only downside to this game is the cartoony graphics. The creators have added cell shading to the outlook of the game, which is OK at some points but doesn't make too much of a difference. Some of the characters look dorky. However, you may be able to look past that aspect. This game is basically the same type of game as the Nintendo 64's Legend of Zelda games. The only thing that is truly different is the story. This game literally is the "legend" of Zelda. If you can get past the cartoon graphics, you'll get swept away by The Wind Waker. Moore is a Tulsa, Okla., freshman in journalism SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay NEWS SPORTS OPINION JAYPLAY SPECIALS SEE IT ALL ONLINE. kansan.com The online edition of The University Daily Kansan 15 This page is satire. All names are made up, except in cases when public figures are being satirized. Other use of real names is accidental unless otherwise noted. Questions? comments? Contact Lucas Wetzel at 864-4810 or beak@kansan.com. Or send smoke signals. TONGUEINBEAK WWW.KANSAN.COM/SATIRE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 2003 'I'm leaving,'announces senior photo by Kelley Weiss/Kansan By Lucas Wetzel beak@kansan.com Kansan Jayplay writer Despite delivering the momentous news that she would leave the University after graduation, Jill Harrah's impromptu press conference drew an attendance of zero. "I don't expect you to understand," Harrah told a cluster of empty seats at Stauffer-Flynt yesterday. In a hastily-called press conference yesterday afternoon, soon-to-be graduating senior Jill Harrah began with two simple words: "I'm leaving." The phrase was followed by a silence, due in part to the emotional nature of the announcement, and in part to the complete emptiness of the room. "No syndicated columnists, no bitter t-shirts, no flags at half-mast, no nothing," she said. "Nobody gave a muck." "When I decided to go to college after high school, coming to KU was the right thing," said Harrah, Andover senior. "Now that I've completed my degree, leaving KU is the right thing." Although Harrah anticipated an emotional evening, she was disappointed by the lack of public response. The only student reactions about Harrah's decision came in the form of chalk markings on Wescoe Beach that read, "Jill is a strumpet," and "Jill played vo-vo with my emotions." James McCartney, Las Vegas junior and Harrah's boyfriend of 15 months, later admitted to the chalk writing. "Three months ago she said she might stay for graduate school, and then she pulls this (expletive)." he said. McCartney vowed to undertake an "aggressive search" for a new girlfriend, saying he had narrowed the list to the girl from his sociology class, his little sister's roommate, and former Kansas basketball player Kevin Pritchard. Harrah was equally upset about the press conference, but for different reasons. She said that despite being a phenomenal student, Chancellor Robert E. Hemenway had made virtually no effort to retain her at the University. "Hemenway all but dressed up as Lisa Loeb and sang 'Stay' to Roy Williams, but he didn't say boo to me," Harrah said. "All I asked was for him to fire my math teacher, but no dice." After the conference, former Athletics Director Al Bohl was seen listlessly walking around the statue of Icarus behind Nichols Hall, a yellow marshmallow Peep in hand. "This bird had a tongue, and could peep once," he said. "Alas, Icarus, I knew him well." Online enrollment: tips for easy (K)use This April, the University of Kansas offered online enrollment for the first time. In order to clear up last-minute confusion, Project Manager Robert "Topsy" Turvey submitted a list of common problems to the Tongue in Beak in a Question/Answer format. 1937 Q: How does online enrollment work? A: The KU server sends student-selected course numbers via telex to a satellite dish in Puerto Rico. The satellite dish then projects the information to Space station Mir, where a copy of the class schedule is printed out and approved by Ukranian cosmonauts. Q: What exactly is the Kyou portal? Enrollment yesterday: Students line up outside Strong Hall, often for days on end. As a result of sub-zero degree temperatures, few survive. A: Kyou is like Stargate, only instead of sending you to the pyramids, you wind up with a new schedule. In the future, Kyou will be personalized to sell you things. Many monkeys were lost in space in the designing of this portal. Q: Is my Epassport valid for international travel? A: Yes. Your Epassport can be used to travel to Mexico, Canada, and virtually any nation not currently under U.S. economic sanctions. Please clear all financial holds to avoid deportation and/or execution while abroad. What happens if I have to go to the bathroom while enrolling online? A: If you are in the school of Engineering, you will need a dean's stamp. A: Learner is a new University employee who specializes in helping students set up and view their class schedules. However, Learner is ready and willing to offer additional services not listed on the Kyou portal. Inquiries can be sent to LrnrXXX@hotmale.com. Q: Who exactly is the "Learner" and what are his/her "services?" Q: When I try to enroll in Human Sexuality, the V-chip on my parents computer will not allow me to proceed. What do I do? A: This is a result of a new amendment designed to protect average students from pornographic pop-up windows. Under the amendment, proposed by Sen. Susan Wagle (R-Wichita), all Enrollment today: Using a space-age wormhole called the Kyou portal, a student enrolls in classes from the comfort of his planetarium. students wishing to enroll in the course must meet with the street preacher on Wescoe Beach, who will then peer long and hard into their lost souls. Q: If I set the date on my computer calendar forward, can I enroll ahead of my scheduled enrollment time? A: No. Not only is that dishonest, but classes that do not exist will appear to be open. That is frustrating. Q: I broke all of my fingers in an industrial accident and am unable to type. Can I enroll using my Texas Instruments Speak 'N Spell? A: Of course. Simply plug your Speak'N Spell into a phone line, locate the online timetable on the LCD display, and go to Enroll & Pay. Good luck. BRIEFLY World's Largest Groundhog breaks free, sets fire to World's Largest Ball of Twine In a fiery protest of Mt. Sunflower's recent demotion to "nub" status, The World's Largest Groundhog World's Largest Groundhog broke free of his confines near Oakley, grabbed the World's Largest Ball of Twine and set it aflame atop the mount before being talked down by authorities. The Groundhog fled Prairie Dog Town last Friday after his friend, the five-legged cow, read him the screenplay to "Follow That Bird." Adam Collingsworth, Oakley resident, said he and several friends followed the groundhog west "That was inspiring," Collingsworth said. "After that, the groundhog broke out the moonshine and the cow started drinking like he had a hollow leg. Five of them, in fact. I thought Padre was fun, but it pales in comparison to Mt. Sunflower." after seeing him level an entire grain elevator with the ball of twine. The festivities ended once former senator Bob Dole journeyed to Mt. Sunflower to talk some sense into the gargantuan varmint. The Groundhog agreed to return to Prairie Dog Town after Dole promised him a free frosty mug at the A&W in Russell. 'Oracle' wins Pulitzer The Oracle, the quarterly magazine of the Greek Community, received a top prize last week in the 87th annual Pulitzer Awards. The Oracle, which chronicles the life and times of Greek residents at the University of Kansas, won the top award in this year's mystery category. The prize-winning story, "Hollywood Greeks," matched up photos of KU fraternity and sorority residents with movie-star look-alikes. Groundhog photo by Spencer Roberts. All stories by L Wetzel. Unfortunately for you, naughty girl, two can play the quiet game. squirrel 16 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT THURSDAY,APRIL 17,2003 There's a better way to vent. free for all 864-0500. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weekly Specials Dig that Laurence Nightlife Friday 5pm Saturday 7pm Sunday 9pm Tuesday 10pm Wednesday 11pm ABE&JAKE'S Ultravit at Electronic Dance Night $2.50 Captain Morgan $3.50 32oz Bubba Beers Free Pool Every Day $2 Bud & Bud Lt Bottles $3 Smirnoff Martinis $1.50 Sticks Free Pool Every Day $2.50 Southern Comfort $3.50 Bubba Beers Free Pool Every Day $5 Miller Pitchers $2 Michelob Lt & Ultra Free Pool Every Day $1.50 Miller Highlife $5 Miller Pitchers Free Pool Every Day $2.50 Parrot Bay Drinks $3 Bacard, Citron Smirnoff Ice Mike's Zima Free Pool Every Day $3 Imports $2 Wells $2 Michelob Lt & Ultra $2.50 Any Bottles 1/2 Price Appetizer 8pm-10pm $1.50 Deli Meats & Drinks 1/2 Price Appetizer 8pm-10pm $2 Well Dbls DJ Nick Reddell $3 Red Bull Vookas DJ Brandon Morgan Anything But Joey & Ultimate Fakebook 7pm Check out www.thesalad.com for upcoming shows Organization latest space is available Check out www.thesalad.com for upcoming shows Gladiator arena space is available No Lessons Concern 8pm 25c DRAWS!! 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GOOD LOCATION! Pool Right JACK TRANGARS Pool Room JACK GRANDERS JCB Friday April 18,2003 Vol. 113, Issue No. 137 Today's weather 76° Tonight:46° Tell us your news THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KA KANSAS ELAYS 1022 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas Relays events continue throughout weekend p. 1B Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Final farewell The Lied Center The Ceremony of Kanza Eric Braemy/Kansar Former basketball coach Roy Williams thanks the Lied Center audience after finishing his speech at the KU basketball awards ceremony. Williams received a standing ovation when he was introduced, but yells of "Go home, Roy" and "Traitor" also were heard. A trio shook newspapers in front of their faces when Williams took the podium. Fans responded to the negative comments, shouting "We love you, Roy," and directing, "You should be ashamed of yourself," at the hecklers. See full story on page 1B. Building a better center Donor, student fees to help build new MRC By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Construction of a new Multicultural Resource Center jumped two steps forward Wednesday. In the morning a donor expressed interest in making a $1 million commitment to the estimated $3 million building, said Kevin Corbett, senior vice president of development at the Kansas University Endowment Association. STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Later that day, the Student Senate Finance committee passed a bill 17-2 to create a student fee that would incur half of the cost. "The turnaround from idea to reality has been amazing," Jonathan Ng, student body president, said. Senate will vote to finalize the student fee next Wednesday. The proposed legislation includes a $3.50 fee per semester if the student is enrolled in more than six credit hours. If a student is enrolled in six or fewer hours, the fee is figured for each enrolled credit hour, the amount as published in the Official Comprehensive Fee Schedule. The summer fee, if enrolled five or more credit hours, would be $1.75.If enrolled in less than five hours, the fee, again, is figured for each enrolled credit hour. The fee is set to last until 2014. Kit Brauer, holdover senator and one of the opposing voters, said he was worried students would keep paying beyond the halfway mark. "The turnaround from idea to reality has been amazing. Jonathan Ng Student Body President Loren Malone, student body vice president, said not to worry because the University would stop charging the fee once the halfway mark was met. The fee would also subside if funds were met sooner in other ways. Blake Shuart, MRCtask force member, said the group would continue to push the Endowment Association to find more donors even if the confirmed donor fully commits to paying for half the construction. "With half of the cost, approximately $1.5 million, coming from students and $1 million from a donor," Shuart said, "that last $500,000 is unaccounted for." Ng said there were definite options to attaining the last bit. If more donations aren't pledged, Ng said, Chancellor Robert Hemenway told him the University of Kansas would pick up the rest. Hemenway also told Ng that he would lobby the Board of Regents to put the fee on its agenda before June so that the student fee could be instituted as soon as possible. If the fee passes Senate and the Board of Regents, an architect could be found this summer with hopes of completing the MRC by Fall 2005. — Edited by Ryan Wood New illness a concern among those going abroad By Nikki Overfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome is hitting home. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, two cases have been reported in Kansas, and 190 have been reported in the United States as of April 13. For one former KU student, SARS hit way too close to home. Lindsay Kincaid, May 2002 graduate, was about two-thirds of her way through a nine-month trip around the world when she became sick in Hong Kong in March. Kincaid was running a fever and was having some difficulty breathing but figured it was probably just her allergies and didn't want to let it ruin her trip, she said. "Oh, this is nothing," she said she told herself. "It's not like I'm going to stay in bed for five days." After spending five days in Hong Kong, Kincaid continued on to Thailand. She started to feel even worse, so she went to a hospital in Bangkok. The doctors did a chest X-ray at the hospital and diagnosed her with atypical pneumonia, she said. On March 11, Kincaid was sent home to Overland Park on an emergency flight — all before Kincaid had even heard about SARS. After being home for a day, Kincaid started hearing news from Europe about the then mystery illness. She was feeling better, but went to her doctor just to make sure. "It was all very suspicious because I was in the infected area at the time," she said. "I was kind of freaking out, for sure." Kincaid had another chest X-ray done, which showed that she didn't have pneumonia anymore or SARS, she said "It was all good news once I went to the doctor," she said. Watkins Memorial Health Center has been fielding a lot of questions about SARS from students and faculty who plan on traveling, said Myra Strother, director and chief of staff of Watkins. "Students here at KU, unless they're traveling abroad, probably don't have much to worry about," she said. Students who are traveling for fun to the places most affected, such as China Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam, might want to consider changing their traveling plans, she said. If they do travel, students must realize they are putting themselves at risk of becoming ill and at being quarantined, she said. SEE SARS ON PAGE 8A Students react to fall of Baghdad, U.S. role in rebuilding By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The forthcoming end of the war and United States' future in the Middle East has led to uneasiness among students. Though the war with Iraq appears to be coming to a close, students at the University of Kansas remain apprehensive. U. S. forces appear to be controlling the war after seizing Baghdad last week, but student reactions boil down to one basic question. "Now what?" Conor Meagher, Overland Park junior, said. about the United States' role in a post-Saddam Iraq. Meagher said he was nervous While many students are relieved that the war's most intense fighting is coming to a close, the same students question how successful the United States will be in reshaping Iraq. "I don't think it should be the United States deciding for the Iraqi people," he said. "It's like if you get a heart transplant but it's the wrong type," Sam Hopkins, Prairie Village sophomore, said. "It seems like it's a good thing, but it might not be." Hopkins, who is a member of the KU Israel Alliance, said he also worried about how the fighting would affect Israel. He said the United States' intensified language toward Syria, which is a country branded as a supporter of terrorism by the U.S. government, worried him. Hopkins is nervous because of Syria's proximity to Israel. "It's sad; I have to look ahead to the next war, but that's the way it is." Hopkins said. For Kristen Pedula, the end of the war isn't the fall of a Saddam Hussein statue, it's the return home of loved ones. Pedula, Leavenworth senior, has a brother and several hometown friends who are deployed in Iraq. "It won't be over for home, when the yellow ribbons are down from the trees," she said. Despite worries about the future, most students expressed relief that Saddam Hussein had been usurped. "I'm glad he's out," said Ladan Behbahani, St. Louis sophomore. "He's killed thousands of his own people and thousands of Iranians." Behbahani, who is of Iranian descent, said the Middle East would benefit from the fall of Hussein's regime. She was more worried about continued U.S. presence in the region. "It makes me nervous, Western dominance in the Middle East," she said. "That's what Al Qaeda and a lot of extremists are upset about." — Edited by Christy Dendurent TURKEY IRAN Mediterranean Sea IRAQ Baghdad Cario EGYPT Red Sea SAUDI ARABIA Donovan Atkinson/Kansan 4 7 。 2A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front FRIDAY,APRIL18,2003 News briefs CORRECTIONS Yesterday's The University Daily Kansan contained two errors. In the Jayplay article, "Debating footwear and liberalism," Footprints owner Mick Ranney's name was misspelled. In the same article, Footprints address was misidentified. It is located at 1339 Massachusetts St. Wednesday's Kansan contained an error. The article, "Fitness center closes, leaves members seeking new club," stated that only one coed fitness center other than Robinson Gymnasium still exists. Olympic Iron, 520 E. 22nd Terrace, is a public coed gym. CAMPUS Anti-violence march now open to everyone The annual protest against sexual and domestic violence, Womyn Take Back the Night March, will take place at 5:30 tonight at Buford M. Watson Park, Sixth and Tennessee streets. The march is open to all genders, ethnicities, ages and sexual orientations. Activities will include a march down Massachusetts Street, a rally featuring local speakers and performers, speak out circles and the Clothesline Project a display that demonstrates violence against women and children For the first time this year, men are invited to march with the women and children. Cal Creek STATT Philip Morris USA fulfills state payment TOPEKA—The state's receipt this week of a scheduled payment from the national tobacco settlement helped dispel fears that one cigarette maker's legal problems could block its contributions. Attorney General Phill Kline said the $41.1 million that arrived Tuesday included $21.6 million paid by Philip Morris USA. Philip Morris had warned it might miss a $2.6 billion payment due Tuesday to states that sued tobacco companies for the costs of treating sick smokers because it had to post a $12 billion bond in Illinois. But the bond was reduced Monday to $6 billion, after the attorneys general of 33 states — not including Kansas — filed a request with the judge in the Illinois case. The 1998 tobacco settlement allots Kansas a total $1.6 billion over 25 years, with payments due each April and December Area man to stand trial for Turnpike stabbing LEAVENWORTH — A Missouri man was bound over Wednesday to stand trial on a charge of stabbing his disabled son and leaving him to die on the Kansas Turnpike. The preliminary hearing for Raymond Boothe, 34, was delayed to allow for the completion of an independent evaluation of Boothe's mental competence. Boothe of Cameron, Mo., is charged with first-degree murder in the Aug. 27 death of his 11-year-old son, Raymond Levi Boothe. Prosecutors said the boy died after being hit by a car. NATION University of Missouri to add fifth campus COLUMBIA, Mo. — The University of Missouri's governing board on Wednesday formally endorsed the efforts of President Elson Floyd to add Northwest Missouri State University to the system as a fifth campus. It was the latest development in merger talks that surfaced less than two weeks ago, after Northwest President Dean Hubbard brought up the subject during a visit by Floyd to Maryville, Mo. on other business. Floyd told reporters Wednesday the process seemed to be moving quickly — perhaps too quickly for some critics because he and Hubbard have been "out front and open regarding our conversations," rather than negotiating in secret and announcing a complete deal. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJHTV KUJH-TV News Tune in to KUJH-TV tonight to watch a special on the Lawrence Public School District's budget crisis. The district is facing $4 million in budget cuts. KUJH-TV Brooke Wehner will explain how the board plans to make up for those cuts and who will be hit the hardest. Listen to news tonight at 5:30,7,9 and 11. News: Tawny Bach and Brooke Wehner Weather: Matt Jacobs Sports: Mike Alzamora On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 90 7 кубы kansan.com Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. John Nowak/Kanzan Kelli Brandt, Leawood junior, watches Katie Macfee, Topeka junior, successfully catch a tossed pancake at the Alternative Breaks 2003 Multimedia Celebration at the Kansas Union Ballroom. The event was put on to commemorate all of the Alternative Breaks for the 2002-2003 school year. New events delay Castro documentary The Associated Press crackdowns. NEW YORK — Oliver Stone's documentary on Fidel Castro has been postponed indefinitely by HBO, which had planned to broadcast the film next month. Stone spent three days with Castro in February 2002 in an attempt "to portray the human figure." But HBO, which had promoted Comandante as "an unfinching portrait of the famous icon," said Stone's interpretation was undercut by the Cuban leader's recent "In light of recent alarming events in the country, the film seems somewhat dated or incomplete," said HBO representative Lana Iny, who characterized the film as "still in the works." Governments and rights groups around the world have condemned Cuba in recent weeks for its crackdown on the opposition, followed by the executions last week of three men convicted of hijacking a ferry filled with passengers in a bid to get to the United States. At February's Berlin Film Festival, where Comandante was screened, Stone said his three-day encounter with the communist leader left a deep impression. "We should look to him as one of the Earth's wisest people, one of the people we should consult," said Stone, director of such features as JPK and Nixon. Yesterday, Iny said HBO was "talking to Oliver about going back to Cuba" to pose questions to Castro about the arrests and executions. "We'll have to look at what Oliver's able to do." ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Kansas Relays begin at 8 a.m. today and tomorrow in Memorial Stadium. Contact KU Athletics at 864-3355 Robert Blackstone of the history department will give a War, Peace and Diplomacy Seminar on "The Father's Draft? Manpower Mobilization in WWII" from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today in the Hall Center for the Humanities. Call 864-4798. James Pryor of Princeton University will give a philosophy lecture on "Epistemic Agency" at 4:30 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3976. - Watkins Health Center will hold a First Aid and CPR class for students, faculty and staff from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday.Call 864-9571. KU Environers will sponsor an Earth Day parade and celebration from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday at South Park on Massachusetts Street. Call 550-6643. Musician Heather Trible will give a flute and piano performance at 2 p. m. on Saturday in the Central Court in the Spencer Museum of Art.Call 864-4710. Et Cetera Kansas Public Radio will present the comedy sketch Right Between the Ears at 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Saturday in Liberty Hall. Call 864-4530. Asian American Student Union will host Taste of Asia, a showcase of Asian fashion, performance and culture, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Call 864-4263. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Fint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS66045. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4567) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bi-weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stouffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 66045 which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Walk to Campus 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Campus Place APARTMENTS Apartments Available for Summer 2003 2 bedroom/2 bath Furnished & Unfurnished Apt. available 4 bedroom/2 bath 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft Fully Equipped Kitchens 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance Private Balconies & Patios Gas, Heat and Water Off Street Parking On-site Manager Call or stop in TODAY for private showing Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm EHO EAT AND The Lawrence Arts Center PRESENT The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams Directed by Paul Stephen Lim Scene Design by Kaye Miller Lighting Design by Lee Saylor Original Music by Karl Ramberg 8 PM April 16, 17, 18 2:30 PM April 19 Tickets (785) 643-2787 $6 students $8 seniors $10 others Lawrence Arts Center 940 New Hampshire Featuring Amy Devitt, Aron Carhon, Jacqueline Grissan, Jeremy Auman, John Youngs, Karl Ramborg. "Take 5"...five minutes for 5% off on Fall '03 Books Preorder and Save an extra 5% Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill or click and save @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com Economics 101 Preorder and Save an extra 5% USS CHICAGO Jayhawk Bookstore Stop in...at the top of Naismith Hill or click and save @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A NEWS Regents urge Sebelius to veto obscenity legislation The Associated Press TOPEKA - A legislative attempt to punish university departments that use "obscene" videos in human sexuality classes is unwarranted, the state Board of Regents said yesterday. The board unanimously approved a statement urging Gov. Kathleen Sebelius to veto the punitive language in the $10 billion budget bill awaiting her signature. University of Kansas professor Dennis Dailey is the unnamed target of the budget amendment by Sen. Susan Wagle, R-Wichita, who also filed a formal complaint that the university has agreed to investigate. Wagle's budget measure would deny funding to university departments if videos that would be "obscene" under Kansas law are bought or shown by instructors in undergraduate classes on sexuality. Dailey teaches in the university's School of Social Worker, which could lose $3.1 million under Wagle's measure. The regents, in their statement, urged Sebelius to use her authority Wagle for line-item vetoes to cross Wagle's amendment out of the budget. "The board is confident that current policies, which seek to PETER GROTHMAN Dailey said. resolve these issues at the institutional level, are sufficient to respond to concerns that may arise regarding these matters," the regents Sebelius must act on the budget on Monday at the latest. Wagle said Chancellor Robert Hemenway had told her the university cannot complete an investigation of Dailey by then. Dailey has taught the course for 20 years, regularly drawing the maximum enrollment of 500 students, and Wagle's complaint was the first to be filed against him, according to the university. In her complaint, Wagle said students have told her that Dailey not only shows "obscene" videos but uses vulgar language and gestures in class and belittled a student. The regents' statement also noted that each university has a procedure for addressing complaints about instructors or courses. But Wagle said the process does not work at the University of Kansas. She said one student, whom she did not identify, saw no action after verbally complaining about Dailey's class to an administrator. "The policies in place at the University of Kansas are ineffective," she said. "Whatever system they have in place has failed." Regents to consider fees for expansion of Saferide By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The Board of Regents considered a proposal yesterday to increase the required University of Kansas campus fee for student transportation by $2, to $18 from $16 each semester. The Regents will vote on the fee increase at their May meeting, said Dick Carter, director of external relations for the Regents. The increase will fund the expansion of the Saferide program, which provides students rides from 11 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. every day to their homes within Lawrence city limits. The program, started in 1986, provided about 21,000 rides in the 2001- 2002 school year and has been increasing every year for the past seven years. "Currently, Saferide is nearing peak capacity," Tim Akright, transportation coordinator, said. "When people are not with it, they don't tend to be the most patient people." The proposal states the additional revenue generated by the fee increase would mean more vehicles on weekend nights, when students typically wait up to 45 minutes for a ride. Wednesday and Thursday nights would expand from four to seven cars and Friday and Saturday nights would expand from seven to ten cars. The fee would also fund the initiation of a Summer Saferide program, which would provide two cars on Thursday. Friday and Saturday nights during the summer. The Transportation Board developed the proposed fee increase. The Student Senate University Affairs and Finance committees approved it in late March. Student Senate approved the fee in early April. Although the Summer Saferide program would start with only two cars, the Transportation Board budget is flexible enough to add cars immediately if there is a need. Akright said. The fee, if passed by the Regents, would be effective in Fall 2003. The expanded Saferide program would begin in August and the Summer Saferide program would begin in 2004. Edited by Michelle Burhenn Increased fees would benefit health services at med school By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Students at the University of Kansas School of Medicine may have to pay as much as $9 a semester to increase health services. The University of Kansas Medical Center presented the Board of Regents with a proposal yesterday to increase the fee for Student Health Services by 15 percent. The Regents will vote on the fee increase at their May meeting, said Dick Carter, director of external affairs for the Regents. Pending approval by the Regents, all medical students will be charged an additional $9 per semester. All graduate and undergraduate students in the School of Nursing, School of Allied Health and Graduate Studies and Research program enrolled in more than six credit hours would be assessed an increase of $7.20 per fall and spring semester and $3.20 per summer semester. Currently students pay $120 for a year. The revenue for student health is insufficient to cover the operating expenses for 2004, leaving a projected deficit of $16,000, according to the proposal. In addition to the projected deficit, the Student Health Outreach Team said it needed more services at Student Health, including more comprehensive travel medicine, urgent care hours and evening clinic hours. Rebecca Vaughn, director of Student Health Services, said new services would not be possible without a fee increase. "The best way to keep prices the same and improve our services was to increase the student health fee." Vaughn said. The proposal was presented by e-mail to all students in the School of Medicine and Graduate Studies and Research. Vaughn also spoke to the Student Governing Councils for the School of Nursing and School of Allied Health, both of which approved the fee increase. The fee increase was approved by the Med Center Student Governing Council in early March. The proposal projects the fee increase will create $30,013 in additional revenue and be effective next fall. Edited by Michelle Burhenn OK We Did It FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE C75172181G WASHINGTON,D.C. C75172181G ONE DOLLAR ANYTHING Fridays COME BACK! BACARDI FEAR FACTOR PROMO sports • music darts • billiards JACK FLANIGANS Bar and Grill Just off 23rd behind McDonalds #749-HAWK Fridays - 21 to Enter FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE C 75172181G WASHINGTON, D.C. C 75172181G SECRETARY JAMES H. SMITH SECRETARY OF THE DEMOCRACY ONE DOLLAR ANYTHING Fridays COME BACK! BACARDI FEAR FACTOR PROMO sports • music darts • billiards JACK FLANIGANS Bar and Grill Just off 23rd behind McDonalds #749-HAWK Fridays - 21 to Enter EARTH DAY PARADE register at: PandaForTheEarth@lawrencek.org earn Earth Day Activities listed at www.Lawnforce.org/recycles PARADE FOR THE EARTH Saturday, April 19th 11:00 a.m. - Parade begins at 11:10 a.m. Massachusetts St. and trails to 7th St. Come to watch or come to walk. Earth-friendly encouragement. Noon~4p. - Celebration in South Park on the west side of Mines. St. Come party, peruse, play, and participate in this purely fun festival! Live music, creative activities, greatwishes will be delivered home. home. planet earth KANSAN.COM just click EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY EVERYDAY $ Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. $ Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 reserve your spot on the summer crew FRY-WAGNER MOVING & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Equal-Employment-Opportunity Employer $ $ Holy Week Schedule Monday, 4/14 Communcal Penance Holy Thursday, 4/17 + Holy Thursday, 4/17 Good Friday. 4/18 Easter Vigil Sat., 4/19 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 9:00 p.m. 9:30 a.m 11:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center 1631 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 785-843-0357 www.st-lawrence.org 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 TALK TO US Kristi Henderson 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepert@kansan.com and ihenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or leahshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Matt Fisher Malcolm Gibson general manager and news advise 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kanan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com Enrollment needs work It may have been less of a hassle for students to stand in line at Strong Hall than to go online for enrollment this year. EDITORIAL BOARD Confusion replaced convenience in this seemingly stress-free process as students fought slowed and crowded servers to get into needed classes. Several things prevented online enrollment from running smoothly. First of all, the University is relying too much on technology. Last semester, students were deprived of hard copies of the timetable to alleviate budget cuts. The online timetable was supposed to be better because opened classes were updated every five minutes. This was not the case this semester. The open classes Web site was inaccurate and only added to the enrollment-induced headache. Without the cost of employing people to enroll students in Strong Hall, the University should be able to afford to print at least a few dozen copies of the timetable to put on reserve at libraries and computer labs for student use. Secondly, computers become bogged down with the timetable course catalog and enrollment all online. Students often needed up to three running Internet windows running at once to complete the process. Thirdly, students should not be able to do add/drop until all students have had the opportunity to enroll. It just added to the congested servers. Fourthly, online enrollment may also be overly confusing to underclassmen — especially freshmen and transfer students. The online enrollment process is confusing for experienced students, let alone those who have much less of an idea of what they're doing. Finally, the old-fashioned stand-in-line method was easier. Students simply had to hand their enrollment sheets to a trained person in the enrollment office and wait while he entered the information. If a class was full, the computer would pull up similar classes. Through enroll-and-pay searches, students ended up searching entire departments for appropriate classes. It is unacceptable that it took some students more than an hour to enroll. True, standing in line is not the most desirable thing to do at the University, but that method of enrollment usually took less than five minutes after you got in the door. Students should still have had the option of enrolling with the aid of trained personnel at Strong Hall while the glitches and imperfections of going online were worked out. Going online should have been more efficient than standing in line in Strong Hall. The University needs to make adjustments to the process before enrollment for Spring 2004 begins to make the system more user-friendly. Amanda O'Toole for the editorial board RERUNS OF OURLIVES MAN, the C.C.C. HARVES is looking GOOD this YEAR! C.C.C. HARVES! Campus CLEAVAGE Crop! Ah, LIKE SWEATER MEAT IN WINTER TIME. Emilu L Nice 4/11/19 Niel Muika and Emily Elmore for The University Daily Kansen PERSPECTIVE Online enrollment not quite ready COMMENTARY Online enrollment is a reality, but whether it's ready is another issue. As my enrollment appointment loomed near, I grew increasingly frustrated that the enrollment Web site consistently turned up an error page. It was only the day before I enrolled that I figured out how to make it work by minimizing my usual Web browser (AOL, which I do not recommend) so the modem remained active, and opening Netscape Navigator 7.0. Only then was I able to access my information and realize that I had a hold. By its writing it sounded as though I hadn't paid any of my tuition bill. Rushing to Carruth-O'Leary Hall to get the details, I was thinking I would have to make an emergency trip home and have a long chat with my mother. But it turned out to be just 90 cents. While I paid the cashier, she related to me that when enrollment started she could clear financial holds the minute the student paid, but recently they only cleared overnight. Sam Lane opinion@hansan.com My point in subjecting you to that rant is that the system still has a few kinks to work out. The Web browser incompatibility has since been worked out, but had I not figured out the 'Netscape trick', I would have missed my appointment by quite a bit. A more persistent issue is that fall enrollment largely takes place before summer enrollment, meaning it will take some effort to get into a class in the fall if you intend to take its prerequisite in the summer. Last year a major selling point for KUnited, which went on to win the student body presidency, was that students would not have to stand in long enrollment lines again. The pressure must have been great on those attempting to get the system up and running far before they estimated, especially considering our lean budget year. This kind of rushing is exactly the environment that breeds problems and mistakes. Given all that, it was no surprise that the date to begin enrollment was pushed back, or that we had the problems we had. The system is essentially untested. In fact, it's surprising that we didn't have worse problems. What would happen if in place of all these minor bugs were a few very large problems? With tens of thousands of students trying to enroll. I don't want to think about the problems it would cause and expenses it would incur if the system failed. The people who created this system should be commended for doing as well as they did, especially way ahead of schedule. Rushing online enrollment was a chance—the system is clearly not ready to be used for full enrollment. It could have gone well or it could have collapsed, and if it had collapsed, we would be in deep trouble now. Before taking the chance that the bulk of the student body could be thrown into confusion and chaos by their enrollments not processing, at least one semester should have been used as a trial period. A small number of students could have used online enrollment, such as a school other than College of Liberal Arts and Science or students enrolling in summer classes; if the system collapsed, only a manageable quantity would be left out. They then could efficiently be enrolled the old fashioned way. Online enrollment is convenient when it works. But it is a gamble and I would rather spend just one more semester in those enrollment lines than take a chance on an overly hurried system. Lane is a Leavenworth senior in psychology. PERSPECTIVE Opinions about war need evaluation While watching CNN's coverage from a beach in Florida during my alternative spring break, I was shocked to see that people were fighting in a far away place that didn't seem so sunny. Being from Japan, I had never lived in a country involved in war. I had to really think about how to handle myself until the war subsides. The longer the war lasts, the more society forces us, against our wills, to have a specific opinion of war. Ideas are not only imposed on society, but also our position is subject to influence from the media, the Bush administration and personal experience. We should place ourselves appropriately so we can fully express our opinions for or against the present war. Several countries, such as France, have resolved not to participate in the war My country, Japan, is now a U.S. ally — against the wishes of the majority of Japanese citizens. Saddam Hussein did not withdraw from Iraq within President Bush's deadline of 48 hours. The United States' war initiative shows us that governmental decisions do not always reflect the will of the people. So, everyone needs to decide how he or she wants to react to the war. People should continue to evaluate their priorities — that's most important. COMMENTARY Kengo Terada omnion@hansan.com In order to be human shields, some Japanese people are applying for Iraqi visas. These people plan to lie down around power plants or oil fields to protest the war. But after seeing the battlefields, some of these enraged people quickly gave up their statuses as human shields and returned to their hotels with regrets of going to Iraq. Their presence could interfere with the American allies' military progress. Even the Iraqi government opposed their movement, telling them to go home if they weren't going to be real shields. Now the Japanese government is discouraging their applications for Iraqi visas. Activists are not the only ones headed to Iraq. Average people, such as office workers and housewives, are also becoming human shields. These volunteers have not put themselves in the right place to do their best against the war. Personal experience, background and knowledge help to put myself in the right place. Anna Clovis, Fairfax, Okla., sophomore, and Stacy Fagan, Wellington junior, have specific reasons for their war views. Clovis said that when she heard of the war, she thought immediately of Desert Storm when her father worked as an Air Force strategist in the Pentagon. She said she was surprised to find out that the situation had not been resolved in 1991. "I have felt like this situation is out of our hands, like the government is going to do what they what do regardless of public opinion," she said. Fagan is a member of the Air National Guard. She said that when she learned of the U.S. attack on Iraq, she had confidence in the country's move. "I back up our president and support his decision 100 percent," Fagan said. Their specific attitudes toward the war could be based on their different experiences throughout life. The media present a vast coverage of the war, which is hard to fathom for the American public. As the fighting gets complicated, we need to be firm in what we stand for. - Terada is a Kashiwa, Japan, sophomore in journalism. Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 10 - Hey, this is for Jeff and Brian who saw my wreck on Ousdahl last week. If you could bring those pictures by my house, that would save me and my insurance company about $3,000. I'm really pissed off at people who call into the Free For All with jokes that aren't theirs. If you can't be funny on your own, shut the hell up and don't touch your phone. 图 So I thought online enrollment would be great, until I spent three hours doing it. Why does KUJH have such bad reception? I mean, I live on campus, for God's sake. 器 It's a sick, sad day when you get home at 1 in the morning and all you have to eat in the fridge is half a can of jellied cranberry sauce that you stole from the Kansan. - Does anybody else think that Kimberly Caldwell from American Idol looks like she has a really long blonde mullet? I'm 21 years old and I just spent seven hours watching Anne of Green Gables and I'd just like to say that it's the best movie ever. It wouldn't be a full day at McColum unless the police showed up. 图 I respect that jazz evolved, but how can you have a jazz show that doesn't play Duke Ellington, or Louis Armstrong, or Count Basie or Ella Fitzgerald? What respectable jazz show doesn't play any classic jazz? 图 I work at a delivery restaurant and I just wanted everyone to know that the closer to close you order food, the more we mess with it. 图 Why is it when Saddam Hussein addresses Iraqi people, dozens of U.S. experts can't figure out if it's actually him on the tape, but when a decades-old gay porno surfaces, everyone immediately accepts that it's Saddam? Am I the only one who sees something strange going on here? FRIDAY,APRIL18.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Hard for spouses to find positions together at University By AmyPotter apotter@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Byron and Marta Caminero-Santangelo consider themselves lucky. They are assistant professors in the department of English at the University of Kansas, and they are married. It can be a daunting task for married couples to find teaching jobs at the same university. The University offered a miracle solution for the Caminero-Santangelos when it hired them both to work in same department. "There was a potential for sacrifice, but it turned out not to be the case." Marta Caminero-San tangelo said, "KU offered us both a job." both a leon McCluskey-Fawcett, senior vice provost, hires faculty for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. She said the University was "pretty couple-friendly." She said that early in the recruiting process, the University tried to find out whether a candidate had a partner, so it could begin to make hiring accommodations in other departments for the spouse. "The hard part is when you make someone an offer, and they say they can't come unless you find something for my spouse," McCluskey-Fawcett said. McCluskey-Fawcett said she was seeing more need for partner accommodations within universities. The University has a policy that outlines accommodation guidelines for spouses. According to the policy, the accommodation rests on the flexibility and good will of faculty and administrators. The policy covers both same-sex and heterosexual couples. Unfortunately, hiring the spouse doesn't always work out. Sometimes, the deans and department chairpersons do not need a person in his or her area of specialty, McCluskey-Fawcett said. If positions aren't open at the University, it will ask other area schools in Kansas City, Ottawa or Baldwin to see whether they have any openings, she said. Susan Gauch, associate professor in electrical engineering, said sometimes the couple had to decide whose career was more important. Spousal accommodations at her husband's previous institution, Northeastern Illinois University, didn't work out. They gave her a couple of options: She could work at the local community college or find a job at a high school edge of find a job. "I didn't get my Ph.D. to teach community college and high school," Gauch said. Gauch and her husband John are both associate professors in electrical engineering. They came to the University in 1993 because there were faculty positions available for both of them. Barbara and James Shortridge did their graduate work at the University in the 1960's. Barbara Shortridge is an assistant professor in geography and her husband is a professor in the same department at the University. Her husband was hired after they both finished their doctorates, but Barbara was not. There were still nepotism laws in place — laws that would not allow married couples in the workplace. "Yes, it was frustrating but what could I do about it?" Shortridge said. "It was really a different time then." Five years ago, Shortridge was given the position of assistant professor. During the years she wasn't teaching she would run labs and participate in various kinds of research. "The reason I have my position was part of an initiative by the Provost to have more women and minorities in the classroom." Shortridge said. McCluskey-Fawcett said there were probably a handful of faculty maintaining long-distance relationships with their spouses because they worked at other Universities. "It's not a long-term plan. It's very hard to sustain that kind of life." McCluskey-Fawcett said. Student finds knack for argument effective at mock trials — Edited by Melissa Hermreck By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff member Ryan Faulconer's parents have been telling him he'd make a good attorney since he was a little kid. The Colorado Springs, Colo., sophomore decided to take their advice and refined his arguing skills. He just got back from the National Mock Trial Competition in Des Moines, Iowa. Faulconer is president of the mock trial team, which has been to the nationals in five of its six years in existence. getting nervous at competitions. Although he's been competing for five years, Faulconer admits to Faulconer got involved in mock trial his sophomore year of high school and joined the University of Kansas team his freshman year. "If you don't get nervous, there's probably something wrong with you," Faulconer said. There are 20 students on the mock trial team, and seven of those 20 members went to nationals last week. During a competition, the members of the team are assigned a legal case that is going to trial. Three members of the team act as witnesses, and the other three act as attorneys. They then argue a fake trial. The seventh member is the team coach. Team members must be prepared to argue both the defense and plaintiff sides at competitions. Two teams compete on either side, and an impartial judge chooses the winner. Because Faulconer and his mock trial coach, Branden Bell, are roommates, petty arguments Bell, Lawrence first-year law student, has been a member of the team for the past three years. Because the team has never had a formal coach, Bell thought he would be an asset to the team. "The team needed someone to make the decisions because we are all friends on the team," Bell said. Members of the team sometimes have to hide smiles and grins during serious competitions. They take their work seriously and they have trophies to back them up. During nationals last week, Tai Vokins, Overland Park sophomore, was speaking when a photographer interrupted him and began taking pictures of the final round. Vokins took the unexpected visitor in stride and worked him into the trial by introducing him to the judge as a member of the press. MARC SILVERMAN often erupt between the two experienced debaters. As usual, the coach generally wins. "I often just lose interest," Faulconer said. "Some things just aren't worth arguing about." "I really had to fight not to smile," Faulconer said. After he graduates with a degree in political science, Faulconer plans to go to law school just as his parents suspected. Stephen McAllister, law school dean, was impressed with Faulconer's reasoning skills when he taught him in a law and society class last year. "Ryan pays so much attention to both sides," McAllister said. "He thinks critically before he makes decisions." — Edited by Melissa Hermreck Dan Nelson/Kansan Ryan Faulconer, Colorado Springs, Colo., sophomore, flaunts a few of the trophies he received in mock trial competitions through the University of Kansas School of Law. Faulconer recently returned from the National Mock Trial Competition in Des Moines, Iowa. JOHN MAYER COUNTING CROWS JULY 28 at 7:00pm Verizon Wireless Amphitheater Tickets go on sale this Saturday, April 19 at 10am! Get Tickets At CC.COM Tickets available at all ticketmaster ticket outlets, the Box Office, ticketmaster.com, or charge by phone at (816) 931-3330. All dates, acts, and ticket prices subject to change without notice. "A service charge is added to each ticket price." Brought to you by Clear Channel Entertainment. WWW.JOHNMAYER.COM WWW.LOCAL.B3.COM Serving KU www.pipelineproductions.com SATURDAY, APRIL 19TH conner getaway driver capsules aprilswitch THE MOONEY SUZUKI LOUISVILLE, LA www.mooneysuziuki.com 07 FARMER'S BALL CROSS CANADIAN RANGED with the Daybirds THURSDAY MAY 1ST CAPTAIN OVERHEAT THE COLOR BLUE THE AFTERNOON BctHenode2.399 THURSDAY, MAY 1ST JASON HOLAND AND THE TREATMENT SCIENCE NATIONAL MUSIC CONCERT AT THE CITY COMING SOON TO WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10TH WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30TH SUNDAY, APRIL 4TH . 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Evaluate the following expression. FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 ADVERT KANSAS 34 KANSAS 23 KANSAS 1 KANSAS 11 KANSAS 42 KANSAS 4 University of Kansas for a job Our community is very proud Go H Sponsored by the Lawre SEMENT FRIDAY,APRIL18,2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A KANSAS 3 KANSAS 5 KANSAS 20 KANSAS 33 KANSAS 25 o the 2002-2003 Men's Basketball Team well done. of you and your success. lawks! nce Chamber of Commerce& the City of Lawrence 8A • THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN NEWS FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 Spring fashions turn to vintage Hippie look is out, '80s have returned for fashion season Dan Nelson/Kansan By Nicole Roché nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Fashion-minded students might be able to dredge their parents' closets this spring for the latest styles. At Urban Outfitters, 1013 Massachusetts St., women flock to vintage T-shirts. "They all have kitschy writing that says things like, 'Not everything's flat in Kansas,'" said Kristi Arnold, assistant manager and 2001 graduate. As warm weather finally settles in Lawrence, students must adapt to temperature—as well as style changes that come with spring and summer. Michelle Ade, Wichita senior, said she usually followed her own style. She said it was difficult to avoid trends, however, because stores sell the latest-and-greatest. Peris Wanjiku, Wichita sophomore, (left) and Noriko Koga, Fukuoka, Japan, freshman, shop for clothes at Sugartown clothing, 918 Massachusetts St. Wanjiku said she shopped at Sugartown because of the selection. western wear has become fash- baggy jeans anymore," Ray said. The hippie look is also ionable for men and women. "I think people are wearing nicer, way out of th "Our style is mostly a combination between the '80s and a '50s flapper girl," she said. "That's exactly what we are able to buy," Ade said. "They kind of shape our style." Raiding your parents closet might also be a good idea if they were once cowboys. At The Buckle, 805 Massachusetts St., Urban Outfitters also sells real vintage T-shirts revamped by the company. Logos from the 1970s and '80s are popular, Arnold said, and polka dots keep popping up on skirts and flip-flops. According to Krystal Quillin, assistant manager and Plains junior, western shirts snap up instead of button up, and they have the western seam. Ade recently purchased a western tank top, she said, but she didn't realize she was following a trend. "I just buy crazy clothes," she said. "I have a different style." In keeping with the cowboy theme, tighter jeans for men and women are now in style, Quillin said. Carl Ray, Leavenworth senior, said the loose jeans trend ended more than a year ago. "I don't own a single pair of baggy jeans anymore," Ray said. "I think people are wearing nicer, dressier clothes." Employees at both The Buckle and Urban Outfitters said they had heard pink shirts would be popular for men this spring. "I'm not excited about it," Quillin said. Ray said he bought a pink polo two months ago for his spring wardrobe. Although he likes the color, Ray said, not everyone can get away with the feminine shade. "It depends on the person's skin tone." Ray said. "You have to be pretty tan to pull it off, I think." Quillin said capris pants were finally exiting in lieu of flood pants that cut off two inches above the ankle. "It was overwhelmingly popular, and I think people are getting tired of it," she said. "I know I am." Stefanie Tracy, assistant manager at Flush, 17 E. 7 St., said customers were selling back peasant tops at the new and used clothing store. She said the hippie look was taking a backseat to preppy 80s polos and screen printed She-Ra and Mr. T shirts. "There's been an '80s come back," Tracy said, "and the '80s weren't about hippies." Edited by Leah Shaffer Warm days uplift students and stores By Lauren Bristow Ibristow@ku.edu Kansas staff writer Sunny, warm weather. The crack of a baseball against a wooden bat. Barbecue smells wafting through the air. With temperatures hitting the 70s last weekend and earlier this week, students are heading outside to enjoy the nice weather. The current rainy weather will shortly give way to sunny skies by the end of the weekend. "We couldn't keep our baseball and softball equipment in stock," said James Dain, Play It Again Sports employee. "We also sold at least 100 to 150 discs for disc golf this weekend alone." The nice weather made people want to get out and enjoy it. Dain said. Play It Again Sports is at 1029 Massachusetts St. David Weber and his girlfriend, Julie Jones, both Tulsa, Okla., juniors, enjoyed the sunshine by playing disc golf at Centennial Park, 600 Rockledge Road. Others, such as Nathan Urbauer, Frankfurt junior, enjoyed the weather with barbecues and outdoor sports. Urbauer went to his fraternity, Theta Chi, for basketball and a "It was just too nice to stay cooped up inside," Weber said. "Hopefully it will stay nice, but just in case, you've got to get out and enjoy it." barbecue. "It was just so nice outside," he said. Local businesses including hardware stores and golf courses noticed an increase in customers because of the weather. Employees at Westlake Ace Hardware, 711 W.23rd St., sawan increase in demand for outdoor and warm weather products. "We've had an increase in the sale of barbecue grills," said Stephanie Golden, the head cashier of the store. "But we've mostly had an increase in sales for things like mulch and flowers for gardening." The Twin Oaks Golf Complex, Kansas Highway 10 and County Road 1057, noticed an increase in the number of golfers this weekend. "A combination of the nice weather and the Master's Tournament made this weekend busy," said Jim Bligh, general manager of the complex. "The tournament is sort of an unspoken opening day for amateur golfers. They get excited after watching it and want to get out and play." With summer quickly approaching, students are looking forward to the consistent nice weather it brings. "I can't wait until it's warm all the time." Weber said. "This warm one day, cool the next just sucks." Edited by Leah Shaffer SARS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Symptoms for SARS may include fever, headaches, body aches and a cough, according to the CDC. Quarantining people exposed to the disease is the only effective way of stopping the disease until a vaccine or treatment is developed, Strother said. When students come into Watkins with upper respiratory infections, the doctors are asking about their recent traveling history to make sure they haven't come in contact with the virus, Strother said. Strother also recommends that if students have traveled abroad in one of the areas of concern that they come in and be checked if they develop any kind of cold. Because of wide-spread travel, SARS is showing how the health concerns of one "When something affects one country it's going to eventually touch everyone." Myra Strother Director and chief of staff of Watkins country can become the health concerns of others rapidly. Strother said. Troupe stages radio show for eyes and ears "It's a good example of how we are a world-wide community," she said. "When something affects one country it's going to eventually touch everyone." - Edited by Ryan Wood Doctors figured out the DNA sequence of SARS this past week, which is promising for diagnosis and testing, Strother said. Strother said SARS would be around until either a vaccine or treatment was developed or if enough people got the virus to start building immunity. By Kevin Wiggs kiwigs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer For students who did not grow up in the golden age of radio, a local comedy show can demonstrate how it was done before television. "Right Between the Ears," a local award-winning sketch comedy troupe, will perform at 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. tomorrow at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. The 8 p.m. show can be heard live on Kansas Public Radio, Lawrence station 91.5 FM. Darrell Brogdon formed the troupe, then called Imagination Workshop, in 1985 as a radio drama. But by 1990 it had concentrated on comedy. "Ive always had a love for radio theater," Brogdon said. "It established itself, and comedy elements emerged, and audiences responded." Brogdon describes the group's comedy as topical and headline-driven. "It's like Saturday Night Live meets the golden age of radio," he said. Seeing the show live and hearing it on the radio are different experiences, Brogdon said. "It's a real kick to see and hear the actors, how they interact, and how the sound effects are made," he said. "You get to see how it was done 50 years ago." Kip Niven, cast member and 1968 KU graduate, is in his eighth season in "Right Between the Ears." He gives Brodgon, the group's producer, much of the credit for writing quality skits. "I think much of our writing is better than SNL, which goes back to Darrell," he said. "Nobody ever says that they didn't get their money's worth." While Brogdon does most of the writing, other cast members contribute skits, and they are "Writing comedy is extremely difficult. Coming up with new material is a never-ending battle." Kip Niven Right Between the Ears cast member and 1968 KU graduate always looking for help from outside writers. Niven said. They pay writers $25 per minute for skits based on their length. Most skits are one to six minutes. "Writing comedy is extremely difficult," he said. "Coming up with new material is a never-ending battle." The group performs five times a year but is looking to make it a more regular show. Brodgon said the group was trying to identify possible corporate sponsors that could provide the funding so it "I would be thrilled to death to do this year-round — this is as good as it gets," Niven said. "This is the most fun I've had as an actor. It's very gratifying to make people laugh." In the past year, the group has won several awards both locally and nationally. The awards include a Golden Reel Award for Best Music/Entertainment Show from the National Federation of Community Broadcasters, a Crystal Award of Excellence from the Communicator Awards, a Silver Microphone Award and a Silver World Medal from the New York Festivals. Tickets are $12 for cabaret seats and $10 for balcony seats and are on sale at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., and Ticketmaster outlets. For more information on the troupe visit its Web site at www.rightbetweentheears.org. — Edited by Michelle Burhenn Now Leasing Now Leasing for Fall 2003! 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Soldiers thwarted a Baghdad bank robbery over the protests of Iraqis eager to share in the loot. Marines sought to calm tensions in Mosul after shooting 17 Iraqis to death in clashes over the past two days. "The war is not over," Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld warned an audience at the Pentagon. But the State Department awarded Bechtel Restoration of San Francisco a contract worth $34 million immediately and as much as $680 million over 18 months to evaluate and repair Iraq's power, electrical, water and sewage systems. And the USS Constellation steamed from the Persian Gulf PABU SALMENA for its home port of San Diego, carrying dozens of warplanes that helped bomb Iraqi forces into submission. It was the second aircraft carrier ordered home in recent days. Hussein Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks announced the capture of Barzan Ibrahim Hasan, a half brother of the former Iraqi leader, who is on the five of clubs in the Pentagon's deck of most-wanted Iraqis. Barzan Hasan was an adviser to Saddam "with extensive knowledge of the regime's inner workings," the general said. He also was responsible for managing Saddam's wealth, according to the Coalition for International Justice, a nonprofit organization based in The Hague, Netherlands and Washington. A U.S. intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Barzan Hasan had been a presidential adviser to Saddam's regime since 1998 but had a shaky relationship with his half brother and was not part of the regime's inner circle. the regime he was a representative to the United Nations in Geneva from 1899 to 1998. Earlier, from 1979 to 1983, he headed Iraq's Mukhabarat, or intelligence service, a period when the organization arranged executions of regime opponents in Iraq and overseas, the official said. Brooks provided scant details of the operation that netted Barzan Hasan, saying that he was taken inside Baghdad and that U.S. special forces were aided by Marines. He said there were no casualties. Another of Saddam's three half brothers, Watban Ibrahim Hasan, was captured earlier by U.S. forces. The third has not been found. The search for weapons of mass destruction continued in Iraq, but Rumsfeld said he doubted any would be found until Iraqis lead American forces to them. "I think what will happen is we'll discover people who will tell us where to go find it. It is not like a treasure hunt where you just run around looking everywhere, hoping you find something," he said. FBI Director Robert Mueller disclosed that agents were in Baghdad with orders to assist in the recovery of items taken from the antiquities museum and other cultural facilities looted in recent days. They will aid international efforts to recover stolen items "on both the open and black markets," he said. "We are firmly committed to doing whatever we can to secure these treasures to the people of Iraq," he added. Atkins diet creator dies from head injury The Associated Press NEW YORK — Dr. Robert C. Atkins, whose best-selling low-carbohydrate, high-protein diet was dismissed as nutritional folly for years but was recently validated in some research, died yesterday, his spokesman said. He was 72. Atkins died at New York Weill-Cornell Medical Center, surrounded by his wife and close friends, said Richard Rothstein. PETER S. PAPER Atkins his spokesman. Atkins had suffered a severe head injury April 8 after falling on an icy sidewalk while walking to work. Atkins first advocated his unorthodox weight-loss plan, which emphasizes meat, eggs and cheese and discourages bread, rice and fruit, in his 1972 book, "Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution." Its publication came at a time when the medical establishment was encouraging a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet. The following year, the American Medical Association dismissed Atkins' diet as nutritional folly and Congress summoned him to Capitol Hill to defend the plan. Labeling it "potentially dangerous," the AMA said the diet's scientific underpinning was "naive" and "biochemi- cally incorrect." It scolded the book's publishers for promoting "bizarre concepts of nutrition and dieting." Despite this, his books sold 15 million copies, and millions of people tried the diet. Atkins' philosophy enjoyed a resurgence in the 1990s with "Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution," which sold more than 10 million copies worldwide and spent five years on The New York Times best-seller list. Criticism of the diet lingered, with many arguing that it could affect kidney function, raise cholesterol levels and deprive the dieter of important nutrients. Atkins said no study showed that people with normal kidney function developed problems because of a high-protein diet, and he never gave in to his detractors. Defending his plan at the American Dietetic Association's convention in 2000, Atkins quipped, "I'm very happy to be here. Not as happy as Daniel in the lion's den." This year, his approach was vindicated in part by the very medical community that scorned him. In February, some halfdozen studies showed that people on the Atkins diet lost weight without compromising their health. The studies showed that Atkins dieters' cardiovascular risk factors and overall cholesterol profiles changed for the better. Pope reiterates Mass, divorce guideline The Associated Press VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II issued a stern reminder yesterday that only priests can celebrate Mass and divorced Catholics who remarry cannot take communion, expressing alarm over what he called unacceptable practices in his flock. John Paul also warned Catholics against receiving communion in non-Catholic churches, an admonition that is likely to stir up protests in the United States and other countries where interfaith services are a fundamental part of efforts to bring Christians closer together. Some Protestant officials immediately criticized the warnings as a step backward in efforts to achieve Christian unity. The pope's denunciations of practices clashing with Vatican teaching were contained in an encyclical issued on Holy Thursday, a commemoration of Jesus' Last Supper with his apostles. Encyclicals are a special kind of letter dealing with matters of extreme importance to the Church. "It is my hope that the present encyclical letter will effectively help to banish the dark clouds of unacceptable doctrine and practice," the pope wrote. The 78-page document is aimed at combatting abuses related to the Eucharist, commonly called communion, a sacrament central to the life of the Church. nce; the popover "In various parts of the Church abuses have occurred, leading to confusion with regard to sound faith and Catholic doctrine concerning this wonderful sacrament." In parts of Western Europe, as well as in the United States, many divorced Catholics who have remarried have been clamoring for the Church to allow them to receive communion. John Paul cited centuries-old Pope John Paul II issued a stern reminder that only priests can celebrate Mass and divorced Catholics who remarry cannot take communion. The pope also warned Catholics against receiving communion in non-Catholic churches. teaching that all faithful must confess grave sins before taking communion. "The judgment of one's state of grace obviously belongs only to the person involved, since it is a question of examining one's conscience," the pope said. "However, in cases of outward conduct, which is seriously, clearly and steadfastly contrary to the moral norm, the Church, in her pastoral concern for the good order of the community and out of respect for the sacrament, cannot fail to feel directly involved," wrote John Paul. He reiterated Church law that those who "obstinately persist in manifest grave sin" be denied communion. While the pope didn't name any sins, his reference to divorce was unmistakable since the Church considers remarried Catholics living in a state of continued sin, and experts said his intent was clear. "That is what the Vatican is saying for years about the non-admission of public sinners to the Eucharist whether they be divorced or Mafia or people who are notorious criminals," said the Rev. Thomas Reese, editor of America, a Jesuit magazine. The Vatican does not permit divorce and teaches that those who remarry after divorce are living in sin unless couples refrain from sex. The pontiff is "articulating a general principle of not admitting public sinners to the Eucharist, while not necessarily getting into the details of each person's life." said Reese, based in New York. CNN sorry about premature obituaries The Associated Press NEW YORK — CNN blamed human error yesterday for exposing obituary mock-ups that its Web site's designers had prepared for Ronald Reagan, Bob Hope and other prominent figures. The mock-ups had been on a development site meant for internal review. But the public briefly had access to them after the password protection was disabled. discovered and fixed Wednesday. CNN spokeswoman Edna Johnson said technicians were trying to determine how long the mock- CNN was investigating the cause of the error, which was PETER HAYES Reagan ups had been exposed on CNN.com. PETER J. BROWN Although the prepared obituaries were no longer accessible to the public, the search engine Google still had a reference yesterday to Reagan's mock-up. Ford titled "Ronald Reagan Remembered." Another Web site, The Smoking Gun, also had copies of mock-ups for Reagan, Hope, Fidel Castro, Pope John Paul II, Nelson Mandela, Gerald Ford and Dick Cheney. News organizations, including The Associated Press, routinely prepare obituaries on prominent figures so stories can be run quickly when they die In 1998, miscoding caused one such article, for Hope, to be inadvertently displayed on the AP's Web site, prompting a congressman to erroneously announce his death on the floor of the House of Representatives. The story did not say Hope had died, but the headline did. The CNN mock-ups do not actually say that the subject had died, although they had a placeholder for the year of death, as in "1941-2001" for Cheney. The write-ups also referred to subjects in the past tense. earth day celebration Saturday, April 19th Tuesday, April 22nd Earth Day Speaker: James Kunstler 11AM - Parade begins at 11th & Massachusetts St 8PM - "The Paving of America" lecture and book signing Kansas Room of Kansas Union Children's Activities SPM: "Development In Lawrence" discussion Lawrence Public Library 11:30 AM-4 PM-Celebration at South Park on the west side of Mass. St. KU ENVIROSNS Recycling and Resource Conservation Advisory Board SENATE IN CONSTITUTION OF THE SENATI Accoustic and Bluegrass Music featuring Mark Lyda (11:30AM) Prarie Acre (1PM), and $2 Show Revival Story (2PM) Food, and Environmental Organizations! Red Lyon Cavern Red Lyon Tavern a touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 Red Lyon Tavern 7th & Florida SUNDANCE 7th & Florida NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Studios, IBR, 2BR, 3 BR w/ 2 baths & 4 BR w/ 2 baths - Furnished Apt. Available * Gas heat & water * Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves * W/D in select Apts * Private balconies & patios * On-site laundry facility * Pool * On KU bus route * On-site Manager * 24 hr emergency Maintenance Models Open Dail $ ^{v1} $ For more information call 785-841-5255 Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m EOG. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Ged Lyon Taver GOOD LUCK TANGLEWOOD APARTMENTS 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished Studios, 1 and 2 Bedroom apartment homes. - Laundry facilities on site - Fully equipped kitchens Fully equipped launders (dishwashers* ,disposal, (dishwashers ,disposa- stove,refrigerator,microwave) - Within walking distance to KU campus - KU campus • Telephone and cable outlets in - Telephone and cable outlets in each bedroom - Central Air - Ample off-street parking for tenants - Or-site manager - Of-site manager - 24 emergency maintenance - 24 emergency maintenance Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Equal Housing Opportunity * Available in select units 10A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PHOTO ESSAY FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 ROTC weekend warriors Story and photos by Kelley Weiss The University Daily Kansan ! Will Chuber, Leavenworth senior at Saint Mary's College, cleans a weapon April 6. Chuber and the other cadets were stuck inside because of cold, wet conditions. ABOVE: Eric Holbrooks, Arkansas City senior, helps Amy Southard, Lansing senior at Washburn University, get on the obstacle course rope bridge Saturday. The bridge is approximately 10 feet above a creek, and Lt.Col. DeToy said the bridge was one of the hardest obstacles to complete. THE SIXTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE GRAFICA GUARDIAN WORKSHOP IN BALKON, CROATIA. THIS IS A GUARDIAN WORKSHOP FOR KNIFE AND MACE COMBAT. THE WORKSHOP IS PROVIDED BY THE NATIONAL GUARDIAN WORKSHOP ASSOCIATION, LTD., AT NO AVAILABLE PRICES. THE WORKSHOP IS HELD AT THE NATIONAL GUARDIAN WORKSHOP ASSOCIATION, LTD., AT NO AVAILABLE PRICES. CAMUPS D During the last two weekend's Spring Field Training Exercise, the University of Kansas Army ROTC cadets trekked through woods, fired guns, rappelled off towers and ran through obstacle courses. Approximately 50 KU students and students from other smaller schools such as Saint Mary's College, Washburn University and Baker University, devoted two weekends to improving their skills for the Army ROTC. On the weekend of April 5 to 6, the cadets went to the Fort Leavenworth base to do field exercises in the woods and night land navigation, an orientation exercise done in the dark. 1234567890 Cody Johnson, Larned sophomore, and Sara Garlick, Sanford, Maine freshman, remove their camouflage after a day of Spring Field Training exercises in the woods on Saturday April 5. The exercises the cadets did at Fort Leavenworth were challenging. After running through the woods to simulate Army land missions for several hours, James Burke, Leavenworth freshman, said carrying his 40-pound backpack was harder than he expected. "For a lot of us, this is the first time we had to hump our rucks around," Burke said. "After a while it really starts taking a hold of your body." The Spring Field Training adventure in Fort Leavenworth was a first for Mike Rumford, Lancaster junior at Washburn University. He said he liked being able to apply his ROTC skills, and the terrain and intensity of the exercises were surprising. "I didn't think it would be so hilly—it was more chaotic than I thought," Rumford said. "I was surprised with how much walking we did. They don't mess around." The cold, wet conditions on April 6 caused the rappelling, live firing exercises and obstacle course to be canceled and rescheduled for Saturday. Although the weather postponed the exercises scheduled for April 6, Lt. Col. Brian DeToy said the training weekend had still been successful. "I thought it was an outstanding training event," DeToy said. "The seniors did a great job of organizing it and doing evaluations. The enthusiasm of the underclassmen was high and was a great learning experience." The cadets finished their Spring Field Training Saturday by shooting M-16 rifles, repelling and running through an obstacle course at the Lansing Correctional Facility. Fewer cadets went to Lansing during the second weekend of training than went to the training at Leavenworth the weekend before. All cadets were invited to go, but only the junior class was required. DeToy said the purpose of the training was to build confidence in the cadets for the National Advanced Leadership Camp. Juniors attend the camp; it will be held this summer in Washington and will last for 31 days. Edited by Amber Byarlay RITCHIE BARNARD ABOVE: Philip Hickson, Lansing freshman, inspects Sgt. Clark, an active duty service man at the Fort Leavenworth base, pretends to be dead in a movement-to-contact exercise. The cadet did a casualty inventory on Clark to make sure he did not pose a threat. Clark volunteered his time on April 5 to help train the ROTC cadets. LEFT: Cadets practice rappelling off a 60-foot tower at the Lansing Correctional Facility Saturday. BELOW LEFT: As a smoke grenade fills the woods with cover Mike Rumford, Lancaster junior at Washburn University, moves closer to his enemy in a movement-to-contact exercise. 1945 1 Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B COMMENTARY FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2003 COMMENTARY Brad Zollars bzollars@kansan.com A little help to Bill Self in choosing between jobs Bill Self has a problem. In fact, it's the same problem Roy Williams had not long ago. He's torn. He loves Illinois, loves his players, the area, the university. And like Williams, he also has the opportunity to have a dream job. To be at the highest level and coach the Kansas men's basketball program. Right now, Self is in Florida, vacationing with his family. I'm sure he doesn't want to take up vacation time trying to make this choice. What's a man to do? Well, Self should get down on his knees and thank the heavens. Lucky for him, I have lived in both Kansas and Illinois for most of my life and am the perfect impartial judge. So sit back and take another ride on Space Mountain, Mr. Self, I've got you covered. Sports: Both the Kansas City area and Chicago have professional sports teams that entertain. Chi-town may look like the clear winner here with its beautiful Wrigley Field and the fact Kansas City has no professional hockey or basketball team. But Bill, you're not missing much. Think Kansas has gone forever since winning a championship? The last time the Cubs and White Sox won the world series, James Naismith was still coaching the Jayhawks. That's heartbreak. And sure, watching the Royals lose 100 games a season isn't that exciting, but at least you don't have the possibility of getting tackled by a fan while patrol the sidelines of Allen Fieldhouse. Chicago does have great food, but Champaign, Ill., is a long way from the city. Lawrence offers some of the most eclectic food choices in the United States, and it's only a hop, skip and a jump to Kansas City barbecue. Food: Trust me Bill, the first time you have a No.1 from our beloved Burrito King at 3 a.m., you'll wonder how you even entertained the thought of not coming here. Historical Relevance: Lawrence is a well-known Civil War city. The Jayhawkers drove Quantrail out of Kansas after he torched the city. And famous Americans such as Langston Hughes and Beat writer William Burroughs have called Lawrence home. roughs have earned their fame. The only plus for Champaign is the pronunciation of its name, which matches the alcoholic drink that tastes like crap and leaves you with a terrible hangover. Shopping: OK, so Kansas can't compete with Michigan Avenue, and the Plaza's in Missouri so we can't claim that either. But keep this in mind, no matter where in Lawrence your family moves to, you'll be no farther than 5 feet from a Dillons. College Basketball: Please, no contest. Sure, Illinois has done pretty well in recent years and did knock Kansas from the tournament three seasons ago, but that's about all it has to claim. Kansas has Phog Allen, Wilt Chamberlain, Roy Williams and the creator of basketball, James Naismith, under its belt, and the list goes on and on. Allen Fieldhouse is college basketball's version of Graceland, and you could be the next version of the King: Bill Self. Zollars is a Chicago senior in communications. So there you have it, both Kansas and Illinois in a nut shell. The choice seems obvious; doesn't it? KANSAS 1023 GILL Freshman Dena Seibel finishes in the women's unseeded 800 meter run. Seibel finished the race in 17th place.The Kansas Relays will continue today and tomorrow at Memorial Stadium. Relays sport multiple events The Kansas Relays have been described as a three-ring circus by meet director Tim Weaver, and today the circus is in full swing. A full schedule of athletes will compete today with events beginning at 8 a.m. and running until 9 p.m. Beginning on Wednesday and ending tomorrow, the Relays will see more than 4,000 athletes compete from all over the world. Yesterday saw the completion of the heptathlon and the decathlon, which were both won by Nebraska athletes. Casey Thom won the decathlon with 7,226 points and Ashley Selig won the Yesterday evening also began the distance carnival in which a number of Kansas athletes competed. Sophonore Jeremy Mims won the Unseeded College 800-meter run with a time of 1:50.51 and was the Jayhawks' only event winner of the day. heptathlon with 4,954 points. For a full schedule of Kansas relays events, see page 2B. The highest finishing Kansas women were freshman Jenna Bimbi in the 800-meter run (2:14.01) and sophomore Lauren Brownrigg in the 3,000-meter run With his performance, Mins regionally qualified for the NCAA Regional Competition. (10:18.45). Both finished in fourth place. Today, both field and running events begin at 8:00 a.m. Weaver said one of the highlights of the day would be women's and men's steeplechase, which will begin at 5:35 p.m. and 6 p.m., respectively. "It is kind of like a NASCAR event for track and field with people jumping over water, into water pits and over big steel barriers." Weaver said. "Occasionally a crash happens and the crowd tends to make a little noise at that point." Weaver said there was something for everyone at the Relays, and he urged fans to come out and support the event. "If you want to see big guys throw big steel balls we got that for you. If you want to see crazy people fling themselves 16, 17, 18 feet in the air we can do that, and of course people running in circles and jumping over things," he said. The Relays will conclude tomorrow after a full day of events, which will begin at 8:00 a.m. PRESIDENT OF THE JAMAICAN CONGRESS — Chris Wintering Senior guard Kirk Hinrich receives a standing ovation from his former coaches and teammates after radio announcer Max Falkenstein introduction. "Kirk only missed one game in four years, and he hated that," Falkenstein said. Eric Braem/Kansan Banquet brings end to season, era By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportswriter By Doyle Murphy It seemed so normal. The Kansas basketball players sat in front of the capacity crowd at the Lied Center, gathered for another basketball banquet. Roy Williams, the man who had been their mentor since the day each one of them stepped on campus, sat behind them. Each member of the team was dressed to the hilt. Williams and his assistants did the same. They could have been posing for a Instead, they were collected to end an era. Not the kind of end that happens every year when the seniors leave. Teams change — but this was different. This was the end that means your parents have sold your childhood home: The house is still there, but it's not the same. Still, the evening seemed normal. The strained ear could detect a smattering of boos as Williams filed onto the stage amongst the Jayhawks. Not everyone stood during the numerous ovations, but on the surface, it was the same. And then there was the voice. Piercing through a quiet moment, a single voice shot through the crowd, stinging Williams with the message he had been dreading all evening. "Traitor!" The sentiment that had been printed on hundreds of "Benedict Williams" T-shirts, shouted at television sets during Williams' University of North Carolina press conference and plastered on the pages of Internet chat rooms had been said. Williams cringed, and most of the SEE BANQUET ON PAGE 6B Donation to provide athletics scholarships Ray C. Wyatt, former Kansas track champion, will be honored for his contribution to the Kansas University Endowment Association today. Wyatt, a 1958 graduate, committed $750,000 for olympic sports scholarships. He made provisions in his will to create the Ralph E. Wyatt and Ray C. Wyatt fund. The fund is named for Ray and his late father and will provide scholarships to athletes in sports that aren't profitable for the University, preferably in track. A. Drue Jennings, interim athletics director, said the gift was greatly appreciated. Wyatt's father introduced him to Kansas athletics early on, often taking him to football and basketball games. In high school, Wyatt knew he wanted to run track at Kansas. Wyatt ran the 440-yard relay at Kansas. In 1956, his relay team won the outdoor race at the Big 7 championship. In 1957, he won the 440-yard dash and his relay team captured the indoor and outdoor conference championships. Wyatt was part of a track era in Kansas history that included Wilt Chamber- By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer SEE DONATIONS ON PAGE 6B 1 --- "I just want to say, Bill Bridges, you have the biggest hands I've ever seen." Nick Collison after winning the Bill Bridges rebounding award. 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Inside Sports FRIDAY,APRIL18,2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY Jonah Ballow jballow@kansan.com Improving pitches can help record This weekend, Kansas baseball heads to Norman, Okla., to face the Sooners, who are having a rough season with only one victory in the Big 12 Conference. The three-game series should give the Jayhawks an opportunity to bolster their Big 12 record. The Jayhawks have an impressive overall record of 29-15 but are only 4-8 in the Big 12 Conference. Even with a somewhat dismal record in conference play, the Jayhawks have managed to elapse its victories last season by seven. Kansas has experienced strong offensive play by out-homering its opponents 40-31. Not only have the Jayhawks hit the ball out of the park but three players are on pace to break Kansas' season single hit record. But the pitching for the Jayhawks has slumped, and coach Ritch Price said he realized the need for a strong overall performance by his team. "It has to be a complete effort for us," Price said. "We don't have good enough pitching to not be perfect in every phase of the game." The need for this team to succeed is evident especially when Kansas has an opportunity to make a move in the Big 12 standings. Three days after the game against Oklahoma, the team will play Missouri Valley Conference powerhouse Wichita State University on the road. The Jayhawks are only a game behind Texas Tech, a team they won two of three from last weekend. Baylor, Missouri and Oklahoma State are all in striking distance if Kansas can muster big victories against Oklahoma this weekend. Oklahoma's record might now show a competitive team, but Kansas must enter the weekend with a purpose of making some noise in the conference; the time is now. Ballow is a Littleton, Colo. junior in journalism. Keep up with the search for a new basketball coach in The University Daily Kansan and on kansan.com. KANSAS RELAYS SCHEDULE Today Field Events ■ 8 a.m. Boy's Javelin ■ 8 a.m. Girl's Shot Put ■ 9 a.m. Boy's Pole Vault ■ 10 a.m. Women's Triple Jump ■ 10 a.m. Women's High Jump ■ 10 a.m. Boy's Triple Jump ■ 11 a.m. Girl's Javelin ■ 11 a.m. Women's Shot Put ■ 1 p.m. Men's Pole Vault ■ 2 p.m. Women's Javelin ■ 2 p.m. Men's Shot Put ■ 3 p.m. Men's Triple Jump ■ 3 p.m. Boy's High Jump ■ 3 p.m. Girl's Triple Jump ■ 5 p.m. Men's Javelin ■ 5 p.m. Girl's Pole Vault ■ 5 p.m. Boy's Shot Put Running Events 8 a.m. Women's Shuttle Hurdle 8:15 a.m. Men's Shuttle Hurdle 8:35 a.m. Girl's 3,200 Meters 9:10 a.m. Boy's 3,200 Meters 9:35 a.m. Girl's 100 Meters Preliminaries 9:55 a.m. Boy's 100 Meters Preliminaries 10:15 a.m. Women's 100 Meters Preliminaries 10:35 a.m. Men's 100 Meters Preliminaries 11 a.m. Boy's 300 Meter Intermediate Hurdles 11:20 a.m. Girls 300 Meter Intermediate Hurdles 11:40 a.m. Women's 400 Meter Intermediate Hurdles Preliminaries Noon Men's 400 Meter Intermediate Hurdles Preliminaries 12. 20 p.m. Women's 800 Meter Relay 12. 20 p.m. Women's 800 Meter Relay 12. 30 p.m. Men's 800 Meter Relay 12:45 p.m. Girl's Distance Medley Relay 1:15 p.m. Boy's Distance Medley Relay 1:40 p.m. Women's Distance Medley Relay 2. 05 p.m. Men's Distance Medley Relay 2:09 p.m. Metrs Distance is 2:30 a.m. Girl's 400 Meters 2:30 p.m. Girls 460 Meters 2:50 p.m. Boys 400 Meters 3:10 p.m. Women's 400 Meters Preliminaries 3:30 p.m. Men's 400 Meters Preliminaries 3:55 p.m. Girl's 400 Meter Relay Preliminaries 4:15 p.m. Boy's 400 Meter Relay Preliminaries 4:35 p.m. Women's 400 Meter Relay Preliminaries 4:55 p.m. Men's 400 Meter Relay Preliminaries Preliminaries F:15 p.m. Girl's 800 Meters 5:25 p.m. Boy's 800 Meters 6 p.m. Men's 3,000 Meter Steeplechase 5. 35 p.m.Women's 3,000 Meter Steeplechase 8 p.m. Men's 1,600 Meter Relay Preliminaries 8:30 p.m. Bill Easton Men's 4 Mile Relay 6:20 p.m. girl's 1,800 Meter Relay Preliminary 6:55 p.m. boy's 1,800 Meter Relay Preliminary 7-30 p.m. Women's 1,600 Meter Relay Polemimeters Tomorrow Field Events 8 a.m. Boy's Discus 10 a.m. Women's Long Jump 10 a.m. Boy's Long Jump 10 a.m. Girl's High Jump 10 a.m. Women's Pole Vault 11 a.m. Girl's Discus 11 a.m. Men's Invitational Shot 2 p.m. Girl's Long Jump 2 p.m. Men's Long Jump 2 p.m. Women's Discus 3 p.m. Men's Invitational Pole Vault 3 p.m. Carl Rice Men's High Jump 5 p.m. Al Oerter Men's Discus Running Events 8 a.m. 5K Open Racewalk Invitational 9 a.m. Girl's 100 Meter Hurdles 9:40 a.m. Boy's 110 Meter Hurdles Preliminary 9:20 a.m. Women's 100 Meter Hurdles Preliminaries 10:20 a.m. Girl's Sprint Medley Relay Finals 10 a.m. Men's 110 Meter Hurdles Delimination 10:40 a.m. Boy's Sprint Medley Relay Finals 11:15 a.m. Men's Sprint Medley Relay Finals 11:40 a.m. Men's 400 Meter Dash Finals 884-629-5330, Men's 400 Meter Preliminaries 11:15 a.m. Women's 400 Meter Dash Finals 11:35 a.m. Women's 400 Meter Dash Finals 11:55 a.m. Special 400 Meter Relay Marine Dock Structures 11:45 a.m. Special Olympics 100 Meter Dashes Steelleap 100 Noon Special 400 Meters Relay — 8th Grade Race Steelechase 12:05 p.m. Special 400 Meters Relay — 7th Base Race Steelchase 12:10 p.m. Special 400 Meters Relay — 8th Grade Race Steecheaple 12:15 p.m. Girl's 800 Meter Relay Finals 12:30 p.m. Boys 800 Meter Relay Fina 1:24 p.m. Girls 0:25 m. Hockey Finals 1:10 p.m. Bags 2 Mile Relay Finals 2. 25 p.m. Men's Masters 800 Meter Run Steeplechase 1. 35 p.m. Women 2 Mile Relay Finals 2 p.m. Men's 2 Mile Relay Finals 2:40 p.m. Men's Invite 200 Meter Dash Invitational Invitational 2:50 p.m. Girl's 100 Meter Hurdle Finals 2:54 p.m. Women's 100 Meter Hurdle Finals 2.48 p.m. 50 motor dash — 5th Grade Steeplechase 2:56 p.m. Women's 100 Meter Invite Hurdle Invitational 2. 52 p.m. 50 meter dash — 4th Grade Steeplechase 2-57 p.m. 50 Meter dash — 3rd Grade Steenlechase 3.02 p.m. 50 Meter dash — 2nd Grade Steeplechase 3 p.m. Boy's 110 Meter Hurdle Finals 3:06 p.m. Men's 100 Meter Invite Hurdle Invitational Steeplechase 3:04 p.m. Men's 110 Meter Hurdle Finals 3:07 p.m. 50 Meter dash — 1st Grade Steepeasehase 3:10 p.m. Girl's 100 Meter Dash Finals 3:15 p.m. Boy's 100 Meter Dash Finals 3:20 p.m. Women's 100 Meter Dash Finals 8:55 p.m. Men's 100 Meter Dash Finals 3:20 p.m. Women's 100 Meter Dash Finals 3:25 n.m. Men's 100 Meter Dash Finals 3:30 p.m. Women's Invite 100 Meter Dash Invitational 3:40 p.m. Men's Invite 100 Meter Dash Invitational 3. 50 p.m. Masters 100 Meter Dash Steeplechase 4:05 p.m. Men's 800 Metar Run Finals 4:15 p.m. Special 400 Meter Relay — Living Groups Steelchase Groups Steeplechase 4:20 p.m. Girl's 490 Meter Relay Finals 4:25 p.m. boy's 400 Meter Relay Finals 2013 4:30 p.m. Women's 400 Meter Relay Finals 4:55 p.m. Women's 400 Meter Intermediate Hurdle Finals 4:35 p.m. Men's Invitational Mile Invitational 4:45 p.m. 5 p.m. Women's 400 M Intermediate Hurdle Invite Invitational 5:05 p.m. Men's 400 Meter Intermediate Hurdle Finals 5:10 p.m. Men's 400 M Intermediate High Invite Invitational 5:15 p.m. m.Women's Invitational 400 Meter Run Invitational 5. 20 p.m.Men's Invitational 400 Meter Run Invitational 5:25 p.m. Girl's 1600 Meter Run Finals 5. 55 p.m.Women's 1500 Meter Run Finals SPORTS IN BRIEF 6:05 p.m. Men's 1500 Meter Run Finals 6:10 p.m. Girl's 1600 Meter Relay Finals 10:15 p.m. Girls 1000 Meter Relay Finals 6:15 p.m. Girls 1600 Meter Relay Finals 6:15 p.m. Boy's Locker 8 6:20 p.m. Women's 1600 Meter Relay Finals 6:25 p.m. Men's 1600 Meter Relay Finals 6:25 p.m. Men's Invitational Reals "Our practices are geared towards winning our fifth consecutive Kansas Cup." Rowing team fighting to win Cup for fifth straight year The University of Kansas rowing team will go head-to-head against Kansas State tomorrow at the Kansas Cup in Manhattan. The Jayhawks and Wildcats will par-take in the 1st Varsity 8, 2nd Varsity 8, Varsity 4, 1st Novice 8 and 2nd Novice 4 races. Kansas took two third-place finishes in both novice races in the Knecht Cup last weekend in Camden, N.J. — Jason Hwang Kansas has won the Kansas Cup for the past four years. But in its last meeting against against the Wildcats, The Jayhawks lost all five races at home in the Sunflower Showdown last November. "We are looking forward to racing in Manhattan and competing against Kansas State," coach Rob Catloth said. Tennis team tries to end fourmatch losing streak The No. 74 Kansas tennis team will play its final home match when it faces the No.32 ranked Texas A&M Aggies at the Robinson Courts tomorrow. The game will be the final game of the regular season. "This weekend is going to be really tough, A&M is good this year," Kansas coach Kilmene Waterman said. "I want everyone to compete up and down the line." The Jayhawks suffered a loss to in-state rival Kansas State last week and are on a four-match losing streak. Sophomore Paige Brown showed signs of light by going undefeated in doubles and singles against Kansas State. Senior Kim Lorenz also won in singles last week, and the match against Texas A&M marks her last match in Lawrence. After a victory over Texas on Tuesday, the Aggies will look to improve their third-place position in the Big 12 Conference standings. The Jayhawks have not defeated Texas A&M in its last four meetings and are 3-7 all-time in head-to-head match-ups. Kansas stands at 7-10 and 3-7 in the Big 12, while the Aggies are 15-9 and 7-2 in the conference. "We are going to be the underdogs, but if we all come together and play up to our abilities we can get the victory," Lorenz said. Jonah Ballow POLI kansan.com What was former Kansas athletics director Al Bohl's best move? Firing football coach Terry Allen Beer before football games Hiring baseball coach Ritch Price Hiring baseball coach from his His best is yet to come: moving out of Lawrence Log on to www.kansan.com to vote. TODAY Kansas Athletics Calendar TOMORROW Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium Baseball at Oklahoma, 6:35 p.m., in Norman, Okla. Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium Tennis vs. Texas A&M, noon, at Robinson courts Softball at Texas, noon and 2 p.m., in Austin, Texas Baseball at Oklahoma, 2 p.m., in Norman, Okla Rowing dual with Kansas State, in Manhattan Women's golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. SUNDAY Baseball at Oklahoma, 1 p.m., in Norman, Okla. Women's golf at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Columbia, Mo. Free for All rs really sad that Roy stole the boys' thunder by announcing his leave before the parade and the banquet. A man who had really loved his players would have let the team enjoy how much they accomplished this year. Put the parade back on, we're celebrating our boys, not Roy. Could we have a shorter attention span? As soon as we hear that Roy's leaving, we forget about the war. What's up with that? Is it just me or does that picture of Ryan Greene in the Kansan remind you of that nerd from the movie Road Trip? 图 To the person that said KU's loss and Roy's leaving is just as bad as losing a friend in a car accident, that's really sad and you need to get some perspective. Wanna know what I think? You can find out on roysucks.com. 图 图 The asparagus lady is on again. I hope this doesn't mean Roy's going to make another speech. apartments I think Richard Simmons should be the new basketball coach. Orchard Corners Apartments - 2 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - 4 BR -2 Bath w/Study - Furnished & unfurnished - apartments Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! We offer: - 4 BR -2 Bath - On KU bus route - Private patio or balcony - Friendly on-site manager - Sparkling pool - Small pets welcome - On-site laundry Models open daily 749-4226 15th & Kasold Mon.-Fri.9:00-5:00 - Dorm units available VISUAL WORKING OPPORTUNITY Find your favorite drinks ON SPECIAL In Weekly Specials Regents Court Apartments apartments for rent with Parkings for Paint Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Starting at $35.99 Large 38.4 BR, 2 full bath Large fully Applianced Kitchen Including Gas Heat & Hot Water Microwave & Dishwasher Central Heat & Air Central Heat & Air Off street parking On KU bus route 24 hr. Emergency maintenance d EHO For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 Mon.-Fri. 9-5 1. - FRIDAY,APRIL 18.2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Jayhawks vie for spot in tournament By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas baseball team will travel to Norman, Okla., this weekend to do battle with the Oklahoma Sooners in a crucial Big 12 Conference match-up. Kansas holds a 29-15 record this season and a 4-8 mark in conference play. Oklahoma is 13-20 with a conference record of 1-11 and three games behind Kansas. Both teams are vying for a bid to the Big 12 Tournament, which only the top eight teams in the conference receive. Kansas is currently in eighth place and will try to get some separation this weekend against Oklahoma. "Without a doubt, this is a big weekend for us," coach Ritch Price said. "The great thing about last weekend's series is that it made this series more important. We have the opportunity to do something special this weekend." Reggie Willits and Eddie Cornejo lead the Sooners on the offensive side. Willits is batting .397 and Cornejo is right behind with a .346 mark. The team's No. 1 pitcher is Mark Roberts who is currently 4-2 in nine starts and has an ERA of 3.92. Kansas will send its normal rotation to the pitching mound this weekend as junior Ryan Knippschild will get the start today and will be followed by junior Chris Smart tomorrow. Senior Kevin Wheeler will pitch the series finale on Sunday. It is unknown whether bullpen ace junior Brandon Johnson will "The great thing about last weekend's series is that it made this series more important. We have the opportunity to do something special this weekend." Ritch Price KU baseball coach be available to pitch during the series. Johnson has been suffering from an elbow injury and received treatment for it last week. Johnson was instrumental in the Jayhawks' success last weekend as he registered both victories against Texas Tech. Another spot in the lineup that will be adjusted this weekend is the No.9 spot in the batting order. Senior Brandon Shepard and freshman Matt Baty have both been receiving playing time in the middle of the infield, and Price will continue that this weekend. "The reason we were successful against Texas Tech was because we were getting production through our entire lineup," Price said. "Both of those guys are quality players. Matt has been struggling since conference play started, but he is a strong player who will rebound." The two teams will start their three-game series at 6:35 p.m. and then will play two day games at 2 p.m. tomorrow and 1 p.m. Sunday to close out the series. — Edited by Michelle Burhenn The Associated Press OLEAN, N.Y. - St. Bonaventure fired basketball coach Jan van Breda Kolff and accepted the resignation of two athletic department officials yesterday, a month after the team was sanctioned by the Atlantic 10 Conference for using an ineligible player. The school accepted the resignation of Athletic Director Gothard Lane and assistant coach Kort Wickenheiser effective immediately. Van Breda Kolff, Lane and Wickenheiser were placed on administrative leave in March, shortly after the Atlantic 10 sanctioned the team for using center Jamil Terrell. Terrell was declared ineligible for violating NCAA junior collegetransfer guidelines. In a review of the men's basketball program, officials found three violations of NCAA rules. University President Robert Wickenheiser resigned at the demand of the board of trustees and took full responsibility for approving Terrell's transfer. Terrell was ruled ineligible because he didn't have an associate's degree. Softball to face final opportunity for road victories at Texas By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com kansan sportswriter If the Kansas softball team wants to improve on its 5-8 road record, it'll have to do it at No. 4 Texas during the weekend. The Jayhawks take on the Longhorns for a doubleheader at noon tomorrow for their final away games. Looking at the standings, the two clubs seem to be becoming polar opposites as the regular season comes to end. Texas (33-7 overall, 10-2 Big 12 Conference) has won 12 of its last 13 games and is on a four-game winning streak as it sits on the top of the Big 12. out of 10 teams. Kansas (23-16, 2-9) had lost five in a row before defeating an equally struggling Arkansas 1-0 in the second game of a doubleheader at Jayhawk Field on Wednesday. The Hawks maintain ninth place in the conference Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said the Longhorns weren't the most explosive ball club as far as offense goes, but they still got the job done. "They don't score a lot of runs, but they win ball games and that's what it's all about," Bunge said. Despite its low amount of runs, Texas still has some players that can hit the ball such as freshman Tina Boutelle with a .336 average and 36 hits, junior Tamara Poppe with a .312 average and 25 hits and sophomore Wynter Turner batting. 306, 30 hits and 21 RBI. Texas can get away with few runs because it holds opponents to fewer runs — if any at all. The Longhorns have a phenomenal team ERA of 0.61. To give some perspective, Kansas' team ERA is 2.36. Out of four pitchers, the pitcher with the highest ERA, sophomore Lizi Sowers, could easily be the ace of any other squad MILIDAN 51 "Their entire pitching staff is solid right now," Bunge said. Sophomore pitcher Cat Osterman is also a member of the U.S. National team. Osterman has an ERA of 0.38 with an overall record of 18-4 and has recorded 131 strikeouts so far. "When she's on, there's not many pitchers who can throw the ball like she does," Bunge said of Osterman. "There's a reason she's on the U.S. National team." Kansas will return from Texas to finish the regular season by playing seven home games against four different clubs, beginning with Missouri for a doubleheader at 3 p.m. Monday. — Edited by Michelle Burhenn Senior Kirsten Milhoan pitches in game one in a split with Arkansas in this picture from Wednesday. The Jayhawks take on No. 4 Texas at noon and 2 p.m. tomorrow in Austin, Texas. Cordney Kuhlen/Kansan Now at Last Call HawkRock Wednesdays Featuring Resident DJ Jab Money Lawrence's best Mainstream/Hip-Hop & Top-40 DJ Prizes/Contests/Giveaways $1.50 ANYTHING!!! 729 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks (785) 838-4623 LAST CALL DANCEclub & BAR Wednesdays $1.50 Anything $3 Pitchers Thursdays $1.50 Shots $1.75 Pints Fridays $2 Coronas $2.25 Smirnoff Flavors Saturdays $3 Dbl. vodka/Red Bull $4 Pitchers Now at Last Call Hawk Rock Wednesdays Featuring Resident DJ Jab Money Lawrence's best Mainstream/Hip-Hop & Top-40 DJ Prizes/Contests/Giveaways $1.50 ANYTHING!!! 729 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks (785) 838-4623 LAST CALL DANCEclub & BAR Wednesdays $1.50 Anything $3 Pitchers Thursdays $1.50 Shots $1.75 Pints Fridays $2 Coronas $2.25 Smimoff Flavors Saturdays $3 Dbl. vodka/Fed Bull $4 Pitchers THE FIRST SPRING BREAK REALITY MOVIE! NO SCRIPTS. NO ACTORS. NO RULES. APRIL 25 ONLY IN THEATRES FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE REAL WORLD THE REAL CANCUN For more than two centuries, the opera's unique combination of the sublime and the ridiculous has worked its theatrical magic... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and The Department of Music & Dance PRESENT A VIRTUAL REALITY PRODUCTION OF The Magic Flute By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Directed by Delbert Unruh Virtual Reality Technology by Mark Reaney Costume Design by Ione Unruh Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet (KU MI'A '98) Featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra Steven McDonald, conductor 7:30 P.M. APRIL 26 & MAY 1-3, 2003 2:30 P.M. SUNDAY, APRIL 27 & MAY 4, 2003 CRAFTON–PREYER THEATRE Reserved seat tickets are on sale through the KU ticket offices: University Theatre, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-7469; and on-line at www.kuheatre.com; public $16 & $14, all students: $10, senior citizens: $15 & $15; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Actuary Fee. News news NEWS News News news NEWS News News news NEWS Now. kansan.com 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. P For more than two centuries, the opera's unique combination of the sublime and the ridiculous has worked its theatrical magic... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and The Department of Music & Dance PRESENT A VIRTUAL REALITY PRODUCTION OF By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Directed by Delbert Unruh Virtual Reality Technology by Mark Reaney Costume Design by lone Unruh Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet (KU MFA '98) Featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra Steven McDonald, conductor 7:30 P.M. APRIL 26 & MAY 1-3, 2003 2:30 P.M. SUNDAY, APRIL 27 & MAY 4, 2003 CRAFTON-PREVER THEATRE Reserved seat tickets are on sale through the KU ticket office: University Theatre, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; UUA Office, 864-7469; and on-line at www.kuala-lumpur.com/public $16 & $14; all students $10; senior citizens $15 & $13; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. STUDENT SENATE THEATER The Magic Flute 4B • THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN ADVERTISEMENT FRIDAY,APRIL18,2003 Top of the HILI TOP OF THE HILL is KU students' chance to vote for the best of Lawrence.Fill out this form and return it to Room 119 Stauffer-Flint or visit Kansan.com to complete the online survey. Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. 2003 RESTAURANTS Best Mexican: Best Chinese: Best Breakfast: Best Burgers: Best Subs: Best Italian: Best Steakhouse: Best Vegetarian: Best Pizza: Best French Fries: Best Wings: Best Buffet: Best Ice Cream: Best Custard: Best Coffee House: Best Atmosphere: Best Delivery Service: Best Bakery: Best Post-Party Food Restaurant: Best Customer Service: Best KC Restaurant: Best Local Restaurant: Best Overall: BARS Best Sports Bar: Best Drink Specials: Best Martinis: Best Margaritas: Best Wells: Best Selection of Beers: Best Dance Club: Best Place to Play Pool: DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25,2003 BARS, continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTY SERVICES Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING Best Apartment Complex:___ Best Townhomes:___ Best Landlord:___ Best Neighborhood to live in: ___ SCHOOL Best Place to Study:___ Best Bookstore:___ Best Residence Hall:___ Best Scholarship Hall:___ Best Building on Campus:___ Best Fraternity:___ Best Sorority:___ Best Student Organization:___ THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: Station 10, Condemned Station 24, 36th Street Hill Cross Station 34, 46th Street First Avenue West Station 44, 56th Street Mother Station 54, 66th Street Drone Lake Closet THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5P Wild want to remain in playoffs The Associated Press 51. PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota Wild played two of their best games of the season this week. What do they have to show for it? One goal scored, six goals allowed and two losses. "I always say it's how you play that will s at i s f y you" coach Jacques Lemaire said yesterday, a day after the Wild lost 3-1 to Colorado. Colorado leads the best-of-seven playoff series 3-1 going into Game 5 tomorrow night in Denver. Maybe you're not always happy with the result, but if everyone is working hard and doing their best, even though you don't get the result you want, sometimes you have to be satisfied with that." The Wild don't appear to have a choice. Lemaire said his players had done everything he had expected of them in their first-ever playoff series. They've played better in each game; they've played well on defense; they've given themselves plenty of scoring chances; and their goaltending has been exceptional. In short, they've played well enough to beat an above-average NHL team — in the regular season. But not well enough to beat the Avalanche in the Stanley Cup Plavoffs. The Avs' goal is to reach the finals and win the cup. The Wild appear to be using this postseason, a bonus in their first-ever winning season, as a learning "I want them to be happy about what they have done and the way they have played," Lemaire said after yesterday's practice. "They are playing well and I'm proud of them." experience. "I think the guys will come back tomorrow and feel a little better than they do today. It takes time to recover." The lack of goals has been the most disappointing aspect. After erupting for three goals in the second period of their Game 1 win, the Wild offense was held to a single goal for most of Game 2 until Andrew Brunette added one with only seconds remaining. Then came Patrick Roy's shutout in Game 3, the Wild's first home playoff game. In Game 4, the fans were on edge throughout, cheering nearly every possession, booing the officials and waiting for that elusive first goal. The Wild found the puck in front of the net several times, but couldn't penetrate Roy, whose years of playoff experience showed. Roy would've had his second straight shutout, but Marian Gaborik narrowly slipped a shot between his pads in the third period. "Couple shifts were unbelievable," right wing Sergei Zholtok said. "It looked like the puck had nowhere to go but in the net, and then it hits the D, hit Patrick and won't go in. ... They know what they're doing. Give them credit." Although they surpassed expectations this year, it's hard for the players to not feel disappointed. But they're doing their best to stay optimistic about tomorrow's game. The Wild didn't lose more than three straight games this season, a streak they can still keep intact. Quarterback working through injury The Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. - Since he was hands off during full-contact workouts this spring, it's uncertain how much improvement, if any, Nebraska quarterback Jamal Lord has made since last season. As for the two quarterbacks behind Lord, coach Frank Solich has made it clear that he's N Huskers disappointed they haven't performed better. That being the case, the Cornhuskers' offensive coaches can count on high anxiety this summer regardless of what happens in tomorrow's Red-White Game at Memorial Stadium. "We're not there yet," new offensive coordinator Barney Cotton said. "I'm glad we've got 29 more practices." Cotton's charge is to make what had become a predictable offense into one with a bit more panache. He has promised more passing, but has found it difficult to get his plan off the ground because of inconsistent line play and poor performances by the quarterbacks. Solich is frustrated by the lackluster play of Lord's No. 2 backups — junior Mike Stuntz and redshirt freshman Curt Dukes. Judging from practices, receiver Ross Pilkington said. Cotton remains committed to putting the ball in the air. "For Nebraska football, it's going to be a drastic change," Pilkington said. "We're throwing it a lot more on first down. It's not so much deep passes, but short passes to work in with the run." Cotton said he expected there to be a 2-to-1 run-pass ratio in the spring game. Aside from protection issues, the question is whether the Huskers have a quarterback who can consistently deliver the ball to the backs and receivers. Pilkington said Lord's passing had improved since last season. "He's going to have a chance to make plays on early downs," Pilkington said, "and I think it will open up the passing game a lot and let him show off his arm." Lord, a senior, is 10 of 19 for 86 yards, with one interception, in two scrimmages this spring. He will be limited in the spring game because of a quadricep pull. pun Dukes was 1 of 2 for 11 yards, with an interception, in last Saturday's scrimmage. He was held out of the previous week's scrimmage because of continuing knee soreness related to his off-season surgery. Canseco taking bids for fan companionship The Associated Press MIAMI - Jose Canseco plans to profit while under house arrest for his part in a 2001 nightclub brawl. Cansecoo's Web site is accepting bids to spend an afternoon with the 1988 American League MVP. The opening price is $2,500. NB www.josecanseco.com received 268 bids as of yesterday after no on although it was impossible to determine how many were Canseco "Hey, you know, he's still a celebrity," said Canseco's attorney, Manny Hillman. "There are a lot of people out there who like to hang out with celebrities." legitimate. The top offer of $30,000 was from a fan identifying himself as Joe Blow. There was also a bid for $0. An earlier offer of $1 billion was removed from the site. But while some Canseco fans submitted bids, others who know the slugger were dismayed. "It's not exactly the best PR move," said his former agent, Juan Iglesias. "People around him always try to give him the best advice. Whenever something comes up as bad timing, it's usually because he thought of it on his own." The Web site offer began April 9, and bids will be accepted through Saturday. "Spend the afternoon with Jose at his house in South Florida," the site says. "Ideas for activities: Private powerhitting instruction, private martial arts instruction, workout with Jose, and cook out by the pool... Canseco will provide roundtrip limousine service from the airport, but overnight accommodations and airfare aren't included. The highest bidder can bring along a guest who's younger than 18 at no extra cost. "Cashiers check or money orders only." "Jose loves kids," Hillman explained. Judge Leonard Glick said the auction was OK with him. He sentenced Canseco on March 17 to two years' house arrest on an aggravated battery conviction. "As long as there's no criminal act going on, there's absolutely nothing wrong with it," Glick said. "It's free enterprise_a little unusual form, but free enterprise." Hillman and Iglesias agreed that the auction winner will have a good time with Canseco. "He's got a lot of toys, a lot of cars, a nice pool, a gym and a batting cage," Iglesias said. Hillman said: "Is it worth $6,000? Or $10,000. Or $50,000? I don't know." Hillman and Iglesias said they tried to contact Canseco by phone about the auction without success. Canseco didn't return a phone message from The Associated Press. "He's under house arrest," Iglesias said. "You'd think you could reach him." Umpire attacker's bond at $250,000 The Associated Press The 24-year-old Dybas came out of the stands and grabbed CHICAGO - A judge set bond at $250,000 yesterday for a man who attacked an umpire during a Chicago White Sox game. Eric Dybas of Bolingbrook was charged with one count of felony aggravated battery and one count of misdemeanor criminal trespass. umpire Laz Diaz around the legs during Tuesday night's game between the White Sox and Kansas City Royals. Dybas was the fourth fan to run onto the field that night. The other three did not attack anyone and were charged with misdemeanor trespassing. Dybas appeared in court yesterday with his lawyer. Cook County Judge Nicholas Ford called Dybas' actions disturbing and said nobody should be subjected to violent acts at a ballpark. Defense attorney Frank Kosttouros said his client has an alcohol problem and his behavior was a result of that. The lawyer also said Dybas is sorry for what he did. Last September, Kansas City coach Tom Gamboa was pummeled by a father and son just yards from where Tuesday's attack took place. White Sox out-homer Royals The Associated Press CHICAGO — Esteban Loaiza matched a career high with 11 strikeouts and Carlos Lee's grand slam was one of four Chicago homers as the White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 8-2 yesterday. Loaiza (3-0), a nonroster invitee to spring training, won his third straight start. He didn't give up a hit until Brandon Berger led off the fifth with a single and allowed one run and four hits ir The right-hander had a 15inning scoreless streak snapped in the sixth when Dee Brown drove in a run with the third of three Kansas City singles in the inning. six strong innings. After a fan attacked an umpire Tuesday night, there was no trouble the rest of the series. Lee's sixth career slam gave Chicago an 8-0 lead in the fifth against Chris George (2-1), who gave up all four Chicago homers in four 2-3 innings. Miguel Olivo and Tony Graffanino hit back-to-back solo shots in the second and Paul Konerko added another solo homer in the third. Maggilio Ordonez had an RBI single in the first, extending his hitting streak to 13 games. Lee and Konerko entered batting.174. Lee's homer was his first of the season and came right after Konerko was intentionally walked to load the bases following a walk to Jose Valentin and a double by Frank Thomas. The devotion known as "Stations of the Cross" is an adaptation of a custom widely observed by pilgrims to Jerusalem, the offering of prayers at a series of places in the city traditionally associated with Jesus Christ's passion and death. Station I: 9:15am Jesus is Condemned to Death Station II: 9:30 Jesus Takes Up His Cross Station III: 9:45 Jesus Falls the First Time Under the Cross Station IV: 10:00 Jesus Meets His Mother Station V: 10:15 Simon of Cyrene is Forced to Take Up the Cross Station VI: 10:30 Vejonica Wipes the Face of Jesus Station VII: 10:45 Jesus Falls a Second Time Station VIII: 11:00 Jesus Meets the Women of Jerusalem Station IX: 11:15 Jesus Falls a Third Time Station X: 11:30 Jesus is Stripped of His Garments Station XI: 11:45 Jesus is Nailed to the Cross Station XII: 12:00pm Jesus Dies on the Cross Station XIII: 12:15 The Body of Jesus is Placed in the Arms of His Mother Station XIV: 12:30 Jesus is Laid in the Tomb stations of the cross: The trial and execution of Jesus Christ, 14 scenes from the Last Day VIII. Twente Hall Blake Hall VII. Watson Library VI. V. Anschutz Library Fraser Hall VI. Budig Hall Marvin Hall Lindley Hall Stauffer-Flint Hall Wescoe Hall IV. IV. III. II. jayhawk boulevard Danforth Chapel IX. X. Spooner Hall XII. Smith Hall XI. KS Union XIII. Lippincott Hall XIV. Bailey Hall XIV. Strong Hall XIV. Snow Hall Chi Omega Fountain I. Vietnam Memorial Good Friday, April 18th A pilgrimage through KU Campus, beginning at the Vietnam Memorial at 9am, following the traditional Stations of the Cross. Join the pilgrimage as your schedule permits. People are encouraged to walk the entire pilgrimage, or just some of the pilgrimage. Sponsored by: Apostolic Catholic Church, Lutheran Campus Ministry (ELCA), Ecumenical Christian Ministries (PCUSA/Presbyterian, UCC/United Church of Christ, Brethre Quaker), Canterbury House (Episcopal), and United Methodist Christian Ministry. Call ECM 843-4933 for more information. 9 6B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 Football team looks to speed up for fall season If the Kansas football team plays more competitively next season, it will be for one reason greater team speed. In Division I college football, speed is not a novelty; it is a requirement. Florida, California and Texas are the three major recruiting havens because those regions have the warm climate to train speed players annually. Three of the fastest teams in the nation and three of the best programs in the nation recruit heavily out of Texas. Oklahoma and Texas both have fantastic team speed, and Kansas State is not far behind. Teams need players who can play at a fast pace to compete in the Big 12 Conference. Iowa State was successful in the first part of last season because it was faster than its opponents. In the second half of the season, when Iowa State played Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas State, it was drubbed because, while fast, it wasn't fast enough. However, Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said Iowa State's speed was "100 times better" than the school's losing teams of the mid '90s. The result: Iowa State went to its third-straight bowl in three seasons. Kansas coach Mark Mangino has worked at both Kansas State and Oklahoma. He learned the importance of acquiring speed. This year's Kansas team looks to fit the part. "You always try to stockpile speed," Mangino said. "We are a much faster and much quicker football team than last year." SPORTS COMMENTARY Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Most of the dedication was made in the offseason at the weight room, where players worked harder so they could play faster. Kansas certainly appears fast at almost every position. The wide receivers look quick; the defensive backs look quick; even the linemen appear to be quicker. Two of this spring's standout players were sophomore David McMillan and junior Adrian Jones. McMillan is a tenacious pass rusher with the speed and quickness to get across the edge from his defensive end position. Look for him to acquire double digit sacks next season. Adrian Jones had such a fine spring that he was named an offensive captain. While a step slow for a tight end, Jones is quick for an offensive tackle and will work on protecting quarterback Bill Whittemore's blind side. More speed will arrive in the fall. All of the recruited skill position players run the 40-yard dash in under 4.7 seconds. All but three run the dash in the 4.5 range or faster. The three who don't? Sophmore Lyonel Anderson's 4.65 40-yard dash is blazingly fast for a tight end, and is not a bad time for tight ends who play professionally. Incoming freshman Adam Barmann is fast for a quarterback at 4.64. Incoming freshman Brandon McAnderson is in the 4.65-4.7 range, but he may play linebacker instead of running back. Speaking of fast linebackers, this class has two linebackers with fantastic size and speed combinations in Victor Valley College transfer junior John McCoy and Iowa Central Community College transfer sophomore Gabe Toomey. Toomey is 230 pounds and ran in the 4.6 range, while the 255 pound McCoy has been clocked at an astounding 4.56. While the team has enough great 40-yard dash times to fill an NFL Draft Guide, clockings are not how the coaches judge speed. Mangino insists that there is a difference between being fast and playing fast. Oakland Raiders wide receivers Jerry Rice and Tim Brown were considered slow for wide receivers. But with pads on in game situations, they were hard to catch. Players achieve game speed through combining instincts and decision making with athletic ability. It is obvious that this team has the athletic capabilities — it looked fast in practice. If the team can get that speed to translate onto the football field during games beginning Aug. 30 against Northwestern, Kansas could have a very interesting run next fail. Flaherty is a Lenexa junior in Journalism. Banquet CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B crowd twisted in their seats to find the source of the verbal bullet. But Dave Collison, father of senior forward Nick Collison, turned for another purpose. "You should be ashamed of yourself," Collison roared at the balcony. In that instant, confusion gave way to clarity. Suddenly, every fan in attendance knew exactly where he stood. There were no more endless discussions of loyalties, using ambiguous measures. They either agreed with the critic or Dave Collison. Most fans sided with Collison. They cheered, and the show went on. "When I walked in," Williams told reporters later. "I was kind of chicken. I walked in the middle of the players because I knew they wouldn't boo the players." But Williams knew he couldn't hide for ever. He knew it when he decided to return to face the community where, to some, he had gone from national hero to villain with one decision. He knew it would be easier to move on, and he came back. "Oh yes," Williams said when asked whether he considered skipping the banquet. "There seemed to be a little storm building, and maybe it wasn't the best, but that would have the easy way out, and I've talked to my guys all the time that you can't take the easy way out. You have to do what's right." — Edited by Christy Dendurent Returning to Lawrence Eric Braem/Kansen I will do my best to ensure that you are safe and comfortable in the vehicle. If you have any questions or need assistance, please contact our customer service team. Television cameras surround former coach Roy Williams and all but ignore the players as they arrive at the Lied Center. Williams returned to Lawrence yesterday to attend the KU basketball awards ceremony. Donations CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B lain, Al Oerter and Wes Santee. Wyatt said he appreciated the help he received from track coach Bill Easton. The gift counts toward the $500 million goal set by KU First. Started by the Endowment association, KU First seeks to raise funds for KU scholarships, fellowships, professorships, capital projects "What I liked about him was that he provided anyone the opportunity to participate." Wyatt said. "He taught me life lessons that I still hold. Looking back, it was a real character builder for him." "Scholarships are a major priority for us, and this gift is great because it furthers our fundraising goal." John Scarffe Communications director for KU Endowment and program support. John Scarffe, communications director for the Endowment association, said this helped KU First reach their goal. "Scholarships are a major priority for us, and this gift is great because it furthers our fundraising goal," Scarffe said. "It is also unusual that the scholarship is for a specific sport. It is great that a former Kansas track star would come back and donate money to make sure that track stays strong at Kansas." KU First has currently raised $404 million,and will continue to raise funds through 2004. Other 1950s and 1960s track champions present at the Kansas Relays include Santee, Jim Ryun, Al Frame and Jim Hershberger. Wyatt will be honored at 3 p.m. today at the awards platform of Memorial Stadium. Edited by Todd Rapp Womyn Unite! Take Back the Night! Where: WatsonPark (train park) 6th & Tennessee Lawrence, KS When: Friday, April 18th Times: Pre-March Activities: 5:30 pm Speak-Out Circle: 7:00 pm March: 8:30 pm Kentucky Place Apartments Now Leasing 2 BR Apartments For Fall 2003! - Furnished apt. available - Within walking distance to campus - Fully equipped kitchen including microwaves & dishwashers - Large walk-in closets - Laundry facilities on site Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 841-1212 or 749-0445 For more information call 841.1212 or Now taking applications for Fall 2003 - 1 BR & 1 BR Loft A Available - $475-490 1PP & 1PB - 24 hr. Emergency maintenance - Water and trash paid - $475-490 Apartment Available Water and trash paid - Walking distance to Campus - Laundry facilities on site - Laundry facilities on site - Private off street parking Call (785) 841-1429 for details Mon-Fri 9 am - 6 pm 1105 Louisiana EHO LAND WOOD PROPERTY Domestic &Foreign Complete Car Care LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews Now. kansan.com We Stand Behina Our Work, and WE CARE!" 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr Hanover Place Apartments Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! - Fully applianced - kitchen w/microwave - Laundry facilities - Private off street parking - Central Heat and Air - Walk-in closets - Garages - Fireplaces - Washer/Dryer hookups - Walk to K.U. - On-site Manager - 24 hour emergency maintenance 14th & Mass. (785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO I FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B 10. BAMBINOS DEEMS APRIL 16 thru 19 2003 Gates Open at 7am Memorial Stadium BAMBINO'S DEEMS Krispy Kreme DOUGH'NUTS JOHN DEERE Kruspy Kreme DOUGH NUTS SUB-SANDWICHES MAFF A.S. MR. GOODCENTS SUB-SANDWICHES PARTYAS MR. GOODCENTS Paisano's RISTORANTE Pizza Hut PIZZERIA UNO EST. 1943 CHICAGO BAR & GRILL Pizza Hut PIZZERIA UNO CHICAGO BAR & GRILL NO GREAT OLD CHICAGO BAR & GRILL FAMOUS FOR Steak n Shake STEAKBURGERS OLD CHICAGO FAMOUS FOR Steak n Shake STEAKBURGERS Dillons FOOD STORES* KUStore.com Official KU Athletics Merchandise Dillons FOOD STORES* KUStore.com Official KU Athletics Merchandise 8B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 ENTERTAINMENT TODAY TOMORROW SUNDAY 76 46 65 43 62 39 thunderstorms rain cold and clear late TODAY 76 46 thunderstorms late TOMORROW 65 43 rain SUNDAY 62 39 cold and clear — MATTHEW F. LAUBHAN, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE CAPTAIN RIBMAN in Tele-Visions by Sprengelmeyer & Davies ...THE WAR WINDING DOWN AFTER THREE WEEKS AND BOMBING RUNS NO LONGER NECESSARY... CRAP! I BOUGHT ENOUGH CHIPS AND BEER FOR THREE MONTHS! SAWM THOSE RETIRED GENERALS! ...THE WAR WINDING DOWN AFTER THREE WEEKS AND BOMBING RUNS NO LONGER NECESSARY... CRAP! I BOUGHT ENOUGH CHIPS AND BEER FOR THREE MONTHS! DUMN THOSE RETIRED GENERALS! HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 18). Making money this year could involve spending. Don't invest more than you can back in one lifetime, however. You'd be wise to work up a plan. Crunch the numbers before you start running up debt. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. The direct approach won't work as well as a more subtle advance. So if at first you don't succeed, come around the back way. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. Share your vision for the future with a sensitive, supportive person. It may be too hard to accomplish alone, but with faith and a good friend, anything is possible. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 6. Push hard to get a tough job done. It might have been easier if you'd finished it sooner, but there's no use worrying about that now. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is an 8. Money may be a little tight,but it's out there. You can use your own creativity to make more. Accept a loved one's encouragement and inspiration. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. Finish whatever you need to do in order to strengthen your infrastructure. You'll be much more creative, and have much more time, after this basic stuff is done. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 6. You're one of the few who can get a message across, when others aren't speaking. Help out a couple of people you know who can't see eye to eye. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 6. By putting more work into your own place, your investment goes up in value. It's another way to make money and build self-esteem. Scorpio(Oct.23-Nov.21).Todayis7. You learn pretty well through books, but you learn best through hands-on experience. Maybe that's why you'll be able to do something that somebody else can't. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 7. People think you're lucky, and maybe you are. Luck isn't all you have going for you, however. It also helps to have good timing. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. A person who's a good strategist could help you with the perfect scheme. Find a way to do your work faster so that you have more time to play. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 6. Something that seems impossible at first really can be accomplished. Don't let yourself be intimidated. Stay cool and you'll win the prize. Piaces (Feb. 19-March 20). Todav is a 7. Compassion can travel great distances and touch hearts so far from your own. When one door slams shut, look for the one that opens. Crossword ACROSS 1 Flat inflater 5 First of music's Three B's 9 Yep 14 One woodwind 15 Car shaft 16 Gander's mate 17 Programming repetition 18 Not counterfeit 19 Razor sharpener 20 Early spring flower 23 Action word 24 Purloin 25 Timid: var. 27 Wildcat 30 Universe 33 Call's partner? 36 Oliver Twist or Annie 39 Tin Man's cure-all 40 Cambodia neighbor 41 Divining card 42 Portuguese lady 43 World Series mo. 44 Disc-jockey bribe 45 Black 46 Angelic type 48 Son of Seth 50 "Ulysses" city 53 Sing for Heidi? 57 Wild guess 59 Some cooking utensils 62 Seeped 64 Ivory rival 65 Baseball team 66 Dried fruit 67 Depravity 68 __ the Red 69 Rocking toy 70 "__ : Warrior Princess" 71 Woad and anil DOWN 1 Axls points 2 WWII sub 3 __ Jaw, Saskatchewan 4 Rousing speeches 5 Canadian golfer Dave 6 Skater's jump 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | | | 22 | | 23 | | | 24 | | | | | □ | 25 | | 28 | | | | | | | | 27 | | 28 | 29 | 30 | | | 31 | 32 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 33 | 34 | 35 | | 36 | | 37 | 38 | | | 39 | | | 40 | | | | 41 | | | | | | 42 | | | 43 | | | | 44 | | | | | | 45 | | | 46 | | | 47 | | | | 48 | | 49 | | | | | | 50 | | | | 51 | 52 | 53 | | 54 | 55 | 56 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 57 | 58 | | | | 59 | | 60 | 61 | | | | | | 62 | | | | 63 | | 64 | | | | 65 | | | | 66 | | | | | 67 | | | | 68 | | | | 69 | | | | | 70 | | | | 71 | | | | © 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 7 Assert 8 Phone opener 9 Yuck! 10 Equine feet 11 Early harmonious period 12 Exploitive one 13 Parsley or sage 21 TV Tarzan Ron 22 Mexican peninsula 26 Mama's boy 28 Worth mentioning 29 Dentist's shot? 31 Sty comment 32 Do in a dragon 33 United group 34 Apiece 35 The Riviera, to the French 37 Niner or Buc 38 Cup on a green 42 Repudiated 44 Tavern by a tube stop 47 Flemish baroque 04/18/03 B R O S G R A C E B E A T R A V I R U M O R E R L E E N I D A L E X A N D R I A W I D E O P E N A L E C K K W H R P A R A D E S S P O I L S S Y S T E M N A R C S I S I S S S T E R I K R H E T T R E N O E R G C O I L H E M A N C H I L D P R O D I G Y E G G R O L L L L O W E B R E A K S O U L F O O D B A T T E N D O W N I N D O E D I E T I R E D N E E D D E N S H E E D S E S S O Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. painter 49 Popeye's Olive 51 Encyclopedia volume 52 Wide-eyed 54 Milk farm 55 One of the Muppets 56 Onions' kin 57 2nd yr. student 58 Spanish bull 59 Central 61 Ms. Fitzgerald 63 Actress Sandra NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS KANSA NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS OM LIBERTY HALL 644 massachusetts lawrence 785) 745-1012 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM PG-13 FRI 4:15 7:10 9:40 SAT 4:15 7:00 SUN 1:15 4:15 7:00 9:40 CITY OF GOD Directed by Fernando Meirelles R FRI 4:00 9:30 SAT 9:30 only SUN 4:00 9:30 Adaptation R FRI 7:00 only SAT 1:30 only SUN 1:30 7:00 WEEKEND TIMES ONLY! FRI 4:16 7:10 9:40 SAT 4:15 7:00 SUN 1:15 4:16 7:00 9:40 CITY OF GOD Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against persons on race, sex, age, color, nationality or disability. Further, Kansan will not knowingly accept WEEKEND TIMES ONLY! call or visit www.libertyhaifa.com for times Dance lessons; ballet, latin, and swing; Sunday nights 7-8 p.m., followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receceptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 311-227 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements 200s Employment I Classified Policy Marks JEWELERS Fast, quality jewelry repa custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 markinsc@swell.net Quality Jewelers Since 1880 男厕 女厕 D 205 - Help Wanted 130 - Entertainment - LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at Girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature, sports, challenge course, dance and dramas) Early June - mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, and end of season bonus. Call 303-778-0109 *x211* e-mail rhornbon@gsnm@gsnm.com I will help you with that. It looks like a simple illustration of four people holding hands. The characters are simple and stylized, representing the concept of teamwork or friendship. I'll just provide the text. Personal Care attendant jobs available for the summer. Flexible schedule, no experience needed $9/hr. 20-40 hrs/wk + nights. Must have own transportation. For info call 218-0753, leave message. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 9-5 Mon-Sat. 811 New Hampshire. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary, students well- comed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepro.com advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277 ex. 1020 GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED, PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUSI CALL NOW 785-865-0856. versity of kansas regulation of land real estate that has a newsletter to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertis "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion Dependable, trustworthy female needed to assist wheelchair user, Errands, transportation and light housekeeping. Must like dogs. Call 832-0527. 205 - Help Wanted GPA. The Graduate & Professional Association of the University of Kansas, seeks a graduate or professional student as Financial Director. The successful candidate will be an independent, organized, and motivated worker; possess business and/or financial knowledge and experience; strong people skills; budget experience; and the ability to multitask. Specific job requirements include managing and reporting finances for GPA and 40 graduate student organizations. Position is a student/hourly part-time, one year (reewable) term with start date May 5, 2003. (Pay approx. $800/mo with institute/staff tuition rates.) PeopleSoft experience recommended but not required. Please send letter of interest and resume to Financial Director Search Committee, c/o Graduate & Professional Association, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd, Rm 426, Lawrence, KS 66045. "LesBiGay Irans: issues Lauson Responsibilities: Serve as liaison to Queens and Allies; LBGT services of Kansas; serve as liaison to other campus offices and student organizations. Develop a variety of educational resources directed toward raising consciousness and increasing awareness Graduate Student Hourly Position: acceptance. Required Qualifications: Bachelor's degree and graduate status for Fall 2003 and Spring 2004 (Must be enrolled in at least 6 credit hours). Demonstrated ability to articulate the concerns of gay, lesbian. bisexual and transgender persons, especially those related to higher education. Demonstrated ability to work effectively with a variety of publics and individuals. Availability to attend KU Queers and Allies meetings Thursday evenings. Ability to organize and work independently on assigned tasks. Position Start Date: On or about August 18, 2003, $8.50 per hour, 20 hours a week. Complete job description available in Student Development Center, 22 Strong Hall. Application: Please submit a letter of application, resume, and names, addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses (if available) of two references to Marshall Jackson, Associate Director, development, 22 Strong Hill, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS. 66045. Review of applications will begin on May 2, 2003. Position open until filled. 3. Position open until filled EOE/AA sex, handicap; familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." kansan.com Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 205 - Help Wanted --- Schumm Foods needs a part-time office assistant who has prior office experience and good customer service skills. Start at $7 per hour. $8 per hour after a year. Apply at Schumm Foods at 719 Mass (above the Smokehouse). Great practical experience in all facets of a small business. STUDENT ASSISTANT 205 - Help Wanted Required Qualifications: Candidates should have valid state Driver's License, be reliable, and be available to work 20 hours per week (Monday through Friday) anytime between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. starting on or before 5/19/03. This position requires a high level of accuracy, attention to detail, strong work ethic, and good verbal & written communication skills. Job Description: This ongoing part-time student position will provide support services for the KU Center for Research Budget & Employment Services staff by: filing, sorting, making photocopies, retrieving specific documents from files, verifying authorized signatures, creating and/or modifying Microsoft Word. Access or Excel computer files, assisting visitors at our reception desk and/or service counter, drive company vehicle to deliver and pick up documents on campus, and perform other duties as assigned. Preferred Qualifications: Available to work on a long-term basis (including over the summer and holiday breaks) is preferred. Previous work experience using standard office machines, personal computer, and software such as Microsoft Word. Access and Excel is preferred. Hourly Rate & Other Information: This is a part-time position (20 hours per week, except as noted below). Starting pay rate is from $7.00 to $8.00 p/hr depending on qualifications/experience. This is a potential long-term employment opportunity, since we have an ongoinglong-term need for a Student Assistant. During the period of the summer break, the student assistant may be offered the opportunity to work up to 40 hours per week. How to Apply: Go to Youngberg Hall (2385 Irving Hill Rd.) between 8:00 AM and 4:30 PM (M-F) and contact the receptionist on the 1st floor. Then complete the application form. Review of applications will begin at 4:28/03. 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampjobs.com. SUMMER INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. Apply online at www.pigrimage.com/intern.htm --- 205 - Help Wanted --- Sales Career Opportunity $100,000 per year (our top performers earn that) Did you make $15,000 last month? Do you want the opportunity? - Signing bonus up to $1000* - $500 per week guarantee (while training) * Great summer job for college grads - Flexible work schedule - 4. 1/2 day work week - Advancement opportunities - Career path to management • 401K health insurance • Quarterly bonuses • Drug free environment • EOE Traveler - E.O.E. Employer Call Jason Robinson @ 913-208-9952 to schedule an interview y - S1000 licenses for professional售机 sales personnel with strong DOCUMENTED track record. References required. * Must have a documented successful sales record, in any quality, to保证 $500 per week quarantine. FRIDAY,APRIL18,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9B 205 - Help Wanted ------- Summer to remember in woods of Maine. Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6/18- 8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call collect 914-835-5800. Bartender Traines needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 511. BASS PLAYER BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours, great call Gai 810-806-0086 ext 1422. Exotic dancers, Immediate hire. Great tips world-class gentlemen's club. 785-766 7600 or 1-785-219-5900. Get Paid For Your Opinion! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com The Mass. St. Dell is looking for kitchen staff and servers with daytime availability. Apply at the Deli or 719 Mass. (upstairs above the smoke house). TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINIE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS - HAVE FUN- MAKE $ $ Openings in: ALL TEAM & IN-DIVIDUAL SPORTS, ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS: Camp/Hike, Ropes/Rock-Climbing, ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Secretaries, Top Hat Awards, Excellent Facilities. FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUNDRY, Travel Unlimited ONLINE! ONLINE APPLICATION: www.camppccbseee.com or call:(860)473-6104 Transportation Coordinator. Applications available in 410 Kansas Union. Due April 18 by 5:00 p.m. Call 864-4644. X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale $ Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C, 17th and Vermont. No pets. $335/month CALL 841-1074 Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext. 4565. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 & 2 BR apts. in nice houses, Close to KU. Off street parking. With wood floors, high ceilings. $425-525. BM4-3633. 1,2,3. & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fail. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU bus re, laundry facility Call 843-001-01 CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA town-houses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in-cloats, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, patios/palets, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas 843-4090. 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus. Available August. Call 913-411-4169 3 BR apts. 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, guel 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Avail May, June, or Aug. Very nice remodeled studio and IBTs apts close to campus. No pets/mosketing. Starting $360, 550-8111, 841-3192. Avail. 8/1. Quiet, no smoking, no pets 6th & Kasoldi, 2 BR, 1.5 BA, $685/month plus security deposit, 1-year lease, 500-6812. Avail. Aug. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated older house, 1300 bkl. Vermont. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique tub. No pets. $440/mo. Call 841-1074. Avail. Aug. 92 Nice 2 BR room in renovated older house, 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, fan A/C. 10th & NY no pets. $699. Call 814-1074. Avail. August 1st. 3 BR. 2.5 Bath. Wash. Dryer/Dishwasher. 829 Alabama. $110/month. Kit#81-8450 Ext.21. 405 - Apartments for Rent Avg. Aug, Small 1 BR apt, in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets, $450, Call 841-1074. 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1 BR apt, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807. 1,2,3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. Available August 1st. 841-6254 Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. $^{90}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com early app Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes Washer/Dryers* Dishwashers* Microwaves* Patios* Fire Places* Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com Tuckaway Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street 2600 w 6th Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fireplace (atTuckaway/Harper) 4241 Briarwood Dr. Fully Equipped Kitchen Tuckaway has two pools hot tubs, basketball court fitness center and gated entrance call 838-3377 Briarwood pool, fitness www.tuckawaymgmt.com 405 - Apartments for Rent MILLION DOLLARS Great location. 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt. in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. $650/mo Avail Aug 8-142-4242 Great west location. Spacious & 1 & 2 bedrooms. $480/570. All appliances, ample on-site laundry. Call 834-4909. Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship, Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studios and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295 Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. 838-8302 Save Your Money! Now signing YR 12 weeks starting May June/July Aug. No smoking pets. Extr nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low utilities, A/C bus route & more! $405 mo. Spanish Craft学院 841-688-1 Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road, 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $535. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday, Call 841-3800. 1 BR, $400/mo. Avail Aug 1. New carpet, paint, vinyl, hardwood floors in BR, Very cute/nice; 730 Arkansas; Call 843-8540 ext.21. CLOSE TO CAMPUS Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-4090. CHASE COURT Now leasing for fall 2003 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Fireplace - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Model Open Daily! - Small Pet Welcome - 843-8220 - Small Pet Welcome 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.theforun.com 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@akks.com www.colonywoods.com COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 - ExerciseRoom - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall THE LEGENDS - Indoor/OutdoorPool 1&2Bedrooms NOW LEASING May 2003 405 - Apartments for Rent M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ALL INCLUDED UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) IN BEACH DRIVE IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA GULLY FOURFEDER FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY GAMES HOME ROOM COMPUTER & CRAFT BOAT UNITHEATER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED Internet LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING (785) 856-5800 Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 More information contact modeling Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ouridahl Avail, Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt, DW, CA micro, laundry on site, 38BR 2 BA $900, 4B 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt. 841- 5333 www apartmentsilhouette.net 1712 OHIO Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apartments Now Leasing for Spring 2003 1. 2, 3 Bdrm - Fitness Center - Basketball Court - Gearset Available - Garages Availability * High Speed Internet Connections * Security Systems Available * Small Pet Welcome VILLAGE SQUARE apartment 842-3280 Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net Blue Meat Management, Inc. Apartment & Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Tierra Tres Homes. Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 - **Washer & Dryer** - **Fully Equipped Kitchen** - **Serving Bar** Blue Meadow Management, Inc. Lorrey at an Affordable Price Courtside Townhomes 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 Call 640.9467 for an appointment - Washer/Dryers * Dishwashers * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Fire Places * Ceiling Fans Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. For More Info: 785-841-7849 4100 Clinton Parkway Need a place to live next year? 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - car ports - approx. 1600 sq feet Williams Pointe Townhomes Townhomes - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - tull size washer / dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) - 1421 sq feet 405 - Apartments for Rent Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 --- Excellent location. 1341 Ohio/1104 Tennesse, 2 br. in PLex. C/A, D/W, D/hook-ups. $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug: 1. No pets. Bkty 842-4242. Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR tripleplex in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NO PETS. 841-5533 Town home - 3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD, Fired, place, kitchen app, garage/operer, nets. Sublease 6/1-7/13 $500.768-5080. Available in August..1.2 bbm Close h GS/Corb/in between campus and down town No pets 913-301-3553 or 841 1207 PARKWAY COMMONS Leasing 3031 • 1, 2, 3 P. Room • Pool • Washer/Dryer • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Security Systems • Garages Available Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! Models Open Daily 3601 Clinton Parkway www.frontpageonline.com 5601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com MASTERCRAFT WALKTOCAMPUS Campus Place * Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. ♦ Regents Court 19th & Mass749-0445 Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Tanglewood Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 410 - Condos For Rent בנקודה הזו כל מספר מקורי Very nice condo. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Wash and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eli at 814-4707 415 - Homes For Rent --- 5 BIG 2B HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 or 766-6626 between 6:30-10 p.m. 4 BR, 2 1/2 BA, great area, large deck, fenced yard. 2 car garage, family room, DW, AC, hookups, many fans, attic tan. No dogs. $1000/mo. Avail. August 1. 842- 1376 10 a.m.-6 p.m. or 842-3556. 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Edridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained. 2-car garage, dishwasher, W.D.A. AC30, 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs $875/mo. Call 842-1360 17 a.m.-6 p.m.or 842-3555 Avail. Aug. 1, 3 BR 1 BA house with W/D hookups. 1011 Illinois. $800 call. Call 218-3071. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jaccuzi, tireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/view, two car garage, fenced landscaped back yard. $1450, 841-3633 anytime. House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath CA/WD included. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100 /mile 201-4813 2 BR 1 BA nice house with one car garage, garage floors, fenced yard, porch with swing. $855.841-3633 anytime. 420- Real Estate For Sale 430 - Roommate Wanted **Moving to KC?** Qew onondo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. awesome 1BR/BA 24/hr security, convenient plaza location. Unbeatable at 105k. Call 913-522-5360. Realty Exec. Female Roommate No. 308 For 3 BRL, 1 BA house N/S. No Pets. Close to Campus $275/mo + 1/3 meals. Avail Aug. 1 Garl. 913-5837-3712 or email garl.91358373712@vip.protective.com 2 roommates needed for 5 BR house, 13th and Tenn. 3 floors, off-street parking. Megan 750-9596 or Amy 764-0698 ASAP 440 - Sublease Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $399 plus half utilities. Call 843-5540. Grade student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet. WD and garage. No smoking.pets. $300 + /1 util. Avail Aug 42, 845-454 1 bedroom at 527 California. Wash- derdyr. Nice neighborhood. Call 841- 5533 for information. Key House 1 BR in 4 BR apartment. Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool. $370/mo. Leave message 785-691-9048 1 BR, 2 BA at Aberdeen Apartments WD included $525 mo. Available June 1- Dec. Please call 832-2458 2 BR 2 BA apt at Parkway Commons, Avail mid May and Aug. 1, Pet friendly. Pool Exercise room $795/mo $300 signing bonus. Call Jesus at 312-9710. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, central air. Available mid-May or June test Call 218-7736 4 Subleasers needed, new 4 BR townhouse, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $12.50, lease through July 31, 816-5260-9421 or 678-578-3585 or 620-340-3273. Beautiful 5 BR 2 BA house available for summer sublease. Close to St. Mass. St. and campus. Rent negotiable Call 856-1022 Female roommate wanted to share 4 BR apt. @ Jefferson Commons. Swimming pool. lft mo. rent pad for. 785-218-5542. Female to sublease bedroom in 2 BR apt: $240 + lowUtil. May 1? Balcony views the stadium Free cable. 312-9390 Need subleader to live w 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent. paid.Call 785-830-8003 PERFECT SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER 2 spaces avail. in a 3 person, 4 BR duplex. Each has full private BA. 749-6060. Roommate wanted for large 5 BR house Half block from campus: $315/mo. Call 393-3197 Summer Sublease Furnished 1 BD on Mass St. Wood floors, lots of natural light. $350 plus utilities. Call 830-914-801 505 - Professional TRAFFIC-DUIT'S-MIP' INCORRENTAL INJURY Student legal matters/Residence issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STRATEE Donald G. Sturge Sally G. Kelsey To 6 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation 510 - Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233. BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG 10B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT FRIDAY,APRIL 18,2003 BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG To our Kansas Basketball Players: Aaron, Brett, Bryant, Christian, Jeff G., Jeff H., Keith, Michael Moulaye, Stephen and Wayne. YOU are our heroes. YOU are our heroes. YOU are Kansas Basketball. YOUR sweat stains the fieldhouse floor. YOUR determination produced this 30-win season. YOUR talent and courage led Kansas to back-to-back Final Fours. It is YOU for whom our children wait outside the locker room door. It is YOUR commitment to excellence that we admire. It is YOUR class that makes us proud that it says "KANSAS" on your jersey. YOU share a special bond with those who came before: B.H., Clyde, Wilt, JoJo, Bud, Darnell, Danny, Adonis, Jacque, Raef, Paul, Drew Kirk, Nick, and hundreds more. They are proud of YOU and so are we. YOU will share that special bond with those who come They are ready to join YOUR unique family. Together YOUR future is as bright as the Kansas sun. The magic of Allen Fieldhouse is YOUR doing. The electricity flows from YOU ... to us ... and back again. The spirit of Phog has resided in the fieldhouse for 50 years--NO ONE CAN REMOVE IT. The haunting sound of the Rock Chalk chant has echoed through the fieldhouse for 50 years-No ONE CAN SILENCE IT. Nothing can rain on YOUR parade in our hearts. We could not be there in person on Thursday, but we want you to know that in spirit the Kansas Nation is lining up thousands deep along Mass street waiting to applaud you and to hug you. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG BEWARE OF THE PHOG Monday April 21, 2003 Vol. 113, Issue No.138 Today's weather 69° Tonight: 40* Tell us your news Tell us your THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Young athletes breathe new life into track and field at Relays p.1B Alan Webb Self to take coaching job PETER MURPHY By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansan senior sportwriter Head coaching overall record: 207-105 BILL SELF'S CAREER The men in charge aren't talking until this afternoon, but when they do, they are expected to announce Illinois' Bill Self as the eighth men's basketball coach at Kansas. Illinois coach Bill Self makes his way out of the parking garage next to Allen Fieldhouse. Self flew into Lawrence yesterday with interim athletics director Drue Jennings after reportedly agreeing to be the next coach of the Kansas mens basketball team. Self left without speaking to reporters. Eric Braem/Kansan Honors: 2000 National Coach of the Year, The Sporting News; 2000 Don Haskins WAC Coach of the Year, 2000 John and Nellie Wooden Coach of the Year; 2000-2002 finalist for Naismith College Coach of the Year. Kansas will hold a press conference to introduce its men's basketball coach on Monday, April 21st at 1:00 p.m. in the John Hadl Auditorium on the KU campus." Self, the coach of the Illini for the past three seasons, arrived in Lawrence at 2:30 p.m.yesterday and met with Chancellor Robert Hemenway, interim athletics director Drue Jennings and members of the University of Kansas Athletics Corporation at the Wagnon Student Athlete Center. SEE SELF ON PAGE 5A By the time Self emerged from the meeting two and a half hours later, the athletics department had released the following statement: "The University of ST. LOUIS JOHNSON CITY, MO - A man and woman pose for a photo in front of a wooden fence, with the man holding the woman's hand. In the background, there is another couple embracing outdoors. Love War Love War Photo contributed by Erica Brittain Ana Maria Erica Brittain, Wichita junior, is waiting for her boyfriend to return from his yearlong deployment. The couple met at a party in Fall 2001. Photos by Brandon Baker/Kansan Letters span war's distance make separation bearable Bv Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Erica Brittain is waiting. Waiting for her boyfriend to return home from war. And waiting for his letters to fill her mailbox. Ruth Schiefelbusch knows this feeling well. She waited for her husband to return home from war more than 60 years ago. The U.S. Department of Defense estimates more than 300,000 coalition troops are deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. More than 15 million men and women served in the U.S. Armed Forces during World War II, said Theodore Wilson, professor of history. The relatively young age of those in combat combined with uncertainties of war led many to seek companionship. "During World War II, many people didn't know what the future was going to bring and wanted to establish permanent relationships," Wilson said. "Clearly there is something to the notion of quick relationships, quick marriages during wartime." Although nearly 60 years separate these two wars, love hasn't changed. Dick Schiefelbusch and Ruth Magee Dick Schiefelbusch and Ruth Magee met through friends during the autumn of 1939 at Pittsburg Teachers College. He was 21 years old: she was 19. "We played tennis together before Comments about the war in Iraq are everywhere — sidewalk graffiti, protesters' signs, bumper stickers, in every newspaper and on television. But American veterans have their own opinions. Tune into KUJH-TV tonight to watch Glen Kappelman, KU graduate and World War II veteran, and Ervin Hodges, KU graduate and Korean and Vietnam wars veteran, tell KUJH-TV reporter Graham Winch how war affected them and how they feel about the current war. SEE RELATIONSHIPS ON PAGE 8A METAMOTTV Tuition, fees for next year may increase 18 percent By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansas staff writer The University of Kansas wants to increase tuition by about 18 percent for the next school year. Provost David Shulenburger told the Board of Regents on Thursday that the University planned to increase tuition and fees $627 per year for Kansas residents taking 15 credit hours each semester. This would be an increase from $3,484 to about $4,100 per year for instate undergraduates. The tuition for nonresidents would increase from $10,686 to $11,313. Leaders from each of the state's six public universities made 10-minute presentations on their tuition plans. Each university plans to raise its tuition. Fort Hays State University plans to increase its tuition 9 percent, and Kansas State University plans to increase tuition by 20 percent. The University will present a formal proposal to the Regents in May, and the Regents will vote on the increase in June. "If we are to achieve Top 25 status, increased tuition, state funding, endowment giving and research grants are essential parts of the strategy." Shulenburger said. "Nothing has changed from the five-year expenditure plan we put forth to the Regents in February of this year." The University made a five-year plan last year at the request of the Regents. The Regents approved 25-percent increases for the current school year, with the understanding the revenue would be used for improvements, not routine expenses. Improvements made this past year include enhancing technology, increasing graduate teaching assistant salaries and hiring new faculty. The money was also used for classroom and library improvements. Because of state budget cuts, however, the Regents decided in February that the universities could spend tuition revenue as they saw fit. Shulenburger said all revenue from increased tuition was being used for improvements to the University and not to replace funds lost in the budget cuts. Jonathan Ng. outgoing student body president, told the Regents that students remained supportive of the University's five-year plan, even though it called for a tuition increase each year. Ng said students would continue to support the increase as long as money was being used for improvements to the University. - Edited by Erin Chapman Queers and Allies' Pride Week accents family By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Members of Queers and Allies want to add a new definition to the word family this week. "Family is not necessarily a father, a mother and the children," said Sarah Burris, head of Queers and Allies support group. "A family is a group of people who cares enough about a group of people to get together." Queers and Allies will celebrate Pride Week this week in an effort to come For a full schedule of Pride week events, visit www.ku.edu/~qanda/ together, celebrate tolerance and increase education about gay and lesbian issues. The theme of this year's Pride Week is "Focus on the Family." "It's one of those things where it's our opportunity to expose KU to more diversity." Burris said. Members of the organization have been planning the event since mid-fall. It is the group's most high-profile event. Burris, Lawrence junior, said pride week would offer the opportunity to break down stereotypes of gay and lesbian people presented by the media. "Situations aren't always going to be easy," Burris said. "We're just focusing on who we are." Pride Week's activities include lectures on bisexuality and state sodomy laws and a march for gay rights. "We're committed to educating ourselves and others to the issues we face," said Patrick Ross, Queers and Allies director. "So we've planned a lot of education events. The whole week is an education opportunity." Ross, Topeka senior, said there were "It's basically an open invitation to come out and feel comfortable and to show that there's a community here to help queer students succeed at KU," Ross said. As has become a custom, Pride Week also will feature the 10th annual "Brown Bag Drag," a lunchtime display of cross dressers. Burris said this was the event she looked forward to the most. "I love the drag show because it brings a group of people together that don't normally come together," she said. "Even though a lot of our events are really political and we've got a lot of serious things going on this week, this is a thing that's just going to be about having fun." Ross said he was also looking forward to the drag show, particularly because it brought in people who might not otherwise pay attention to Queers and Allies. "I think it brings a lot of people because it's the most outrageous event," he said. "Straight people come to see what a drag queen looks like. It's just kind of a celebration of the ludicrous." — Edited by Anne Mantey 0 1 4 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front MONDAY,APRIL 21,2003 News briefs CAMPUS Medical marijuana patient to speak about drug policies George McMahon, legal medical mar jiana patient, will speak tonight at 7 in room 330 Strong Hall. The program is part of a week of events sponsored by Students for Sensible Drug Policy. Controversy rose as to whether McMahon would be able to legally smoke his medication on his visit. Originally, law enforcement officials said McMahon would not be able to transport marijuana into the state. Christopher Largen, McMahon's co-author of the upcoming book Prescription Pot: One Man's Personal Mission and Public Crusade to Legalize Medical Marijuana, said they received a verbal agreement from Lt. Schuyler Bailey of the KU Public Safety Office that McMahon would not be bothered if he could produce proper documentation. Largen said they had not heard from the state district attorney's office. Largen said McMahon had not run into this problem before. "Usually officials are good about doing their homework." Lergen said. McMahon smokes marijuana in order to treat the pain and nausea associated with Nail Patella Syndrome. The syndrome is a hereditary condition that causes abnormalities in the arms and legs, kidney disease and glaucoma. He was granted this right through the Food and Drug Administration's Compassionate Investigational New Drug Program, which studies the long term use of medicinal marijuana. Jessica Palimenio NATION Laci Peterson's husband had $10,000 when arrested MODESTO, Calif. — Scott Peterson was carrying $10,000 when detectives, fearing he might try to flee the country, pulled him over about 30 miles from the Mexico border and arrested him. Hours later, authorities would announce that DNA tests identified two bodies found on the shore near San Fran cisco as his pregnant wife, Laci, missing since Dec. 23, and their unborn son. Peterson had repeatedly denied any role in his wife's disappearance, and police had avoided labeling him a suspect. But authorities say he knew he was being tracked. Modesto Police Chief Roy Wasden sought the arrest warrant for Peterson a day before the bodies were identified because he feared Peterson might flee to Mexico, where law forbids extradition of anyone facing the death penalty. Prosecutors in Stanislaus County plan to charge Peterson, 30, with capital murder for the deaths of his 27-year-old wife and their unborn son. Peterson, now jailed, is expected to be arraigned as early as Monday. He has been segregated from other inmates, who know he's there and "definitely have some unfavorable opinions of him." Stanislaus County Sheriff's spokesman Kelly Huston said When detectives arrested him Friday, Scott Peterson's dark hair had been dyed reddish-blond and he had grown a goatee. POWs return to the U.S., celebrate Easter with Bush FORT HOOD, Texas—An upbeat President Bush celebrated Easter Sunday with two prisoners of war rescued in Iraq a week earlier. Bush flew to Fort Hood, 50 miles south of his Crawford ranch, to mark Christianity's highest holiday. Hours before he arrived, Chief Warrant Officers David S. Williams and Ronald D. Young Jr. had returned to their Army base. Inside the 4th Infantry Division Memorial Chapel, the two helicopter pilots sat across the aisle from Bush, his wife, parents, mother-in-law and twin daughters. Sunshine streamed through the stained glass as Chaplain Lt. Col. Bill Phillips told an audience of 200 the story of Christ's resurrection. There were reminders of war and loss on this base that has sent some 20,000 troops, about half its personnel, to the Iraq region. Most people in the chapel were women and children, their husbands and fathers off fighting the war. After the service, Bush spent about 10 minutes with the former POWs and their families. Then Bush, Williams and Young met with reporters outside the church. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. News: Brett Wjard and Laine Baker News. Brendan Ward and Lance Baker Weather. Brandi Gunter Sports: Doug Donahoo kansan.com On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to 907 81709 kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Eric Braem/Kansan Bryan Kluger, Garland, Texas, junior, shields his eyes from the sun Saturday as he checks out the Kansas Relays in Memorial Stadium. "I had a great time," Kluger said. "I saw great athletes and a lot of hot girls." ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com The Hall Center for the Humanities presents the Poetics and Philosophy & Literature seminar, "Postmodernisms; Session I" with Ormofolabo Ajayi, theatre and film; Daniel Breslauer, religious studies; and Thomas Heilke, political science, from 3:30 p.m to 5 p.m. at the conference room in the Hall Center. Call 864-4798. Call 864-4401. The department of design presents a Hallmark Symposium featuring, Paul Greenhalgh, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, at 6 p.m. at the auditorium in the Spencer Museum of Art. Queers and Allies presents a forum on queer issues at 7:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. An open question session will follow a short presentation. Call 864-3091. The department of linguistics presents "Relativizer 'illi' in Arabic Dialects with Mohamed Galal at 3:30 p.m. at room 206 in Blake Hall. Call 864-2384. Carlip, University of California-Davis at 4 p.m. at room 3005 in Malott Hall. Refreshments will be served at 1089 Malott at 3:30 p.m. Call 864-4626. The department of physics and astronomy presents "What Can the Black Hole Thermodynamics Tell Us about Quantum Gravity" with Steve Russian and East European Studies presents "Life and Politics in 2003 St. Petersburg" with Alan Holiman, William Jewell College, from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Call 864-4236. The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will practice from 7 p.m.to 8:30 p.m.at room 207 in Robinson Center. Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. ON THE RECORD A 20-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged the retractable sunroof on his car sometime between 7 p.m. and 9:05 p.m. April 14 in the 4500 block of Overland Drive, according to reports. Damage was estimated at $1,500. A 23-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged the front passenger door of his car and stole his backpack containing two textbooks and a CD case with CDs in it sometime between 12:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. Tuesday in the 2500 block of Redbud Lane, according to reports. The loss was estimated at $2,279. A 19-year-old KU student told the KU Public Safety Office that someone damaged her 2000 Chevrolet Cavalier and took her Pioneer CD stereo from her car sometime between 11:50 p.m. April 13 and 10 p.m. Wednesday in the Oliver Hall parking lot, according to reports. The loss was estimated at $600. Et Cetera 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stuaffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jeyhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4957) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bicycle weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 60045 which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. EVERYTHING BUT ICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass. ZEN ZERO an Asian Noodle Shop & Thai Restaurant Dumplings, Satays, Salads, Noodles, Curries & Vegetarian Dishes Introducing Our Lunch Card. Buy 10 Lunch Entrees & Get 1 FREE! Up to a value of $6.95 Sun Mon~31CC AM-2CC EM Tue Sat~11CC AM-1CC EM Downtown • 811 Massachusetts • 832-0001 Redefine your world. Peace Corps. Learn how you can make a difference. Information meeting and film show tonight! Lawrence Public Library 707 Vermont, Downtown Lawrence 7 p.m., Mon. April 21 Questions? Contact Aline Hoey at peacecorps@ku.edu 1-800-424-8580 www.peacecorps.gov PEACE CORPS Preorder Online Avoid the Bookline Blues and save an extra 5%! It’s Easy! Click on: www.jayhawkbookstore.com Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill www.jayhawkbookstore.com • 1420 Crescent Rd • 843-3826 IBS 图 Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill www.jayhawkbookstore.com • 1420 Crescent Rd • 843-3826 WJ MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Traditional performances give diverse 'Taste of Asia' By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansas staff writer At the Taste of Asia festival Saturday, the University of Kansas defeated Syracuse. Unfortunately, the game was not basketball. And the participants were not Nick Collison, Kirk Hinrich, Carmelo Anthony and company. They were members of the Japanese Student Association performing a reenactment of the basketball game, while incorporating Japanese culture into a University event. One team wore Kansas colors and the other team represented Syracuse. The game was called kibasen, a popular playground game in Japan where participants ride atop each other's shoulders while trying to remove a headband from the opposing team. The demonstration was one of many cultural events during the Taste of Asia festival, which was presented by the Asian American Student Union. AASU has been working on Taste of Asia since January. "We tried to cover the widest variety of countries we could," said Tiffany Lopez, AASU's president. "We talked to every Asian organization on campus." Performances included songs, dances and videos from various Asian cultural groups. "I'm enjoying myself," said Ken Sugimoto, Shizoka, Japan exchange student, who sang a song in Japanese about the need for peace in the world. "I'm especially enjoying the communication of students who come from different countries." Though seats were set up for nearly 350 people, dozens stood at various points throughout Taste of Asia because there were no seats. About 400 people came to the performance part of last night's festival at the Kansas Union ballroom. "Things turned out really well," said Victoria Li, Overland Park freshman. "There were a lot of people here and we expected less turnout because of Easter weekend and the rain." Taste of Asia also included an Asian buffet dinner at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries prior to the performances. Martin Korykownkr, Lancing, England, senior, said he thought the show showed the diversity of Asia well, but wished there were more non-Asian students in attendance. "The Asian community is not just the Chinese.It's so much more,"Korykownkr said.Iwould like to see more Americans,more white people here to see that." — Edited by Anne Mantey Kelley Weiss/Kansan Lara Puno. Overland Park sophomore, performs a traditional Filipino fan dance at the Taste of Asia Festival. Puno said she had been in the Sinag Tala dance troop, or Starlight dance troop, for 10 years doing traditional Filipino dancing. Carilloneurs to perform songs as part of cultural concerts By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Melodies from different regions of the world will ring on campus this week as the World Music and Diversity Concerts begins Thursday. As part of the scheduled events, members of the KU community will play a variety of world music on the carillon throughout the day. "We are going to have different parts of the world represented through the music," said Clarence Henry, professor of ethnomusicology and the Concerts coordinator. "Most of the cultures in the world have a form of music, even though it might be expressed differently." The carillon is located inside the Campanile. The performers during the day will be students of Elizabeth Berghout, the campus cariloneur. "The carillon looks like a piano with wooden knobs that you hit with your fist," said Andrea Coleman, Lincoln, Neb., senior, one of the performers. "Your two hands play the top line and your feet play the bottom lines with pedals similar to that of an organ." Coleman said she would represent Australia with a piece entitled "Summer Song" by Terry Vaughan, an Australian. Although Coleman will play a composition originally written for the carillon, some other performers will play music not intended for the carillon. "We have a performer that will represent Africa that had to transcribe a vocal melody from an old African song into music notation," Henry said. Henry said he wanted to highlight music of all cultures across the campus. "Students could almost play a guessing game of identifying the "Most of the cultures in the world have a form of music, even though it might be expressed differently." Clarence Henry professor of ethnomusicology continent with the type of music being played," Coleman said. "I think it would be fun for students to get a flavor of different music and cultures." Edited by Erin Chapman WORLD MUSIC AND DIVERSITY CONCERTS Music from all over the world will be played on the carillon Thursday 9 a.m. Fanfare for World Music and Cultural Diversity, Lon H. Mitchell, KU Mathematics 10 a.m. South America, Anne Tempel, KU Music 11 a.m. North America, Elizabeth Berghout, KU faculty Music 1 p.m. Africa, Ashley Peterson, KU Music 2 p.m. Asia, Hatsumi Shibata, KU Music 12 a.m. Europe, Lara Walter, KU Music 3 p.m. Australia, Andrea Coleman, KU Music 4 p.m. Antarctica, Janet Reeves KU Art 5 p.m. World Peace and Solidarity Martha Schad, KU engineering PRIDE WEEK EVENTS 2003 MONDAY: PRIDE WEEK KICKOFF 10:00 AM Wescoe Beach SPONSORED BY QUEERS AND ALLIES SPEAKERS BUREAU OPEN FORUM 7:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union TUESDAY: QUEER MOVIE: BETTER THAN CHOCOLATE 7:30 PM Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union WEDNESDAY: BROWN BAG DIVERSITY SERIES: CHRISTINE ROBINSON: SODOMY LAWS 12 noon Multicultural Resource Center THURSDAY: BISEXUALITY 101: ROBYN OCHS 7:30 PM Malott Room, Kansas Union FRIDAY: TENTH ANNUAL BROWN BAG DRAG SHOW 12 noon Kansas Union Front Plaza COMEDIAN: DEIDRE SULLIVAN 8:00 PM Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SATURDAY: PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 11:00AM South Park along Massachusetts to Watson Park sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Coca-Cola STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Learning Through DINROSSIT Multicultural Resource Center STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANGAS Coca-Cola Learning Through DIVERSEITY Multicultural Resource Center Student Development Center PAUL SIEGEL: WHY QUEER RIGHTS IS A FREE SPEECH ISSUE 2:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union QUEER THEATER 7:30 PM Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union: $2 donation PRIDE DANCE 10:00 PM -1:00 AM Ecumenical Christian Ministries: $2 donation Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY MONDAY APRIL 21, 2003 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION MONDAY,APRIL 21,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepert and Justin Henning managing editors 884-4854 or jgoepert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative +544-8180 or laffaker@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Eric Keeling business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher Matt Hines sales and marketing adviser 864-7665 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Day on the Hill deserves support Now that it's gone, it's missed. Having the opportunity to listen to good live music has been a basic part of being a KU student. For 13 years, Student Union Activities has delivered a free outdoor concert during the spring semester. This year, SUA made the decision to put Day on the Hill funds toward other entertainment outlets. "We were spending too much money and not entertaining enough people," said Isaac Dill, live music coordinator for SUA. Annoyed students have turned to Free for All to voice their frustrations with SUA's choice. But the problem is not with SUA's lack of funds or lack of planning. What this event needs is active community support. SUA has an average budget of $20,000-$30,000 each year for Day on the Hill. This money must pay for a headliner band, opening acts, local bands, security, publicity and facility rental. A band's fee includes booking, a talent fee, transportation and lodging. Last year about 3,000 people attended this expensive concert for free. Day on the Hill hosted Pearl Jam in 1992 and other big name bands such as They Might Be Giants. The more popular a band, the harder it is to book, and the bigger the name, the higher the cost. Dave Matthews Band, for example, can cost as much as $150,000. SUA devotes many hours to setting up a flawless event. The SUA staff has worked each year to bring in bands that would please a variety of tastes, and the brainstorming has already begun for a future concert. Dill said he would like to open Day on the Hill meetings to the community to give people a chance to be involved in something they care about. SUA's major new idea is to make Day on the Hill a benefit concert. SUA has already teamed up with KJHK and envisions the collaboration of other campus organizations. The community should be willing to pay a few dollars for next year's show. The closest thing to a free concert is a cheap one, and next year it could be for a cause, not just for entertainment. Day on the Hill is a program that the entire KU community can enjoy. With the support and ideas of the community, SUA will revive the long-standing concert and give Lawrence what it wants: good live music.FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS Meghan Brune for the editorial board THE END IS NEAR No, The Royals are actually winning Do you think that's its because of the war? EXQUISITE RELIFE Lance Menoley for The University Daily Kansan PERSPECTIVE People not defined by homeland individuality counts for everything Editor's note: Stauffer writes a biweekly column about her experiences studying abroad. She is participating in the humanities and western civilization program in Florence, Italy and Paris. Used to view the international students on campus with a combination of curiosity and a feeling of separation, an inability to penetrate into their world. Now that I live at the Cite Universitaire, I find that I now know more than I ever thought possible how it feels to be in their places. I'll go with the plain text. Let's re-read the image. It's a black and white photo of a smiling woman with short hair. She looks happy and content. Whenever I meet new people, which is not often and usually in the cafeteria over salisbury something, they usually greet me with a knowing smile and say something such as, "Oh, you are American. Are you from Texas? I hope not." COMMENTARY This does not lead to a lasting friend- ship. As ashamed as I am, I can count on one hand the number of times I have struck up conversations with students from other countries at the University of Kansas who did not have something to do with politics or who I told should try When people make assumptions about those from specific countries and treat them as stereotypes, and not individuals, it is almost impossible to find out who they are. Louise Stauffer opinion@kansan.com Some of my feelings of isolation melted away when I met a flutist named Marion from Macedonia. He plopped down his heaping tray next to mine and some others from the University in the cafeteria, didn't say hello and ate so fast my friends and I just watched in amazement. After his shout of disappointment that he didn't get a brain freeze in spite of inhaling three cups of ice cream, he asked our names and didn't flinch when we told him we were Americans. He laughed and started talking about his friends. a restaurant in Lawrence that might have food like their homelands. Just for the record, my Greek friend hates The Mad Greek, so don't try it. "We are just so alive," he said with a wide grin. We were so excited that someone was actually talking to us without caring where we were from that we became friends immediately. Marion introduced us to his Polish friend Machek (pronounce it like Magic, he told us) taught us some Slavic words, took us out to a basement pub to drink Sangria and rescued me from the metro police after convincing me it was OK to jump the gate. He showed us perfect examples of that wonderful European confidence and generosity, saying "when I go to Juilliard" and playing his flute so loud you could hear it across campus and lending money to friends without a second thought. He was honest, telling me after I highlighted my hair that it was just "a little better." We have never talked about Bush or the war or capitalism. We discuss food, drink, people and any other topic of conversation one would overhear at a Lawrence coffee shop on a lazy afternoon. When I get back, I am going to take a new approach when meeting someone studying at the University from abroad. Maybe we can bond about the wonderful architecture of Wescoe Hall or where to get the cheapest groceries. All I know is that to make friends, no matter where they're from, the trick is to find out what makes them who they are and not what their countries do. Stauffer is a Holland, Mich., junior in journalism and English. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Cartoon dehumanizes women For all those men who view women as a crop of cleavage, for all those men who like their women better as meat than as humans, why don't you be men about it and write a guest commentary for us all to read? At least then we can make a decision about whether these people are enlightened or just pathetic. But please quit fooling yourselves that of all the types of discrimination out there, sexism is the only one that's a harmless joke. If someone wrote an editorial seriously supporting the toxic beliefs implied by your cartoon, they'd be laughed off campus. The reason so many men get away with such sexism and the reason so many women get raped is because we've all found it easier to laugh it off as a joke than put their ideas into the light to see them for what they are. It might be a joke to the author of the April 18 (editorial) cartoon, but it's not a joke to the 84,000 women who were raped last year by men who felt just that way. It isn't a joke to the majority of women who don't fit impossible body image standards and who are made to feel worthless because of it. The editorial section of the Kansan should be open to all opinions and viewpoints, even misogynist ones. It shouldn't be a place where dehumanizing beliefs are excused as funny. That's a disservice to all the jerks out there who take sexism seriously, and the rest of us who wished they'd be exposed. No value in objectification Luke Middleton, Lawrence graduate student in English I recently received my Ph.D. from the University of Kansas. Although I now live in Vermont, I still feel a strong connection to KU and Lawrence, and still keep in touch with what is happening around town and on campus. I am often pleased to hear about positive and progressive changes. Unfortunately, I occasionally hear about incidents of blatant prejudice, discrimination, and oppression. As a graduate of the University, I was embarrassed to see the very offensive (editorial) cartoon that appeared in April 18's The University Daily Kansan. What were the editors thinking? The cartoon is crudely sexist. The women in the strip stand mute while the men in the cartoon objectify the women's bodies, referring to them as "crop" and "meat." Is there anything thoughtful here at all? Is it even funny? What possible value does this serve? I'm not suggesting censorship here but responsible editing. Does the Kansan really want to suggest to women that their worth comes from conforming to unrealistic beauty standards, and suggest to men that they should think of women as crops or meat? Does the Kansan want to suggest that these attitudes, which are harmful to both women and men, are in any way funny? I can imagine dozens of ways of approaching this topic that are both funny and non-exist. For instance, why not a comic strip making fun of men who treat women like objects? Kansan reinforcing sexism Michael T. Schmitt, Postdoctoral Fellow, Dartmouth College I am writing to express outrage at the editorial cartoon appearing in April 18's The University Daily Kansan. Just what is the editorial staff trying to say with this cartoon? Does the editorial board truly believe that women should have huge breasts and tiny waists? Does the editorial board view women primarily as sex objects? Does the editorial board think that the only thing men notice about women are their breasts? This cartoon and the stereotypes it reinforces would be offensive if it appeared anywhere in the Kansan, but the fact that it appears on the opinion page is unbelievable. It is disheartening that the Kansan runs an anti-feminist column every few weeks. It is disheartening that I cannot read the Kansan without having to see ads that use women's bodies to sell goods and services. But I am disgusted to find on the opinion page exaggerated breasts on women who don't even get to speak, along with words like "cleavage crop" and "swater meat" coming out of men's mouths. As a community of learning, we should be doing everything in our power to help people overcome their sexism. We should not be reinforcing a sexist mindset by allowing crude drawings which reduce women to body parts to take up one-third of the opinion page. Chantel C. Guidry, Watson Library Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com you know you're in western Kansas when you can use your brights on the interstate. You know who I just remembered? The 7-Up guy, you know, the red dot with the sunglasses. That guy was cool. 图 you know you're in western Kansas when you can use your brights on the interstate. 品 I just saw an Action News reporter standing around doing absolutely nothing. is it just me, or is the Orbit gum girl hot? Lurinated on Mount Sunflower. 图 Who the hell thought the "Campus Cleavage Crop" cartoon was appropriate? 图 Why is it that I know I'm crossing a one-way street, but I still look both ways? I sure am depressed about the hot bartender at Fatso's that's married. Here's to beer and divorces. 图 Instead of blaming KUJH for your reception problems, why don't you blame the cable company? 图 4 图 Yeah, I'd just like to say I've got you all beat. I had to get a second computer to hold all of my porn stash, so suck it. - I'm looking for a business partner. The idea. Bobblehole Muhammad Ail. It's been raining for two days straight and I have three papers due on Monday, but everything's going to be OK because my roommate just told me that SUA is showing Office Space this week. 履 I guess with a nose that big it's kinda hard to stay out of people's business. My friend and I are calling for the liberation of breasts everywhere. The 34DDs are sick of being oppressed because we are forced to wear grandma bras. This is boobism and we don't have to take it. - 图 I think somebody fell asleep at Comedy Central because they've been playing the same Jon Stewart for the last four days and I'm sick of it. Pedestrians, walk faster or I will run you over. SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, email the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES **Maximum Length:** 650 word limit **Include:** Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) **Also:** The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: Hard copy: opinion@kansan.com Kansan newsroom 111 Stauffer-Flint --- 1 MONDAY,APRIL21.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A War protests persist abroad, international students say By J.J Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer As the war with Iraq comes to an end, protests against America and its foreign policy continue around the world and at home. Some University of Kansas international students must deal with anti-American sentiment in their home countries while being students in the United States. Sang Jo Kim is a Fulbright scholar from South Korea where massive protests against the U.S. policy have been staged in recent months. "Most of the people protesting are vehemently opposed to any form of war, with massive protests contending that the war is immoral and unjustified on the grounds that it even failed to get the endorsement of the United Nations," Kim said. South Korea sent more than 700 non-combatant engineering and medical troops as part of the U.S. and British coalition. Kim said many South Koreans fear their country's military involvement could undermine its ongoing engagement with the North in a more open and peaceful manner. Worse yet, South Koreans fear a U.S. attack on their northern neighbor, a country named by President Bush as an 'axis of evil,' Kim said. "When the U.S. leadership utters more and more about 'evil' regime in North Korea, people take it personally, given almost every one of them has their family member or relative killed in the Korean War," Kim said. In Mongolia, a landlocked country between Russia and China with the population of Kansas, anti-American sentiment exists, but in a more subdued manner than in South Korea, said Battsetseg Serj, a Fulbright scholar from Mongolia pursuing a Ph.D. at KU. The Mongolian government announced support of the U.S. and British coalition despite opposition from within that government But whatever their opinions, many Mongolians welcome the chance to simply voice an opinion that differs from their government in light of their country's repressive communist past, Seri said. "I don't think it necessarily means there is a contradiction between government's position and ordinary people's opinions," Seri said. Seri said she thought this is one of the features of a country like Mongolia. "We're transitioning from a totalitarian regime to a more liberal and democratic society in which every single citizen has a constitutional right to express his or her views without any partisan or ideological pressures," Serjsaid. Mongolia didn't fully free itself from communist rule until citizens voted the party out of office in 1996. Four years later, however, communist candidates were voted back into office by an overwhelming majority. Such is the nature of democracy, Serj said. "Divergent views of people in Mongolia in regard with the Iraqi war might be a reflection of 'political diversity' prevailing around the world," she said. Edited by Anne Mantey Self CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Self is believed to be the top candidate to replace former Kansas coach Roy Williams, who announced April 14 that he was headed to North Carolina. Even if Self is the favorite, Hemenway told reporters that he would rather wait until the press conference to make any statements regarding the 40-year-old coach. "I don't really have anything to say," he said. "But we'll see you all tomorrow." Hemenway also declined to say who would attend the press conference but possibly provided a clue as to the outcome of his discussions with Self. "It's a beautiful day," Hemenway said. Bill Self's career When a reporter pointed out that the weather had been rainy 1982-1985. Bill Self was a four-year letter winner at Oklahoma State. He was named to the All-Big Eight freshman team in 1982. 1985-1986: Kansas men's basketball assistant coach under Larry Brown. He also coached the junior varsity team. The Jayhawks advanced to the Final Four, where they lost to Duke 71-67. coaches Leonard Hamilton (1987-90) and Eddie Sutton (1991-93). The Cowboys advanced to the NIT twice and the NCAA Tournament three times during this period. 1986-1993: Assistant coach at Oklahoma State under 1993-1997: Head coach at Oral Roberts. The Golden Eagles advance to the NIT in 1997. 1997-2000: Head coach at Tulsa. The Golden Hurricane advanced to the NCAA Tournament twice, making it to the Elite 8 in 2000. and cold all day, Hemenway replied, "It looks beautiful to me." Illinois. The Fighting Illini shared the Big Ten regular season championship in his first two seasons and won the conference tournament in 2003. The team advanced to the NCAA Tournament each of these years, including a 2001 berth in the Elite 8 and the Sweet 16 in 2002. 2000-2003: Head coach at April 20, 2003: Met with Kansas Athletics Department officials to accept men's basketball head coaching position. Source: fightingillini.com Self has had several meetings since returning early from a Florida vacation on Friday. Kent Brown, Illinois sports information director, confirmed that Self met with his players Saturday night and that he had spoken with the parents of Illini recruits. Brown refused to reveal the contents of those conversations. Self has a 78-24 overall record at Illinois. He became an assistant coach at Kansas on Larry Brown's 1985-86 staff after concluding his playing career at Oklahoma State. He returned to the Cowboys' bench as an assistant coach in 1986, before taking over at Oral Roberts in 1995. Since leaving Kansas, Self coached Oral Roberts to a 55-54 record and Tulsa to a 74-27 record. Shane Mettlen and The Associated Press contributed to this story. Man run over by tank welcomed home Eichelberger's father, Martin pulled the family's pickup truck into a church parking lot to let his son address the crowd. The Associated Press ATCHISON — Marine Cpl. Travis Eichelberger was welcomed back home Saturday by more than 200 people, many waving flags and holding homemade banners wishing a quick recovery for the 20-year-old, who was run over by an American tank in Iraq. Travis Eichelberger said he was humbled by the turnout and the cards and letters he had received. num recover," Martin Eichel berger said. "This kind of thing will help Travis Eichelberger, a member of the 1st Battalion, 2nd Marines, suffered serious injuries to his lower body in the incident last month. Eichelberger was sleeping when another Marine pulled him partially out of the tank's path. One track of the 67-ton Abrams tank crushed his pelvis, jerking his body upright into a seated position. of me." "In my dream, someone was yelling my name over and over," Travis Eichelberger said. "I came to and the tank was almost on top Eichelberger tried to roll out of the way, but didn't move quick enough. He suffered a broken pelvis and intestinal damage, but is now moving around on crutches. The crowd sang the national anthem and waved flags including a Marine Corps flag as city police escorted the family back into Atchison. "It's all about American pride." Atchison resident Jennifer Daniels said. back. Mary Sallee toed a sign with a new nickname for Eichelberger — "Tank." Darrell and Mary Sallee and their daughter, Dana, drove from Troy to welcome Eichelberger "We're all here to tell Travis, 'Welcome home,' and we're real proud of him," said Tammy Glenn, of Atchison. Eichelberger was transported to Landstuhl Regional Hospital in Landstuhl, Germany, after the incident and was moved to the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. on March 30. Eichelberger was awarded the Purple Heart in a ceremony at the hospital March 31. Karaoke returns to its Asian roots Restaurant offers multilingual songs By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Karaoke may be performed in many Lawrence bars and restaurants, but a local restaurant is returning to karaoke's roots. Every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday night from 10:30 until 2 a.m., Jade Mongolia Barbecue, 1511 W. 23rd St., will hold karaoke night in six languages: Japanese, Vietnamese, Korean, Cantonese, Mandarin, and English. Possible songs include everything from pop to traditional Asian music. There is a $5 cover charge. While there are many stories about the origins of karaoke, it is widely believed that it began in the Japanese city of Kobe in the 1970s. The word karaoke comes from two other Japanese words: 'kara,' means empty and 'oke,' is short for okesutora and means orchestra. Last week was the first week of Asian karaoke, and Alan Kao, waiter at Jade, said it had a good start despite the lack of publicity. "The first night we had a couple of tables," he said. "But we've progressed and had more and more each time." Kao said the groups who attended enjoyed the karaoke. "They say it's a good change, something not available in Lawrence," he said. Steve Nguyen, owner of Jade, said the computer system held more than 3,000 songs in multiple languages and cost $5.000. "We've planned on doing it for a while," he said. "But we waited for our liquor license." Nguyen said he decided on the Asian version because other places have karaoke, but not with an Asian twist. Kao said the crowd at karaoke nights had been mostly Asian students. "Just college kids having fun singing their hearts away," Kao said. The Pochi Tea Station, 125 E. 10th St., shows Asian karaoke videos on televisions, but it lacks the necessary sound system. "We play them to bring more Asian flavor and have a more up beat atmosphere," said Erlinda Tghai, owner of Pochi. Tghai said she planned to have a karaoke night within two months. Kao said people should not be apprehensive about singing because the group at Jade was very accepting. "We don't judge anyone, we accept everyone," he said. "Everybody has a good time." -Edited by Todd Rapp the only address you need to know. WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) 1520 WESCOE let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. the only address you need to know. 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Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. 2003 RESTAURANTS Best Mexican: ___ Best Chinese: ___ Best Breakfast: ___ Best Burgers: ___ Best Subs: ___ Best Italian: ___ Best Steakhouse: ___ Best Vegetarian: ___ Best Pizza: ___ Best French Fries: ___ Best Wings: ___ Best Buffer: ___ Best Ice Cream: ___ Best Custard: ___ Best Coffee House: ___ Best Atmosphere: ___ Best Delivery Service: ___ Best Bakery: ___ Best Post-Party Food Restaurant: ___ Best Customer Service: ___ Best KC Restaurant ___ Best Local Restaurant: ___ Best Overall: ___ BARS Best Sports Bar: Best Drink Specials: Best Martinis: Best Margaritas: Best Wells: Best Selection of Beers: Best Dance Club: Best Place to Play Pool: DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25,2003 BARS,continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTYSERVICES Best Workout Facility: ___ Best Hair Salon: ___ Best Barber: ___ Best Massage: ___ Best Waxing: ___ Best Tanning Salon: ___ Best Nail Place: ___ Best Tattoo Shop: ___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued RETAILERS, continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING BestApartment Complex:___ BestTownhomes:___ BestLandlord:___ Best Neighborhood to live in:___ SCHOOL Best Place to Study: Best Bookstore: Best Residence Hall: Best Scholarship Hall: Best Building on Campus: Best Fraternity: Best Sorority: Best Student Organization: THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: SUA presents the movie tickets online at kansan.com BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas 2 MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 NEWS BRIEFS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A STATI New study reveals minority profiling TOPEKA — Black and Hispanic motorists are three times more likely than whites to be pulled over by authorities on Kansas' interstate highways, according to a recent report. "The results of the study demonstrate, by and large, that the state of Kansas is experiencing profiling of Hispanics and black motorists," the Police Foundation study said. The $400,000 study compiled motorists' race and ethnicity information from tens of thousands of stops at predetermined locations and compared the data with previously collected traffic demographics from those locations. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius' office said Friday that the governor planned to use the report to improve law enforcement training "It's critical that Kansans feel like they are being treated fairly," said Matthew All, Sebelius' general counsel. All said his office wanted to analyze the report further before making recommendations. The Washington, D.C.-based foundation checked Interstate 70 from the Colorado border to Colby; Interstate 35 from the Oklahoma border to Wichita, and between mile marker 144 and 168 in Osage and Coffey counties; and the Topeka area. NATION NASA head resigns; no link to Columbia HOUSTON—The man in charge of NASA's space shuttle program, who was one of the agency's most recognized faces following the destruction of the shuttle Columbia, will soon resign, according to media reports. Ron Dittemore had planned to resign earlier but postponed his departure because of the shuttle disaster and investigation, a source said yesterday. The Orlando Sentinel reported Saturday that Dittemore was expected to announce his resignation this week, while CBS News reported his resignation would come in the near future. The Sentinel said a search for Dittemore's replacement was under way. In the meantime, The Houston Chronicle reported yesterday that the shuttle program would be headed by William Readdy, NASA's associate administrator for spaceflight, and his deputy, Michael Kostelnik. Girl free, unharmed after kidnapping REHRERSBURG, Pa. — A man who allegedly abducted his teenage niece after killing her parents was arrested yesterday following a high-speed chase and four-hour standoff with police. The 13-year-old girl was released unharmed. Police said the violence began Saturday night when Robert Hixson shot and killed his wife's brother, Myron Bilger Jr., and Bilger's wife, Ellen, after breaking into their Pocono Lakes home. He then allegedly abducted the teenager, Hadley Bilger. The stain couple's 5-year-old daughter had been at their home during the shooting and ran to the house of a relative, who alerted authorities, police said. The girls' father identified Hixson as the shooter before he died, according to Pocono Mountain Regional Police Detective Harry Lewis. Hixson, 42, wasn't immediately charged. Police declined to comment on a possible motive but said they did not think an argument preceded the shooting Hixson's truck was spotted by police yesterday morning. Authorities say he then fled, initiating a chase that ended about 45 minutes later when police disabled the tires of his truck in Berks County, about 90 miles southwest of the girl's home in the Pocono Mountains. TOPEKA REHRERSBURG BAGHDAD BEIJING HOUSTON DOHA WORLD Saddam's son-in-law surrenders in Baghdad BAGHDAD, Iraq — Saddam Hussein's son-in-law has left the Syrian capital and surrendered to the Iraqi National Congress in Baghdad, a spokesman in London said yesterday. One of Saddam's top bodyguards also arrested yesterday by the group, the spokesman said. And U.S. Central Command said Iraq's minister of higher education and scientific research was apprehended by coalition troops. Jamal Mustafa Abdallah Sultan al-Tikriti is married to Saddam's youngest daughter, Hala, and was deputy head of the Tribal Affairs Office in Saddam's ousted regime. Dubbed by the U.S. military as the nine of clubs in its deck of most wanted, he ranks No. 40 out of the 55 top Iraqi officials sought by the allies Kuwaiti convoy feeds Iraqi zoo animals DOHA, Qatar—A convoy of food has arrived for the animals at the Baghdad Zoo, who were malnourished during more than a decade of international sanctions and abandoned during the U.S.-led war, the U.S. Central Command said. The shipment included a twoweek supply of fruit, vegetables and meat, and a one-month supply of dry feed, the command said in a statement. The food convoy left Friday from Kuwait and arrived in Baghdad the next day, the statement said. The animals were weakened before the war from lack of food and medicine biomed on U.N. sanctions, then were endangered during the conflict when an Iraqi gun battery was placed on zoo grounds, making it vulnerable to attack. The zookeeper fled, leaving the lions, bears, monkeys, camels and other animals without food and water. Since Saddam Hussein's regime was toppled, the zoo has been looted. American troops had been feeding some animals from their rations. Chinese officials fired amid boom in SARS BEIJING — Jolted by a jump in SARS deaths and a tenfold increase in infections in Beijing alone, China's Communist Party stripped the health minister and the capital's mayor of power yesterday. It also canceled an annual weeklong holiday for tens of millions of people to keep them from traveling and curb the spread of the disease. Just hours after announcing 12 new deaths nationwide, the official Xinhua News Agency said Health Minister Zhang Wenkang and Beijing Mayor Meng Xuenong were removed from their Communist Party posts but kept their government titles. The reported number of infections in Beijing increased from 37 to 346. The party is the true power in China, and Zhang's and Meng's party posts were far more important than their government offices. Their loss left the two men greatly diminished as political figures and possibly foreshadows their demotion or outright ouster from government. The dismissals came two days after President Hu Jintao threatened serious punishment for officials who didn't quickly and accurately report cases of SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome. The Associated Press P free give-a-ways - red swingline staplers & office space soundtracks office space character impression contest Did you get the memo? Did you get the memo? Did you get the memo? You can see Office Space! SUA presents the movie Office Space April 23, 2003 tickets $2 and can be purchased at the sun office 7:00PM woodruff auditorium Henry T's Bar & Grill 2 FOR 1 GOURMET BURGER BASKETS ON MONDAY NIGHTS. THIS IS THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN!!! $2.50 GUSTOS OF BUD, BUD LIGHT, COORS LIGHT AND MILLER LIGHT, MICHELOB LIGHT INDOOR & OUTDOOR TV's 6TH & KASOLD 749-2999 Meet the Author. Dave Malone. Poet, playwright, actor and screenwriter, Dave Malone currently teaches composition and film at Southwest Missouri State University, West Plains. He is the author of two books of poetry, Under the Sycamore and Poems to Love and the Body, and one chapbook of poems, 23 Sonnets. THURS. April 24th 5:00 - 6:30 785-864-4431 oreadbooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 Jayhawks.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fr. 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support student programs, services & facilities "Impudent and blunt, the energetic, accessible... Poems to Love and Body celebrate sex and excess in ways that test the boundaries of taste. But even as the poems tease the id, they awe the ear and the imagination." Mel Danner (Professor of English, Indiana State University) free give-a-ways - red swingline staplers & office space soundtracks office space character impression contest Did you get the Memo? Did you get the Memo? Did you get the Memo? yeah... go see Office Space! SUA presents the movie Office Space April 23, 2003 7:00PM woodruff auditorium tickets $2 end can be purchased at the sua office student union activities The University of Kansas. Level 4, Kansas Union. 785.864.SHOW. www.suaevents.com SUA SUA presents the movie Office Space April 23, 2003 tickets $2 and can be purchased at the sun office 7:00PM woodruff auditorium Henry T's Bar&Grill "Impudent and blunt, the energetic, accessible ... Poems to Love and Body celebrate sex and excess in ways first test the boundaries of tarts. But even as the poems tease the id, they awe the ear and the imagination." Matt Branson (Professor of English, tests Stata University) Meet the Author. Dave Malone. Poet, playwright, actor and screenwriter, Dave Malone currently teaches composition and film at Southwest Missouri State University, West Plains. He is the author of two books of poetry, Under the Sycamore and Poems to Love and the Body, and one chapbook of poems, 23 Sonnets. THURS. April 24th 5:00 - 6:30 785-864-4431 oreadbooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 Jayhawks.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fri 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support student programs, services & facilities "Impudent and blunt, the energetic, accessible... Poems to Love and Body celebrate sex and excess in ways that test the boundaries of taste. But even as the poems tweak the id, they awe the ear and the imagination." April 24th 1969 30 785-864-4431 oreadbooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Level 2 Jayhawks.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed, Fri. 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support student programs, services & facilities 1969 Oread Books 4. 4. 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LOVE & WAR MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 Relationships CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A we actually had our first date," Dick said. "She had a cute little backhand." Sitting at the kitchen table of their Lawrence home, Ruth slightly blushed at Dick's comment. He calls her Ruthie now. In November 1945, after returning home from the war, the couple came to the University of Kansas. Although Dick retired in 1990, he still drops into the office of the Institute for Life Span Studies, which bears his name. He is a distinctive professor emeritus in speech, language and hearing. "I think on our first date, we did something that had to do with dancing." Ruth said. "That was the culture when we were in college. The school held dances every week." The couple casually dated for the remainder of the year. After Dick graduated in May 1940, he took a teaching position in Chautauqua County. The couple grew apart. "It was while I was there that I got my draft number and what a terrible draft number it was, something like 35," he said. "I knew that they could grab me at anytime." So rather than wait to be drafted, Dick took the military exams and joined the Army Air Corps in the fall of 1941. He was put on-call and called to duty after the bombing of Pearl Harbor that December. Dick went to cadet training school in San Antonio. He and Ruth reunited while he was on leave from school. "I happened to be in Pittsburgh nosing around," he said. "I ran into an old friend and he told me, 'I saw Ruthie at a teacher's meeting the other day. She looked really nice.' So, I wrote her a letter." Following Air Corps tradition. Dick invited Ruth to San Antonio to pin his silver wings on his chest for the first time. And along the San Antonio River, Dick first "I happened to be in Pittsburg nosing around. I ran into an old friend and he told me, 'I saw Ruthie at a teacher's meeting the other day. She looked really nice.' So, I wrote her a letter." Dick Schiefelbusch World War II POW proposed marriage to her, Ruth said. "I had to think about it for a few days," she said. "He was leaving for war. I didn't know what to think." Dick and Ruth traveled to Osawatomie so she could meet his parents. The couple had a layover at Union Station in Kansas City, Mo., and visited Ruth's sister for dinner. She still hadn't answered his proposal. "We were doing the dishes," Ruth said. "He had his hands in the dishwater and he looked over at me and said, 'At least let me buy you a ring.' I said yes over the dishes." They returned to Union Station and Dick bought her an engagement ring at a jewelry store inside the station. "The ring cost $275," he said. "That was the best I could do." Although the engagement was official, a wedding date wasn't set right away, they said. Dick was off to combat training, the last stop before war. While completing training in Wendover, Utah, Dick sent Ruth a telegram asking her to come and be his wife. After a little bit of consideration, she decided to go, she said. Once Ruth arrived, the couple thought they only had a few days to get married before Dick left for war. "It was an awful situation. We couldn't get married in Salt Lake City because there was a 14-day waiting period," Dick said. "So we went to Elko, Nevada. Nevada sort of has a black market for quick weddings." They married Sept. 20,1942. By chance, the B-24 bomber that Dick was to navigate was grounded for repairs for five months after the wedding. The couple spent those months together in Utah, Florida and Louisiana, waiting for the plane to be ready for combat. Soon after the repairs were completed, Dick deployed to England. Ruth returned to live at her parents' home in Jasper, Mo. The waiting began. Erica Brittain and Dave Warren Erica Brittain and Dave Warren went to Northwest High School in Wichita, but they met at a party in Lawrence in Fall 2001. "After the party, Dave told his friend Rick that he thought I was cute." Erica said. "We met again in January and ended up hanging out at Rick's house for a few days after. Eventually we just started dating." Erica can't recall an official first date. She and Dave just started spending more time together. "It was an awful situation. We couldn't get married in Salt Lake City because there was a 14-day waiting period. So we went to Elko, Nevada. Nevada sort of has a black market for quick wed- Erica does recall the first time the couple held hands, however. Dick Schiefelbusch World War II POW "The second night we hung out, a group of us went out to Clinton Lake," she said. "It had been warmer during the day, but once it got dark it was really cold. We were in the car on the way home, and he took my hands and tried to warm them up." Erica found out that Dave was a member of the Army National Guard soon after they began dating. At the time, it wasn't an issue for her. Neither Dave nor Erica thought about the fact that his unit could be called to active duty, she said. "I guess it was always in the back of my mind, but I just didn't think about it," she said. Then around Thanksgiving 2002, Dave's unit was placed on alert status. The unit should prepare for active duty. The next call came two days after Christmas. Dave and Erica were at home in Wichita for winter break. "That night it was just a shock," she said. "We were in my basement building a fort out of boxes with my little sisters, and he got the call he had to report on Jan. 2, 2005." His orders were for a year of service. The couple immediately drove to Lawrence and began packing his belongings. "I was at my apartment doing his laundry and he and his mom were at his packing," she said. "Even though I wanted to just be with him, there were things we had to get done." Erica had a trip planned to Las Vegas for New Year's Eve. Should she go or stay home with David? "It was a hard decision to make," she said. "I knew I had to live my life; it was something I had to do for myself." She took the trip but came home a day early. Dave withdrew from the SEE RELATIONSHIPS ON 9A By Lauren Cristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer 'I wouldn't be going home' 1 On May 14, Dick Schiefelbusch "L" and Dick Schiefelbusch "R". On May 14, Dick Schreiberbusch will celebrate his 60th anniversary — the anniversary of the day his B-2 bomber was shot down. He was one of more than 100,000 American prisoners of war during World War II. As Schiefelbusch bailed out of his plane's escape hatch in 1943, his thoughts raced. Photo contributed by Ruth Schiefelbusch Schiefelbusch floated in the Baltic Sea for about a half an hour before a fishing boat pulled him aboard, he said. The Germans took him to a hospital to thaw out and then to a military prison nearby. "My prominent feeling was regret," he said. "I wouldn't be going home ... Odds were you were either going to die or become a prisoner of war." "After a poor grade interrogation, they sent me to Dulag Luft," he said. "For two glorious weeks I was kept in solitary confinement and interrogated." Second Lt. Richard L. Schiefelbusch attended Army Air Corps cadet training school in San Antonio. He was trained as a navigator. Dick helped to dig tunnels before he was moved. Before the escape, Stalag Luft III was separated into a north and south camp dividing the British and American soldiers in October 1943. Dulag Luft was a prisoner of war encampment in Oberursel, Germany. At the prison, Dick got to become a part of a historic event. The Great Escape refers to the escape attempt of 80 British officers through underground tunnels and was depicted in the 1963 movie with the same name. "It was a bit exciting to be at Stalag Luft III," he said. "I got to know some wonderful people, as well as play a part in news distribution and The Great Escape." After about two weeks, Schiefelbusch was sent by train to Stalag Luft III, an encampment for both British and American Air Force officers in Sagan, Poland. Life at the camp was relatively good, he said. Although food was not in abundance, the prisoners still ate regularly. Schiefelbusch taught courses about communications to fellow POWs and participated in talks, study activities and debates to pass the time. "Potatoes were one of our main staples," he said. "You can't imagine all the ways you learn to fix potatoes." His job was news coordinator. "We had an undercover radio, which was basically a souped-up walkie talkie," he said. "The senior officer gave me a script each day, and it was my job to relay the news to everyone else." On Jan. 28, 1945, guards ordered the prisoners to leave the camp. They marched for several days then crowded onto trains and were shipped to Stalag VIIA in Moorsburg, Germany. Later, Schiefelbusch found out that he was a part of massive migration that included an estimated 6 million people trying to flee the Russian armies, he said. Schiefelbusch remained a the crowded camp until April The news broadcast over the underground radio was becoming increasingly positive. Soldiers also noticed American planes flying over the camp and wagging their wings as a type of acknowledgment. Finally on April 29, 1945, Patton's Seventh Army rolled a tank over the camp's metal front gate. Schiefelbusch was free after almost two years. "General Patton with his six shooters was bustling about shaking hands. It was almost unbelievable," Schiefelbusch said. "Then reality set in that there was no way to transport us all out and we had to wait nearly two weeks for trucks to arrive." After the prisoners were SWEDEN DENMARK North Sea Baltic Sea POLAND GERMANY CZECH REPUBLIC FRANCE flown to a rehabilitation center, they were loaded onto Liberty ships and sent home, he said. There is an Army Air Corps reunion planned in New Orleans this summer. The Schiefelbuschs aren't sure they are going to attend this one, but they have attended in the past. German officers and soldiers attend, too. Other members of the opposition have attended these reunions, including five women who worked as mail censors, two guards and descendants of others, Schiefelbusch said. He said the Germans treated the prisoners fairly well and he had a lot of valuable experiences as a prisoner of war. "Camp was an interesting place," he said. "Here I was, I had a degree from Pittsburg Teaching College and I was conversing with men with Harvard, Yale and Princeton degrees." — Edited by Michelle Burhenn HELP SAVE LIVES and EARN $25* TODAY! ZLB Call or stop by: ZLB Plasma Services Donate your blood plasma. Help burn, trauma and shock victims, surgery patients & more. 816 West 24th Street Lawrence, KS 66046785-749-5750 Fees and donation time may vary. *(for approx. 2 hours. New donors only.) www.zlb.com Find your favorite drinks ON SPECIAL In Weekly Specials Serving KU To Do List: Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County Take a Study Break Add something to my resume Be someone's friend. Make a difference Complete your list. Stop by or call today! 211 E. 8th St. 785-843-7359 ALVAMAR 1800 Crossgate Dr Lawrence, KS 785-842-1907 IT 18 Holes $18.00 Student & Faculty Rates 9 Hours $11.00 ee Campus Coupons Wednesdays and Fridays KUA reqs GREAT COFFEE IN A COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE 1025 MASS. CHONGQING CHENGDU HOMEADE SCONES • KISSCOM AIMEE'S COFFEEHOUSE MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 LOVE & WAR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A SAPHIRA WILLIAMS Photo contributed by Ruth Schiefefbusch Ruth, Lary and Dick Schiefelbusch were reunited in June 1945 after his return from imprisonment in a German prisoner of war camp. The family moved to Lawrence on Nov., 1, 1945.Dick enrolled in six credit hours at the University of Kansas. His specialty is in speech-language pathology, and he helped establish the Schiefelbusch Institute in Life Span Studies. Relationships CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8A classes he had enrolled in RU. It was his first semester back since he had joined the National Guard. After leaving Wichita, his unit trained at Fort Riley. Erica was allowed to visit five or six times. "Each time I had to say good-bye, not knowing if there was going to be a next weekend and not knowing if it was really good-bye," she said. "You just get numb after a while." Erica and Dave spoke each night on the telephone in anticipation of his last call. On Feb. 25, the phone rang. "He called about nine in the morning and told me that they were leaving sometime that day," she said. "He called for the last time about nine that night and told me they were getting on buses and he wasn't sure where they were going." Waiting It took about three weeks for Dick's letters to start coming, Ruth remembers. She wrote him back as often as she could, about every few days. They wrote about the weather and about what was going on in the United States. "After he left, I found out I was pregnant," she said. "I knew he would be delighted but I had to write it in a letter." Dick was ecstatic and started making a list of baby names to send home. But before the list arrived, Ruth got a telegram: "The War Department deeply regrets to inform you that your husband, Lieutenant Richard L. Schiefelbusch is missing in action." "That night my father told me to write a note with free flowing ink and put it under my pillow," she said. "If I dreamed of something white then Dick was alive, if it was black — he wasn't." "I just knew that he was alive," she said. She dreamed of a white cotton field and woke up thinking that Dick was still alive. So she tried again the next night and dreamed of a large plane flying overhead shedding a great white light. Two weeks later, she got a second telegram. Dick was a German prisoner of war. His plane had been shot down on May 14, 1943. During the war, the International Red Cross made it possible for prisoners of war to receive letters and packages from family. "I wrote him every day." Ruth said. "The Red Cross let us send a package, one every two months." Ruth sent sugar and vitamins in each package. She also included small containers of cocoa. On Oct. 20, 1943, the couple's son Lary was born. Dick received the pastel birth announcement two-and-a-half months later. He had been a prisoner of war for more than five months. "The first reference I had about the baby was written by Ruth's mother telling me about the difficult delivery," he said. "I got the bad information first, before I got anything about what he looked." Ruth credits the unusual spelling of their son's name to Dick. He had spelled it that way on the list he sent, she said. While Ruth waited for Dick's return, she spent her spare time substitute teaching and sewing clothes for Lary. "Once the baby came, I kept pretty busy," she said. "I had him to take care of." Ruth tried not to worry about Dick, but continued to write him about Lary and awaited the arrival of his every letter. Erica Brittain has received six letters since Dave left in February for Kuwait, then Iraq. "For the first few days after you receive a letter,you're on an emotional high. It's those next few days when you're waiting for the next letter. Those are hard." Erica Brittain Wichita junior When she got home from spring break, she found two letters waiting in her mailbox. "I was so excited," she said. "It took a while for the first letter to come." Erica and Dave had set a goal of writing each other once a week during a group counseling session provided by the Army before his deployment. But Erica sends a package or letter out almost every other day, she said. tional high," she said. "It's those next few days, when you're waiting for the next letter. Those are hard." "For the first few days after you receive a letter, you're on an emo- Erica's letters to Dave contain information about friends, her daily life and newspaper clippings from home. "I just write anything that I feel like writing," she said. "In his last letter he asked me to send him some things that he needed and couldn't get where he was, so I just try to keep him up to date with what's going on back home and send him things he needs." She usually sends him snacks and Handiwiipes. He uses them to bathe with because his unit doesn't have a real shower. Although some of the deployed troops have access to e-mail, Dave's unit doesn't. Access to a telephone is almost nonexistent, she said. Erica said she felt closer to Dave because they were writing letters and communicating in an old-fashioned way. call home when I'm not here to see if there is any mail or how often I run to the mailbox each day," she said. After three years as a prisoner, Dick was freed on April 29,1945 when Gen. George Patton's Seventh Army drove a tank over the metal gates of the camp. Coming Home Ruth and 20-month-old Lary were waiting at Union Station in Kansas City when Dick arrived home in June. He met his son for the first time that day. He had only seen him grow in the pictures that Ruth had sent. "Lary's first words to me were 'chew gum.' It made me smile, but his first word to me wasn't Daddy." Dick recalled. "I knew from that moment that I had to learn how to be a father and Lary had to learn how to have one." Although the war in Iraq may end soon, Erica isn't sure when she'll see Dave again. The last she heard his unit was laying pipeline in Iraq. She heard that from a member of the family support group she attends. "You don't know how often I - "I just try not to worry about him," she said. "He's been trained well. Granted he isn't in direct combat, there is a chance there could be hostilities where he's at — but he knows what to do." Because the orders Dave received in January were issued for a year, Erica has to wait until he returns to continue their relationship from where they left off. But for now, she'll wait for the next letter to show up in her mailbox. Edited by Michelle Burhenn HEADQUARTERS, ARMY AIR FORCES WASHINGTON 23 June 1945 SUBJECT: Letter of Communication TO: 2nd LL.R. L Schieffelbusch [sic], 0-663417 1. It is with the greatest pleasure that I commend you for the excellence of your performance as a prisoner of war under my jurisdiction in the South Compound at Stalag Luft III, Germany. 2. Your outstanding devotion to duty, sound professional judgment, loyalty and integrity over the eighteen months at Sagan and Moosburg was an inspiration to all with whom you came in contact. 3. To the colossal difficulty of the task of dealing with the Germans, and with the conditions of prison life, you have continuously applied superior characteristics. The war effort has been furthered, and camp morale maintained at a high standard as a result of your services. 4. A copy of this letter will be made a part of your permanent record. CHARLES G. GOODRICH Colonel, Air Corps Senior American Officer South Compound, Stalag Luft III ENCOURSY Erica Brittain writes her boyfriend, Dave Warren, a letter almost every other day. Warren is deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and is thought to be in Iraq with his Kansas Army National Guard unit. NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS KANSAN.COM NEWS NE MIDWEST SCREENWRITING WORKSHOP June 14th- June 27th Beginning & Advanced Sections Check our website: www.lewhunter.com Phone: (402)879-3617 Limited enrollment. Clear your calendar & apply now. LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 2858 Four Wheel Dr. 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS We Buy, Sell & Trade USED & NEW Sports Equipment There's a better way to vent. Trade free for all 864-0500. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN free for all y 7 / 10A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BODY AND SOUL MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 Body and Soul Free church clinic heals those in need Story by Megan Hickerson Photos by Brandon Baker PLEASE READ THE DETAILED TEXT BELOW FOR MORE INFORMATION. With her pink dress and long hair, Annu Christopher looks like any other 8-year-old with a sore throat waiting for medical attention. But because her mother, Jeanne Christopher, has no health insurance, a traditional doctor's office is out of the question. Everyone needs medical care, but more than 38.7 million Americans can't afford to pay for it. Heartland Medical Outreach gives medical attention to anyone without medical insurance. The Heartland Medical Outreach is only open 11 hours a week, but they treat an average of 40 people. "They have groceries and sandwiches here at the clinic," Jeanne Christopher said. "You can't get this anywhere else, even if you do have health insurance." As they walked into the Heartland Medical Outreach, 619 Vermont St., the Christophers were treated like any other medical patients—and they didn't have to pay for the visit. Dr. Paul Kurth explains to Anna Christopher, 8,and her mother, Jeanne Christopher, both of Lawrence, how often Anna should take the medicine he has prescribed. Heartland Medical Outreach provided the medication for strep throat and Anna's check-up for free. Until the clinic opened in 1999 there was no place for uninsured Lawrence residents to turn for completely free medical care. Healthcare Access, another medical clinic in Lawrence, requires patients to be residents of Douglas County and charges them based on their income. Heartland Medical Outreach accepts uninsured patients, regardless where they live or their economic status and welcomes them into their make-shift office. The clinic is housed in the Sunday school rooms in the Heartland Community Church. Any Berthold, clinic director at Heartland, transforms the Sunday school rooms into a doctor's office every Monday morning and then turns the rooms back into a place of worship on Thursday Chalk boards and puppet theaters line the walls of the medical examining rooms. It's not unusual to find a stethoscope lying on a Mickey Mouse chair. Watch KUJH tonight for more on Heartland Medical Outreach. Dyn. Zyn. Dr. Gillian Stephens does a check-up of David Sears, Lawrence resident. Stephens has been diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension and works at Heartland Medical Outreach to give back to the community. KUWG afternoons. Perhaps the books and toys put patients like Anna Christopher at ease while Dr. Paul Kurth examines them. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. Dr. Gillian Stephens, volunteer at the clinic, said she doesn't think that the clinic's unusual setting brothers the patients. Although she admits that the clinic doesn't have fancy furniture and lovely decor, the clinic is complete with most medical necessities. "Patients come in and see medicines and stethoscopes, and it's clean," Stephens said. "For the most part, I think that they are just thrilled to be seen by someone, and they are so happy to have bodies to talk to." Dr. Dennis Sale examines a tick bite on the neck of Donna Carr, Lawrence resident. Sale started the Heartland Medical Outreach, 619 Vermont St., in October 1998 and divides his time working there and Promptcare, 3511 Clinton Parkway Bill and Virginia Davis of Baldwin City are senior citizens who have been patients since the clinic opened in October 1999. Bill's high blood pressure and Virginia's heart condition keep them coming back for treatments. "We've never had any health insurance," Virginia Davis said. "Before the clinic opened, we just did without medical attention." The Davises have even received medical attention while the clinic was not open. "When Bill passed out one time, we called Pat Mayo at home," Virginia Davis said, referring to the parish nurse at Heartland. "Pat even came to visit Bill in the hospital. I give the clinic an A plus plus. We'll probably come here forever." "We've never had any health insurance. Before the clinic opened, we just did without medical attention." Virginia Davis Clinic patient Sooners lost 10-4 hrs. Sooners With Dr. Gillian Stephens listens to Al Tebben, Lawrence resident, explain his alimenties associated with high blood pressure. They are wonderful doctors to commit to the community like this," Tebben said about why he has been coming to Heartland Medical Outreach, 619 Vermont St., for two years. The clinic has one parish nurse who is funded by private grants, one clinic director, 11 medically-trained volunteers and 11 nonmedically trained volunteers. Each week, they provide the Lawrence community with $6,000 to $8,000 of free health care services and medicines. Sale ran a free clinic in Manteca, Calif., before he moved to Lawrence. The clinic was housed in an RV, and the volunteers would drive to 14 sites where homeless people would often congregate. "Seventeen percent of the residents in Douglas County are without health insurance," he said. Gray doesn't mind housing a medical clinic in his church. Paul Gray, pastor at the Heartland Community Church, saw the growing need for a free clinic like this in Lawrence. "I didn't ask the members of the congregation. We just did it," Gray said. "The members are so helpful — they donate money and canned food each week for the clinic." More than half of the clinic's patients are working-class people without health insurance. Stephen Leiker from Kansas City, Mo., is one of them. Leiker fell off his bike three weeks ago and broke his hand. "We moved to Lawrence because my wife's parents live here," Sale said. "We wanted our son to live near his grandparents, and God led us to Heartland." Mayo said that, because of the free clinic's religious setting, the volunteers had more freedom to pray for the patients rather than just administer medications. "Because I don't have insurance, I went to the free clinic to get my hand checked out," Leiker said. Parish nurse Mayo, Pastor Gray and Dr. Dennis Sale opened the clinic almost four years ago. Because of limited funding, the clinic doesn't have an X-ray machine. Private and church donations and private grants keep the clinic running. Leiker got a waiver for a free X-ray at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Heartland Medical Outreach has arrangements with outside doctors to provide care for patients who need special treatments. Pat Mayo, the parish nurse at the clinic, spends time contacting outside doctors and facilities that can provide medical assistance to Heartland's patients. Outside doctors provide patients with two or three free treatments a year. Some patients who come to the clinic lost their health insurance along with their jobs. Nina Cobb, Lawrence resident, started going to the clinic when her husband lost his job with Worldcom in December. Along with his job, the family also lost their heath insurance. Cobb has been treated at Heartland and she has taken her youngest son to the clinic several times. Stephens has a personal connection with her patients and seems to put herself on the same level as the patients. Stephens has pulmonary hypertension, a condition in which blood vessels constrict in the lungs so she doesn't get enough oxygen. "They sometimes get abused, and they are not very trusting." Mayo said. "They are a bit leery and they question why we are offering something like this for free." Dr. Gillian Stephens sees a wide range of patients at the clinic.Having been a medical volunteer since January, she recognizes the strong need for a free clinic in a community like Lawrence.She said that homeless people were the most challenging patients. "Everybody is really friendly," Cobb said. "They don't downgrade you and ask a bunch of questions. It's a comfortable environment." Mayo agreed that homeless people are usually the most difficult patients to treat. "I think that the fact that I'm on oxygen 24/7 puts people at ease," Stephens said. "They realize that I'm human, and we all have illnesses. Some patients come in and think that I'm a smoker — it's a good conversation opener." "They can't go to a regular doctor's office because they don't have an address — so where do they send the bill?" Stephens said. Although Stephens is still paying off medical school bills — she graduated from KU Medical Center in 1999 — she donates her time twice a week as a part-time volunteer at the clinic. Because the clinic receives no state or national funding, it doesn't have enough money for all of UNINSURED IN AMERICA Heartland Medical Outreach provides medical attention to individuals in Lawrence without health insurance. Over 38.7 million people in this country cannot afford health insurance. Percent of American population uninsured by race 10% whites 19% blacks 28% Native Americans 33% Hispanics 18% Asians/ Pacific Islanders the medical equipment that it needs to fully serve the public. Pastor Paul Gray would like to see the clinic grow in the next five to 10 years. "God has a plan for all of us," Kurth said. "In the end, he will put us in our place, and he will be just and fair for all of us — even the homeless. I've learned here that regardless of one's personal finances, whether they're homeless or working poor, everyone has an incredible amount of dignity and self-worth." "I'd like to see the clinic as a separate building." Gray said. "We need at least six beds for patients to stay overnight. We also really need X-ray equipment and blood sugar testing equipment." Edited by Anne Mantey Dr. Paul Kurth has volunteered at the clinic since November 2001, and he and his family attend Heartland Community Church. He said working at the clinic provides a strong example of community service for his sons. He hopes the clinic will eventually become full-service with a laboratory and trained technicians. Stephen Leiker's injuries to his hand and lip are healing after an accident on his bike. Leiker, of Kansas City, Mo., visited Heartland Medical Outreach because he had no health insurance and a wanted to make sure his injuries weren't too serious. . . Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS 1B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2003 BROOKLYN 1091 HATES 211 F272 Eric Braem/Kansan High school athletestake a turn in the second leg of the Boys' 4x800 meter relay at the Kansas Relays. Liberty High School of Liberty, Mo., won the event with a time of 7:58.47. Young stars revive track MARINA VALLEY 1758 Andy Samuelson/Kansan Alan Webb, who broke Kansas legend Jim Ryun's national high school mile record two years ago, runs in the All-Star squad's men's distance-medley relay Saturday at the Kansas Relays. b. Gruber regain nation's interest in sport By Shane Mettlen smettlen@kansan.com Kansan sportwriter Middle distance runners took the center stage Saturday at the Kansas Relays. The Glenn Cunningham Invitational Mile, featuring national high school record holder Alan Webb and former Kansas All-American Charlie Gruber, overshadowed the sprints, but that seems to be reflective of the track landscape. Webb surpassed former Kansas track star Ryun's record with a 3:53.3 in the mile and has emerged as one of track and field's household names, just as Ryun did 38 years ago. But times have changed since Ryun became the first school boy to break the fourminute barrier. Ryun's picture graced the cover of Sports Illustrated multiple times during the 1960s, when track, particularly middle-distance, was one of the most popular sports in the country. Since then, interest in the sport has dwindled in the United States, and what interest remains is focused on sprinters. A new crop of young, American milers, including Webb and Gruber, seem poised to regain the attention of the world. "There are a lot of guys in the U.S.who are running really well now,"Webb said. "Charlie is running really well. There's even a couple of high school kids beating down on the four minute barrier." One of those high school runners is Liberty, Mo., senior, Adam Perkins, who finished third in the mile Saturday, behind Gruber and Webb. Perkins gave up his final season of high school eligibility at Liberty High School to run in high-profile races like Saturday's and other events not sanctioned by the Missouri State High School Activities Association. Perkins and Webb both look to Ryun as inspiration to be successful and bring the sport back to national prominence. "I met him two years ago." Perkins said. "That was before Alan Webb broke his record and I thought I'd like to take a shot at that. Alan obviously got that, which is great." Ryun couldn't agree more. The congressman said he was surprised his record lasted so long but thought the new generation runners could help the sport. "Alan Webb, he had that momentum when he was in high school," Ryun said. "You could see that there were expectations that it might be another breakthrough for track and field, especially since the interest was so high in middle distance running." "The fact that my record stood for 36 years, in one respect, was unfortunate." Jim Rvur Jim Ryun Former Kansas track star Ryun, who remains a legendary figure in running, said runners like Gruber, Webb and Perkins would help move focus from the past to the future. "The fact that my record stood for 36 years, in one respect, was unfortunate," Ryun said. "It meant that we weren't progressing. It was never meant to be that kind of a barrier. It was meant to be an inspiration. Records are meant to be broken." —Edited by Todd Rapp Big throw highlights Relays By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter When an event ends and your fellow competitors ask you for an autograph, you must have done something special. That is what happened to Kevin Toth Saturday at the Kansas Relays. He threw the shot put 74-04.50 feet, the longest throw in the shot put since Randy Barnes set the world record (75-10.50) in 1990. "We needed to come here and take it to the next level," Toth said. "When you throw 72-9 last year, that's one level. To go over 74 was another level, to break the world record is another level." Toth's performance earned him the honors of Kansas Relays Most Outstanding Performer. After the event, Toth couldn't hide his excitement, but tried to put his performance in perspective. "This is just a piece of the pie right here. We really believe we're going to break the world record," he said. "The bottom line is Kevin Toth is going out on a big note." You can excuse Toth talking in the third person because of his excitement (and because of his size). In his excitement, Toth, a 1991 graduate of McNeese State, said he wanted to be a national champion this year and a world champion next year before retiring. Oh yeah, he wants to set the world record, too. Toth's coach, Mike Mielke, said that all of Toth's goals were possible, but for now he would need some time to go home and process his performance. "I today he broke through to a different place that few throwers ever get to," Mielke said. Mielke, a coach for the U.S. Army, has worked with Toth since October and helped Toth change his technique. "He wanted to make a statement," Mielke said. Consider that statement made. Especially when you realize that the shot put was supposed to be one of the marquee events at the Relays this year. Toth, Missouri's Christian Cantwell and Nebraska's Carl Meyerscoff were all scheduled to compete, and all three have thrown better than 70 feet. However, Cantwell and Meyerscoff pulled out of the shot put event earlier in the week with injuries, and Toth was left as the main competitor. To top it off, a storm, which canceled eight events in the day, pushed the start time of the shot put back nearly three hours. Some wondered if the event would even happen or if Toth would still compete. SEE THROW ON PAGE 4B Win games to re-ignite enthusiasm SPORTS COMMENTARY 1945 Ryan Wood rwood@kansan.com It's been two months since the Jayhawks made their splash on the national scene. Coach Ritch Price is doing his best to keep his Kansas baseball team in order. On Feb. 16, Kansas, in stunning fashion, completed a three-game sweep of No. 6 Louisiana State in Baton Rouge, La. Upon returning home, the Kansas players raided Massachusetts Street, setting fires, tipping cars and exposing themselves to anyone looking their way. It was pure chaos. Actually, I'm lying to you. They did no rioting that weekend. They were quite calm about shocking the baseball nation. "We want it to be a highlight of the season," coach Ritch Price said, "not the highlight of the season." Price's attitude on the victories may have kept his entire roster out of jail. The Jawhaws listened to their coach. There were no fires, no vandalism, and, thankfully, no male nudity that weekend. The only real hangover stemming from the Louisiana State sweep was the nationwide respect of Kansas baseball. The team rose as high as No.18 in the Top 25 polls. National awards came streaming in. Meanwhile, Kansas fans took their lips off the basketball players' backsides for a split second to applaud the baseball team. But unfortunately, hangovers wear off after a while. A month later, the Jayhawks started conference play 2-7. On April 8, Kansas lost to Baker, a National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics team. Disheartening as it was, suddenly, Jayhawk baseball was just another program without any reason to burn cars or destroy the streets of downtown. But during the next two weeks, the Jayhawks can redeem themselves. Kansas will play eight games in the next 14 days - all against ranked teams. Seven are at home. Six are against Big 12 teams. The other two plot Kansas against its biggest non-conference rival, Wichita State. Since the men's basketball team crushed Marquette on April5, the partyhungry student body at the University has had no excuse to go crazy. That was more than three weeks ago. Could an eight-game winning streak by Kansas baseball be reason enough to make downtown go up in flames? SEE WOOD ON PAGE 4B Baseball continues winning ways in conference play By Daniel Berk dberk@kerk.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas baseball team won its second consecutive Big 12 Conference series this weekend, winning two out of three games against the Oklahoma Sooners. Kansas won 11-4 on Friday, lost 10-8 on Saturday and topped the Sooners 16-6 yesterday. With the victories, Kansas improved its overall record to 31-16 and its conference mark to 6-9. The Jayhawks have now won eight of their last ten games. Junior Ryan Knippschild pitched a complete game for Kansas in the first game of the series. He registered his seventh victory of the season in Kansas' 11-4 victory. 4. Victory. Junior first baseman Ryan Baty hit his ninth home run of the season in the first inning, giving the Jayhawks an early 1-0 lead. In the fifth inning, six straight Kaneae batters reached base, and the lead was stretched to 7-0. Senior designated hitter Kevin Wheeler hit his ninth home run of the season, an inside-the-park hit that gave Kansas a 10-0 lead. Knippschild allowed one run in the seventh inning off a solo home run, then allowed three runs in the ninth but managed to hold off the Sooners. Knippschild struck out five batters and did not walk a batter in the game. Senior shortstop Brandon Shepard then hit his second home run of the season in the seventh inning, which gave Kansas an 11-0 lead. "Knippschild set the whole tone of the weekend by his performance on Friday." Kansas coach Ritch Price said. "He protected our bullpen by going the distance and that was big for us." Kansas took an early 7-0 lead Saturday in the second game of the series. Senior center fielder Lance Hayes started off the game with a single and was moved over to second base when the next batter walked. Baty then singled, scoring Hayes. Sophomore third baseman Travis Metcalf later hit a grand slam to straightaway center field, which gave Kansas the 7-0 advantage. Hayes then came through again in the third inning when he delivered another single, this time scoring freshman second baseman Matt Baty. But Oklahoma responded and scored three runs in the third and then three more in the fourth to make the score 7-6. The comeback by the Sooners knocked out Kansas starter Chris Smart after just 1/3 innings of work. Oklahoma would later take the lead after scoring two more runs in the fifth inning. Kansas tied the game at 8-8 in the seventh, but the Sooners once again answered, scoring one run in both the seventh and eighth innings to take a 10-8 lead. Wheeler was given the start and worked seven innings, allowing six earned runs and striking out five batters. Wheeler was credited with the victory and improved his record to 5-2. The third and final game of the series saw the Jayhawks pile up 20 hits and register a 16-6 victory. Freshman middle infielder Ritehie Price, Ryan Baty, Wheeler and junior right fielder Matt Tribble all singled consecutively, which gave Kansas the large lead. Kansas broke the game open in the fourth inning, scoring seven runs. The first run of the inning came when Metcalf doubled and scored senior left fielder Casey Spanish. Metcalf then scored when Matt Baty hit a single. Matt Baty was next to score as Hayes doubled to the outfield. "Everyone went up in the box and competed, no matter what the count was," Tribble said. "It was contagious, and everyone wanted to out-do each KANSAS 8-OKLAHOMA 10 SATURDAY Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 - R H E Kansas 2 1 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 8 8 1 Okahanna 0 0 3 3 2 0 1 X -10 18 1 Pitchers: Brian Smart (3/1, 1/3), Josh Duran (2/3), Don Czyz (3), Brandon Johnson (1) Okahama--Buddy Blair (2/1, 3), Casey Brown (4), David Puricey (2/3), Jared McAuliff (2) Win--Puricey (1-2) Sage--Nona Lane--Czyz (2-3) YESTERDAY KANSAS 16-OKLAHOMA 6 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 - R M E Kansas 0 1 0 1 7 2 2 2 16 - E 7 Oklahoma 1 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 - 6 0 1 Pitchers Kansas—Kevin Wheeler (7), Brandon Johnson (1) Oklahoma—Mike Swindell (3/2/3), David Purnel (13), Charlie House (1), Austin M (2), Jarod McAulif (1) Wilson (2), Mia (5-2) Save — None Loss — Saundall (2) 1 other. It was a lot of fun today." SEE BASEBALL ON PAGE 4B --- "You know they don't come here for the School of Engineering. They come here, for the coach, and he's gone." 2B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Inside Sports Free forAll Does anyone else realize that Dean Smith has the biggest schnoz in America? right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. I guess with a nose that big it's kinda hard to stay out of people's business. Thanks, Roy, for everything you've ever done for us, ignore the T-shirts, because they are ignorant fools who wear them. right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. UNC; University of a Narcissistic Coach. 图 right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. This is for the committee who's hiring a basketball coach. Can someone please get in touch with Larry Brown? 图 --right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. So I haven't seen any squirrels on campus in the last 3-4 days, and I'm thinking Roy took them with him to Chapel Hill. 图 What is KUstore.com going to do with all the extra Roy Williams bobbleheads? I have one thing to say about Roy Williams this holy week of Easter. Crucify him. --right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 Good decision, Roy. You go get your championship at North Carolina. right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. Hey Wayne Simien, and I are going to have such beautiful babies. right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. I may hate North Carolina,but I'll always love Roy Williams. 图 While everyone else is dressed for a banquet, Jeff Hawkins is dressed for a rap show. right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. Let's just see how many times Roy Williams can say "15 years." Let me see, 1, 2, 3, 4 ... oh wait, I lost count. Which to hate more? Mizzou or UNC? right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. Chancellor Bob is speaking now at the awards ceremony, and we think he looks a little like Yoda. To the people who were yelling at Roy at the banquet tonight, we have a place for so-called fans like you, and it's called Mizzou. The whole basketball team is chewing gum right now, and they look like a bunch of cows. Two things have happened that I never expected. #1: Roy Williams left KU, and #2: I'm falling in love with Jeff Graves. Kevin Pritchard for head coach. 图 I just have one thing to say about Roy Williams leaving; dibs on his parking space. --place. I can't see why Roy Williams would want to leave. Mmm, Nick Collison has pretty muscles. --place. I can't see why Roy Williams would want to leave. Yeah, we just got done watching the awards ceremony, and we want to know where we can buy that video that he made for the players. place. I can't see why Roy Williams would want to leave. 图 To the people who booed Roy Williams at the awards ceremony, you suck. The people who velled "Traitor" to Roy at the basketball banquet are classless trash. Whether you like it or not, he gave 15 great years. Get over it and move on. place. I can't see why Roy Williams would want to leave. Lawrence, Kansas is such a happenin' place. I can't see why Roy Williams would want to leave. After watching Roy Williams at the banquet Thursday night, it looks like he's aged 10 years in 10 days. at shortstop. Omar Infante fielded the ball and threw it wildly into the dugout, sending Relford to second with an infield hit and an error. I don't care what anybody says in the Free For All. I want to make hot monkey love to Roy Williams. at shortstop. Omar Infante fielded the ball and threw it wildly into the dugout, sending Relford to second with an infield hit and an error. at shortstop. Omar Infante fielded the ball and threw it wildly into the dugout, sending Relford to second with an infield hit and an error. I love Roy, I love Roy, I love Roy, even if he went off to North Carolina. Rock chalk, Jayhawk, go KU. at shortstop. Omar Infante fielded the ball and threw it wildly into the dugout, sending Relford to second with an infield hit and an error. You know, Roy Williams has spent 15 years at KU, built a legacy, and to let him know how everyone at KU feels, I think they should name something after him ... like the parking department. Roy, how could you do it? How could you leave Shannon? at shortstop. Omar Infante fielded the ball and threw it wildly into the dugout, sending Relford to second with an infield hit and an error. Instead of blaming KUJH for your reception problems, why don't you blame the cable company? I'm looking for a business partner. The idea: bobblehead Muhammad Ali. at shortstop. Omar Infante fielded the ball and threw it wildly into the dugout, sending Relford to second with an infield hit and an error. He won the championship in Hoosiers. He went to the playoffs with The Replacements players. I say we get Gene Hackman to coach the KU Jayhawks. Royals sweep Tigers,continue torrid start The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Royals keep finding new ways to win and the Detroit Tigers are losing every way possible. Desi Relaford scored the winning run in the bottom of the ninth on Carlos Pena's throwing error as the Royals won 4-3 yesterday, handing the Tigers their 16th loss in 17 games this season. "We scratched and clawed for everything we got." The Royals extended the best start in franchise history to 14-3 and are 8-0 at Kauffman Stadium, the only undefeated team at home this season. The Tigers matched the worst start in the majors since Kansas City also lost 16 of 17 to open the 1992 season. "We scratched and clawed for everything we got," said Tigers manager Alan Trammell. "It seemed like it comes a lot easier on the other side, which is the way it happens when you're not going well." Relaford led off the ninth against Mike Maroth (0-5) with a grounder to the hole Alan Trammell Tigers manager Joe Randa then bunted toward first base. Carlos Pena fielded the ball and threw to first. But the throw hit Randa in the back and rolled into right field for an error, allowing Relaford to score without a play. "I don't know where it rolled when it hit me in the back of the arm," Randa said. "I turned around and Relaford was crossing the plate and it was pretty crazy." Randa almost didn't play after leaving Saturday's game with soreness in his left hamstring. Randa convinced manager Tony Peña he was healthy enough to play and drove in three runs, including a two-run homer in the first. M KC R Royals Royals "I almost didn't play," Randa said. "When I came out yesterday, my leg was pretty sore. I felt good enough to play today and Tony wanted me in the lineup. "We talked about it. He trusts me on how I feel. Today I felt like I had enough to go. I told him I'd give him everything I got." The Tigers came into the game with only seven errors but committed three in their fifth loss in five meetings against Kansas City this season. Mike MacDougal (1-0) pitched the ninth for the win. Randa, who left Saturday's game with tightness in his left hamstring, hit a two-run homer in the first inning and a sacrifice fly in the sixth to lead Kansas City. Maroth pitched a four-hitter in his first career complete game. "His ball was moving everywhere." Tigers catcher Matt Walbeck said. "His pitches were invisible. He was making pitches out of this world. He deserves a better record that what he's shown, as do some of our other pitchers, just him." The Tigers scored a run in the first when Miguel Asencio walked Eric Munson with the bases loaded. After Randa's third homer of the year gave Kansas City a 2-1 lead, the Tigers tied it in the second on Bobby Higginson's RBI single. "We worked so hard one run in the first inning and they get two like that," Trammell said. "It was a tough loss. We definitely had our opportunities." Munson's sacrifice fly in the fifth put the Tigers up 3-2, but the Royals tied it in the sixth. Angel Berroa led off with a double, went to third on Relaford's bunt and scored on Randa's sacrifice fly. Asencio allowed three runs and nine hits in six innings. Illinois fans saddened by loss of Self to Kansas The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Bill Self's apparent move to Kansas left fans at the University of Illinois feeling insulted, disappointed and sympathetic toward the players he leaves behind. Self, the Illinois basketball coach for three seasons, arrived on the University of Kansas campus yesterday afternoon and ate a meal with Jayhawk players. University officials said only that the school had scheduled a news conference Monday to introduce its new basketball coach. Illinois officials also refused to confirm Self was leaving to replace Roy Williams, who left Kansas last week to It's the second time in less than three years that Illinois fans have had to cope with a coach's sudden departure. Lon Kruger left in May 2000 to coach the become coach at North Carolina. The Illini sports information director said the school would wait for an announcement from Kansas. But Illinois fans winding down their afternoon at a tavern near campus seemed resigned that the school would lose their coach. "Obviously it's very disappointing," said David Kraft, 31, of Urbana. "It just seems like we have all the pieces in place and he's just leaving at the wrong time for me as a fan." Atlanta Hawks. "We felt real lucky to get Bill Self," Kraft said. Self was hired away from Tulsa three weeks after Kruger left. He had spent three seasons there and left with a record of 74-27, similar to the 78-24 record he amassed in three seasons at Illinois. Self may be landing his dream job at Kansas, but not everyone agrees it's the best decision. "I think it's kind of a poor career move," said Adam Watkins, 23, a UI senior from Naperville. He said the team was performing well under Self and would have an opportunity to compete for a championship. The Illini won a share of the Big Ten regular-season title in Self's first two seasons in Champaign and won the Big Ten Tournament championship this season. Kraft said he understands Self's apparent decision to take the Kansas job, but he wondered why Illinois is not viewed the same way. Caleb Parker, 22, a UI junior from Champaign, said his sympathy is with the players. "It's an insult to us that we can't be considered in that same class," he said. "You know they don't come here for the School of Engineering. They come here for the coach, and he's gone," he said. Friday's The University Daily Kansan contained an error. On page 1A and in the page 1B photo outline for the Kansas Relays, the runner is misidentified. Freshman Jenna Bimbi, who finished third in the 800 meter run, is pictured. POLL QUESTION kansan.com How successful will Bill Self be in his first season at Kansas? 12 Conference title He will take Kansas to the Elite Eight He will have a winning record. The Jayhawks will struggle in his first year. He will lead the Jayhawks to a Big 12 Conference title. Kansas will see another Final Four berth. He will win the championship. Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote. LAST WEEK'S POLL RESULTS What Al Bohl's best move? Firing football coach Terry Allen — 146 votes for 8 percent Beer before football games — 637 votes for 33 percent Hiring baseball coach Ritch Price 146 votes for 8 percent His best is yet to come: moving out of Lawrence — 1014 votes for 52 percent TODAY Kansas Athletics Calendar Women's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day, Columbia, Mo. Softball vs. Missouri, doubleheader, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., Jayhawk Field TOMORROW Women's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day, Columbia, Mo. WEDNESDAY Women's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day, Columbia, Mo. Baseball at Wichita State, 7 p.m., Wichita Softball vs. University of Missouri-Kansas City, doubleheader, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., Jayhawk Field THURSDAY FRIDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Softball vs. Nebraska, 5 p.m., Jayhaw Field SATURDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Hoglund Pollack Rowing at the University of Cincinnati, all day. cincinnati Softball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Jayhawk Field LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • CIGARS • POOL * must be 21 to enter 1009 MASS . LAWRENCE MASS. STREET DELI INC. 941 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 AM - 9 PM SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY 11 AM - 9 PM THURSDAY - SATURDAY All 1/3 lb. charbroiled burger platters only $3.95 values to $6.00 values to $6.00 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening I became a woman who tucked her shirt in. Over 4,000 locations to serve you. (785) 841-1431 Holiday Plaza: 25th & lowa Lawrence, KS 60047 Curves is 30-minute fitness, commonsense weight loss, and all the support you need to achieve your goals. www.curvesinternational.com Curves The power to amaze yourself." $ 40 for the rest of the semester $75 for summer semester *with this ac- tivation*. Other hands in the class are welcome, minimum 12 m. c. program. Join Now 60% Off Service Fee 1 MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Texas pitching gouges softball team By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Going into Saturday's doubleheader, the Kansas softball team knew the Texas pitching staff was good with a team ERA of 0.61. After shutting out Kansas twice Saturday, the number decreased. The Longhorns grounded the Jayhawks, winning 1-0 and 7-0 as Texas continued to bulldoze the Big 12. Coach Tracy Bunge said she was disappointed with Kansas' hitting—or lack thereof—after a paltry offensive production against Texas A&M and Arkansas last week. The Longhorn rotation wasn't sympathetic. A Texas trio of sophomores — Amy Bradford, Lizi Sowers and Cat Osterman — combined powers on the mount and held Kansas (23-18 overall, 2-11 Big 12 Conference) to one hit and two walks while striking out six. Osterman took the victory in the first game. Freshman third baseman Nettie Fierrros came up with the lone hit for the 'Hawks with a double down the left-field line during the sixth inning. The game's only run came in the sixth inning when Longhorn senior second baseman Lindsay Gardner scored off an error by Fierros. Senior pitcher Kirsten Milhoan started for Kansas and had a shutout going with two strikeouts before junior Kara Pierce relieved her in the third inning. Pierce gave up the one unearned run for the defeat. In the second game, Texas (35-7, 12-2) rallied at the plate while Kansas remained dormant. runs in the first inning to glide to the 7-0 victory. The Longhorns scored four Pierce started the game but didn't get past the first inning as Milhoan replaced her. With the defeat, Pierce dropped to 15-12 for the year. Osterman returned in game two to torment the Jayhawks a little more. She struck out 12 Kansas batters and took the victory to bump her record to 20-4. Three Jayhawks recorded hits, with freshman Heather Stanley delivering a pinch-hit double and junior centerfielder Mel Wallach and freshman second baseman Jessica Moppin each landing a single. Kansas looks for its third and fourth conference victories today, as Missouri comes to town for a doubleheader. Play starts at 3 p.m. Mizzou (28-15, 9-4) comes to Jayhawk Field on a four-game winning streak after sweeping the GAME 1 KANSAS 0- TEXAS 1 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Kansas 0 0 0 0 0 1 - 0 1 3 Texas 0 0 0 0 0 1 X - 1 2 0 RUMORS (2/13) Texas - Army Bradford (4-1, 7/3L) Slover's (11), Cat Ostram (12/23) Wink Osterman (19-4) Slave North Slave Pierce (15-11) GAME 2 KANSAS 0-TEXAS 7 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Kansas 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 3 1 Texas 0 0 0 1 0 2 X - 7 1 North Carolina - Pierce (1/3), Kristen Milhoan (5) 2/3 Texas - Cat Osterman (5), Lori Sowers (2) Win. Osterman (20-4) Save - None Loss - Porsche (15-12) University of Missouri-Kansas City and Baylor. The Tigers are ranked third in the Big 12. — Edited by Lindsay Hanson Canucks move on to Game 7 in first round ST. LOUIS — The Vancouver Canucks are going home for Game 7. Markus Naslund had a goal and two assists as the Canucks staved off elimination for the second straight game, beating the St. Louis Blues 4-3 last night to force a decisive Game 7 in the first-round playoff series. The Associated Press Mattias Ohlund had a goal and an assist for the Canucks, who scored two goals in each of the Whoever wins tomorrow's game in Vancouver will play the winner of the series between Colorado and Minnesota. first two periods. Vancouver scored twice on the power play in the second period as the Blues repeatedly hurt themselves with ill-advised penalties. After scoring four goals in the first four games, Vancouver has nine in the last two, putting constant pressure on goalie Chris Osgood. The Blues made it interesting with third-period goals by Eric Boguniecki and Doug Weight before the comeback fell short. St. Louis outshot Vancouver 13-2 in the third period. Naslund, who finished second in the NHL in scoring with 104 points, had one assist in the first three games of the series. In the last three contests he has three goals and two assists. Henrik Sedin and Ed Jovanovski both scored on power-play rebounds in the second period for Vancouver. St. Louis has never lost a series in which it led 3-1, but the Canucks have come back twice from that deficit to win. The Canucks were second in the NHL, in goals in the regular season, and their offense has come to life the last two games. Doug Weight scored his fourth goal of the playoffs and added an assist for the Blues, who trailed 4-1 entering the third period of the last two games with a chance to end the series. The Canucks scored on their second shot at 3:49 of the first as Naslund tapped in the rebound of Brendan Morrison's shot that trickled between Osgood's pads but was headed wide. Weight tied it on a shot from the point on a power play at 10:42 before the Canucks regained control. Ohlund beat a screened Osgood from the left circle during a 4-on-4 at 14:25 of the first. Sedin made it 3-1 on the rebound of a shot by Ohlund at 8:52 of the second. Jovanovski's rebound shot on another power play made it 4-1 at 16:12. Jayhawks crushed by stronger Aggies By Jonah Ballow jbellow@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The last regular season match for the No. 74 Kansas tennis team ended on a sour note with a loss to No. 35 Texas A&M 7-0 on Saturday. Even by not tallying a point in the match, the Jayhawks battled the Aggies in just about every position. "It was a good match," Kansas coach Kilmany Waterman said. "We have to use this as a positive going into next week at the Big 12 Conference Tournament." Kansas struggled early by losing two of three doubles matches and the crucial doubles point. At No. 1 singles, Steinbock started strong by winning the first set against Jessica Roland but lost the next two sets and the match,2-6,6-4,6-2. At No. 2 doubles, junior Courtney Steinbock and sophomore Paige Brown battled back from a 5-0 deficit to tie the match at 6-6. However, Aggies Ashley Hedberg and Lauren Walker eventually defeated Steinbock During the No.3 singles match, junior Emily Haylock dropped the first set but was able to capture the second before losing 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 to Roberta Spencer. The only victory for the Jayhawks came from senior Kim Lorenz and freshman Christian Skoda over Danielle Lee and Nicki Mechem 8-6 at the No.3 doubles position. During her last regular season match as a Jayhawks, Lorenz blasted four aces in the victory. and Brown 8-6. Kansas finishes the season with a 7-11 overall record and 5-8 in the conference. Tournament play will start Thursday for the Jayhawks, the No. 9 seed. Edited by Todd Rapp KANSAS ROWING Rowing defeats K-State captures Kansas Cup The University of Kansas rowing team captured the Kansas Cup for the fifth consecutive year Saturday. The Jayhawks took first place in four of the five races, beating Kansas State 15-8 in Manhattan. "Our goal was to come in and win our fifth consecutive Kansas Cup," Kansas coach Rob Catloth said. "We did pretty well considering the poor conditions that we raced in today." Kansas dominated the Varsity 4 race by finishing almost 22 seconds ahead of Kansas State, the biggest margin of victory in Saturday's dual. The Jayhawks also took both Novice races, with times of 6:24.3 in Novice 8 and 9:24.8 in Novice 4. Kansas suffered its only blemish in the dual in the 1st Varsity 8 race, finishing 6.4 seconds behind Kansas State's 8:07.9 mark. The Jayhawks won the 2nd Varsity 8 race with a time of 7:58, ahead of the Wildcats' time of 8:00.6. The Jayhawk rowers continue the spring season Saturday with a trip to Cincinnati for the University of Cincinnati Regatta. -Jason Hwang Get Out and Relax Wait, the man is actually a waiter, not a chef. The cloak is on his head. Let's look at the hands. They are crossed. Okay, I'm ready to transcribe. Wait, let me re-read the image. It's a waiter holding a clover tray. And the man has his hands crossed. Okay, I'm ready to transcribe. Join us for a night of fun, food, and lots of laughs. KUSSHA will provide appetizers. Bring money for food and drinks. Stone Creek is located at 6th and Wakarusa. STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE KUSSHA is hosting our annual end of the year bash at Stone Creek on April 22,2003 at 7:00pm The award-winning advertising staff of The University Daily Kansan is looking for self-motivated, forward thinking students to apply for positions in sales and creative departments. Pick up your application today in Room 119 in Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications are due April 25, 2003. JOIN OUR TEAM "Working at The Kansan has given me the chance to meet new people and have fun. More importantly, it has prepared me for the real world." -Avisola Abegunde Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass.832-8228 Fed Lapin Coven LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749-1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM (P2-13) 4:15 7:10 9:40 CITY OF GOD (P) 4:00 9:30 ADAPTATION (P) 7:00 ONLY www.libertyhall.net COUNTRY BILL MOTORS INC. A professional development series for 2003 grads April 24th 5:00 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center “Transition 101: Student Skills to Work Place Leaders” • entrepreneurship • effective workplace communication • diversity in the workplace • translation, talking about your skills in “employer language” April 29th 7:00 - 8:30 pm Big 12 Room. KS Union “Employment Issues for Women” • finding jobs to “fit” your needs • wardrobe on a budget • handling your 1st year with finesse May 7th 5:30 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center “Grad Grill” • free dinner, soft drinks, & door prizes! • info on alumni programs & services free registration at www.ku.edu/~uces A professional development series for 2003 grads "BACKPACKS 2 BRIEFCASES" 4B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS MONDAY,APRIL 21.2003 Throw CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B "If he had left, I wouldn't have begrudged him one bit," said Tim Weaver, Kansas Relays meet director. "But I'm glad he stayed." Weaver credited the hard work of the facilities team that cleared enough of the water off to begin the event. "They share a part in Kevin's success today." Weaver said. "I was proud of everyone involved today" When the competition did finally start, only six throwers staved around to compete. Despite the bad weather and a lack of competition, Toth managed to have a performance that Weaver called the best performance in any event at the Kansas Relays in a couple of decades. "If you want to be a champion you have to be ready in any kind of weather," said Tonyo Sylvester, who competes for Army Elite and finished second in the shot put with a throw of 63.02.00. "Expect big things from him." Team High Performance and finished third with a throw of 62- 08.00. He was one of the many competitors who were in awe of Toth's performance. "He motivates me to try and get better." Beyer said. Toth's performance broke his own Kansas Relays record that he set in 1997 (71-02.50), but that almost didn't happen. Not just because of the weather or the competition, but because he fouled on his first three throws. "He just couldn't settle down." Mielke said. He finally did settle down enough to make the record-setting throw on his fifth attempt. Weaver said the new record is one that won't be broken any time soon. "The Kansas Relays record in the men's shot will be in the hands of a great athlete and a great person for man, many years to come," Weaver said. "When people talk about the 2003 Kansas Relays they won't talk about the rain. They'll talk that that was the year Kevin hit that ridiculous throw. I couldn't think of anything better for this meet." — Edited by Ryan Wood The Jayhawks then scored two runs in each of the last four innings, highlighted by home runs from Tribble and Metcalf. Baseball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B "It was a great effort by our club this weekend," Price said. "This is the first time in Kansas baseball history that a team has won a series in the state of Oklahoma and won two road series in the same season. So we took some big steps this weekend." "This is the first time in Kansas baseball history that a team has won a series in the state of Oklahoma." Kansas will return to the Ritch Price Kansas baseball coach While the second string was the primary focus for the afternoon scrimmage, highlights of the game revolved around an interception of a James Cox pass by sophomore safety Medford Moorer (which the junior returned On Wednesday afternoon, a 71-play, 62-minute scrimmage showcased the strength of a defense that has dominated the Buffs' spring practice sessions. field Wednesday night when the Jayhawks travel to Wichita to battle with Wichita State. Racestight for Buffs' football spots ing for 178 yards and one touchdown. Cox finished the day having completed 7-of-10 passes for 139 yards and two touchdowns, while Greenberg went 8-for-14 pass- While it looks as if sophomore Joel Klatt might have the lead in nabbing the starter's spot, Wednesday's scrimmage saw freshmen John Cox and Erik Greenmage battling it out. As per usual, the quarterback race is one that has kept Barnett's eyes wide open, given the departure of last year's season-opening starter Craig Ochs and the scramble to replace him with backup Robert Hodge, who did a credible job. Another battle to watch will be the battle for the kicker position. Staff Reports "Our quarterbacks have done a good job learning' the offense,' Barnett said after Wednesday's practice. "Our receivers have also done a good job catching the ball this spring." Junior J.T. Eberly and freshman Kevin Eberhart have been singled out by Barnett as the two main competitors, but the race is still tight. BOULDER, Colo. — Saturday's spring game will be the last opportunity for Colorado head coach Gary Barnett to get a good look at the talent on his team - specifically those players vying for key positions Barnett hasn't decided on a solid starter for the fall, but he has stated in the past that he wouldn't hesitate to name one if it came down to it. Colorado Daily via U-wire University of Colorado - Edited by Ryan Wood Freshman James Garee tallied two-and-a-half of the defense's six sacks. for a touchdown), nine tackles by safety Tyrone Henderson and fellow sophomore Chris Hollis' five stops, including one sack. "If it is close, it is close," he commented at a recent practice. "If it is not, I will name a starter." Wood CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B A trip to Wichita State is up first for the Jayhawks on Wednesday. The Shockers usually draw 5,000 fans for Kansas. Last year, the team scheduled $1 beer night for when the 'Hawks hit the town. After that comes a three-game set with No. 20 Baylor, Kansas plays Wichita State again on April 29, this time at home. Then it's three games with No. 10 Texas, the defending national champion. The game won't be easy, but it will happen at Hoglund Ballpark, the most hostile baseball environment on campus. H Kansas wins eight in a row, chaos will ensue. Students will tear down the foul poles and throw them in the Naismith Hall pool. Massachusetts Street will be hopping. People will fall out of truck beds. Women will show breasts, Sports columnists won't remember their own names. And the baseball players might be there, too, throwing bricks through windows and climbing light poles. Then again, they might not show up. If they win eight in a row in the next two weeks, they could find themselves doing the necessary preparation for the NCAA Tournament. Kansas students would be happy to party like lanatics again. Anything to help the team. Razorbacks punish themselves for violations in payment - Wood is a Lee's Summit, Mo., senior in journalism. Bv Rainer Sabin Arkansas Traveler via U-wire University of Arkansas FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Case closed. After almost three and a half years of investigation, the NCAA Committee on Infractions determined the University of Arkansas' punishment Thursday in an inquiry that primarily centered on booster Ted Harrod's overcompensation of student-athletes who worked at his J&H Trucking Service. Because the university failed to monitor these actions in a satisfactory manner, the NCAA, in December 1999, began to investigate possible recruiting financial-aid and extra benefit violations committed by Arkansas. Nearly 40 months later, the NCAA has exacted a punishment that includes a public censure of the university, three years probation, the loss of 10 football scholarships in the period 2001-06. and a limitation of 50 expensepaid visits in the 2003-04 academic year. From 1994 to 2000, a total of $4,300 was paid to 20 Razorback football and basketball players for work they did not do at Harrod's firm. The university imposed sanctions upon itself. By doing so, the university hoped to convey to the Committee on Infractions that it understood the seriousness of the violations. Arkansas eliminated eight football scholarships between the period of 2001 and 2005, while also cutting one basketball scholarship during the 2003-04 academic year. In addition, it cut the official visits in men's basketball from 12 to eight in the 2002-03 academic year. Meanwhile, the university forfeited the remaining $225,000 of a $300,000 pledge by Harrod, who was banned from associating with Razorback athletics. GET CARDED USE YOUR JAYHAWK VISA CARDS AND SUPPORT THE KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICIAL JAYHAWK VISA CARDS Apply today. www.intrustbank.com 544 Columbia • 785-830-2600 901 Vermont • 785-830-2612 1-800-222-7458 INTRUST encourages responsible credit card spending. To learn more about handling credit, contact Consumer Credit Counseling Service at 1-800-383-0217. Member FDIC KANSAS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PLATINUM 4602 0129 8765 4304 LICENSE NUMBER DEPT. 004 V VISA KU INTRUST Check Card 6248 0229 8765 4324 1998 DEC 10/04 V VISA VALID THROUGH JAN 31, 2022 HUMAN RIGHTS AND ETHICAL GLOBALIZATION The Stephenson Lectures in Law & Gov't presents Mary Robinson - First female President of Ireland (1990-1997) - United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997-2002) - Accomplished Human Rights lawyer Aurora M. E. April 24,2003 7:00 pm 120 Budig Hall Contact Jennifer Colaner, Event Planner, at (785) 864-4531 for more info. Sponsored by the University of Kansas School of Law Made possible by the Stephenson Lectures in Law & Government and the David H. Fisher funds MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 ENTERTAINMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B WEATHER TODAY 69 40 mostly sunny and windy TOMORROW 66 45 mostly sunny WEDNESDAY 70 52 mostly cloudy — WWW.WEATHER.COM APARTMENT NUMBER 9 by Kevin Gritzke, for The University Daily Kansan The following events are true. The names have NOT been changed to make fun of the stupid. Gerry, you mama so stupid that she thought a quarterback was a football player... now wait... Tom, you have the IQ of a speedbump. BELLS The following events are true. The names have. NOT been changed to make fun of the skirt... Getting yo mama so shoved that she thought a quarterback was a football player...no wait... Then you have the IQ of a speedbump. the jokes on you... speedbumps don't have IQs... the following events are true. the names have NOT been changed to make fun of the stupid. Gaming, so mama do stupid that she thought a quarterback was a football player... no wait... Tom, you have the IQ of a speedbump. HA HA HA The jokes on you... speedbumps don't have IQs... HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 21) You can advance this year, both personally and in your career. Go ahead and apply for that promotion, and start planning that vacation. Your friends will give you a shove in the right direction. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. Settle into a routine at work, and the pressure you've felt should ease. Slow and steady wins the race now, and for a while to come. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is an 8. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a7. You'll get more aloof in some relationships,more passionate in others. Privacy makes a big difference. So does timing. You love life could show improvement soon. Your honesty was quite impressive. Start saving your dimes for a romantic trip. You've earned a special treat. Cancer(June22-July22).Todayis7a7. You'll find it a little easier to accomplish your goals over the next few weeks. Others will join in your good cause, so you won't have to do it alone. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. You're anxious to get a lot of things done, but you may not know quite where to start. There are still transitions going on. Wait until you get new orders. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sep. 22). Today is an 8. There's more work coming soon, of a slightly different kind. This is more technical and less exciting, which should be a relief. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 6 It's time to start getting practical again. Make lists and set priorities. Come up with a budget. If you already have one, start using it. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is an 8. Slow and steady wins this race, so put your mind to work. Set priorities so that you'll know what to do when you have to move quickly. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is an 8. It's getting easier for you to learn technical material. It'll also get easier to express love, but practical matters take more time. It's a fair trade. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is an 8. You show your love in many ways, including through what you provide. You won't need to spend much when you open your heart and your home. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a7. You're getting a shot of adrenaline, and you should feel it soon. Remember to use your common sense, and don't get hasty. Count to 10 and then reconsider before taking action. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is an 8. An old friend may turn out to be one of your best teachers.If somebody with more experience offers to lend you a hand, grasp it warmly. Crossword 1 Cuban dance 6 Sedimentary material 10 Easy pace 14 Step 15 Location 16 United __ Emirates 17 Frankie of The 4 Seasons 18 Golda of Israel 19 New Haven institution 20 New Testament book 22 Boitano or Button 24 Side-by-side ones? 26 Motionless 27 Hubbub 30 Pasta dish 32 Cow's chew 33 Show on the tube 34 Stirring slightly 38 In conflict 30 Bug bomb 41 Papyrus 43 Like a near miss 44 Mine yield 45 Southwest walkway 47 Sailors' drink 48 Unvoiced 51 Not so fast 53 Danish port 55 Gave a rubdown 59 Take the train 60 Monumental 62 REM sound? 63 Char slightly 64 Folk wisdom 65 Astaire's sister 66 Belonging to us 67 Orion or Rigel 68 Affirmative responses DOWN 1 Party letters 2 Cedar Breaks state 3 Landlocked African nation 4 One requesting payment 04/21/03 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 35 36 37 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 5 Spirit of "The Tempest" 6 Urn with a tap 7 Ryan and Dunne 8 Lanai garland 9 Old sailors 10 Fail wretchedly 11 Speak from a soapbox 12 More washed out 13 Critic Roger 21 Singer Etheridge 23 Somewhat 25 Put the collar on 27 Wound covering 28 Ballet skirt 29 Graven image 31 Hearty laughter 33 Grownups 35 Inventor Sikorsky 36 Stout's Wolfe 37 Golfer Norman 39 Colanders 42 "__ Pinafore" Solutions to Friday's puzzle. P U M P B A C H U H H U O B O E A X L E G O O S E L O O P R R E A L H O N E R E A S T E R L I L Y V E R B S T E A L M O U S E Y L Y N X C O S M O S B E C K O R P H A N O I L L A O S T A R O T D O N A O C T P A Y O L A I N K Y C H E R U B E N O S D U B L I N Y O D E L S T A B E N A M E L W A R E O O Z E D D I A L N I N E P R U N E E V I L E R I K H O R S E X E N A D D Y E S 43 5th-century Germanic leader 46 New York city 47 Rio ___ 48 Trunk 49 Au revoir 50 Fragrant conifer 52 Bacon or Lamb paper 54 Sushi fish 56 Leaves 57 Perry's penner 58 Low grades 61 Poker take Thompson Grewley FURNITURE LEASING Since 1971 - LEASING/MONTH TO MONTH RENTAL - LEASING/MONTH TO MONTH RENTAL - LEASE PURCHASE OPTIONS AVAILABLE - ALL OF YOUR FURNITURE NEEDS - TWO DAY DELIVERY - CORPORATE LEASING AVAILABLE - ONE PIECE OR COMPLETE HOME - WIDE SELECTION **YOUR CHOICE LEASING** **LIVING ROOM SUITES** **BEDROOM GROUPS** **DINETTE GROUPS** 841-7111 Showroom hours: M & F 8:30 - 5:30 T Th 12:00 - 5:30 Closed Weekends 601 KASOLD LAWRENCE, KS 66049-3236 Thursday, April 24 Sunday, April 25 Campin. Lied Center The University of Kansas School of Fine Art Department of Music & Dance presents UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY SPRING 2003 Tickets on sale at the Lied Center, Muphy Hall, and SUA box offices. 47 public, $5 students, and senior citizens for tickets call: 864-2787 featured events: Remembering & Yes. Indeed! by Bill Ewert Choreographic Offering by Joel Lamritt staged by Sarah Matthouse The Institute of Kuala Lumpur of Fine Dance of Music & Dance Arts I SPRING 2003 LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. Weekly Specials before you drink. Watch for the Weekly Specials every Thursday in the Kansan and always on Kansan.com Please think THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAN kansan.com The university's online course browser Course conflicts? KANSAN Course KU INDEPENDENT STUDY conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! offers more than 160 online and print courses KU ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE The University of Kansas The University Theatre and the Department of Theatre and Film Invite you to a Sneak Preview of KU Alumnus Neil LaBute new film they're back...! The Shape of Things welcomes our wonderful alumni for alums come home it April 24, 2018 7;30 p.m. Friday, April 25, 2003 Liberty Hall See our former students perform for open mic night immediately following the film General admission tickets are on sale through the University Theatre Ticket Office and at the door; for reservations, call 785/864-3982; all seats $10; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. For additional information call The University Theatre, 785/864-3381 Cash bar available at Liberty Hall --- CLASSIFIED 6B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY BAILY KANSAN = 7B SPORTS MONDAY.APRIL 21.2003 No.21 Oklahoma State feasts on tough schedule By Brandi Ball By Brand Ball Daily O'Collegian via U-wire Oklahoma State University STILLWATER, Okla. — Beefing up the Oklahoma State baseball schedule was a task that the coaching staff knew it needed to tackle. Finishing high in the RPI rankings was a must on the Cowboys' preseason shopping list. according to the skipper, the opponents are all of the gourmet persuasion. "We don't have any cupcakes on our schedule — they are all steak," OSU coach Tom Holliday said. The No. 21 Cowboys (25-11, 84 Big 12) open up a three-game series with No. 16 Texas A&M (30-11, 10-5) Friday night at Olsen Field in College Station, Texas. Tied for third-place in the league, winning the series is Texas leads the conference in winning percentage, followed by Nebraska, and OSU and A&M. important to the future of both teams. "A&M's playing good." Holiday said. "But if we have a good weekend and somebody up in Nebraska takes a series, who knows where you're gonna end up after this." Traveling to College Station will be a new experience for most of the young Cowboy team. It is known as a hostile environment for visitors, and fans at Olsen Field are expected to continue the tradition when the Cowboys roll into town. Third baseman and quarterback of the OSU football team. Josh Fields, is looking forward to the challenge that the Aggies will pose on the field – in the stands. "It will be rowdy, hostile and everything you can think of," Fields said. "But, sometimes you gotta have that incentive to drive you. I am kind of looking forward to it." And, with a race for the title, that kind of attitude is just what Holliday likes to see in his players. As only one of the two returning regulars off last year's team, coupled with his gridiron experience. Fields will be a leader during the series with the Aggies, Holliday said. On Tuesday, the Aggies hosted Texas-Arlington, and drew a crowd of 5,136. A midweek game, The Aggies beat UTA 7-6 Tuesday, a team that the Cowboys also defeated by one run, 3-2. Common Big 12 opponents both teams have faced include Kansas State and Baylor, K-State was swept by both the Aggies and the Cowboys, and Baylor took 2-of-3 games from OSU and A&M. Kansan Classified a non-conference opponent and A&M generated more fans that Allie P. Reynolds Stadium in Stillwater, Okla. (capacity 4,000) can hold. T 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Business Personals 115 On Campus 120 Announcements 125 Travel 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted Y 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 310 Computers 315 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 438 Sublease 400s Real Estate BUSINESS 500s Services 500s Services 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised this newspaper are available on an on-call opportunity basis. tation or discrimination." Y Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference', limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status on national origin, or an intention, to make any suit of preference, tim 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements WANTED: Caucasian 'emale, 21-34 years old for oocyte (egg) donation through a Wichita donation site. Must have red auburn hair; brown, green or hazel eyes and some college experience. Financial compensation provided Write to RJE, cio PMB #119, 13505 S. Mur-Len, Suite 105, Olivia, KS 68062-1600 F 205 - Help Wanted --- Marks JEWELERS Associate Director of Adult Education Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 markinsc@swbell.net Quality Jewelers Since 1880 130-Entertainment The Kansas Board of Regents seeks an Associate Director of Adult Education to provide technical assistance with the Adult Education data collection system and to serve as the State Administrator of Kansas GED Testing. Minimum requirements include a graduate degree and at least three years of full-time professional experience in teaching or administration, experience in data systems development and administration, and fluency with major statistical packages. I Men and Women Dance lessons: ballroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7 p.m. followed by public dance 9:12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy 1117 Mass 331-2272 200s Employment Happy Birthday Exciting dancers immediate hire. Great tipe world-class gentlemen's club. 785-766 7000 or 1-785-221-5900 205 - Help Wanted kansan.com 31 话 Send letter of application, current vita copies of postsecondary education transcripts, and contact information (names, titles, e-mail addresses, business addresses, and business telephone numbers) of three references. Confidentiality of all applicant materials will be maintained. References will be contacted only after obtaining permission from the candidate. All materials should be sent to the Human Resources Office of the Kansas Board of Regents, preferably as a MS Word attachment to 611H@kbsn.org or otherwise in hard copy to 1000 SW Jackson Street, Suite 520, Topika, Kansas 64612-1368. Review of applications will begin April 29, 2003 and continue until the position is filled. The Kansas Board of Regents is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. F 120 - Announcements BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours. great pay. Gall 1-800-808-0082 ext 1422 Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions Call 1-800-293-3685 ext. 531 Heart of America Photography is seeking 12-14 full/part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season. April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment! Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7109 or drop by 2449 Iowa. St. J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGees EOE. Wanted for top rated local cover dance band all styles. C785-784-3649 BASS PLAYER EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER Ir Fraternities • Sororites • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program it works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 932-3235, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com 205 - Help Wanted 120 - Announcemenus Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 9-5 Mon-Sat, 811 New Hampshire. HAPPY HOLIDAYS Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOKING FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED, PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUS! CALL NOW 785-865-0550. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Com- bine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-843-7490, evenings. Hundreds of partner positions available. No experience necessary. Students welcomed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277-9787. www.collegepro.com **MOVIE EXTRAS; MODELS NEEDED** Earn up to $150 - 450-day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277 ex.1020 Nanny for 3 girls, ages 6-12 for summer Monday, Tuesday, & Thursday approx 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Send resume to Brian Crandon, 1015 Mass. Lawrence 86944 SUMMER INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. Apply online at www.pligimage.com/intern.htm Average Rep makes $12-15/hr. Up to $1 Raise and full Medical & Dental Ins. after 90 days. JOIN OUR TEAM! Hours Morn- day-Friday 4 pm. Please call & ask for Ann Or fax resume to 785-542+ 5611 AMERIQUE WATER COMPANY 785-542-5600 Spring Break was awesome! STS America #1 *Student Tour Operator* is now hiring with repas for 2003-4 1-800-648-8494 www.stsavtravel.com Spring Break was awesome! 130 - Entertainment 205 - Help Wanted Preferred Qualifications: Available to work on a long-term basis (including over the summer and holiday breaks) is preferred. Previous work experience using standard office machines, personal computer, and software such as Microsoft Word, Access and Excel is preferred. Hourly Rate & Other Information: This is a part-time position (20-hours per week, except as noted below) Starting pay rate is from $7.00 to $8.00 per dependent on qualifications/experience. This is a potential long-term employment opportunity, since we have an ongoing-long-term need for a Student Assistant. During the period of the summer break, the student assistant may be offered the opportunity to work up to 40-hours per week. Required Qualifications: Candidates should have valid state Driver's License, be reliable, and be available to work 20 hours per week (Monday through Friday) anytime between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. starting on or before 5/19/03. This position requires a high level of accuracy, attention to detail, strong work ethic, and good verbal & written communication skills. Job Description: This ongoing part-time student position will provide support services for the KU Center for Research Budget & Employment Services staff by filing, sorting making photocopies, retrieving specific documents from files, verifying authorized signatures, creating and/or modifying Microsoft Word, Access or Excel computer files, assisting visitors at our reception desk and/or service counter, drive company vehicle to deliver and pick up documents on campus, and perform other duties as assigned. How to Apply: Go to Youngberg Hall (2385 Irving Hill Rd.) between 8:00 AM and 4:30 PM (M-F) and contact the receptionist on the 1st floor. Then complete the application form. Review of applications will begin 4/28/03. Summer to remember in woods of Maine. Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6/18-8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call 914-835-5800. 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan www.greatcampjobs.com Celebrate your graduation with Jacks! 130 - Entertainment 1800 E. 23rd St. In the 10 Marketplace 205 - Help Wanted Make your reservation or catering arrangements Now! OFFICE HELP NEEDED Happy Family Personal Care attendant jobs available for the summer. Flexible schedule, no experience needed. $9/hr. 20-40 hrs/wk * nights. Must have own transportation. For info call 218-7053, leave message. After-Class workout. First-Class pay. Part-time office help needed (approx. 20, hours per week, Monday-Friday, 1 PM -5 PM). Duties include answering phones, lit- ing, data entry & customer service. Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Availar. FO Box 3487. Lawrence KS 66046. Attention Tracy EOE. 832-2030 Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 FedEx Ground - Weekly paycheck - Tuition Assistance - $ .25 raise every 90 days for a year - 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week - $10-11/hr starting pay - $100 new hire bonus - Need ability to load, unload, and sort packages. SET UP JACKS THE MUSIC BAND & COSTUME FOOTBALL CLUB - paid vacations and holidays X 305 - For Sale 300s Merchandise 360 - Miscellaneous S Available August; Tiny studio apartment in renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C, 17th and Vermont No pets. $355/month. Call 841-1074 Cars from $500. Police impounds! Honda, Chevy and more! For listings http://www.801-339-3323.com/4665 CDs, games, and movies. CHEAP! @ www.objtused.com. $ $ $ $ $ $ Recycle Your Kansan 400s Real Estate 340 - Auto Sales 405 - Apartments for Rent 1, 2 & 3 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings. 5425-850. 841-3633. 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580; 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670; walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no parts, available August. Call Bo @ 843-400-3691 汽车之家 340 - Auto Sales CAR CROSSING COUNTRY HILL MOTORS INC 98 Mitzu Spyder S8950 97 Sebring Conv $6950 SPRING STUDENT SPRING STUDENT - 00 Pontiac Sunfire $3950 96 Ford Mustang Conv. $5950 SALE! 95 Honda Civic DX $4850 92 Ford Muslong Conv. S4250 97 Honda Civic EX S6995 95 Hondo Chu DY $4B50 93 Hondo Accord SE S4850 1/2 Block East of I-35 on Johnson Drive in KC WWW.COUNTRYHPLL.COM 913-645-7966 Ask for Danny and get a student discount visit our website for more info on these and other ads in show Find it, Sell it, Buy it in the Kansan Classifieds --- MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B 405 - Apartments for Rent --- 1712 OHIO Avail. Aug, 1, Large newer 3&4 BR apt. DW, CA, micro, laundry on site, 3&4 BR BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 5333 www.appartmentslawrence.com 2, 3, and 4 BR apartments and townhouses. Very close to campus Available August. Call 913-441-4169 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, PS, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Vice nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus rite, laundry facility. Call 843-001-01 1. BR apt, FR, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances, WD hook up, Very nice, No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-8907. 1.2.3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. August Available 1st: 841-6254 Avail. Aug. Cute 1 bedroom apt! In renovated old house 1300 bk. Verm. Mont. Wood floors, great closets, window A/C, ceiling fan, antique tub. No pets. $440 mo. Call 841-1074. Avail Aug. Nice 2 BR apartment in renovated older house. 10 month lease. Wood floors, ceiling fans, window A/C. 10th & NY. No pets. $499. Cali B41-1074-01. Aug. Avg. Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BRL, 8 WA, BD, W/D, CA balcony, 9th & Emergy, No smoking/pets $590 + utilities. Call 550-1181 or 841-3192. CLOSE TO CAMPUS, 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 BL Arkansas, 843-4090. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870; 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-409-800. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cashie Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling: **Features include:** Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwavees Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $580 On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841.5533 HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 1, 2, 3. Bedroom Washer/Dryer Fireplace Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa THE LEGENDS NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2.3 & A BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY WESER AND DRIVER IN EVERYWAY BEACH ENTRY PACK WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY GUESS HOME GAME. COMPUTER & CRFT ROOM SUNLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERFACE (785) 856-5800 405 - Apartments for Rent SAN FRANCISCO Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $480/570. All appliances, ample parking, on-site laundry Call 843-4090 Need a place to live next year? LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - car ports - full size washer/dryer - approx. 1600 sq feet Williams Pointe Townhomes - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - full size washer/ dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) - 1421 sq feet Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Early Bird Special Going on Now For More Info Call 312-7942 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. $0 savings on select units with new 12 month lease. Some with fireplaces and Garages W/D,all appliances OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Washer/Dryer Alarm System Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs, basketball court, fitness center and gated entrance. Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Fully Equipped Kitchen Briarwood pool, fitness Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) www.tuckawaymgmt.com call 838-3377 405 - Apartments for Rent Avail, Aug; Small 1 BR apt. in renovated older house, 9th & Mississippi. Wood floors, ceiling fan, window A/C, DW, no pets; $450; Call 841-1074 Excellent location, 1341 Ohio/1104 Tennesse. 2. BR in 4 plex. C/A, D/W, WD hook-ups. $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1. No pets. Cat 842-4242 Avail. May, June, or Aug. Very nice remodeled studio and 1 bedroom apts. close to campus. No pets/m smoking. Starting at $380.Call 550-8111 or 841-3192. Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath, W/D, fireplace, kitchen appli, garage/operner, no pet. Subsite 61-7/311 $650, 766-5080 VILLAGE SQUARE apartments close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route Now Leasing! A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 phone: 842-3040.net 1301 W.24th &Naismit 842-5111 colony@ixks.com www.colonywoods.com COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 - 1&2Bedrooms M-F 10-8 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Indoor/Outdoor Pool - Exercise Room -3Hot Tubs M-F10-6 - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall HOLIDAY NICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON GATE MANAGEMENT 1,2,&3 EASTERN SHORE 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MONDAY 9A LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME CHASE COURT Bedroom Apartments Great 3BR's 405 - Apartments for Rent 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.theforkrun.com Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday, Call 841-3800. Nearly new 3BR tripleplex in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities $955-1050, NOVE 841-5533. A two-story industrial building with large windows and a flat roof. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. 420 - Real Estate For Sale 405 - Apartments for Rent PARKWAY COMMONS - Small Pet Welcome - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Financial - Spacious, Luxury Apts - All appls. + W/D - Water paid - 6 mo. leases avail. FOX RUN - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Washer/Dryer - On KU Bus Route - Washer/Dryer 1 Bedroom Specials Avail. - Fitness Center JEFFERSON COMMONS 843-8220 Blue Mosa Management Sdn Now leasing for fall 2003 - Washer/ Dryer -Townhomes - Individual Leases - Cable plus HBO - Resort-style Pool Plaza - 24 hour Fitness Facility - On KIU route www.firstmanagementinc.com Model Open Dailv - Security Systems - Garages Available $600-$600 $615-$805 ◆ Washer & Dryer ◆ Fully Equipped Kitchen ◆ Serving Bar West Town Homes town Homes SQUAL BORING NPW2017 Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Curacy at an Affordable Price Call 840.9467 for an appointment - Fitness Center - Basketball Court Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! Open House 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 ing for Fall 1942 STEWART AVE. You've heard the name. You've heard it's the place to live... - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments 405 - Apartments for Rent Stop by and find out for yourself! - Washer/Dryer in each unit - Internet access in each room - Tanning Bed - Computer Center L 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 www.jeffersoncommons.com Located just behind SuperTarget - 1, 2; 3 Bedroom - Pool 842-0032 early leg up perfect - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom - Digital Cable & Internet - Great Location Near Campus - Reasonable Rates NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED West Hills Models Open Daily Apartments Lorimar Townhomes 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Monday - Friday 1:00-5:00 Lorimar & Courtside Townhomes *Washer/Dryers* *Dishwashers* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Fireplaces* *Ceiling Fans* 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 talk about maps by! flipllexes! Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes - *Wather/Dryers* * *Dishwashers* * *Microwaves* * *Patios* * *Gas Fireplaces* * *Cafes Fans* 4100 Clinton Parkway For More Info: 785-841-7849 405 - Apartments for Rent Moving to Wichita? If you are graduating or working an internship. Quality Apartments. At Affordable Prices. Flexible lease terms. Studies and 1 bedrooms. Start at $265 & $295. Amidon Place Apts. 2727 Amidon. 838-8302 Save Your Money! Now signing *1 YR.* Leases starting May June/July/Aug. No smoking pets, Extra nice, well-leapt 2 BR apts. Oui, all appliances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/month. Spanish Creed Crest 841-8686. Canyon Court Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Briarstone Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. Washer/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. 700 Comet Lane Now Leasing for Spring 2003 *1. 2 Bdrm *Washer/Dryer *Swimming Pool & Hot Tub *Fitness Center *Basketball Court *Garages Available *High Speed Internet Connections *Security Systems Available *Small Pet Welcome Brand New Luxury Apartments 842-3280 SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic on 6th St) - Luxurious 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Townhomes - Swimming Pool - Garages; wd Hookups * Microwave Ovens * Some with Fireplaces * On KU Bus Route - Tennis Courts 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 OPEN: MON - FRI 10-12 & 1-5 MASTERCRAFT WALKTO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 + Hanover Place 14th & Mass841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Regents Court Regents Court 19th & Mass·749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 0th & Arkansas·749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 410 - Condos For Rent للتوصيل Very nice condo. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 per person. Call Eli at 841-4470. 415 - Homes For Rent 415 - Homes For Rent --- 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Eldridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained. 2-car garage, dishwasher, W.D, AC, 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/mo. Call 842-1760 13 a.m. - b.p. 842-3556. Village 4 BR, 2 1/2 BA, great area, large deck, fenced yard, 2 car garage, family room, DW, AC, hookups, many fans, attic fan. No dogs. $1000/m. Avail. August 1. 842- 1376 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. or 842-3556 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jacuzzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fenced landscaped back yard. $1450-841-3633 anytime. BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 ullities. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 or 766-6662 from 6:30-10 p.m. 420- Real Estate For Sale House for Rent 4BR / 1 Bath CAWD Included. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1150/mi. 218-4113 430 - Roommate Wanted **Moving to KC?** Kea a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24/hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbeatable at 105k. Call 913-528-5360. Realty Exec. Female Graduate Student seeking non- smoking roomate to share quiet 2 BR 1 BA apt. Starting August, fst. $260/mo. plus utilities. Call 766-6528. Female Roommate Needed For 3 BR, 1 BA house / N/S. No Pets. Close to Campus $275/m + 1/3 ubls. Avail Aug 1 Call 911-583-3571 2after 6. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 843-5540. Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, WD and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2 utility Aug 842-4540. 440 - Sublease 1 bedroom apartment. 16th & Tennessee. No smoking, no pets. Summer sublease Rent negotiable. Call Kristina at 393-1549 Property Logo 1 bedroom at 527 California. Washerdryer. Nice neighborhood. Call 841 5533 for information. 1 BR in 4 BR apartment. Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool. $370/mo. Leave message 785-691-9048 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail. mid May and Aug. 1, Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. 3 bedroom, 2 bath Washer/dryer, dishwasher, central air. Available mid-May or June tst Call 218-7736 Subleasers needed, new 4 BR town- house, 3 BA, 2 car garage, W/D, rent $312.50, lease through July 31, 816-520- 6421 or 636-578-3505 or 620-340-3273. 40 MBA students need summer subleases for July. If interested e-mail italy03@ku.edu. : Female to sublease bedroom in 2 BR apt. $240 + low utility. May 1-7? Balcony views the stadium. Free cable. 312-9390 Need subleaser to live w/ 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent.paid.Call 785-830-8003 Summer Sublease. Furnished 1 BD on Mass St. Wood floors, lots of natural light. $350 plus utilities. Call 830-9104. TECHNICAL DESK 500s Services TRAFFIC-DUIT-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matters/Residency issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 510 - Child Care Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233. kensan.com 8B *THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS MONDAY,APRIL21,2003 IT’S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. 7th & Hortida 911-525-3888 SUNDANCE We have a dedicated team of professionals who know how to make your apartment feel like home. Our office is located on KU bus route 422 and we have an emergency minute watch system that keeps residents open daily. Regents Court Vacation Homes for Your Water, Air, Cleaner and Air Quality Needs Wonderful Water, Air and Cleaner Facilities Low Amenities and Premium Services Great Location with Scenic Views EHO Orchard Corners 15th & Kaveld Now Leasing! Models open daily Running on water KANSAS KANSAS RELAYS 1061 Kansas' Dan Ferguson splashes through the water obstacle during the 3,000-meter steeplechase Saturday at the Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium. The sophomore finished fifth with a time of 9:38.14. AndySamuelson/Kansan Iowa State football prepares for season By Josh Madden By Josh Madden iowa State Daily via U-wire iowa State University AMES, Iowa — Winning may not be a major concern for the Iowa State football players at this weekend's annual spring football scrimmage, but one thing is: making the starting squad come fall. With Seneca Wallace gone, the question on people's mind this spring is who will play quarterback for the Cyclones. ISU head football coach Dan McCarney said the position was still wide open, but the spring game would have some bearing on his final decision. "This game will be a factor in determining a quarterback, but not a big one." McCarney said. "As close as it's been all year and with Waye Terry not even being in the mix with a broken thumb, whoever comes out of this game on top will have an edge, but it'll be a slight edge." McCarney will even split playing time at quarterback on the first string offense between senior Chris Love in the first half and freshman Austin Flynn in the second half. "IHiawatha's our starting running back going into the spring game. He's earned it," McCarney said. "Running back's a really healthy position for us, but he's our starter." "The competitiveness of this team is very impressive," McCarney said. "I love the way they come to work every day." "That's how close it is," he said. Another position that has had some competition this spring is running back, but as of now McCarney has a starter — last year's leading rusher, Hiawatha Rutland. Something McCarney has On the whole, McCarney feels great about how his team looks heading into this weekend's game. noticed in spring practice is how well his team has improved over the off-season, especially defensively. "Work ethic has been great, the attitude's fantastic, the seven or eight starters on defense that came back have all played really well and our secondary's the best it's ever been," McCarney said. "There's only a handful of guys that haven't improved." Senior defensive lineman Jordan Carstens said one of the things the defense had been working on this spring was stopping the running game. "We've also improved on our red zone and short yardage situations — times where we need big stops," Carstens said. "I think we've really come up big this spring." Another thing McCarney is looking for in the spring scrimimage is guys who will step up and take control of the team. "We've lost some real impact players like Seneca Wallace and Jeremy Loyd, but for the most part, most of the team is back and those kids have really stepped it up." McCarmey said. McCarney said he would treat this game just like a practice in that every player would be under constant watch. "It will be our final evaluation this spring. We'll be checking every play." McCarney said. "We'll make our final decisions on our starting 11 after the spring game." Even though winning or losing is not really a concern, McCarney wants the same things out of this game that he would any other. "We want a clean game without a bunch of penalties or turnovers. I don't want to come out there sloppin' around," McCarney said. "I want to look like a Big 12 program that's won 23 games over the last three years, and a team that's ready to win a lot more games next year." Tuesday April 22, 2003 Vol.113. Issue No.139 Today's weather 67° Tonight: 47° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Feathers fly as Missouri Tigers maul Jayhawk softball team p. 1B K Kaen Self named eighth coach By Doyle Murphy dmurphy@kansan.com Kansas senior sportswriter The worst-kept secret in Lawrence is out: Bill Self is the new coach of the Kansas men's basketball team. Confirming reports published yesterday and Sunday, Chancellor Robert Hemenway introduced the 40-year-old former Illinois coach as the eighth coach of the Jayhawks. Self addressed a crowd of almost 300 supporters and members of the media in his first public appearance at John Hadl Auditorium since taking the job. SELF'S COACHING HISTORY Not only does Self get an office on the famous road near Allen Fieldhouse, he gets to return to the place where his coaching career began. After concluding his playing career at Oklahoma "I woke up this morning," Self said. "And I'm driving to the office and on purpose I drove up Naismith Drive, and you know, I've always thought 'How cool would it be to office on Naismith Drive?' and now it actually gets to happen." 1985-86 University of Kansas Assistant to coach Larry Brown Coach of the Kansas junior varsity team. Team went 12-7 with Self at the helm. 1987-93 Oklahoma State University Assistant at his alma mater. Assistant at his aide mate. In his seven years at Oklahoma State, the Cowboys saw postseason play five times. Three in the NCAA Tournament and twice in the NIT. 1994-97 Oral Roberts University University Became coach of Oral Roberts University on March 8, 1993 Took Golden Eagles to the NIT in 1997 1998-2000 University of Tulsa Became coach of University of Tulsa on July 3,1997 Self was named the Don Haskins Western Athletic Conference Coach of the Year in his second year at Tulsa. Tulsa made an appearance in the Elite Eight 2000, and sat a school record for victories in a season. State, Self came to Lawrence to coach at former Kansas camp Larry Brown's basketball camp. Self injured his knee at the camp. In 2000 Self won the John and Nellie Wooden National Coach of the Year and was named National Coach of the Year by The Sporting News. 2000-02 — University of Illinois Became Illinois' 15th head coach on June 9, 2000 The Illini won the 2001 & 2002 Big Ten Championships. The first back-to-back title seasons for the school since 1951-52 Illinois was seed No. 1 in the 2001 NCAA Tournament. The Illini went on to the Elite Eight Work. Work. **Led Illinois to a Sweet Sixteen** berth in the 2002 NCAA Tournament. SEE NEW COACH ON PAGE 12A but continued to work with campers. His determination impr Kansas Jayhawk Basketball Head Coach Bill Self The University of Kansas Eric Braem/Kansan Bill Self responds to questions during the press conference introducing him as the Jayhawks' new men's basketball coach at John Hadl Auditorium. The ex-Illini served as an assistant during Kansas coach Larry Brown's administration. the silent Lack of symptoms, social stigma force many into shadows By Nikki Overtail novertail@kansan.com Kouwan staff writer Illustrations by Emily Elmore and Neil Mulke The disease is as silent as many of the women who have it. Chlamydia is the most frequently reported infectious disease in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but many who have it never know these fourths of infected women have no symptoms. What's more, "Students think 'I must be a bad person if I have an STD,'" said Myra Strother, associate director and chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, 1200 Schwegler Drive. Most of the students Strother sees are open about being sexually active, but less open when it comes to STDs. That shouldn't be the ease, Strother said, because often students can get an STD and only have one partner. "The medical community doesn't see STDs as a label, with seeing so much of it," she said. "But it will may be them for students, and it shouldn't be that way." Despite the view that a person has to be "legible and easy to get an STD, multiple partners are not a necessity to acquire a sexually transmitted disease," she said. "All it takes is that one-time contact." Strother said. "It could be the one experience they have." College students are at high risk "Because it is asymptomatic, you end up with quite a few young women who have always been in what they consider very monogamous relationships and very careful coming up with surprised about it." This is the reason we been giving the option of annual pelvic exams, or Pap tests, for the past 15 years. By Nikki Overfein novafem@okansan.com Kansas staff writer Illustrations by Emily Limore and Neil Mulke The disease is as silent as many of the women who have it. Chlamydia is the most frequently reported infectious disease in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but many who have it never known three-tourth of infected women have no symptoms. What's more, the disease has amydia ne silent Epidemic a stigma. "Students think 'I must be a bad person if I have an STD.'" said Myta Strother, associate director and chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, 1260 Schweiger Drive. Most of the students Strother sees are open about being sexually active, but less open when it comes to STDs. That shouldn't be the case. Strother said, often students STD and further com- College students are at high risk for the disease. Strother said. Governor safeguards sex course Gov. Kathleen Sebelius decided late yesterday afternoon to veto the amendment to the state budget that targets funding to the University's "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life" class. The amendment, introduced on March 26 by Republican By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Sen. Susan Wagle, of Wichita, aimed to eliminate "obscene material" in the class taught by Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare. Nicole Corcoran, the governor's spokeswoman, said Sebelius had veted Sebelius M. JOAN PATRICIA BURNS the Board of Regents proviso in its entirety. "In a democracy, academic freedom in higher education is essential," Sebelius said in a press release. "Nevertheless, every institution of higher learning in Kansas has an obligation to exercise its academic freedom responsibly. "Therefore, I veto the above proviso as an inappropriate use of legislative powers designed to impinge --- Dailey upon academic freedom in the state of Kansas," she said. Dailey said he didn't want to comment until after the amendment had run its course. The governor's veto could still be overturned by a two-thirds majority vote by the Legislature. The Senate approved the amendment 24 to 13. SEE SAFEGUARD ON PAGE 12A R --- 1 TUESDAY, APRIL22, 2003 2A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN * 3A The Inside Front TUESDAY,APRIL 22,2003 News briefs Local author reads poetry in Kansas Union David Malone, an Olathe native, will be reading a selection of his poems from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Oread Books in the Kansas Union. The reading is in conjunction with National Poetry Month in April. "We're familiar with his work, and we carry his two books." said Lisa Eitner, supervisor of Oread Books. "With his local connection, he just seemed like a good fit for an event here." Malone received a bachelor's degree from Ottawa University and a master's degree from Indiana State University. He teaches at Southwest Missouri State University-West Plains. Malone has two published collections, Poems to Love & the Body and Under the Sycamore. His poetry has appeared in numerous literary journals including Red Booth Review and Potpourri. The event is free and open to the public. —Lauren Bristow Students, graduates win National fellowships Seven University of Kansas students and graduates have won National Science Fellowships. The winners include: Sarah Heimovics, Fairway Irene Karel, New Brunswick, N.J. Ryan Kinser, Oklahoma City Katie Mitchell-Koch, Wichita Megan Sumpter, Madisonville, Iowa Iowa Ian Tice, Tecumseh, N.Y. Ian Hice, leeuwman.ai Christina Vizcarra, Leawood Out of 900 selected for the high prestigious award, the University is lucky to have seven, said John Augusto, assistant dean of graduate school. "There are only a few amounts give out every year. It speaks very highly of the quality of the undergraduate research at KU," Augusto said. Each recipient receives a total of $114,000 for three years of graduate study. —Amy Potter Book collecting finalists to be acknowledged today The 47th Snyder Book Collecting Contest will honor its eight finalists in a ceremony at 3 p.m. today at Oread Books in the Kansas Union. The contest is divided into two divisions — Undergraduate and Graduate. The finalists in the Undergraduate division are Lawrence seniors Sarah Lafferty and Amy Miller; Jason Sachse, Leavenworth sophomore; and Parkville Mo., senior Jennifer Sweeton. The finalists in the Graduate division are Lawrence doctoral student Adrienne Harris Boggess; Lawrence graduate student Joel Boggess; Greece doctoral student, Stylianos Chatzimanolis, Irakilo, Crete; and Shawnee doctoral student Amy Fowler. The winner of each division receives a $600 prize and a $100 gift certificate from the KU Bookstores. Second-place winners receive a $400 prize and a $50 gift certificate, while honorable mentions will receive a $100 prize and a $25 gift certificate. Some of the collections from the finalists include, "Humanitarians Cry Foul: Literature Published in the Wake of the Congo Reform Movement," "Entomological Literature with a Special Reference to Beetles" and "Personal Histories of World War II." All of the finalists' collections will be on display at Oread books during the ceremony. The public is invited to attend. NATION Man pleads innocent to killing wife, unborn son MODESTO, Calif. — Scott Peterson pleaded innocent yesterday to killing his pregnant wife and unborn son, as the district attorney filed murder charges and said he would probably seek the death penalty. "I am not guilty," a clean-shaven Peterson said during a brief arraignment in Stanislaus County Superior Court. Prosecutors filed the murder charges hours before Peterson, 30, appeared in the Modesto courtroom. In the filing, District Attorney James Brazelton said Peterson acted "intentionally, deliberately and with premeditation" in killing 27-year-old Laci Peterson and Conner Peterson, the couple's unborn child. Their bodies washed ashore last week about three miles from where Peterson said he was fishing in San Francisco Bay when his wife — who was eight months pregnant — vanished just before Christmas. "It's hard for me to realistically believe it is anything but a death penalty case at this time," Brazelton told ABC News. Brazelton didn't return messages left yesterday by The Associated Press. The charges against Peterson include the special circumstance that he committed more than one murder, allowing the district attorney to seek the death penalty. California law permits a murder charge for a fetus if a pregnant woman is slain, even if the fetus is not viable, said Hallye Jordan, representative for the state attorney general. The law has been on the books for about 30 years. Documents filed by prosecutors said the killings happened at the Petersons' home in Modesto between Dec. 23 and Dec. 24. The Associated Press Camera on KU Employer debate benefits new backs of decision plan To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Jared Soares/Kansan Jon Stuart, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, delivers a speech about President Bush's role in the war against terrorism. Stuart's Speaker-Audience Communication class held an open forum, "The War on Terror," last night in the Big 12 Room of the Kansas Union. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalandar.com Stephen Floor will give a cosmology seminar on "Ellipticity Evolution of Simulated Galaxy Clusters" at 12:30 p.m. today at Room 1089 in Malott Hall.Call 864-4626. Jennifer Thibodeaux of the history department will give a lecture on "Patriarchy and the Exchange of Power; Case Studies from the Lives of 13th Century Norman Clerics" from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the Hall Center for the Humanities. Call 864-4798. Aminata Diaw of the University of Cheikh Anta Diop will give an African studies seminar on "Senegalese Women between Positive Law and Islam" from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union, Call 864-1064. James Kunstler, Bruce Plenk and Stacey White will lead a discussion on the past and future of development in Lawrence from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. today at Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Call 812-3170. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will practice from 5:30 p.m. to 7 tonight in 207 Robinson. Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. - University Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:00 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Rick Clock at 841-3148 Terence E. Downer will give a Walter S. Sutton lecture on "Working in an Ethically Driven Company: Johnson & Johnson" at 7:00 tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Call 864-2265. The KU Karate Kobudo Club will practice from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 tonight at St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422. Author James Howard Kunstler will give a lecture on "The Paving of America" from 8 p.m. to 10:30 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Call 812-3170. ON THE RECORD A 20-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged his 1988 Honda Civic and took his Alpine stereo and compact discs sometime between 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Thursday in the 400 block of West 14th Street, according to reports. The loss was estimated at $400. Et Cetera A 24-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone stole his 2001 Yamaha scooter sometime between 2:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. April 12 in the 900 block of Massachusetts Street, according to reports. The scooter was valued at $1,300. A 39-year-old KU employee from 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 86045. the department of communication studies told the KU Public Safety Office that someone took three-way computer speakers from Bailey Hall,1440 Jayhawk Blvd.,sometime between 5 p.m. April 11 and 8:30 a.m. April 14 according to reports. The speakers were valued at $200. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form The University Daily Kanan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 68045 filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansen. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Sunrise Terrace Apartments Available Fall Tan - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ Two Story, and Two baths - Balcony / Decks w/ view - Some with w/d's - Digital Cable Ready *On Site Laundry STUDENT The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H--P 841-5797 Call to view IF YOU COME, WE WILL BUILD IT. Chipotle BURRITO OF DREAMS. 9TH & MASS TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Medical marijuana user speaks about treatment By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer A day following April 20, or 4-20, a number associated with marijuana use, George McMahon spoke on campus about his involvement with medical marijuana. McMahon is one of only five patients left in the nation who have been approved to use marijuana legally through a little-known Food and Drug Administration program called Investigational New Drug. McMahon was the recipient of the National Certificate of Heroism for his participation in the President's Drug Awareness Program signed by Nancy Reagan in 1990. He receives 300 marijuana cigarettes a month at no cost from the government. "When my marijuana is good I can ride my bicycle. All thank you to Uncle Sam." said McMahon as he showed his government-issued marijuana to the audience. McMahon uses the marijuana to treat his rare genetic disorder, Nail Patella Syndrome, which causes bone deformities, immune system dysfunction and renal failure. Throughout his life McMahon has gone through 19 major surgeries and has been prescribed morphine, Demerol, Valium, codeine and other medications to deal with his illness. "By the age of 14 I was addicted to prescribed morphine," McMahon said. "When I started smoking I noticed "We are not prohibiting anyone from coming to speak on campus. We just want written proof that he is allowed to possess or smoke marijuana legally." improvement in my condition. The only side effects would be that I would get the munchies, which is good — otherwise I'll lose a lot of weight." Lt. Schuyler Bailey KU Public Safety Office A crowd of about 75 people listened to the presentation at 7 yesterday night at room 303 in Strong Hall. The presentation, which included videos about the governmental program, was sponsored by the KU Students for a Sensible Drug Policy. With his involvement with the FDA, McMahon is allowed to smoke legally in every state. He said he didn't run into problems with law enforcement officials. "The law enforcement officials are actually quite encouraging." McMahon said. McMahon almost had to deal with the KU Public Safety Office when they learned of his upcoming speech at a University Events meeting last week. "We are not prohibiting anyone from coming to speak on campus," said Lt. Schuyler Bailey from the KU Public Safety Office last Friday. "We just want written proof that he is allowed to possess or smoke marijuana legally." Chase Cookson, Wichita junior and president of KU Students for a Sensible Drug Policy, said that it was difficult to provide proof. Cookson then got on the Internet and spread word of the situation. "We had the national chapter align all the organizations and the ACLU was very interested in it and hiring a lawyer was mentioned," Cookson said. "Within five hours word got out and people from all over the country began giving Lt. Bailey a call." Cookson said that he had talked to someone at the Drug Enforcement Administration who acknowledged McMahon's involvement with the program. Cookson said the KU Public Safety Office decided Friday night that the speech would go on as scheduled and would accept documentation upon McMahon's arrival. "This man has spoken on national television and universities all across the country," Cookson said. "It irks me that they were treating this man like a criminal." Willy Madel, Lawrence sophomore, was glad the KU Public Safety Office allowed him to come. "I think its great," Madel said. "We need more people like him to tell the other side." —Edited by Andrew Ward Employees debate benefits, drawbacks of developing plan State employees to vote soon on joining University payroll By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansas staff writer The University may be adding a new set of employees to its payroll. Classified staff members, such as secretaries, custodians, librarians, maintenance workers and administrative assistants, employed by the State of Kansas will begin voting tomorrow to become employees of the University. Some classified employees are voicing their objections through the Coalition Against Alternatives to Civil Service through letters and e-mails to Gov. Kathleen Sebelius. Not all of the employees are up for the switch. At a meeting Friday afternoon, George Cone, assistant director of Facilities Operations encouraged classified employees to let their voice be heard through their vote. "Don't be apathetic," he said. "Vote. Please vote. How you each vote is your business. Just vote." Lindy Eakin, vice provost for scholarly support, said the alternative was proposed because the University had no control over how it paid classified staff. "Let us design the rules that fit our institution and our campus rather than have someone else designing rules that fit every agency in the state." Part of the current proposal would use a portion of the $8.7 million in tuition funds to increase classified staff salaries. There are no absolute guarantees this would happen because the plans are still preliminary. Eakin said. Even with promises of a pay raise, Glennett Corel, facilities and operations employee, is not convinced the switch would be better for classified staff. She is concerned about the ambiguous language of the proposal. "My problem is with the mays, shoulds, coulds. They are making promises they can't keep based on tuition," Corel said. Ola Faucher, director of human resources, said the reason for the ambiguous language was because the current plans were only proposals. The plans must go through at least two more steps of approval before anything can be guaranteed. "Nowadays you are never 100 percent assured you can promise money," she said. "Our intention is clear. We intend to do what we say." Mike Burke, facilities and operations employee, said the priority of the University was teaching and research. He said he was afraid employees would come into conflict with those goals. "Whenever projects and personal salaries come up against doing their job are they going to take our side over education and research? No. The employee comes in last." Burke said. "Whenever projects and personal salaries come up against doing their job are they going to take our side over education and research? No. The employee comes in last." Mike Burke Facilities operations employee Ballots are due back to the University Governance Office on May 5. A committee from Classified Senate will tally the votes. The next step is to seek approval from the Board of Regents, if a majority votes yes. The Kansas legislature would make the final decision, Faucher said. Jay Stewart, facilities and operations staff, said his number one concern was job security. He doesn't trust the University. "They can do anything they want. They can hire and fire you if economic times get bad," Stewart said. Cone, who has worked at the University for five years, said he had to join in the effort to oppose the alternative solution because he wanted to protect the well-being of the people who worked for him. "It's called caring for them and I'm a very proud state worker," Cone said. Edited by Andrew Ward PRIDE WEEK EVENTS 2003 SPONSORED BY QUEERS AND ALLIES MONDAY: PRIDE WEEK KICKOFF 10:00 AM Wescoe Beach SPEAKERS BUREAU OPEN FORUM 7:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union TUESDAY: QUEER MOVIE: BETTER THAN CHOCOLATE 7:30 PM Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union WEDNESDAY: BROWN BAG DIVERSITY SERIES: CHRISTINE ROBINSON: SODOMY LAWS 12 noon Multicultural Resource Center THURSDAY: BISEXUALITY 101: ROBYN OCHS 7:30 PM Malott Room, Kansas Union FRIDAY: TENTH ANNUAL BROWN BAG DRAG SHOW 12 noon Kansas Union Front Plaza COMEDIAN: DEIDRE SULLIVAN 8:00 PM Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union SATURDAY: sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Coca-Cola Learning Through DINOROSITY Multicultural Resource Center Coca-Cola Coca-Cola Learning Through DINEOSIT Multicultural Resource Center Student Development Center Learning Through DIVERSEY Multinational Resource Center PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 11:00 AM Watson Park along Massachusetts to South Park PAUL SIEGEL: WHY QUEER RIGHTS IS A FREE SPEECH ISSUE 2:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union QUEER THEATER 7:30 - 9:00 PM Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union: $2 donation Featuring Crooked Rain PRIDE DANCE 10:00 PM-1:00 AM Ecumenical Christian Ministries:$2 donation Refreshments provided, bring your own drink Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY 中 4A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor editor 864-4584 or khendarson@kansan.com Jenna Goopert and Justin Hening managing editors 864-4584 or jgoopert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers* representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindley Hanson opinion edition 844-4924-3001 amandahanson.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4386 or adaals@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4388 or adaales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 944-765-8200 malcolmgibson.com Matt Fisher Call 864-0500 Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com Free for All Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com Any word on when the Best Buy here opens? Does anyone know when they start hiring? 图 I have long hair, a long beard and sandals. This weekend, my dad took me for a drive and said, "Son, I want you to cut your hair, shave your beard and start wearing real shoes." I told him, "Dad, Jesus had long hair, a long beard and wore sandals," and he pushed me out of the car and said, "Jesus walked, too." 图 Last Monday was one of the crappiest days of my life. My transmission died, Roy left KU, and the girl I wanted to ask out turned me down. I'm sincerely hoping that tomorrow is a much, much better day. 题 图 I think I just saw the ugliest thing ever. It's a Jeep with Missouri plates and a big purple Powercat on the back. I'm driving home from Iowa, and I just passed a car with Mizzou stickers all over it. Should I slam on my brakes and let him hit me, or should I run him off the road so that there's one less Mizzou person in the world? - If my vagina were a Christian school, I would only want heterosexuals teaching there. - Why is there a cow on the fire escape of one of the buildings on Mass. Street? Human Sexuality, as taught by SadoSusan Wagle and Dennis "Dirtyboy" Dailey Neil Mulka and Emily Elmore for The University Daily Kansan EDITORIAL BOARD wall of "torture" ©2 "Bring out the naughty in you" Naughty boys that like dirty pictures deserve punishment. "I'M A NASTYBOY!" Say it, worm, say it! Emily of Neil 4/2013 Legislature's charge of 'obscenity' smacks of censorship, ignorance Dennis Dailey's popular "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life" course has been threatened by the prospect of having to remove sexually explicit images. Thank goodness, because I wouldn't want any of my fellow adult students at the University of Kansas to stumble across something as filthy and perverse to the morals of Kansans as a picture of genitalia. Apparently sexual information has no place in Budig Hall; students have to drive a mile down the road to Priscilla's. Never mind that viewing explicit material is never required, or that that the class itself is an elective. Sen. Susan Wagle is at the forefront of the provision, which passed 24-13. Wagle defended the provision with the ridiculous argument that Dailey's porno expenditures were breaking the Kansas budget. That's not exactly how she phrased it, but it seemed like it when she said, "I do not see this as an issue of censorship; it is simply an issue of priorities for state funding." That's why the proviso would potentially withhold $3.1 million from the department of social welfare at the University. SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS nity from the ever-changing whims of the Legislature lies at the heart of democracy. Perhaps the Legislature should predicate funding for foreign languages on the assurance that French won't be taught until it quits using its U.N. veto as much as the United States does. (On a side note, another amendment by the Legislature to bar investment of the state pension fund in French companies failed.) The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. RERUNS OF OUR LIVES The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. The bigger issue, however, is whether Dailey can show material that nearly every college student has seen before. Should the Legislature be able to micromanage the curriculum of its largest university? Higher education's immu- Sebelius said she hoped "that the Legislature doesn't get into deciding curriculum and products for college classes." Yesterday, Sebelius vetoed the provision holding true to her word and securing a victory for academic freedom. The cynical and cheap employment of "Kansas values" is an insulting attempt to justify the intrusion of a political body into public education. If the Legislature can micromanage the curriculum by selectively and interactively withholding funds, then how can one teach something which is politically unpopular without the fear of reprisal$^{19}$ Wagle has said that she hoped Sebelius "doesn't veto it" because, it's "a huge, grass-roots issue." That's an astounding declaration from the Sedgwick county representative in light of the overwhelming support for Dailey in Lawrence and beyond. Sen. David Adkins even suggested the amendment "doesn't really belong in an appropriations bill, but that's where it is." The burning question is: which part of the last-minute amendment to the budget bill makes it "grass-roots?" GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Lenght 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Greg Holmquist for the editorial board E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Apparently the Kansas Legislature, after nicely shoring up the state's budget, has the spare time to tell the University what is of educational value in its classes. As a KU Alumus wrote in a letter to The Topeka-Capital Journal, "How do you expect students in Kansas to graduate with bachelor degrees in sexual psychology if they cannot use visual materials about sex?" In fact the administration, and a host of faculty and students, have proclaimed their support for and educational value of the class Dailey has taught for 20 years. The Lawrence City Commission and the faculty senate at Kansas State University have also voiced their support. Oh, and there's the organization that was at one point delegated to deal with the schools, the Board of Regents. They "unanimously approved a statement urging Gov. Kathleen Sebelius to veto the punitive language," according to the The Associated Press. Wagle has been on record saying, "I just can't imagine being a female and sitting through that class." Interestingly enough, thousands of students have done just that, and Dailey's continually full classes leave Wagle's accusations questionable. Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Stauffer-Flint Don't be mistaken for a moment this is an issue of censorship. The fervent efforts to suggest otherwise are evidence enough. The bill uses the same definition of obscenity that has historically been used to justify censorship. It's a good thing we're assured that it's not a symbolic gesture but instead a fiscally sound decision. READERS' REPRESENTATIVE Cartoon's intentions misinterpreted The tough part about creating satire is that different people can interpret it in positive or negative ways. That's what happened last Friday when The University Daily Kansan ran a cartoon that featured two male students making crude comments about women's breasts. THE NEXT BEST READERS' REPRESENTATIVE To the readers who sent letters to the Kansan, the cartoon was interpreted as being sexist and objectifying to women. However, that was not how the cartoonist and opinion editors — all of whom are women — interpreted the cartoon. What was seen by many as a satire of big-breasted women was actually a satire of stupid, sexist men. Neil Mulka, Leavenworth junior, wrote the cartoon's dialogue after Emily Elmore, Springfield, Mo., junior, drew it. While the cartoon was inspired by a conversation he overheard on Wesco Beach, he said the point of it, from his perspective, was "making fun of these guys for being meatheads." Leah Shaffer readersrep@kansan.com Amanda Sears, opinion editor, found the cartoon to be edgy. But she also The cartoon was trying something new, but its point was not clear enough. That's something that the Kansan can work on. But at the same time, content on the opinion page is going to ruffle some feathers; that's the point of having such a section. On that note, complaints about this semester's opinion page have called the section's editors anti-woman because of recent columns that criticized feminism. My answer to those criticisms can best be summed up by the Kansan's general manager and news adviser, Malcolm Gibson. interpreted it as a satire on misogynistic men. to the readers who sent letters to the Kansan, the cartoon was interpreted as being sexist and attifying to women. Over, that was not the cartoonist and film editors all of them are women expred the cartoon. That was seen by many as satire of big-breasted women was actually a satire of stupid, sexist men. "The paper is only as good as you demand it to be," he said. That means if readers want more intelligent, pro-feminism columns, they have to write them. If readers don't like the cartoons the Kansan runs, they should send cartoons of their own. Sears said that the opinion page was open to columns from anyone at the University. After receiving the anti-feminism columns, she said she had specifically invited Womyn's Empowerment Action Coalition and the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center to submit columns. The point is that the door is open. The quality of the opinion page depends on the arrival of a variety of viewpoints, which may, at times, be politically incorrect. The Kansan always strives to improve content. But for the most part, content on the opinion page does not come from Kansan staff; it comes from the public. If you are a reader who has a point to make, send your point in writing. That's an order from Sears herself. "Send it to me," she said. I will print it." Shaffer is a Hays senior in journalism and environmental studies. No TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 SILENT EPIDEMIC THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Epidemic CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A who are sexually active to go ahead and get a chlamydia test," she said. Watkins offers confidential billing, meaning the bill can be sent to the student, not the student's parents, and it can be kept off insurance companies' records, Strother said. Getting tested should be seen in the same way as any other health maintenance test is seen, Strother said. "You're not only protecting your own body, but the people you care about," she said. Although the CDC recommends that all sexually active women between the ages of 20 and 25 be screened once a year for chlamydia, routine screenings for sexually transmitted diseases are not widely done. Though in 2001,783,242 cases of chlamydia were reported in the United States, an estimated three million cases occur annually, according to the CDC. The gap between the reported cases and the expected cases is due to the lack of chlamydia screenings. The doctors at Lawrence's Women's Healthcare Group, 1440 Wakarusa Drive, don't routine screenings for chlamydia, said Laura McMurray, gynecologist at the group. But McMurray thinks it would be a good idea in high-risk populations, such as college students. "I think it probably is, depending on how many partners they have or have had," she said. McMurray sees college students as patients but doesn't see too many with chlamydia, she said. Places like Watkins and the Lawrence-Douglas "I think it's really important, when it can have such a profound affect on women's future health, to be aware." Kathy Rose-Mockry Program and associate director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center County Health Department, 200 Maine St., probably see a higher percentage because they see more students, she said. The 4-1-1 on chlamydia The disease is caused by the chlamydia trachomatis bacteria, according to the American College Health Association. The bacteria are transmitted through contact of mucous membranes with the infected person's fluids. If symptoms are present with chlamydia, they may include pain or dull aching from the cervix, a heavy feeling in the pelvic area, pain with urination or intercourse, heavier menstrual flow, breakthrough bleeding and heavy cervical discharge, according to the American College Health Association. Like the disease itself, the damage done by chlamydia can be silent, according to the CDC. If chlamydia spreads to the fallopian tubes it can cause infection that can lead to scarring, which can hamper fertility or increase the risk of a pregnancy outside of the uterus, according to information on chlamydia provided by Watkins. Chlamydia can also lead to pelvic inflammatory disease. According to the National Institutes of Health, pelvic inflammatory disease is an infection of the upper genital tract. At Watkins, doctors have seen the disease firsthand. "We have seen it causing pelvic inflammatory disease, fortunately not too often," Buck said. Pelvic inflammatory disease is the leading cause of sterility in women, according to the CDC. Women may not know they have chlamydia until they try to get pregnant; then they find out about the disease. McMurray said. Although the disease is dangerous, if it is caught early enough, it can be treated with common antibiotics. Chlamydia can be treated with one dose, or six tablets, of Azithromycin, commonly known as Zithromax, for about $20 or ten days of Doxycycline, taken twice daily for n "It's all a matter of keeping informed and not being afraid of being informed. The whole idea is 'knowledge is power.' If you have that power, you can prevent early on." Mary Ann Rasnak Director of the Student Development Center total of about $7, Buck said. What about men? About half of men who have chlamydia show symptoms, and the damages caused by chlamydia tend to be less severe in males, according to the CDC. If men do experience symptoms, they include urethral discharge, pain with urination and epididymitis, as reported in a handout from the American College Health Association. The National Institutes of Health state that epididymitis is the inflammation of the epididymis, which is the tubular structure that connects the testicles with the vas deferens. It can lead to sterility. Chlamydia typically causes urethral infection in men, according to the CDC. Men do not have annual exams like women, so there is no way to routinely screen them for chlamydia, Buck said. For men, doctors can do a urine test, Strother said. Kansas Chamula Cases, 2002 329 Cases 5th most in state DOUGLAS COUNTY 6,780 cases 83% Female 75% ages 15-25 Source: Kansas Department of Health Treatment for chlamydia is the same in males as in females. 'Knowledge is power' It is the job of Melissa Smith and the other health educators at Watkins to make students more aware of this prevalent and dangerous disease. Chlamydia is one of the four most common STDs the doctors at Watkins see, Buck said. The most requested presentation the Watkins' health educators give is about sex and alcohol, Smith said. At these presentations health educators talk about chlamydia and other sexually transmitted infections. Kansas Chlamydia Cases, 2002 Rose-Mockry also said that "There is still a lot of discomfort in students talking about those issues and asking for tests," she said. The stigma attached to STDs often leads to students not being open to talk about them, said Kathy Rose-Mockry, program and associate director for the center. "So many times students have the best intentions to be safe, but then alcohol gets involved," she said. Between February 2002 and February 2003, the Watkins' Health Education Department conducted about 28 of these presentations, reaching more than 1,050 students, Smith said. The department also presented information about chlamydia prevention at its annual health fair, which attracted several hundred students, she said. Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center works with Watkins to present programs on topics such as healthy relationships that lead to talking about STDs. some women may not even know much about chlamydia and its silent symptoms. "I think it's really important, when it can have such a profound affect on women's future health, to be aware," she said. Because students hear information about STDs starting in junior high or high school, they often think they know all there is to know, and they think they would be able to distinguish if they had one, said Mary Ann Rasnak, director of the Student Development Center. "I think students sort of have a false sense of information of their level of knowledge about these issues," she said. Rasnak said she not only thinks students should be more open about these topics, but also thinks educators should talk about STDs more often. "I think there's not enough open, honest, frank information about these issues available to students," she said. The more students know about the symptoms and dangers Neil Mulka/Kansan SYMPTOMS Men Urethral discharge Pain with urination Epididymitis Women Pain or dull aching from cervix. Heavy feeling in pelvic area Pain with urination or intercourse Heavier menstrual flow Breakthrough bleeding Heavy cervical discharge American College Health Association of a disease, the better off they will be, she said. "It's all a matter of keeping informed and not being afraid of being informed," she said. "The whole idea is 'knowledge is power.' If you have that power, you can prevent early on." —Edited by Amber Byarlay Get Out and Relax 餐 KUSSHA is hosting our annual end of the year bash at Stone Creek on April 22, 2003 at 7:00pm Join us for a night of fun, food, and lots of laughs. Join us for a night of fun, food, and lots of laughs. KUSSHA will provide appetizers. Bring money for food and drinks. Stone Creek is located at 6th and Wakarusa. STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • CIGARS • POOL 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five THERE'S A BETTER WAY TO VENT. - must be 21 to enter 20 SECONDS TO SPEAK YOUR MIND free for all 864-0500 KANSAN CLASSIC MOVE. 6A = THEUNIVERSITYDAILYKANSAN NEWS TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 SUA demolishes printer, fax to publicize 'Office Space' By Lauren Bristow Ibristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer A sledge hammer. Four tall orange construction cones. Rap music playing in the background. Students smashing something wrapped in clear, plastic tarping. Student Union Activities staged a re-creation of a scene from the movie Office Space yesterday to promote the showing of the movie tomorrow night. "We're trying to recreate the copier smashing scene from the movie," said Lauren Stewart, SUA vice president for University Relations and Wichita sophomore. "It gives us all a chance to live vicariously through the movie and have a good time." Students looked on as SUA officers took shots at a printer. They eventually broke through the plastic protecting, and pieces scattered across the sidewalk. "I think it's a really great way to promote the movie" said Steven Adkins, Olathe freshman. "It's really cool. I've always wanted to do that to my computer." The printer smashed yesterday and the fax machine planned for tomorrow were old SUA office products, Stewart said. "I really like the people walking past and asking, 'What's going on?'" said Isaac Dill, SUA Spectrum Films coordinator. "Their next question is, 'What are you doing it for?' It's a great way to advertise the movie." Office Depot representatives were on hand to hand-out office supplies to students walking past. The store at 2525 Iowa St., is a sponsor of the movie's showing. It donated red Swingline staplers like the ones used in the movie. "We're having a really positive response from students," said Nathan Haley, the customer service manager at Office Depot. "Everyone keeps saying, 'Cool, free stuff!'" "I really like the people walking past and asking, 'What's going on?' Their next question is, What are you doing it for?' It's a great way to advertise the movie." Isaac Dill SUA Spectrum Films coordinator SUA and Office Depot will be back on Wescoe at noon tomorrow to smash more equipment and promote the movie further. The film will be shown at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are $2. Before the film's showing there will be a character impressions contest and door prizes will be raffled. The red stamper will be handed out as prizes at the show. Edited by Jason Elliott Jason McDermott Warner Jegen McDermott/Kansan Isaac Dill, McPherson sophomore and SUA Spectrum Films coordinator, smashes a printer on Wescoe Beach to promote the SUA showing of the movie Office Space. The film will be shown at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium. Serving KU Se Automotive DON'S Auto Center, Inc. since 1974 A.S.E.MASTER TECHNICIANS - Maintenance & Repair - ASE Master Technicians Domestic or Imports CAREER - Diagnostic Service - Machine Shop Service ACP Master Technician 601 Contacts 920 E. 11th. 11th & Haskell 841-4833 Mon—Fri. 8 am-5:30 pm Dr. Kevin Lenahan, O.D., P.A. Optometrist & Associates -Competitive Prices -Evening Hours -Great Location Hillcrest 935 Business Park, 935 Iowa (785)838-3200 www.lenahanyedoc.com KU Eyewear The Spectacle 60 - Fashion Eye Wear - Competitive Prices - OPENING EVENINGS We welcome KU students faculty & staff If your business appreciates student business and would like to be included in our next Serving KU, please call Let us make a spectacle out of you! Hillcrest 935 Suite 3 935 Iowa 832-1238 Legal TRAFFIC-DUTS-MIP'S PERSUAL INJURY Student legal matters/Resilience issues divorce/marriage attorneys the law of offices DONALD G. STROLE Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation Wilson Locksmithing Security Service Your Security is Our Business We know a lot about locks Call 393-0442 KANSAN.COM Locksmith 841-2500 Located next to south doors of SuperTarget The University Daily Kansan at 864-4358 Psychological Clinic 315 Fraser 864-4121 http://www.ku.edu/~psycline/ Counseling Services for Lawrence & KU Optometrists WAXING Facial touch, lip clench Arms, Legs, Brackets Binkin and Wax Dr. Matt Lowenstein Optometrist and Associates Contact Lenses & Eye Exams Waxing DISCOUNT with student ID IODA&FRIENDS 3009W, 6TH 841-0357 KU Psychological Safon Di Marco & Dany Span BRAZILIAN & BIKINI WAXING TRI- DIMENSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS TEXTURIZED HAIRCUTS FULL BODY WAXING (MEN WELCOME) EYEBROW AND LASH TINTING 7 8 5 - 8 4 3 - 0 0 4 4 733 MASS ● LAWRENCE 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS TABACO (1) THE FIRST SPRING BREAK REALITY MOVIE! NO SCRIPTS. NO ACTORS. NO RULES. APRIL 25 ONLY IN THEATRES FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE REAL WORLD REALCANCUN DIVIDING/MURRAY FILMENGINE AMERICA ONLINE KEYWORD. THE REAL CANCUN www.theresalcuncun.com NEW LINE CUNUN Meet the Author. C. M. BALDEN "Impudent and blunt, the energetic, accessible. *Poems to Love and Body celebrate sex and excess in ways that test the boundaries of taste. But even as the poems lease the id, they save the ear and the imagination." (Harvard University of Florida, State State University) Dave Malone. Poet, playwright, actor and screenwriter, Dave Malone currently teaches composition and film at Southwest Missouri State University, West Plains. He is the author of two books of poetry, Under the Sycamore and Poems to Love and the Body, and one chapbook of poems, 23 Sonnets. THURS. April 24th 5:00 - 6:30 1969 Oread Books 785-864-4431 orebooks@ku.edu Kansas Union, Leavl 2 Jayhawks.com NEW HOURS! Mon, Wed. 8:30-5:00 Thursday 8:30-7:00 Saturday 10:00-4:00 closed Sundays All profits support stu BUY ONE GET ONE FREE Men's Suits BUY ONE GET ONE FREE NEW LOWER PRICES Men's Suits Starting at just 2 for $299 EASTON'S LIMITED 839 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KS 66044 643-5755 TUESDAY,APRIL 22,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Media's war coverage bothers some Muslim students By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer As the War in Iraq draws to a close, several Muslim students at the University of Kansas have been left with a variety of emotions and responses to the roles the U.S. government and U.S. media have played in the military action. "Personally I feel that war is just not necessary when you have other means to solve the situation," said Ariful Huq, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, junior and president of the Muslim Student Association. Huq said while he thought Saddam Hussein was a tyrant and should be removed, he also felt sorry for the Iraqi civilians who had to deal with another war. "The people are suffering so much there,"Huq said. Other Muslim students were concerned for the loss of life. "We lost many innocent people," said Shalan Alkarni, Abha, Saudi Arabia, graduate student and association member. Danielle Brunin, secretary for the KU Muslim Women and Lawrence senior, said she thought the war was illegal and that she didn't like the link between the war on Iraq and the war on terrorism. "I think if we're trying to prevent terrorism this is the worst possible way." Brunin said. Muslim students at the University also have concerns about the coverage of the war provided by U.S. media. She said the war damaged the United States' reputation around the world and made people more angry with America. "I don't rely on the American media because I don't trust it," said Adnan Chaudhry, Jehlum, Pakistan, senior and association member. "I think it's biased; other people might not." Chaudhry said he didn't agree with coverage because it was one sided. "You'll see an American soldier holding an Iraqi boy, but that same soldier has killed hundreds of Iragis earlier," he said. Chaudhry also didn't agree with the uproar surrounding the images of American prisoners of war broadcast on Iraqi TV while American media shows dead Iraqis every day. Brunin said she also thought there was a definite media bias. Brunin cited anti-war coverage as an area of weakness in the media. She said the media implied anti-war protesters were antitroop protesters. Brunin said news organizations in other countries, such as the BBC, had less biased coverage. "They don't look at it as though our anti-war protesters are against our troops," Brunin said. The U.S. media makes it look like United States won the victories outright, Brunin said. But people around the world, she said, have said there were not such clear cut victories. Ali Andaila, Doha. Qatar. sophomore and association member, said the portrayal of Iraqi civilians by the U.S. media was inaccurate. He said the media showed how the Iraqi people were happy with the downfall of Hussein's regime, not how they are killed. Andala said if it weren't for the Arab news organization Al-Jazeera, he would think that the Iraqi people were happy. Many other Muslim students said they used Al-Jazeera and other online organizations to receive their information. "Most people go online and look at some of the international newspapers," Chaudhry said. Chaudhry found the coverage of at least one American news organization to be acceptable. "I think C-SPAN's a good channel. They do a good job," he said. Huq said students should consult media sources other than the United States to make informed decisions. "Read what other people say about it," Huq said, "Use what you've gathered to draw conclusions." Auto burglary numbers in city, on campus rise from last year - Edited by Leah Shaffer By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Tyler Longpine became one of the approximately 125 KU student victims of auto burglary so far this semester. Lawrence auto burglaries jumped 18 percent since 2001. Last year, Lawrence Police reported that University of Kansas students represented 43 percent of that year's burglaries. Photo illustration by Aaron Showalter. The Haysville junior had his car stereo, valued at about $215, stolen last month. Sgt. Mike Patrick said students were often the victims of theft because they commonly live in community situations or apartment complexes where a large number of cars were parked in the same area. The number of auto burglaries in Lawrence jumped more than 18 percent from 844 in 2001 to 1000 in 2002. If figures for 2003 are comparable to Lawrence Police Department numbers from 2002, KU students have made up about 43 percent of auto burglaries this year. A list of burglarized students vehicles for individual months does not exist for concrete comparison because some students report theft to Lawrence police while others report it to the KU Public Safety Office. "If a thief is looking to take a large number of things, they don't want to spend a lot of time doing it," he said. Statistics from the Public Safety Office also showed a small increase in auto burglaries in 2002. "I was just literally right on other side of the window when it happened, I would have been able to look up and see what happened, but the alarm system just didn't engage," he said. engaged. Jeff Unseld, Lexington, Ky., senior, was more fortunate than Longpine. Police caught the person who broke into his car after a neighbor noticed and called the police. But the burglar still left damage to Unseld's dashboard. Thieves also take advantage of carelessness through crimes of opportunity. Patrick said thieves would sometimes go through parking lots and look for visible items and vehicles with unlocked doors. Longpine said he had left his 1993 Lincoln Mercury — with windows rolled down — parked in an alley behind the 1000 block of Mississippi Street on March 23. Longpine said his car was an easy target because the windows were down, but he didn't worry because he thought his alarm system would catch anything. He was sitting in his apartment when it happened. He drives a 1997 Jeep Wrangler, which he had parked the lot at Trailridge apartments, 2500 W. Sixth St. Unseld said he had made the thief's job easy when he left the faceplate on his stereo and the doors and top off the car. "They didn't treatly have to break in," he said. "They just kind of sat down and ripped it apart." Unseld kept his original car stereo and recovered the faceplate from Lawrence police. But he had to pay for a new dashboard. The stereo won't eject CDs, he said. Unseld said he would have to buy a new stereo, which could cost about $300. The experience will make him more cautious in the future, he said. "It makes me more hesitant to take the top off and doors off, and that's the whole reason I bought it," he said. "It definitely makes me more paranoid." — Edited by Lindsay Hanson THIS WEEK at the GRANADA WEDNESDAY it’s the OWNER’S BIRTHDAY! (but we’re gonna part like it’s your birthday) Come help us celebrate James’ 24th! 25 CENT DRAWS! FREE BACARDI sampling with the Bacardi girls SIN (services industry night) Bring your paycheck pay stub for FREE cover DJ Every Wednesday in Service Industry Night with 12 each cover. THURSDAY DESTINATION: Spring Break Granada Every Thursday $2 Double Wells DJ Nick Riddell “It’s like Spring Break, Cancun every week.” Bring your student ID for 1/2 off cover! FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink RSDA FRDAY The New Granada www.thegranada.com 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS BRIEFS TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 STATE Abortion bill vetoed by governor yesterday TOPEKA—Gov. Kathleen Sebellus vetoed a bill yesterday that would set minimum health and safety standards at abortion clinics, saying medical personnel —not legislators—should develop such rules. House Speaker Doug Mays promised to seek to override the veto when the Legislature returns April 30 from a long recess. Abortion opponents had pushed the legislation, framing it as a public health measure. Critics said the real goal was to close abortion clinics — there are seven in Kansas — or make their services too expensive for many women. The bill orders the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to set minimum standards for clinics' supplies, equipment, lighting and ventilation as well as minimum sizes of interview rooms, bathrooms and dressing rooms. In addition, the bill requires that every clinic have a doctor as its medical director; have a female staffer present during any procedure done by a male doctor; and have ultrasound equipment if it offers abortions after the 12th week of pregnancy Asked whether an override would be attempted, Mays said, "You can just count on it." Overriding a veto requires two-thirds majorities in both legislative chambers — 27 votes in the 40-member Senate and 84 votes in the 125-member House. The bill had been passed on votes of 24-16 in the Senate and 87-33 in the House. NATION Students lose Internet for illegal file sharing STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Pennsylvania State University cut off high-speed Internet connections for 220 students in their residence halls because they were sharing copyrighted material, the school said yesterday. Penn State spokesman Tysen Kendig said the move was made after the university received a complaint from a source he would not reveal. "Upon investigation, we found that the students had publicly listed copyright-infringing materials on their systems to other members of this network," he said. Music and movie industry groups have urged universities to crack down on the sharing of copyrighted files. The connections will be restored once the copyrighted material has been removed, Kendig said. Plan B applies to sell pill over-the-counter WASHINGTON—The maker of a morning-after pill applied for government permission yesterday to begin selling the emergency contraceptive without the doctor's prescription now required. The maker of Plan B pills hopes to win Food and Drug Administration approval for over-the-counter sales by next year. The FDA typically won't move a drug from prescription to non-prescription status unless the manufacturer makes the request. Yesterday, Plan B's maker, Women's Capitol Corp., said it had. The morning-after pill can prevent ovulation or fertilization when taken within 72 hours of unprotected sex. The pills won't work if the woman already is pregnant. Morning-after pills already are sold without a prescription in Britain and several European countries. They also are available without a prescription through a network of pharmacists in Alaska, California and Washington state. Two brands of morning-after pills, Plan B and Preven, have been sold in the United States by prescription since 1998. Especially high doses of regular birth control pills taken after unprotected sex work, too. Gay-rights groups urge for removal of Senator WASHINGTON — Gay-rights groups, fuming over Sen. Rick Santorum's comparison of homosexuality to bigamy, polygamy, incest and adultery, urged Republican leaders yesterday to consider removing the Pennsylvania lawmaker from the GOP Senate leadership. A coalition of groups in Washington and Pennsylvania compared Santorum's remarks to those by those last December by former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott about Strom Thurmond's 1948 segregationist campaign for the presidency. Shortly afterward, Lott was forced to resign as Republican Senate leader. Santorum is chairman of the GOP conference in the Senate, third in his party's leadership, behind Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee and Assistant Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. In an interview with The Associated Press, Santorum criticized homosexuality while discussing a pending Supreme Court case over a Texas sodomy law. Santorum spokeswoman Erica Clayton Wright said the lawmaker's comments were "were specific to the Supreme Court case." The White House did not immediately return a call seeking comment, and a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Frist declined comment. Singer Nina Simone dies of natural causes NEW YORK — Nina Simone, whose deep, raspy, forceful voice made her a unique figure in jazz and later helped define the civil rights movement, died yesterday at her home in France, according to her personal manager. She was 70. Clifton Henderson, who was at Simone's bedside at her death, said she died of "natural causes" in her sleep after a long illness. He refused to provide the name of the town where she lived. In the late 1950s Simone recorded her first tracks, including "Plain Gold Ring" and "Don't Smoke In Bed." But she gained fame in 1959 with her recording of "I Loves You Porgy," from the opera Porgy & Bess. But she later wove the turbulent times of the 1960s into her music. In 1963, that killed four young black girls in Birmingham, Ala., and the slaying of Medgar Evers she wrote "Mississippi Goddam," and after the killing of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., she recorded "Why? The King of Love is Dead." One of her most famous songs was the black pride anthem, "To Be Young, Gifted and Black." Simone enjoyed perhaps her greatest success in the 1960s NEW YORK LONDON BAGHDAD TOPEKA WASHINGTON SEOUL and 70s, with songs such as "I Want A Little Sugar in My Bowl," and "Four Women" — the song with the famous line "they call me PEACHES." She was survived by a daughter, Lisa _ a singer who goes by the stage name Simone. She's currently starring in Broadway's Aida and has recorded with the group Liquid Soul. Queen Elizabeth II celebrates turning 77 WORLD LONDON — Queen Elizabeth I celebrated her 77 birthday quietly yesterday, riding on the grounds of Windsor Castle and spending time with her family. The monarch waved to her granddaughter Zara Phillips Princess Anne's daughter_as she set off on her horse, accompanied by a groom. At noon, gunners in London's Hyde Park and at Stirling Castle and Edinburgh, Scotland, fired 21-gun salutes to honor the queen. A Buckingham Palace spokeswoman said the queen spent the day privately with her husband, Prince Philip, and other relatives and friends. She attended Easter services at St. George's Chapel in Windsor with her family on Sunday. Koreas agree to hold Cabinet-level talks SEOUL, South Korea North and South Korea agreed Monday to hold Cabinet-level talks next week, as confusion persisted over whether the communist North has begun reprocessing its spent nuclear fuel. South Korea hopes to use the talks to persuade the North to give up its suspected nuclear weapons programs in return for aid and better ties with other nations. The agreement came as the United States, North Korea and China prepared for separate talks on the North's nuclear programs. The State Department said three days of talks would begin Wednesday in Beijing. The U.S. delegation will be led by Assistant Secretary of State James Kelly. The meeting will be the first face-to-face discussion between U.S. and North Korean officials since Kelly led a delegation to Pyongyang last October. It was during those discussions that North Korea acknowledged it was developing uranium-based nuclear weapons. Since then, North Korea has withdrawn from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and has taken steps to begin production of plutonium-based nuclear weapons. U.S. begins efforts to rebuild postwar Iraq BAGHDAD, Iraq — Glimmers of a new Iraq were evident yesterday, as the American charged with rebuilding a ravaged country came to Baghdad, and Muslim multitudes converged on holy cities for a ritual long suppressed by Saddam Hussein's regime. But the work of rooting out the old Iraq went on. Military officials announced the arrest of a key figure in the bloody suppression of the Shilite Muslim uprising of 1991—Muhammad Hamza al-Zubaydi, the "Shiite Thug" they promised to try on charges of war crimes or crimes against humanity. U. S. officials also revealed that American experts had discovered ingredients and equipment that could be used to make a chemical weapon. Efforts to bring electricity to Baghdad progressed. Iraqi engineers started a turbine at the city's biggest power plant, and a few lights flickered in the capital for the first time since April 3. It was expected that Baghdad would have 90 percent of its prewar power in a day or two. This, said retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, was his top priority as Iraq's postwar administrator to restore power and water "as soon as we can." Garner's arrival in Baghdad was itself a historic moment. For now, a retired American general has taken charge of an Arab country, as Douglas MacArthur did in Japan after World War II and MacArthur's father did in the Philippines after the Spanish-American War. Garner, though, said he has no intention of leading Iraq. His Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Aid is to coordinate emergency aid to the 24 million Iraqis and oversee the rebuilding of the nation's infrastructure and establishment of an interim Iraqi government. — The Associated Press A professional development series for 2003 grads April 24th 5:00 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center Transition 101 Student Skills to Work Place Leaders • entrepreneurship • effective workplace communication • diversity in the workplace • translation, talking about your skills in "employer language" April 29 7:00 - 8:30 pm Big 12 Room KS Union Employment Issues for Women • finding jobs to fit your needs • wardrobe on a budget • handling your 1-2 year with finesse May 2 5:30 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center Grand Gull • freestyle soft drinks & door prizes • information programs & guides From registration at www.karlsruhe.edu April 24th 5:00 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center Transition 101: Student Skills to Work Place Leaders • entrepreneurship • effective workplace communication • diversity in the workplace • translation talking about your skills in employer language April 29th 7:00 - 8:30 pm Big 12 Room: KS Union Employment Issues for Women • finding jobs to fit your needs • wardrobe on a budget • handling your 12-year lease May 7th 5:20 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center Grand Grill • the university's outdoor bar and restaurant • info on student programs & services Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 For more than two centuries, the opera's unique combination of the sublime and the ridiculous has worked its theatrical magic... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and The Department of Music & Dance PRESENT A VIRTUAL REALITY PRODUCTION OF The Magic Flute By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Directed by Delbert Unruh Virtual Reality Technology by Mark Reaney Costume Design by Ione Unruh Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet (KU MFA '98) Featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra Steven McDonald, conductor 7:30 P.M. April 26 & May 1-3, 2003 2:30 P.M. Sunday, April 27 & May 4, 2003 CRAFTON-PREVER THEATRE Reserved seat tickets are on sale through the KU ticket offices: University Theatre, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-7469; and on-line at www.kuheatre.com; public $16 & $14, all students; $10, senior citizens; $15 & $13; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. The University Theater is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. At last, great financial news for all you business majors. A career-building job in Kansas City with an international financial services firm and outstanding benefits could be yours. Whether you're pre- or post-grad, State Street, a world leader in financial services, has full- or part-time job openings at its Kansas City office, right now. Join your future today! Apply online. statestreetkc.com Red Lion Guest Room Fed Lyon Tavern For more than two centuries, the opera's unique combination of the sublime and the ridiculous has worked its theatrical magic... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and The Department of Music & Dance PRESENT A VIRTUAL REALITY PRODUCTION OF The Magic Flute By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Directed by Delbert Unruh Virtual Reality Technology by Mark Reaney Costume Design by Ione Unruh Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet (KU MFA '98) Featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra Steven McDonald, conductor 7:10 P.M. APRIL 26 & MAY 1-3, 2003 2:30 P.M. SUNDAY, APRIL 27 & MAY 4, 2003 CRAFTON-PREVER THEATRE Reserved seat tickets are on sale through the KU ticket office! University Theatre, 864-9982. Lied Center, 864 ARTN, SUA College, 866-7469; and on-line at www.ku theatre.com/public $16 & $14, all students $10, senior citizens: $15 & $13, VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. At last, great financial news for all you business majors. A career-building job in Kansas City with an international financial services firm and outstanding benefits could be yours. Whether you're pre- or post-grad, State Street, a world leader in financial services, has full- or part-time job openings at its Kansas City office, right now. Join your future – today! STATE STREET For Everything You Invest law Apply online. statestreetkc.com --- TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A Top of the HIL TOP OF THE HILL is KU students' chance to vote for the best of Lawrence. Fill out this form and return it to Room 119 Stauffer-Flint or visit Kansan.com to complete the online survey. Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. RESTAURANTS 2003 Best Mexican:___ Best Chinese:___ Best Breakfast:___ Best Burgers:___ Best Subs:___ Best Italian:___ Best Steakhouse:___ Best Vegetarian:___ Best Pizza:___ Best French Fries:___ Best Wings:___ Best Buffet:___ Best Ice Cream:___ Best Custard:___ Best Coffee House:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Delivery Service:___ Best Bakery___ Best Post-Party Food Restaurant:___ Best Customer Service ___ Best KC Restaurant ___ Best Local Restaurant:___ Best Overall:___ BARS Best Sports Bar:___ Best Drink Specials:___ Best Martinis:___ Best Margaritas:___ Best Wells:___ Best Selection of Beers:___ Best Dance Club:___ Best Place to Play Pool:___ DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25, 2003 BARS,continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTY SERVICES Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued RETAILERS, continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING Best Apartment Complex:___ Best Townhomes:___ Best Landlord:___ Best Neighborhood to live in: ___ SCHOOL Best Place to Study:___ Best Bookstore:___ Best Residence Hall:___ Best Scholarship Hall:___ Best Building on Campus:___ Best Fraternity:___ Best Sorority:___ Best Student Organization:___ THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas 10A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 TODAY TOMORROW THURSDAY 67 47 mostly sunny 65 51 rain 69 48 more rain WEATHER TODAY 67 47 mostly sunny TOMORROW 65 61 rain THURSDAY 69 48 more rain — WEATHER.COM THE MASKED AVENGERS by Matt Sevcik & Max Krentze We don't care! Were getting... Married! We don't care! We're getting... ...Married! HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 22). Today's Birthday (April 22). Fears or old traumas could be barriers to your success. If you understand and accept yourself, advancing becomes a lot easier. Don't fret! This can be learned. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is a 6. You'll be lucky in love for the next several weeks, so reinforce your commitment. There's nothing as charming as showing a loved one that you really meant what you said. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is an 8. Look a little bit farther away in order to solve a problem closer to home. Make plans for a cheap, fun weekend trip, too. Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is a 6. Recent developments may have been more tiring than anticipated. Don'tpush yourself too hard for a while, Rest, and count your winnings. Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is a 7. You can inspire others to take care of a situation tha""s difficult for you. Get your message across, and you'll have more help than you thought possible. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 6. there's a lot more work to do, but not a lot more money. Do it because you said you would. That's a good enough reason. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 9. Be extra compassionate with a loved one who's going through hard times. Save the constructive criticism. Just listen until you're asked. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 6. You know those coupons you've saved that never seem to make it to the store? There's something there you'll find quite useful. It's time to cash them in. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8. The item you're seeking isn't far from home. A friend or your mate can show you where. Don't be embarrassed or feel like a fool. It's OK to ask for help. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7. Use brains more than brawn to increase your profits. It's good to have money in the bank, but don't spend it. Use it. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8. An in-depth conversation with someone you love will help ease your troubled mind. Put several of your old fears to rest, and you'll have more time to play. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 7 You should be feeling stronger, but you're not yet good to go. Review all of your procedures and check everything off your lists.Minimize risk. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is an 8. If you can't figure out how to get where you want to go, pull yourself up by your bootstraps just a little. You'll be able to see farther. Crossword ACROSS 1 Forfeiture 5 Candid 10 H.S. jr's trial run 14 Away from the wind 15 Indian currency 16 Vagrant 17 Turner or Louise 18 Go in 19 Colorful mount 20 Position under scrutiny 22 Talkative 24 Kind 25 Reworks old material 27 Building block 30 Dogs 31 Long, straight and limp 32 Wound into rings 33 Provide with weapons 36 Mel of Cooperstown 37 Appease 38 Affirmative vote 39 Three-way junction 40 Except 41 Jacket slit 42 Begin anew 44 Fathers 45 Students saying lessons by rote 47 Alamos 48 Writer Waugh 49 Red cedar 53 Manufactured 54 Backless sofa 57 CD alternative 58 French thought 59 "Maria" 60 Pennsylvania port 61 Gull relative 62 Impede 63 Orlop or poop DOWN 1 Plaster backing strip 2 Medley 3 Transmitted 4 Nautically nauseous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | | 16 | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | | 19 | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | | | 22 23 | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | | 24 | | | 25 26 | | | | | 27 28 29 | | | | 30 | | | | | | | 31 | | | | 32 | | | | | | 33 34 35 | 36 | | | 37 | | | | | | 38 | 39 | | | 40 | | | | | 41 | | | | | 42 43 | | | | | 44 | | | | 45 46 | | | | | | 47 | | | | 48 | | | | | 49 | | | 50 51 52 | 53 | | | | 54 55 56 | | | 57 | | | 58 | | | | 59 | | | 60 | | | 61 | | | | 62 | | | 63 | | | 5 Mutation 6 Litter's smallest 7 Fitting 8 Born in Cannes 9 Woman's square scarves 10 Sentence unit 11 Seer 12 Subside 13 Blair and Bennett 21 Ruminant of the Rockies 23 Blues composer W.C. 25 Bitter critics 26 Join up 27 Ink stain 28 Grade 29 One who pleads for another 30 Nab 32 Vied 34 Philosopher Descartes 35 Gymnasts' pads 37 Antiquated 41 Stopped by 04/22/03 © 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. R U M B A S I L T L O P E S T A I R A R E A A R A B V A L L I M E I R Y A L E P H I L E M O N S K A T E R E L E V E N I N E R T S T I R L A S A G N E C U D A I R B U D G I N G A T O D D S F O G G E R B U L R U S H O F F O R E A L A M E D A G R O G T A C I T S L O W E R O D E N S E M A S S A G E D R I D E E P I C S N O R E S E A R L O R E A D E L E O U R S S T A R Y E S E S 43 Brennan or Heckart 44 Male offspring 45 Send payment 46 Dodge 47 LEM word 49 "___ Eyre" 50 Peel 51 Tale on a grand scale 52 Powerful stink 53 Land in the Seine 56 Animal doc VIVIENNE ALVEN Check out the latest Spring styles from... Steve Madden Chinese Laundry Simple, Rocket dog Teva,Diessel Franco Sarto Merrell,Mia & Others ARENSBERG'S SHOES 825 MASSACHUSETTS in Downtown Lawrence 785-843-3470 Check us out online @ www.arensburgshoes.com Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing, unless it clearly indicates that the advertiser is any person or group of sons based on race, sex, age, color, creed or religion. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept any disability. Furthermore, Kansan will not knowingly accept I advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements H Marks Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swwell.net Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Super Sandwiches. Fresh Salad Bar Hot Food. COMMUNITY MORGANTH CERTIFIED THE MERC! NATURAL FOOD GROCERY 9TH & 10WA • OPEN 7AM-10PM All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the laws of 1968, which makes it illegal to advertise on race discrimination based on race, color, religion 130 - Entertainment I - 1 Dance lessons; ballet, latin, and swing. Sundays nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-227 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted GYMNASTICS COACH WANTED! LOOK FOR A MALE TO TEACH BOYS & GIRLS COMPETITIVE GYMNASTICS TEAM. A BACKGROUND IN THE SPORT IS REQUIRED. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE A PLUSI CALL NOW 765-865- 0956 m m m m m Nanny for 3 girls ages 8-12 for summer, Monday, Tuesday, & Thursday approx. 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Gend resume to Brent Crandon, 1010 Massa, Lawrence 60044 SUMMER IN CHICAGO! Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Childcare and light housekeeping for sub- urban Chicago families. Responsible, low- energy; non-smoker. Call Northfield Nannies. (647) 501-6394. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." 205 - Help Wanted Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary, students welcome and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepic.com EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER Heart of America Photography is seeking 12-14 full/part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season - April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment! Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7100 or drop by 2449 Iowa. Ste J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGees's EOE. Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766 7600 or 1-785-219-5900. BASS PLAYER Bartender Trainees needed, $250 per day potential. Local positions Call 1-800-293-3985; s31. Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles, Call 785-749-3649. City of Lawrence LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at Girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature sports, challenge course, dance and drama) Early June - mid August MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Call 303-778-0109 x281 or rhondam@gsmc.edu The Parks and Recreation dept is looking for adult league, summer softball umpires. Job offers excellent pay & flexible schedules starting May thru Oct. You must be 18 years of age w/ expr in the sport. Training provided & required. Anyone interested must attend orientation. Saturday, May 3 at 10:00am Community Building 115 W 11th Street For questions contact Adult Sports Office 832-7922.EOE M/F/D 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcam jobs.com. 120 - Announcements 205 - Help Wanted MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-614-0277 ex. 1020 Associate Director of Adult Education The Kansas Board of Regents seeks an Associate Director of Adult Education to provide technical assistance with the Adult Education data collection system and to serve as the State Administrator of Kansas GED Testing. Minimum requirements include a graduate degree and at least three years of full-time professional experience in teaching or administration, experience in data systems development and administration, and fluency with major statistical packages. Send letter of application, current vita, copies of postsecondary education trans- scripts, and contact information (names, titles, e-mail addresses, business address, addresses, and business telephone num- berals of three references. Confidensi- tality of all applicant materials will be maintained. References will be contacted only after obtaining permission from the candidate. All materials should be sent to the Human Resources Office of the Kansas Board of Regents, preferably as a MS Word attachment to 561HR@kbsor.org, or otherwise in hard copy to 1000 SW Jackson Street, Suite 520, Topeka, Kansas 66812-1368. Review of applications will begin April 29, 2003 and continue until the position is filled. The Kansas Board of Regents is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. SUMMER INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. Apply online at www.pigimage.com/intern.htm F BARTENDER POSITION BARTENDER POSITION Make up to 330 per shift. Flexible hours, great pay. Call 1-800-806-0082 ext 1422. Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 5-0 Mon-Sat, 811 New Hampton. OFFICE HELP NEEDED OFFICE HELP NEEDED Part-time office help needed (approx. 20 hours per week, Monday-Friday, 1 PM-5 PM). Duties include answering phones, filing; data entry & customer service. Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Alamur, PO Box 3467, Lawrence, KS 66046. Attention Tracy, EOE 120 - Announcements 1 Fraternities • Sororites • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program it works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (868) 932-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com TUESDAY. APRIL 22, 2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 11A 205 - Help Wanted 205-Help Wanted Personal Care attendant jobs available for the summer. Flexible schedule, no experience needed. $9/hr. 20-40 hrs/wk + nights. Must have own transportation. For info call 218-0753, leave message. STUDENT ASSISTANT Job Description: This ongoing part-time student position will provide support services for the KU Center for Research Budget & Employment Services staff by: filing, sorting, making photocopies, retrieving specific documents from files, verifying authorized signatures, creating and/or modifying Microsoft Word. Access or Excel computer files, assisting visitors at our reception desk and/or service counter, drive company vehicle to deliver and pick up documents on campus, and perform other duties as assigned. Required Qualifications: Candidates should have valid state Driver's License, be reliable, and be available to work 20 hours per week (Monday through Friday) anytime between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. starting on or before 5/19/03. This position requires a high level of accuracy attention to detail, strong work ethic, and good verbal & written communication skills. Preferred Qualifications: Available to work on a long-term basis (including over the summer and holiday breaks) is preferred. Previous work experience using standard office machines, personal computer, and software such as Microsoft Word, Access and Excel is preferred. Hourly Rate & Other Information: This is a part-time position (20 hours per week, except as noted below). Starting pay rate is from $7.00 to $8.00 phr depending on qualifications/experience. This is a potential long-term employment opportunity, since we have an ongoinglong-term need for a Student Assistant. During the period of the summer break, the student assistant may be offered the opportunity to work up to 40 hours per week. How to Apply: Go to Youngberg Hall (2385 Irving Hill Rd.) between 8:00 AM and 4:30 PM (M-F) and contact the receptionist on the 1st floor. Then complete the application form. Review of applications will begin 4/28/03. Summer to remember in woods of Maine. Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6/18-8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call collecti914-835-5800. X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $355/month. Call 841-1074 S Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Cnevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3232 ext. 4565. For Sale, 4 adjoining seats to Bill Cosby May 31st, Starlight Theatre, $80 each min. Will sell together of separate. Contact Jeff @ 855-157-161 or 550-379-381 Spring rummage sale First Presbyterian Church 2415 Clinton Pkwy. Bath, 8am-6pm, Sat, 8am-12pm. Bag sale, Sat 11am. Clothing, toys, books, puzzles, games, household goods, and much more. 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent CARROLL HOME 1, 2 & 3 BR apts. in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. With some wood floors, high ceilings. $425-850. 841-3633. 1 br ap, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD-hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807. 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748/9807 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. Excellent location, 1341 Ohio/1104 Tennessee. 2 BR in 4-plex. C/A, D/W, W/D hook-ups. $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1. No pets. Call 842-4242. 405 - Apartments for Rent Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1.2 & bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919 Avail. Aug. Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR, 1.5 BA, DW, W/D, CA, balcony, 9th & Erie. No Smoking, pets. $590 + utilities. Call 550-8111 or 841-3192 Avail May, June, or Aug. Very nice remodeled studio and 1 bedroom apts, close to campus. No pets/smoking. Starting at $360. Call 550-8111 or 841-3192. 2,3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU Available August 1st. 841-6254 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com Now leasing for fall 2003 - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome - Model Open Daily Ask About Our Specials! CHASE COURT 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790.00 savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com 405 - Apartments for Rent 405 - Apartments for Rent 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 West Hills Apartments CLOSE TO CAMPUS 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 BK, Arkansas, 843-4090. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl Avail. Aug. 1. Large newer 384 BR apt, DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site. 382 BA $900. 4BR 2 BA $1040. NO PETS. PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 533 www.appartmentsinlawrence.com 1712 OHIO 1&2Bedrooms 1301 W. 24th & Naismitt 842-5117 colony@xkxs.com www.colonywoods.com PARKWAY COMMONS NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Exercise Room 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 - Washer/Dryers * Dishwasher * Microwaves * Patios * Fireplaces - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 - Indoor/OutdoorPool Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes Open House Monday - Friday 1:00-5:00 - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Luxury Apt. Homes warm hospice specialty Now Leasing for Fall 2003 Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom HIGHPOINTE - Great Location Near Campus 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Lorimar & Courtside what about up to beeple? - 1, 2, 3. Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway transportation.org For More Info: 785-841-7849 841-8468 6th & Iowa - Digital Cable & Internet 841-8468 - 1,2,3,Bedroom 405 - Apartments for Rent - Reasonable Rates www.firstmanagementinc.com Courtside Townhomes: 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes • Washer/Dryers • Dishwasher • Microwaves • Panets • Gas Fireplaces • Ceiling Fans 4100 Clinton Parkway Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. 405 - Apartments for Rent Great 3BR's *Great location.* 1801 Mississippi. J BRAP in, duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. $610-mo Avail. Aug 18-824-4242 Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities $935-1050, NO PETS: 841-5533 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $480/570. All appliances. ample parking on-site laundry. Call 843-4909. Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Brianstone, Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. Washers/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. Canyon Court Brand New Luxury Apartments New Leasing for Spring 2003 • 1, 2, 3 Bdrm • Washer/Dryer • Swimming Pool & Hot Tub • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Garages Available • High Speed Internet Connections • Security Systems Available • Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 VILLAGE SQUARE apartment Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net Need a place to live next year? LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - car ports - approx. 1600 sq feet Williams Pointe Townhomes - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - full size washer/ dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 MASTERCRAFT Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. WALKTOCAMPUS Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass*841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 ✨ Regents Court 19th & Mass•749-0445 Sundance Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm 405 - Apartments for Rent NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Now signing YR, leases starting May/ June July, Aug. 19. No smoking pets. Extra nice, well kept 28 Bqs. Apt. quiet, low utilities, A/C; bus route & more $405 mba. Spanish Credit Mk. 841-6888. Equal Housing Opportunity Save Your Money! Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Hips. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $353. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. 1,2,3. & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and quiet. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU bus rue, laundry facility Call 843-0011. Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath, WD, fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/operator, pet. Subbase i 6-7-311 $500, 768-5080 CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block. Michigan Call 843-409-3600. Blue Meadow Management, Inc. Apartment & Town Home Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Washer & Dryer - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 *Washer & Dryer *Fully Equipped Kitchen *Serving Bar Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street 2600 w 6th Street Tuckaway HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living... as campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood 4241BriarwoodDr Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (atTuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools hot tubs, basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com THE LEGENDS L Est. 1903 NOW LEASING May 2003 ALL INCLUSIVE DIFFERENT PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ ARCA FULLY EQUIPED FITNESS CENTER FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & A BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING GRACES & CARPORS | CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY GAME HOME ROOM | COMPUTER & CRART ROOM SUNFLOWER BROADCAST high SPEED INTERNET ٥٢٨ Very nice condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eile at 841-4470. 415 - Homes For Rent 4 BR, 2 1/2 BA, great area, large deck, fenced yard. 2 car garage, family room, DW, AC, hookups, many fans, attic fan. No dogs. $1000/ml. Avail. August 1, 842- 1376 10 a.m. 6 p.m. or 842-2556. --- 4 BR, 2 B duplex on Eldridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained. 2-car garage, dishwasher, WD, AC. 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/mo. Call 842- 1376 10 a.m. - 6 p.m or 842-3556. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sft of luxury, jacuzzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, ree room, deck w/ window, two car garage, landscaped backyard, bark $1450, 841-3633 anytime. BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING G BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus utilities. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 or 766-6622 between 6:30-10 p.m. House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath CAWD In- cluded. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/mi. 218-4113 420-Real Estate For Sale A **Moving to KC?** KOa a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24/hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbelatable at 105k. Citrine 913-522-5360. Realty Exec. 430 - Roommate Wanted Female Graduate Student seeking non- smoking roommate to share quiet 2 BR 1 BA apt. Starting Aug. 1st. $260/mo plus utilities. Call 766-6528 Female Roommate Needed For 3 BIR, 1 BA house N/S. No Pers. To Campus to Campus. $275/mo + 1/3 tails. Avail Aug. 14 Call 911-538-3712 a week. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Bell 834-5540. Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet. W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2util Aug. 842-4540. 440 - Sublease Key House 1 bedroom apartment, 16th & Tennessee. No smoking, no pets. Summer sublease. Rent negotiated. Call Kristin at 393-1549 1 bedroom at 527 California. Washer-dryer. Nice neighborhood. Call 841-5533 for information. 1 BR in 4 BR apartment Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool $370/mo Leave message 785-691-9048 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail. mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/room. $300 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. 3-BR 2-BA house avail end of May W/D, A/C, near campus, all kitchen appl., 2-car gar. water pat. Pet allowed 749-4928. Summer Sublease, Furnished 1 BD on Mass St. Wood floors, lots of natural light. $350 plus utilities. Call 830-9014. 510 - Child Care --- I Kindergarten Tours Montesson learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2239. news at the speed of light kansan.com 12A - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS TUESDAY,APRIL 22,2003 Project to extend current bike trail John Nowak/Kansan A cyclist riding down a steep hill. In the background, there are silhouettes of trees and a building with large windows. The railroad tracks running perpendicular to 19th Street have been commissioned for clearance. The city of Lawrence wants to turn the area into bike trails. By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Lawrence biking enthusiasts could have more trail options in the future if the city's negotiations with the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway go as planned. The trail would be part of a "rails-to-trails" program the city started more than a decade ago. "We're still in the negotiation stage with the railroad company right now." said city attorney David Corliss. "We've been negotiating with them for about a year. It's not done yet. But this is a 'when', not an 'if'," he said. Lawrence converted an unused railroad track into a bike trail in 1989. That trail runs south from 23rd to 29th streets for about one mile. The portion of track under consideration would extend that trail almost two miles north, from 29th to 12th streets, on a path that runs parallel to Haskell Avenue. The city's negotiations come as welcome news to local cyclists like Clark Coan, a spokesman for Sunflower Recreational Trails, Inc. The organization was one of the driving forces behind the city's initial agreement with the rail company 14 years ago, Coan said. If this trail is completed it could one day link the Landon Trail in Topeka and the Katy Trail in Missouri as the southern route of the American Discovery Trail, Coan said. The American Discovery Trail is a proposed 6,800-mile bike trail that would stretch across the country by connecting existing bike trails. The Landon Trail runs out of Topeka on the old Missouri-Pacific line, and stretches from Shawnee County into Osage County. The Katy Trail is a 225 mile path built on the old Missouri-Kansas-Texas line and stretches from St. Charles, Mo., to Clinton, Mo. The goal is to link those two trails with existing bike and rail trails that run in and around Lawrence, Coan said. trails project, the city was able to contract out the work to clear the tracks and had companies pay the city for materials, said parks and recreation director Fred DeVictor. That kept the costs on that project down to between $10,000 and $15,000. For Lawrence's first rails-tossed Brown, prompting the current coach of the Philadelphia 76ers to give Self help in the future. Self took him up on the offer immediately. He said he quickly cajolied Brown into giving him a job on his staff. This project might not be as simple because the track runs through neighborhoods and has to cross intersections, DeVictor said. - Edited by Erin Chapman New Coach CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A "I wrote Coach Brown a letter once a month to remind him that he'd hired me." Self said. "And he never, ever responded." Brown didn't forget, and Self was his graduate assistant during the 1985-86 season. Self said he loved working for Brown, but when he was presented with an opportunity to assist Eddie Sutton at Oklahoma State the following season, he headed to Stillwater, Okla. Self assured those at the press conference that it was the last time he would leave Kansas for his alma mater. "My future is not in Stillwater," Self said. "My future is in Lawrence." It was a welcome statement to a Kansas community that was stung when Roy Williams accepted a job at his alma mater, North Carolina, just seven days earlier. Like Williams, Self left behind loyal players, a supportive community and a successful program for a job that he said was better for his family. The parallels were too great for sophomore forward Wayne Simien to ignore. "I couldn't help but think about "It's tough to think about them in the same situation we were in last week. But it's a tough situation and you've just got to realize it's more of a business up here now" what it was like watching coach Williams' press conference when coach Self was up there talking and think about the Illinois players" sophomore forward Wayne Simien said. "It's tough to think about them in the same situation we were in last week. But it's a tough situation and you've just got to realize it's more of a business up here now." Simien and sophomore guard Keith Langford blasted Williams after he told them he was leaving them to coach another program. Both have said their statements came at an emotional time, and they were now focused on their current team. Wayne Simien sophomore forward "It worked out for the better," said Langford, who was recruited by Self out of high school. "Some of the kids get torn between coaches and schools and things like that, but I got to play for two coaches that I could build a relationship to." Edited by Jason Elliott Safeguard CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A New York University School of Law. ment an "attack on academic freedom, and quite likely, a violation of the First Amendment." It also said the amendment imperiled a teacher's right to teach and a student's right to learn. The amendment raised concerns across the country last week. The National Coalition Against Censorship, the American Civil Liberties Union and other national organizations sent letters to Sebelius Friday to protest legislative interference in academic affairs. "We have been involved with different issues with the suppression of information dealing with sexuality," said Svetlana Mintcheva, arts advocacy coordinator at the National Coalition of Censorship. "Teaching a class using explicit materials and seeing explicit materials on the Internet are entirely different things. We want more speech instead of suppressing speech." The coalition's letter urged the letter called the amend- Sebelius to line-item veto the amendment to the state budget that threatened to eliminate funding for the University's School of Social Welfare. The amendment, introduced by Republican Sen. Susan Wagle, of Wichita, targets a human sexuality class taught at the University by Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare. The letter was signed by 11 national organizations, two professors and the Mintcheva said the coalition had also been involved with a campaign to examine pornography from a feminist point of view. We were actually very distraught and I hope the governor does the right thing "This is not a new concern of ours," Mintcheva said. "Some of the worst censorship has been done at the expense of women's health. Censoring is not the answer." "Having the Legislature interfere in university affairs is really disturbing, because they're not experts," Mintcheva said. "Once you start doing that, where does it end?" After yesterday's veto, the governor said the Board of Regents had well-established policies to allow for students, parents and taxpayers who question the educational value of material used in institutions of higher learning under the authority of the Regents. - Edited by Lindsay Hanson Like it Cheap & Easy? Spending $100 at Retail gets you... Grand Theft Auto: Vice City (PS2) $49.99 Caddyshack DVD $19.95 King of Torts by John Grisham $27.95 Spending $100 at Half.com gets you MORE! Grand Theft Auto: Vice City (PS2) $24.99 Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon (Xbox) $29.99 Prey by Michael Crichton $1.89 Jackass DVD $12.58 Pearl Jam: Ten $2.20 Caddyshack DVD $10.88 The Jester by James Patterson $7.85 Coldplay: A Rush of Blood... $8.29 $5 off $20 purchase* Enter promo code "JAYHAWKS1" in your shopping cart Coupon Expires 5/25/03 half.com™ by eBay Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtms@kansan.com, or Matt Ghrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2003 Self's road returns to Lawrence By Shane Mettlen smettlen@kansan.com kanssars sportwriter When Bill Self addressed a throng of media and supporters in the John Hadl Auditorium yesterday for the first time as the head men's basketball coach at Kansas, he sounded like a man happy to be home. Sure, Self is a native Oklahoma, who graduated from Oklahoma State, but it seems when a big event happened in his life, it happened in Kansas. Self played basketball for the Cowboys while his wife, Cindy, was a cheerleader at Oklahoma State, but they didn't meet until they traveled the 280 miles from Stillwater to Lawrence for an NCAA Tournament game his senior year. That summer, Self was back in Lawrence to work at Larry Brown's basketball camp, where Brown offered him a job as a Kansas assistant coach. He joined the staff for the 1985-86 season and received his first taste of big-time college basketball, specifically the Final Four. "Every time you come to (Allen Fieldhouse) you get goose bumps," Self said. "I was the fifth or seventh guy on a really big staff in '85 and '86 and it was a thrill just watching the games here. The team was really good and I saw the best of what college basketball had to offer." At his press conference, Self continued to gush about his experiences in Kansas, while showing those in attendance his sense of humor. Self made WHO IS BILL SELF? Education Edmond (Okla) High School, 1981 Oklahoma State University, B.S. in Business, 1985 Oklahoma State University, M.S. in Athletics Administration, 1989 Playing Experience Edmond High School, 1978-81 Oklahoma State University, basketball, 1982-85 Personal ■ Born Dec, 27, 1962, in Okmulgee, Okla. ■ Wife: Cindy ■ Children: Lauren, 12, and Tyler, 9 cracks about his own playing ability and his mentor Brown's reputation of being a journeyman. While Self made a good first impression to the public yesterday, it was just an example of what the powers at the University already knew. Interim athletics director Drue Jennings said he knew Self was the man for the job the first time they spoke. The image shows a woman holding a bouquet of flowers, with a young boy standing in front of her. The woman appears to be smiling gently at the child. The background is blurred, suggesting a public event or gathering. Eric Braem/Kansan "There's an casualness in the way he talked with us, an openness if you will. Much of that you saw today," Jennings said after the press conference. "I would enjoy playing for that guy. I know he's going to work my tail off, but he's going to Bill Self's children Tyler, 9, Lauren, 12, and wife, Cindy, speak with reporters after the press conference. Cindy met Bill at a basketball game in Lawrence when the two were students at Oklahoma State. SEE ROAD ON PAGE 3B Students satisfied with Self's style By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Among students, Self appears to be sufficient. As word of Bill Self's hiring as Kansas men's basketball coach spread yesterday, students reacted positively. "I'm thrilled about it," Dan Sandler, Overland Park sophomore, said. "I think he's going to bring a lot to Kansas." Roy Williams' departure last week left many students befuddled and bitter. But, the announcement of Self, most recently the Illinois men's basketball coach, as the next head coach of the Jayhawks had most students feeling optimistic about life after Roy. "I think they made a careful choice," Jeremy Kuo, Geneva, Switzerland, Junior, said. "I think he'll be successful and keep the Jayhawk spirit alive." Most students did not seem to care that Self, who served as a graduate assistant under Larry Brown during the 1985-1986 season, had Kansas ties. They seemed more excited about his track record as a head coach at Illinois and before that Tulsa. "It's not an emotional thing," Sandler said. "He's just been very successful and now he has a chance to shine." SEE STYLE ON PAGE 3B "I think we'll win it all, and Roy will be sitting, watching and crying." Dan Sandler, Overland Park sophomore Heard on the Hill PETER BALDINI Compiled by Henry C. Jackson "All the way to the end." Jeremy Kuo, Geneva Switzerland,junior "We're going to win it all next year. We have to." How far do you think Kansas will go next year under Bill Self? Noah Becker, Deerfield, Ill., sophomore --- 100% "I think they'll go just as far as they have in the past." "The Final Four." Jamie Mitchell, Lawrence junior I will do it. Laura Cohelo, Shawnee graduate student "All the way." Steven Lucas, Overland Park sophomore MADHUSAN SIBUJI Rocky Jayhawks shut down by Tigers Andy Samuelson/Kansan Kansas pitcher Mel Wallach prepares for a pitch during the Jayhawks' second game against Missouri last night at Jayhawk Field. Wallach, who was making her first appearance of the season because Kansas' top two pitchers were injured, gave up 3 runs on seven hits in five innings of Kansas' 13-1 loss to Missouri. Kansas also dropped the opener 8-4. The Missouri Tigers' softball team turned a border war into a border blowout when they won both games of an afternoon doubleheader against Kansas, 8-4 and 13-1. By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter In both games, Mizzou got out early posting 5 runs in both opening innings. Five of the first six Tiger batters scored in the first inning capped off by a 2-run home run by junior catcher Daisy Mettlach. "When you give up 5 runs in the first inning, emotionally it takes you out of the ball game," Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said. The Hawks put on some numbers as well in the first, as sophomore first baseman Lindsey Weinstein and freshman designated player Melaney Torres crossed home plate off a single from junior centerfielder Mel Wallach. Kansas (23-20, 2-13) posted 2 more runs in the third after Torres and freshman second baseman Jessica Moppin scored off singles — Torres off Moppin's hit and Moppin off Wallach's — but that was it for the 'Hawks for runs. The Tigers (30-15, 11-4 Big 12 Conference) went back to work in the second, getting 3 more runs from only one hit. After the shaky first two innings, senior pitcher Kirsten Milhoan settled down and allowed only one hit in the last four innings, but the 8 runs were plenty for Mizzou sophomore pitcher Erin Kalka to shut down the Jayhawks the rest of the way for the victory. Milhoan took the loss for Kansas. In the second contest, Mizzou again scored 5 runs in the first inning. Bunge decided to let Milhoan call it a day, but the senior was the only active full-time pitcher on the team. Sophomore Serena Settlemier has missed the entire regular season because of a throwing injury and on Saturday the rotation took another blow as junior Kara Pierce injured her shoulder against Texas. So Wallach, who hadn't pitched since January in practice, got the call to the mound. If Wallach was rusty, it was hard to tell for the first three innings she pitched. The junior wound up retiring nine straight batters in the second, third and fourth innings. "If there was a bright spot I'll look at, the bright spot is when Mel Wallach came in," Bunge said. "I pitched a long time before I came here so it was more like a flashback," Wallach said. Wallach said she really wasn't nervous because she had thrown many innings before coming to Lawrence. Wallach's magic, however, wore off in the fifth and sixth inning as the Tigers rang up 3 more runs. SEE SOFTBALL ON PAGE 3B SPORTS COMMENTARY Ryan Greene rgreene@kansan.com D. G. MORRISON Life's greatest lessons are learned in adverse times. It's funny because Kansas basketball fans have learned those lessons each of the past three Mondays. Kansas fans sympathize with Illinois First, we learned that victory is never guaranteed. Then, we learned that Roy Williams is, in fact, a human. Finally, we learned that every cloud has its silver lining. Based on the numerous responses I received from my 'letter' to Roy Williams last Tuesday, I was shocked to see that more than 95 percent of them came from North Carolina fans. Instead of rubbing the University of Kansas' face in the dirt, the Carolina faithful tried to console their Kansas semi-brethren. As much hurt as Kansas fans have experienced the past two weeks, all is once again good and pure in Lawrence, as Bill Self has come to the rescue. I look back at it, and I can't believe that I actually cried twice in one week over basketball-related matters. Now, when things seemed like they couldn't get any worse, I couldn't wait for next year. This is where Illinois and its fans come into play. When hearing and reading reactions from Illinois students in the papers and on the Internet about Self's departure, their reactions are eerily similar when compared to those in Lawrence last Monday. To set the stage, being a Michigan fan, I have always had disdain for the Fighting Illini. Sure, I grew up in the Land of Lincoln, but I bleed maize and blue. I may have absolutely hated everything associated with Champaign-Urbana, but not as much anymore because I can truly feel their pain. Part of SEE GREENE ON PAGE 3B --- TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2003 "It wasn't much of a vacation. It was basically a very expensive flight." Kansas coach Bill Self on his family's vacation and how they labored about the decision to be Kansas' men's basketball coach 2B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS COMMENTARY Kansas fans created an imaginary monster with the last men's basketball coach. Let's not make the same mistake with the new one. The atmosphere at Allen Fieldhouse will be different now that Bill Self is on the sidelines, and considering what the Kansas fan base just went through, that's probably a good thing. During his 15 years in Lawrence, Roy Williams created an image of something that wasn't there. He became a symbol of morality and loyalty, gaining a reputation as a guy who wins "the right way" and would never turn his back on his players. Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Williams also preached the concept of his team being a "family." He loved his favorite players like sons and bawled his eyes out after each year's NCAA Tournament loss as if someone in the "family" had just died. New coach brings better style to KU But Williams invalidated his own team-as-family concept when he left for North Carolina last week. The "family" schick was B.S. from the start, even if Williams didn't know it. Unlike Williams, Bill Self doesn't kid himself into thinking that a basketball team — despite bonding and forming close friendships — can become a family. During his press conference yesterday, the only family Self mentioned was his own. He's here to win games, and he seems to give the impression that he knows that can be done without getting so close to your players that you can call them "son." Self has the right approach, and Kansas fans need to have the right one, too. Self shouldn't be placed on a moral pedestal like Williams was — no matter how many games, conference titles and national championships he wins. Self is a proven winner as a coach, and he has a reputation for integrity. That's all that should matter to any Kansas fan. Sure, Self is known as a good guy. He can be a role model for your kids if you want him to be, but he's no more qualified than any other nice guy who doesn't cheat. He's not a better person than you or me just because he wins games honestly and with class. Expect Self to win and keep the program clean. But don't expect him to be the so-called "father" to 15 grown-ups who have real families back home. Don't expect him to change Aaron Miles' diapers or teach Stephen Vinson how to deal with bullies. Above all, don't make him a false idol. He's a damn good basketball coach. That's all that matters. Inside Sports Missouri player pleads guilty Berlin is a Leawood senior in journalism. The Associated Press COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri guard Ricky Clemons, accused of choking a woman and holding her against her will at his apartment in January, pleaded guilty yesterday to a pair of lesser counts and was suspended from competition for one year. Boone County's prosecutor wants Clemons, 20, to spend at least three months behind bars. Clemons, who faced an April 29 trial on an original charge of felony second-degree domestic assault, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor counts of third-degree assault and false imprisonment. At a June 23 sentencing hearing, Prosecutor Kevin Crane plans to recommend Clemons receive two years of probation and a suspended one-year jail term on the assault charge, and 90 days behind bars on the false-imprisonment count. Clemons' pleas yesterday were "open." Crane said, meaning the judge "is free to exceed or go under what I recommend." Each misdemeanor count carries up to a year in jail. In discussions with Clemons' defense attorneys, Crane said, "I made it clear that if Clemons is going to plead to a misdemeanor, I wanted the jail time." The prosecutor said he offered the reduced charge partly because "it's anybody's guess what a jury will do." "I feel like we've served justice and met the interest of the victim," who ultimately wants the sentence to bar Clemons from having future contact with her, Crane said. Yesterday's development, Crane said, "is something I discussed with her. She approved of it. She's happy with it." Clemons' attorney Wally Bley, reached yesterday night at his home in Columbia, declined comment. "We're just not saying anything beyond what we're saying in court," Bley said. Late yesterday, Missouri suspended Clemons from competition for one year, including the 2003-04 season. Mike Alden, Missouri's athletics director, said in a statement the school would honor Clemons scholarship, "provided he continues to progress toward his degree and meets his academic and social responsibilities." In the statement, Tigers' coach Quin Snyder said, "As we have maintained all along, we would await the outcome of the judicial process until taking further action in this situation." Sam Fleury, a representative for Missouri's men's basketball program, said yesterday's suspension would not end Clemons' association with the team, because he would still have a year of eligibility remaining after sitting out next season. "There's still time on his clock," Fleury said. Jessica Bunge, 20, of St. Clair, alleged Clemons pushed her down, bloodied her nose and choked her the night of Jan. 16 after she refused to watch the movie Roots with him. Clemons was arrested the next day and was suspended from the basketball team for one game. In 32 starts last season, Clemons averaged 14.2 points — third on the team — and a team-best 3.8 assists. He shot 38 percent from the field, including 34 percent from 3-point range. Clemons led the Tigers with 49 steals. Clemons, a junior college transfer, was supposed to be the point guard Missouri sorely lacked. But he struggled down the stretch with turnovers and shot just 10-of-47 (21.3 percent) from the floor in his last five games, including a 2-of-15 showing in a loss to Marquette in the NCAA tournament. Houston Texans weigh draft picks The Associated Press HOUSTON — Houston Texans general manager Charley Casserly dispelled any mystery about the expansion team's first draft pick. Quarterback David Carr already was house-hunting by the time Houston formally chose him at No. 1 in 2002. This time around, the Texans own the No. 3 overall pick and have everyone guessing. What they decide to do could be the key to how things unfold next weekend. TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2003 "It's a different draft. There's no question about that." Casserly said. If Houston keeps its pick, the most likely possibilities are Miami receiver Andre Johnson and Arizona State defensive end Terrell Suggs. Suggs acknowledged his stock dropped after a poor predraft workout he attributed to simply having a bad day. The team also has hosted Kansas State cornerback Terence Newman and Utah offensive lineman Jordan Gross, both of whom could still be available if the Texans trade down a bit. Or perhaps Houston will trade for Cincinnati's top overall pick and snare HARVEST Detroit Lions are a virtual lock to take the home-state product at No. 2. Michigan State receiver Charles Rogers, who also visited the team this month. But if the Texans don't move up, the "To make it simple, if we stay at 3, we're going to get a starter," Casserly said. "If we trade back we're going to get a player who will start for us and something else." "We're looking at a lot of options, and we have for a long time. We're still debating a lot of issues." Despite the horror show put on by the Texans' offense last season — Carr's record 76 sacks at the forefront — Johnson and Rogers say they're eager to come aboard and improve things. "David Carr is a great player and great quarterback," Johnson said. "I've talked to him a few times. He said if I had any questions at all to give him a call. He's hoping I can be here with him. I'd like to be here a long time, and maybe we could start something great." Rogers made it clear he'd be just as happy to come to Houston as he would be to stay close to home. "People who know football know I'm the best player in the draft." Rogers said. "I make good plays. I make great catches. I run fast. I can stretch the field. I can get open. I'm all of the above. I feel like I'm the total package." There are other intriguing names. Suggs could step in and fill a pass-rushing void left by Jeff Posey, who signed with Buffalo after leading Houston with eight sacks. Newman could make cornerback Marcus Coleman expendable, opening up salary-cap space. Or the Texans could take Gross so he could help keep Carr upright a little more often. "If the Texans decide to trade (down), it's still an option. And if they don't, it's still an option," said the 6-foot-5, 306-pound Gross, who sees himself drafted anywhere from No. 3 to the low teens. "On draft day, I will definitely be sitting on the edge of my seat for about two hours waiting to see what will happen." Free forAll Can you please tell me why Aaron Miles called me an L-7 on Thursday night? I'm not Roy thought about himself, so we thought about us. UNC, you're going down. quite sure what that means. 售 Bill Self is coming to KU, and he might be bringing another All-American with him, so good riddance, Roy Williams! Bill Self, let me be the first to say welcome to Kansas. award at the basketball banquet, but by the time he leaves the University of Kansas, theyll have one named after him: Keith Freeze Badass Award. Late Night with Bill Self just doesn't sound right. We should change it to Chill with Bill. Keith Langford might not have won an award at the basketball banquet, but by the time he leaves the University of Kansas, theyll have one named after him: Keith Freeze Badass Award. 图 I have a friend named Mai, and if she married Coach Self, her name would be Mai Self. --- I went to know what makes Jeff Graves think he can drive his Cadillac Escalade across the sidewalk in front of Budig. I don't care if he is a basketball player, that's just rude. The Jayhawks will struggle in his first year. How successful will Bill Self be in his first season at Kansas? He will have a winning record. kansan.com He will lead the Jayhawks to a Big POLL QUESTION ■ He will lead the Jayhawks to a Big 12 Conference title. He will take Kansas to the Elite Eight He will win the championship. He will take Kansas to the Little Light Kansas will see another Final Four berth. Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote. TODAY Kansas Athletics Calendar TOMORROW Women's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day, Columbia, Mo. Women's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day. Columbia, Mo. Baseball at Wichita State, 7 p.m. Wichita Softball vs. University of Missouri-Kansas City, doubleheader, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., Jayhawk Field THURSDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. FRIDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championship, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Softball vs. Nebraska, 5.p.m., Jayhawk Field Baseball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Hogland Ball- Park SATURDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Rowing at the University of Cincinnati, all day. Cincinnati Softball vs. Baylor, 2.p.m., Jayhawk Field SUNDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Softball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., Jayhawk Field Western Illinois hires UNLV assistant basketball coach MACOMB, III. — UNLV assistant Derek Thomas was hired yesterday as head bas ketball coach at Western Illinois, taking over a program that has lost 20 or more games in three of the past four years. Thomas, 36, replaces Jim Kerwin, who resigned for health reasons last month after going 135-174 in 11 seasons at Macomb. Thomas spent two years as an assistant to Charlie Spoonhour at UNLV, which finished 21-11 last season and lost in the first round of the NIT. Thomas' father, Emmitt, played 13 years for the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs. The Fun is a Click Away Optional Campus Fees is now integrated with Online Enrollment. Sign up for Options during online enrollment. Optional Campus Fees Sign Up Instructions: The Associated Press 1 Sign in enroll & pay 3 Click Learner Services 6 Select your Options 4 Click Academics or Finances 2 Click Enroll and Pay 7 Click yellow Save button 5 Click KU Optional Fees "DO NOT CLICK ON BACK ARROW IN WEB BROWSER" SLAB, BOCO, Tradition Keepers, Jayhawker Yourbook KU on Wheels, All Sports Combo, All-Arts Package, Parking, Career Services, SUA Movie Card, Park & Ride www.ku.edu/~options STUDENT TRAVEL web fares and NOT just online London...$314 Paris...$441 Amsterdam...$495 Rio de Janeiro.$611 Fare is roundtrip from Kansas City. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. Kansas Union, Room 475 (785) 864.1271 12345 STA TRAVEL www.statravel.com LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 2858 Four Wheel Dr. Catch Spring Fever! Fitness Special Save $100 annual membership $25/month * Can Freeze Over Summer exp. 4/15 Tanning Special 3-Month Tanning unlimited usage $70.00 * Non-members welcome! exp. 4/15 BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa 749-2424 PALM TREE TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 3B Canucks look to ride momentum to comeback against St. Louis The Associated Press VANCOUVER, British Columbia — The St. Louis Blues are ignoring the big series lead they squandered and the fact they have to play Game 7 on the road. "It's a one-game show right now," Blues forward Doug Weight said after practice yesterday. The Blues held a 3-1 lead over Vancouver in this best-of-seven series, but that advantage is gone. They now have to face the Canucks on the road in the decisive game tonight. ference semifinals. They dropped Game 5 in Vancouver and then lost the sixth game at home. The Blues insist they've forgotten about their last two losses when one victory would've landed them in the Western Con- It's been that way for the last two games for the Canucks, and they responded with their best efforts of the series. After being outscored 14-4 in the first four games, Vancouver has a 9-6 advantage in the last two contests. The Canucks led the NHL in regular-season goals. The Canucks have countered a strong Blues backchecking system by using their defensemen more on offense. Defensmen have scored four of the last nine Vancouver goals and added seven assists in the last two games. Road CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B make me enjoy basketball. I just make me enjoy b-ball. I just find it enjoyable to be around him." Even though his stint as a Kansas assistant lasted only a year, Self never forgot the Jayhawk mystique and began to dream of one-day being Kansas' head man "This is a once in a lifetime opportunity," Self said. "When you're at Oral Roberts and you lose 18 in a row your first year, you don't speak publicly about I'm going to coach at Kansas, someday." But deep in my heart, once you've been here, you know what it's like." Self is expected to make $1.1 million during the next five years including incentives. During yesterday's press conference, Self sounded more like an alumnus reminiscing while back in town for homecoming than a man merely switching jobs. "I know a lot of people in this room," Self said. "I still knew how to get to Alvamar and show my family where I used to live, even though it's changed a little bit." Now, Self is back in Kansas for the biggest opportunity of his professional career,back where it all began. Edited by Jason Elliott Softball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B "She just ran of gas," Bunge said. "She just ran of gas," Bunge said. Junior Leah Mountain relieved Wallach in the seventh but gave up 5 runs off of 5 hits Kalka got the start for Mizzou in game two as well and pitched a one-hitter. The hit came off a home run to center field by freshman third baseman Nettie Fierros in the third. Kalka became the fourth pitcher to post a one-hitter in the last eight games. "She did a nice job, but our hitters made her much better," Bunge said, noting the 'Hawks poor pitching selection late in the game. Bunge said that because of the injury, Pierce couldn't lift her arm above her shoulder. Bunge said she popped some scar tissue in her shoulder. When she will return is not known right now, but Bunge said she would not do anything to jeopardize Pierce's future. "The docs say it could be two days or could be two weeks," Bunge said. "I will not put her in a situation until she's ready." For Kansas, it's just another bad bounce. "There are some things in this game you can't control." Bunge said. "You can't control injuries." Kansas plays tomorrow in a doubleheader against University of Missouri-Kansas City, starting at 3 p.m. Edited by Erin Chapman "I think Self will work on the fast break game, the way Roy did, but I think he'll bring his own game." Sandler said. "I think he's going to bring his defense." Style CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Many students predicted Self would see NCAA Tournament success in his first year as coach at Kansas, citing a solid core of returning players and a much-lauded recruiting class. Sandler said he thought the transition between Self and Williams would be smooth, but that they were different types of coaches. "I'm not worried how we'll do under him." Laura Coelho, Shawnee graduate student, said. "I think the team will go at least as far as it has in the past." Despite sentiment that Kansas could achieve success immediately under Self, Lanard Paden, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said Kansas fans should not put expectations on the new coach. "I think eventually we'll go pretty far judging by how far he went with Illinois," he said. "But give him some time." Efe Ekpere, Fort Myers, Fla. senior said he thought Self's arrival would change Kansas' style of play for the better. "Last year we couldn't guard the three to save our lives," Ekpere said. "So, hopefully that will change. Also, Roy Williams couldn't really coach a zone, so hopefully that will change too." Though students still lamented the loss of Williams to North Carolina, Self appeared to be the best coach available, Steven Lucas, Overland Park sophomore, said "Roy is a one of a kind coach," Lucas said. "But our program is the type of program that can move on. I think Bill Self will be successful." Edited by Jason Elliott Greene CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B This is where the lesson ties in. me wanted to point east and laugh, but I just can't It took a little while for me to realize it, but I finally saw last Monday that Roy Williams is human just like the rest of us. Instead of succumbing to the god-like status the city of Lawrence and state of Kansas had constructed for him, Roy followed his heart east. It's something that the majority of people in Kansas spoke out against. One fan at the team's annual awards banquet even yelled 'traitor' towards the former coach following his speech. Either they truly are clueless, or they were just flatout confused. The way many Kansas fans reacted toward Roy was two-faced. Fans went around conversing with one another saying Roy stabbed the team in the back. T-shirts with anti-Roy sayings even became commonplace around town. This was a man who people saw as the ideal citizen in a world of coaching who was full of lies and betrayal. Unfortunately, in situations like these, those are the fans, or sore thumbs, that stick out in the crowd. I, for one, was appreciative of Roy's years of service and dedication. Shoot. 15 years in one place in the modern sports world can seem like an eternity. All of a sudden, people turned their backs on a historic 15-year run. Now it's time for Illinois fans to react. son that both the Jayhawk and Illini faithful can learn is that, these days, when the amount of money an athlete or coach makes defines their status in the public eye, we cannot forget that they are all still human just like us. Right now, they're probably feeling betrayed and confused at the same time. The common les- They bleed when they're cut, they yawn when they're tired. and they eat when they're hungry. Since seeing the aftermath of Roy Williams' departure, I for one can honestly say I'll never again hold an athlete or coach to a higher standard than anyone else. I'm man enough to say I've done it before and given sports figures the benefit of the doubt, but that all comes to an end now. I suggest everyone else does the same. Kansas was a storied, championship program before Roy, and will continue to be after Roy. Illinois was a successful program before Bill, and the same goes for it. Don't think that once a beloved coach bolts town that all hell breaks loose. Illinois fans should embrace the three great seasons, the big ten championships and the hundreds of outstanding memories Self is leaving behind. It should realize that Kansas was his ultimate finish line. Either way, you'll get an outstanding replacement, just like we did. True, the Illini fans may not have had the same status built up for Self as Kansas fans did for Williams, but once again, every cloud has its silver lining. It's something I may have never thought would come out of my mouth, but knowing what the pain feels like, I hope the sun comes up tomorrow over Champaign. - Greene is a Vernon Hills, Ill., junior in journalism AN Kansas beats lite Light p. 11 s at risl SPOR No more c Kansas dances past Du Nick delivers heavenly game against Devils SHOCKINGLY INTRIGUING THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 kansan.com for students by students Over 40 toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 10" Pizzas 2 toppings $10.99 RUDY'S PIZZERY 2 drinks Home of the Pocket Pizza' 749-0055 704 Mass. time for the battle you've been waiting for... KJHK presents the 2003 Farmer's Ball!!! -TUE APRIL 22- captain overreact hearts to waste boskk (reference to blue) the afternoons FINALS: -SAT APRIL 26 for a full day of recording at the BLACK LODGE all shows S3 18+ 9:00 doors @ the BOTTLENECK -WED APRIL 23- esau vibralux ike turner overdrive kelpie sotonightimaysleep Fed Lyon Town Red Lyon Tavern A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence 944 Mass. 832-8228 Over 40 toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 10" Pizzas 2 toppings $10.10 2 drinks plus tax RUDY'S PIZZERIA Home of the Pocket Pizza 749-0055 704 Mass. kansan.com The student newsletter of the University of Kansas for students by students Over 40 toppings to choose from!!! Rudy Tuesday 2 10” Pizzas 2 toppings $10.99 plus tax RUDY'S PIZZERA 2 drinks Home of the Pocket Pizza! time for the battle you've been waiting for... KJHK presents the 2003 Farmer's Ball!!! FINALS: - TUE APRIL 22- captain overreact hearts to waste boskk [reference to blue] the afternoons SAT APRIL 26 for a full day of recording at the BLACK LODGE all shows $3 18+ 9:00 doors @ the BOTTLENECK -WED APRIL 23- esau vibralux ike turner overdrive kelpie sotonightimaysleep IB • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY,APRIL 22,2003 Quarterbacks compete for position By Will Shanley Colorado Daily via U-wire University of Colorado BOULDER, Colo. — Eeny meeny miny moe, pick a passer by his throws, and by his smarts and by his runs, yet Gary Barnett's job is still not done. More specifically for Barnett, Colorado's head football coach, his decision concerning his quarterback is not yet done. Joel Klatt, James Cox, Erik Greenberg. Those are the varsity players vying for next year's starting spot. Between the three, only Klatt, a sophomore, has game experience, taking 10 snaps last year. After spring drills wrapped up Saturday with the Buffs' Black and Gold Scrimmage, Barnett said he would wait for another day to name his man. "At this point, it's still up in the air," Barnett said about the quarterback position. "This is the kind of spring where you walk out and CU say, 'OK, we still got issues that have to be addressed and we're not going to get them addressed until fall camp." The scrimmage, which used an offense versus defense format because injuries prevented splitting the squad into two teams, was won by the defense 32-26. The defense was awarded five points for a turnover, and between one to six points for stopping the offense, depending on where on the field the drive was ended. The defense earned a steak dinner for their victory, while the offense will dine on franks and beans. Barnett had wanted a clear-cut starter to emerge during spring practice so that receivers and running backs could focus their efforts over the summer with the No.1 guy. the others. None of the quarterbacks, however, significantly outplayed Cox, a red-shirt freshman, had entered spring ball with a slight lead over Klatt. But their positions were reversed midway through the spring practice season as Klatt better handled the Buffs' defensive pass rush in a previous scrimmage. Klatt's superior elusiveness and mobility was again on display Saturday. With 2:45 left in the fourth quarter, and the Buffaloes offense trailing 24-19, the pocket crumbled around Klatt. Instead of going to the turf, Klatt slipped away and sprinted for 18 yards. The offense then hit pay dirt one play later on an 8-yard touchdown strike from Klatt to wideout D.J Hackett. "Joel is a little more advanced in that area; he'll make plays with his feet," said Shawn Watson, the Buffs' offensive coordinator. "That's just part what he brings to the table." And after completing 11-of-18 pass attempts for 127 yards and a score, he certainly strengthened his grip on the starting role. But Watson said all of the quarterbacks have developed significantly since spring practice started. "This time last year, Joel Klatt was on some bus somewhere in Montana for a minor-league (baseball) game. Seriously." said Watson of Klatt's two-year stint with the San Diego Padres organization. "James Cox was thinking about who he was going to take to prom. I shouldn't say that. He's always had a steady girlfriend. He just didn't know how to get there. They've come a long way." And while Cox entered the scrimmage listed No. 2, he fared worse than either of the other quarterbacks. Cox completed just 4-of-11 passes for 30 yards. Greenberg, a sophomore from Rampart High School in Colorado Springs, hit 12-of-23 passes for 117 yards. Cox was the only quarterback to throw an interception. Kentucky pays high price for coach By Derek Poore By Derek Poule Kentucky Kernel via U-wire University of Kentucky LEXINGTON, Ky. — Tubby Smith was all smiles on Friday as he signed a contract extension potentially keeping him at Kentucky — and out of the NBA — until 2011. The eight-year, $20 million deal could make him the highest paid coach in the country. Kentucky administrators pledged support for Smith at the UK Athletic Association meeting Friday. Although the athletic department is self-supporting, some observers are wondering if the nigh price is the right priority for a cash-strapped university. John Thelin, a highereducation and public policy professor, said Kentucky should find ways to obtain the resources the athletics department uses to raise its money. "Sophistication and effective fund raising on all levels," is key to raising money, Thelin said. "Ivy league schools have wonderful athletic programs but raise more money [for academics] than athletics," he said. Smith's contract extension also includes post-season compensation. Each year that Smith's team wins the SEC championship or IK makes the N C A A tournamen tion, he will receive a single payment of$15,000. A Final Four berth would give him an additional $50,000 bonus, and he'll get $50,000 more if his squad accomplishes a cumulative team grade point average of 3.0 or better, and if 90 percent of basketball players meet the NCAA satisfactory progress requirements. "I want to thank Dr. Todd and Mr. Barnhart and his staff," Smith said to applause from a contingent of visiting Board of Trustees members, athletic and administration staff and media. "I look forward to spending quite a few more years here." Smith, flanked by Kentucky President Lee Todd and Athletic Director Mitch Barnhart, said "Our industry is a crazy industry," Barnhart said, "and I'm confident he wants to be here." Lexington, Ky., should be his home for many years to come. "You've had a tremendous year," Todd said to Smith. "it not only the string of victories that makes us proud but it's [the way] which you've done it and the way which you continue to do it." Illinois State hires new basketball coach By Eric Meister By Eric Meister The Daily Vidette via U-wire Illinois State University NORMAL, Ill. — In the last few years, winning hasn't been synonymous with the Illinois State women's basketball program. Part of it has been the attitude; part of it has been not knowing where to go next. In hiring Robin Pingeton away from her job as associate head coach at Iowa State, Illinois State Athletic Director Perk Weisenberg hopes he can return the winning tradition to the women's team. In Pingeton's three years at Iowa State, she has been part of a winning program with a record of 63-31 during those seasons. In the 2001 season, Iowa State showed its mettle by winning the Big XII Championship and making it to the Sweet 16. Even though Pingeton thought it would take a lot to move her from the success she enjoyed at Iowa State, she thinks she can put Illinois state back on the women's basketball map. "There were a lot of factors," she said. "First of all, I know that the program has been successful in the past and there is no reason it can't be successful again, it has a strong tradition in women's basketball," Pingeton said. "I feel like from a recruiting standpoint it's a gold mine, there is just so much ability in the state of Illinois," Pingeton said. Pingeton, originally from Atkins, Iowa, said she wanted to stay close to her home and her family. "I think a lot of that is a credit to [head coach] Bill Fennelly at Iowa State and I think his program has helped a number of us be promoted to different positions," Pingeton said. Some of the coaches to come out of the program at Iowa State are now head coaches in Southwest Missouri State, Maryland and Akron, Ohio. She has been offered other jobs, but she said she thought she had found the perfect opportunity coaching at Iowa State. In addition, she credits Fen really as being a major influence in shaping her coaching style, even though she was at Iowa State for only three years. "Coach Fennelly has been huge in molding me and shaping me into the coach that I am today. I have learned a lot about 'Xs and Os' from him. Obviously, he's had a ton of success on the court, but I think I learned the most valuable lessons off the court," Pingeton said. Even though everything she has learned from Fennelly has come in the last few years, there has been a lot of change in women's basketball since the days that she played. She also thinks that the women's game isn't very fur off from what the men's game is. Columbia names new basketball coach By Pam Wattice Columbia Daily Spectator via U-wire Columbia University Bv Phil Wallace NEW YORK — Levien Gym can now be called J.J.'s Place. Columbia has signed Villanova assistant Joe Jones to a four-year contract to become the 20th head coach in the men's basketball program's 103-year history. Jones is the brother of Yale head coach James Jones. EAGLE "It's awesome," Jones said. "You know, outside of my wedding day and my daughter being born, this is right up there." "[Jones] will bring a new level of intensity and excitement to Columbia Lions men's basketball," athletic director John Reeves said in a press release. "His dynamic personality and attention to detail will captivate Columbia players, fans and alumni." Jones, 37, has worked as an assistant at Villanova for the past six seasons. He graduated from SUNY Oswego in 1987 and earned a master's degree in counseling from the school in 1989; he worked as the middle school and high school head coach at Comsewogue School in Long Island from 1991 to 1994. From 1994 to 1997, Jones served as an assistant coach at Hofstra, working under Jay Wright, during which time the team went a combined 72-22. In 1997, he was hired as an assistant at Villanova, the same year that new Columbia football coach Bob Shoop was the Wildcats' defensive coordinator. After Steve Lappas left the Villanova program in 2001, Wright was hired as the head coach, retaining Jones. Wright was one of Jones' references for the Columbia job, and was also an assistant at the University of Rochester from 1984 to 1986, while Reeves was the athletics director. "He's got great passion for the game. He's a great, personable guy who demands loyalty from his players," Wright said. "I think Columbia is lucky because they're getting a hard-working, passionate guy. We are going to miss him." Jones' teams compiled at 105-83 record at Villanova. He has a reputation as an excellent recruiter, helping to bring one of the nation's highest-rated freshman classes to Villanova this past season. "He did a great job for us. He did a good job working with the kids, and he's a great recruiter," Lappas, now the head coach at Massachusetts, said. "He's ready to be a head coach." "I liked who [Jones] coached under very much. I liked his involvement in recruiting at Hofstra. He deserves credit for [current San Antonio Spur] Speedy Claxton," Reeves said. "I know he had a lot to do with recruitment because I know who he worked under." jones said he would like to have Columbia play a more up-tempo style, but he added he would not make any strategic decisions until he was more familiar with his players. Jones beat out a long list of candidates for the position, including Iona assistant Tony Chiles, former North Carolina assistant Bob MacKinnon, New York Knicks Coaching Associate Mike Malone, NBA Hall-of-Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and former Duke star Bobby Hurley. Abdul-Jabbar's candidacy generated excitement on campus and talk across the country, and while he was seriously considered, he was not one of the three finalists for the position. Reeves said he thought very highly of Abdul-Jabbar and added that he did not buy into perceptions from others that Abdul-Jabbar was an aloof and distant loner. He also said that Abdul-Jabbar's past legal troubles were not a detriment to his candidacy. "It came down to we were looking for a college recruiter and a college coach." Reeves said, citing Abdul-Jabbar's inexperience in coaching at the NCAA level. Jones has a difficult job ahead of him in trying to turn around a team that last year went 2-25 overall and 0-14 in the Ivy League under Armond Hill. Jones said he would draw on his experience rebuilding the Hofstra program in trying to improve Columbia's team. "I'm really excited about the challenge," Jones said. He's also excited about the opportunity to square off against his brother in the Ivy League, he said. The award-winning advertising staff of The University Daily Kansan is looking for self-motivated forward thinking students to apply for positions in sales and creative departments. Pick up your application today in Room 119 in Stauffer Flint Hall. Applications are due April 24, 2003. JOIN OUR TEAM The design team and advertising staff are so much involved in creating life and beauty it would change the course of the profession. RANSAN Advertising HWY Graduation 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore It's Not Too Late Featuring: - Custom Embossed Announcements from 99¢ · choose paper, typeface, print color, and special messages · 24-48 hr turnaround, Low minimum order - Complete Regalia from $19.95 · Masters Regalia w/hood $42.90, Doctoral Regalia w/hood $49.90 - Diploma Frames from $99.95 - Free '03 graduation tshirt (with $50.00 order) Congratulations on your Achievement and thanks for shopping with us over the years! Online ordering @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com www.jayhawkbookstore.com·1420 Crescent Rd·843-3826 TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Kenyan man wins Boston Marathon The Associated Press BOSTON — Robert Cherruivot won the Boston Marathon by 23 seconds yesterday to give Kenya its 12th victory in 13 years. Russia's Svetlana Zakharova won the women's race to prevent a second consecutive Kenyan sweep. Cheruiyot (pronounced cheh-REE-yot) finished in 2 hours, 10 minutes, 11 seconds to earn $80,000, an olive wreath and a bowl of beef stew. It was just his second career marathon, having won his debut in Milan in December. In Milan, he finished with the same time as two others but was declared the winner by an edge. This time, he wasn't challenged over the final five miles to win by more than two city blocks. "I was ready to face anything," said Cheruiyot, who felt he had a chance to win at about 15 1/2 miles. "I said, 'OK, I'll win this.'" to win Boston since his country began its domination in 1991. Kenyans swept the first five spots in the race, and eight of the top nine. Benjamin Kimutai was second, Martin Lel third. Cheruiyot is the eighth Kenyan Russian Fedor Ryzhov was the first non-Kenyan, in sixth, and defending champion Rodgers Rop of Kenya was seventh. Eddy Hellebuck was the first American, finishing in 2:17:18 for 10th place. "It's disappointing," Hellebuyck said. "I'm representing the U.S. and I'm 42 years old. Where is everybody?" Zakharova finished in 2:25:20 to beat fellow Russian Lyubov Denisova by 91 seconds. Her biggest challenge was staying on the course when the television truck turned away before the Back Bay finish line; she was the first Russian to win since 1993. American Marla Runyan was fifth — the best finish for a U.S. runner since 1993. Runyan, who is legally blind, trailed a bicyclist who provided her with her times at the checkpoints and guided her to her water bottles. She traded positions with defending champion Margaret Okayo of Kenya and the two Russians until Zakharova pulled ahead at the 13.1-mile mark. Kenya's Joyce Chepchumba was third and Okayo, who set the women's course record of 2:20:43 last year, finished fourth. Rop was in a pack of a dozen that trailed leader Vincent Kipsos through much of the early race before Kipsos dropped out by Mile 14. Nine Kenyans ran together at the 15-mile mark before some began falling away from the pack. South African Ernst Van Dyk earned his third consecutive victory in the men's wheelchair race, finishing in 1:28:32 without a competitor in sight. Second- place finisher Krige Schabort struck a girl who tried to cross the course at the 11th mile; police said the girl's injuries did not appear to be life-threatening, and Schabort also was knocked over. Christina Ripp of Savoy, Ill., who finished second last year, won the women's wheelchair race in 1:54:57. A field of 20,260 left the starting line at noon after the traditional serenade of "Young at Heart" by 95-year-old Johnny "The Elder" Kelley, who started a record 61 races, winning twice. An F-15 flyover followed the national anthem to start the Patriots Day race. Temperatures climbed to 70 and a slight breeze blew at the start, as runners filled Hopkinton Common, some stretching, others listening to music on earphones. Vendors offered everything from lemonade and fried dough to mutual funds. Henderson to join a New Jersey team The Associated Press Rickey Henderson will soon put on a newjersey in New Jersey. Hoping to play again in the major leagues but still searching for a spot, the 44-year-old Henderson will sign this week with a team in the independent Atlantic League, his agent said yesterday. Henderson narrowed his choice to three clubs based in New Jersey -- the Newark Bears, Camden Riversharks and Somerset Patriots. Baseball's career leader in runs, stolen bases and walks wants to start playing as soon as possible, agent Jeff Borris said. The Atlantic League begins its regular season May 1, the earliest among independents. Henderson spent last season with the Boston Red Sox, hitting .223 with five home runs and 16 RBI in 72 games. He continued to draw walks, however, and had a higher on-base percentage (.369) than regular Red Sox leadoff man Johnny Damon (.356). Henderson has scored 2,288 runs, and his eight steals last season increased his total to 1,403. He also holds records for walks (2,179) and leadoff home runs (80). Henderson was the 1990 American League MVP for the Oakland Athletics, and he won World Series championships with the A's in 1989 and the Toronto Blue Jays in 1993. Primarily a left fielder throughout his career, Henderson played all three outfield spots last season. He had a $350,000 contract with the Red Sox. Henderson was not looking for a rich deal this year, either. Instead, he wanted another chance to play. There had been talk early in the offseason that he might return to Oakland for a fifth stint with the Athletics, but nothing came of it. When no spots opened up in the majors, Henderson thought about joining the St. Paul Saints, the team where Daryl Strawberry once jump-started his career. The Saints play in the Northern League, which doesn't start until May 23. Newark has had its share of big-name players, including Jose Canseco in 2001. League champions last season, the Bears signed former 20-game winner Jose Lima last week as they prepared to leave for spring training in Homestead, Fla. Several former big leaguers are on the rosters of the eight teams in the Atlantic League. Camden recently signed Kevin Jordan, while Somerset added Jason Dickson and Melvin Nieves. The Associated Press ANN ARBOR, Mich. Michigan introduced former Southwest Missouri State coach Cheryl Burnett as its new women's basketball coach yesterday. Burnett replaces Sue Guevara, who resigned on March 24 as Michigan's winningest coach with a 123-82 record over seven seasons. Burnett resigned from Southwest Missouri State almost a year ago as its most-successful coach — with a 319-136 mark — after leading the program to the Final Four twice from 1987 to 2002. Burnett left in part because she said, "I want to run a Top25 program, not a mid-major." She was out of coaching this past season, after withdrawing from consideration to be Minnesota's coach last May. "I am very excited to take over the head coaching duties at one of the top academic and athletic collegiate institutions in the country," Burnett said yesterday. "I also look forward to the opportunity to lead a Michigan program that has made a commitment to women's basketball." Burnett, who coached WNBA standout Jackie Stiles, was known at Southwest Missouri State for her demanding coaching style that often included foot stomping and shrill whistling. The Lady Bears had just five winning seasons before Burnett arrived in 1987. She led the them to their first Gateway Conference regular-season title in 1990 and their first NCAA tourname n t appearance in 1 9 9 1 MICHIGAN Southwest Missouri State made their first trip to the Final Four after winning 31 games in 1992 and another in 2001. Megan McCallister, Michigan's associate athletic director, led the search for a new coach and said Burnett was hired for her integrity along with her teaching and coaching skills. "When Megan told me that Cheryl was interested, I recalled Cheryl's great teams from Southwest Missouri State and I thought to myself, 'She's the one for Michigan,'" said Michigan athletic director Bill Martin. "I am very happy that Cheryl will be guiding this program." A native of Centralia, Mo., Burnett played basketball in the 1970s at Kansas, where she was a four-year starter and was the first woman to receive a full athletic scholarship. Burnett's first team at Michigan will be led by senior Jennifer Smith, who led the team in scoring this season, senior Stephanie Gandy, junior Tabitha Pool and sophomore Niki Reams. The program will have to replace two seniors: Raina Goodlow and LeeAnn Bies. Guevara led the Wolverines to the NCAA tournament in 1998, 2000 and 2001. 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Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew FRY-WAGNER MOVING & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Equal-Employment-Opportunity Employer $ $ LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749.1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKMAN (p-13) 4:18 7:10 9:40 CITY OF GOD (p) 4:00 8:30 ADAPTATION. (p) 7:00 ONLY 2 admissions for the price of 1 tue Tues. KANSAN START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MISS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT •14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-“WING IT” NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells EVERY NIGHT •1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 •Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 LET EVENING AT ET DELI INC. TUESDAY,APRIL 22,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Kenyan man wins Boston Marathon The Associated Press BOSTON — Robert Cherruiyot won the Boston Marathon by 23 seconds yesterday to give Kenya its 12th victory in 13 years. Russia's Svetlana Zakharova won the women's race to prevent a second consecutive Kenyan sweep. Cheriyiot (pronounced chehREE-yot) finished in 2 hours, 10 minutes, 11 seconds to earn $80,000, an olive wreath and a bowl of beef stew. It was just his second career marathon, having won his debut in Milan in December. In Milan, he finished with the same time as two others but was declared the winner by an edge. This time, he wasn't challenged over the final five miles to win by more than two city blocks. "I was ready to face anything," said Cheruiyot, who felt he had a chance to win at about 15 1/2 miles. "I said, 'OK, I'll win this." Cheruiyot is the eighth Kenyan to win Boston since his country began its domination in 1991. Kenyans swipe the first five spots in the race, and eight of the top nine. Benjamin Kimutai was second, Martin Lel third. Russian Fedor Ryzhov was the first non-Kenyan, in sixth, and defending champion Rodgers Rop of Kenya was seventh. Eddy Hellebuyck was the first American, finishing in 2:17:18 for 10th place. "It's disappointing," Hellebuyck said. "I'm representing the U.S. and I'm 42 years old. Where is everybody?" Zakharova finished in 2:25:20 to beat fellow Russian Lyubov Denisova by 91 seconds. Her biggest challenge was staying on the course when the television truck turned away before the Back Bay finish line; she was the first Russian to win since 1993. American Marla Runyan was fifth — the best finish for a U.S. runner since 1993. Runyan, who is legally blind, trailed a bicyclist who provided her with her times at the checkpoints and guided her to her water bottles. She traded positions with defending champion Margaret Okayo of Kenya and the two Russians until Zakharova pulled ahead at the 13.1-mile mark. Kenya's Joyce Chepchumba was third and Okayo, who set the women's course record of 2:20:43 last year, finished fourth. Rop was in a pack of a dozen that trailed leader Vincent Kipsos through much of the early race before Kipsos dropped out by Mile 14. Nine Kenyans ran together at the 15-mile mark before some began falling away from the pack. South African Ernst Van Dyk earned his third consecutive victory in the men's wheelchair race, finishing in 1:28:32 without a competitor in sight. Second- place finisher Krige Schabort struck a girl who tried to cross the course at the 11th mile; police said the girl's injuries did not appear to be life-threatening, and Schabort also was knocked over. Christina Ripp of Savoy, Ill., who finished second last year, won the women's wheelchair race in 1:54:57. A field of 20,260 left the starting line at noon after the traditional serenade of "Young at Heart" by 95-year-old Johnny "The Elder" Kelley, who started a record 61 races, winning twice. An F-15 flyover followed the national anthem to start the Patriots Day race. Temperatures climbed to 70 and a slight breeze blew at the start, as runners filled Hopkinton Common, some stretching, others listening to music on earphones. Vendors offered everything from lemonade and fried dough to mutual funds. Henderson to join a New Jersey team The Associated Press Rickey Henderson will soon put on a new jersey in New Jersey. Hoping to play again in the major leagues but still searching for a spot, the 44-year-old Henderson will sign this week with a team in the independent Atlantic League, his agent said yesterday. Henderson narrowed his choice to three clubs based in New Jersey -- the Newark Bears, Camden Riversharks and Somerset Patriots. Baseball's career leader in runs, stolen bases and walks wants to start playing as soon as possible, agent Jeff Borris said. The Atlantic League begins its regular season May 1, the earliest among independents. Henderson spent last season with the Boston Red Sox, hitting .223 with five home runs and 16 RBI in 72 games. He continued to draw walks, however, and had a higher on-base percentage (.369) than regular Red Sox leadoff man Johnny Damon (.356). Widely considered the greatest leadoff man ever. Henderson has 3,040 lifetime hits since making his major league debut in 1979. Henderson has scored 2,288 runs, and his eight steals last season increased his total to 1,403. He also holds records for walks (2,179) and leadoff home runs (80). Henderson was the 1990 American League MVP for the Oakland Athletics, and he won World Series championships with the A's in 1989 and the Toronto Blue Jays in 1993. Primarily a left fielder throughout his career, Henderson played all three outfield spots last season. He had a $350,000 contract with the Red Sox. Henderson was not looking for a rich deal this year, either. Instead, he wanted another chance to play. There had been talk early in the offseason that he might return to Oakland for a fifth stint with the Athletics, but nothing came of it. When no spots opened up in the majors, Henderson thought about joining the St. Paul Saints, the team where Darryl Strawberry once jump-started his career. The Saints play in the Northern League, which doesn't start until May 23. Newark has had its share of big-name players, including Jose Canseco in 2001. League champions last season, the Bears signed former 20-game winner Jose Lima last week as they prepared to leave for spring training in Homestead, Fla. Several former big leaguers are on the rosters of the eight teams in the Atlantic League. Camden recently signed Kevin Jordan, while Somerset added Jason Dickson and Melvin Nieves. The Associated Press ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Michigan introduced former Southwest Missouri State coach Cheryl Burnett as its new women's basketball coach yesterday. Burnett replaces Sue Guervara, who resigned on March 24 as Michigan's winningest coach with a 123-82 record over seven seasons. Burnett resigned from Southwest Missouri State almost a year ago as its most-successful coach — with a 319-136 mark — after leading the program to the Final Four twice from 1987 to 2002. Burnett left in part because she said, "I want to run a Top 25 program, not a mid-major." She was out of coaching this past season, after withdrawing from consideration to be Minnesota's coach last May. Burnett, who coached WNBA standout Jackie Stiles, was known at Southwest Missouri State for her demanding coaching style that often included foot stomping and shrill whistling. "I am very excited to take over the head coaching duties at one of the top academic and athletic collegiate institutions in the country," Burnett said yesterday. "I also look forward to the opportunity to lead a Michigan program that has made a commitment to women's basketball." The Lady Bears had just five winning seasons before Burnett arrived in 1987. She led the them to their first Gateway Conference regular-season title in 1990 and their first NCAA tournamen t appearance in 1991. MICHIGAN Southwest Missouri State made their first trip to the Final Four after winning 31 games in 1992 and another in 2001. Megan McCallister, Michigan's associate athletic director, led the search for a new coach and said Burnett was hired for her integrity along with her teaching and coaching skills. "When Megan told me that Cheryl was interested, I recalled Cheryl's great teams from Southwest Missouri State and I thought to myself, 'She's the one for Michigan,'" said Michigan athletic director Bill Martin. "I am very happy that Cheryl will be guiding this program." A native of Centralia, Mo., Burnett played basketball in the 1970s at Kansas, where she was a four-year starter and was the first woman to receive a full athletic scholarship. Burnett's first team at Michigan will be led by senior Jennifer Smith, who led the team in scoring this season, senior Stephanie Gandy, junior Tabitha Pool and sophomore Niki Reams. The program will have to replace two seniors: Raina Goodlow and LeeAnn Bies. Guevara led the Wolverines to the NCAA tournament in 1998, 2000 and 2001. But the Wolverines, who were 13-16 overall this season, tied Northwestern for the worst record in the Big Ten with a 3-13 conference mark. MUST-READ 1. What is the purpose of a desk stapler? 2. How does a desk stapler work? 3. What are some common uses for desk staplers? free give-a-ways - red swingline staplers & office space soundtracks office space character impression contest Did you get the MEMO? Did you get the MEMO? Did you get the MEMO? team go see Office Space! SUA presents the movie Office Space April 23, 2003 7:00PM woodruff auditorium tickets $2 and can be purchased at the sun office free give-a-ways - red swingline staplers & office space soundtracks office space character impression contest Did you get the memo? Did you get the memo? Did you get the memo? SUA presents the movie Office Space April 23, 2003 Tickets $2 and can be purchased at the sun office 7:00PM woodruff auditorium Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Equal-Employment-Opportunity Employer START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MISS. STREET DELI DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT •14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY“WING IT”NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells EVERY NIGHT •1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 •Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 er $ S Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Roclo ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew WAGNER MA & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an F^2^al-Employment-Opportunity Employer 10 $ $ KANSAN LIBERTY HALL 644 Marsh 7:49-19:12 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM (p.m.) 4:16 7:10 9:40 CITY OF GOD (p.m.) 4:00 9:30 ADAPTATION. (p.m.) 7:00 ONLY 2 admissions for the price of one on Tuesday START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MASS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT •14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells EVERY NIGHT •1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 •Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 EVENING AT ET DELI, Inc. PETER ROBINSON 6B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN APARTMENT GUIDE TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 APARTMENT GUIDE Found on pages 6B. 7B. 8B. 9B. 10B HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 1 BED/1 BATH $450-$475 2 BED/1^12 BATHS $850-$575 2 BED/2 BATNS $635 *POOL* *ON KU BUS ROUTE* *COVERED PARKING* *ON-SITE LAUNDRY* *PETS ALLOWED* *6-12 MO. LEASE* CALL MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT 795 841 4935 2000 HEATHERWOOD DR. THE WOODS THE WOODS APTURES AND DENSITY APTURES A smaller, quiet community - Spacious 2 bdm. units * Washer/Dryer or hook-ups avail. * Dishwasher and disposal * Central Air, gas heat * On-site mgmt./maintenance * On KU bus route * Swimming pool * Sorry, no pets please * Affordable rent and deposit 630 Michigan • 749-7279 Check out pages 8, 9 &10 for more Apartment Guide Landlord Troubles? Want to move off-campus? Looking to sublease or find a new apartment? off campus living resource center university of kansas 4th floor, kansas union 785.864.4164 KANSAN We can help you. http://www.ku.edu/~oclrc West Hills Apartments 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom - Reasonable Rates - Great Location Near Campus - Digital Cable & Internet Open House Monday-Friday 1:00-5:00 NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Don't drive all over town. Don't make a hundred phone calls. We've done the work for you. GRAYSTONE Apartments that fit your lifestyle - Designed with the KU student in mind. (On KU Bus Route) - One-Two-Three Bedroom Apartments - Rates from $410 to $720 2512 West Sixth Street Lawrence, Kansas 66049 (785) 749-1102 Email: graystoneapt@aol.com Also, Eagle Ridge Apts -- 530 Eldridge, 1 & 2 BRs --- THE LEGENDS FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) PROPERTY-WIDE SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM WASHER AND ORDER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPRED FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPORTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNTEAINER BROADCAST HIGH SPEED INTERNET DOOR TO DOOR KU SHUTTLE THE LEGENDS LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING ALVAMAR COUNTY CLUB K.U. THE LEGENDS 4101 WEST 24TH PLACE • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66047 (Across from the Alvamar Country Club) (785) 856-KU4U • 856-5848 WWW.THELEGENDSATKU.COM Conference memorial student community TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B APARTMENT GUIDE IT’S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. 7th & Florida 785-841-5255 mon-fri 10am-12pm SUNDANCE Furnished apt available Gas heat & wainscoting Pully equipped kitchen including microwaves with no added spots Private balconies & patios on site luxury quality pool on KI bus route On-site manager 24h emergency Maintenance models open daily Regents Court Large Mertle, All High apartments in Walk with Washer & Dryer Modern Dining Large Ivy Appliances Kitchen Baking Microwave & Windowiser Can Heat & Hot Water Centre Heat & Dr. Offices pool inc. On KI accessible 10kla On-site motile names For more information call 811-1212 or 842-1195 Mon-Fri 9am Dat: 10am Sun: Closed EHO Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold 749-4376 8555 Now Leasing! Models open daily kansandotcom 1 & 2 bedrooms $390 & 495 6-12 month leases College Station Apartments 26th & Redbud Lane Pets allowed ♦ Loundrv on-site Free cable Central Air On KU bus Route Call Today! 841-4935 Pinnacle Woods Now Reserving For Summer and Fall Luxury 1,2, & 3 BR apts. Full size washer and dryer Cardio Fitness Center Cardio Fitness Center Computer & Media Center Amilais Pente LeannaMar Williams Dointe Computer & Media Center Club like pool & spa 1/4 mile west on Wakarusa 5000 Clinton Parkway www.pinnaclewoods.com 785-865-5454 3 & 4 BDRM TOWNHOMES Owner Glen Lemesany Owner (O)785-312-7942 (C)785-766-1443 (F)785-841-1403 4410 Clinton Pkwy Bldg D Lawrence, KS 6604 Lawrence, KS 66047 KVM Kaw Valley Management Professional Property Management NOW LEASING FOR SPRING, SUMMER & FALL '03 STUDIOS; 1,2,3, & 4 Bedroom APTS; DUPLEXES & HOMES GREAT LOCATIONS! - Pin Oak Townhomes Real Oak Apartments - Fountain Homes - Red Oak Apartments - On KU Bus Routes - West Meadows Condos - 24 hr Emergency Maintenance - Pets OK in Some Locations Call 841-6080 or stop by 2331 Alabama St. #104 LAWRENCE REALTY ASSOCIATES Why Rent When You Can Own? Lawrence Real Estate is a great investment! For more information Call Rozi! Rozi Foreman, GRI, ABR $ ^{\textcircled{R}} $ Mobile: 766-4732 Email: Rozi@Lawrence-Realty.com 4321 w.6th Street Lawrence,KS 66049 785.841.2727 Blue Meadow Management, Inc. Apartments & Town Homes Luxury at an Affordable Price! Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Apartments & Town Homes Luxury at an Affordable Price! Troon Townhomes 2 bedroom/1 bath $650 Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Townhomes and Apartments For an appointment call 840.9467 5200 West 15th, Suite 101 Check out more offerings in the Kansan classifieds Troon Townhomes 2 bedroom/1 bath $650 Check out more offerings in the Kansan classifieds --- 8B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 APARTMENT GUIDE APARTMENT GUIDE Found on pages 6B. 7B. 8B. 9B. 10B --- Aspen West 2900 W. 15th, 1-2 BR apts. By campus, water & trash paid, laundry on-site, bus route. No pets. 24 hour maintenance. High speed cable available. AC Management. 1815 W. 24th. Don't drive all over town. Don't make a hundred phone calls. We've done the work for you. 842-4461 kansan classifieds buy-sell-rent KANSAN everyday MASTER PLAN MANAGEMENT - Single family homes - Duplexes - Townhomes - Apartments - Condos - 1,2,3,4...bedrooms Call today. We have something for you. 841-4935 www.masterplannagementi.com Woodward Apartments 6th and Michigan 6th and Michigan Now Leasing for Summer and Fall - 1, 2 and 3 bdrms $445-$575 * water/trash paid * washer/dryer * on KU bus route * covered parking avail or visit us at masterplanmagement.com 841-4935 Landlord Troubles? Want to move off-campus? Looking to sublease or find a new apartment? off campus living resource center university of kansas 4th floor, kansas union 785.864.164 We can help you. http://www.ku.edu/-oclcro HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1 BDR 2 BDR 2 BDR +DEN 3 BDR 4 BDR $400 $495-525 $750 $690-720 $840 NICE, QUITE SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY IN SITE MANAGEMENT PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME MON-FRI 9-6 785-843-0011 Just off campus... Cedarwood Apartments *Studios $350 *Studios $350 *1 bedroom $380 *2 bedroom $480 *4 bedroom duplexes - Quiet, clean environment • Close to campus. KU bus stor - Quiet, clean environment - Close to campus, KU bus stop - 1 block SE of 23rd and Iowa - Walk to restaurants, stores - 1 block SE of 23rd and Iowa Walk to restaurants, stores - AC, Laundry, Pool, Balconies - Ask about the Move-In Special - Well-lit parking, night patrol - On-site manager, on carol - Call 843-1116 or visit us 2411 Cedarwood Ave. - On-site manager...we care! Check out pages 6,7&10 for more Apartment Guide Look for the final Leaving Lawrence Apartment Guide... May 5th A In your University Daily Kansan Harper Square Apartments Tuckaway - Washer/Dryer HAWKER APARTMENTS - Alarm System - Fully Equipped Kitchen - Fully Equipped Kitchen* * Fireplace (Tuckaway)* - Built in TV (Tuckaway) - Two Pools Tuckaway at Briarwood - Hot Tubs - Copyright © 2013 by ScienceDigest.com - Basketball Courts - Fitness Center * Grand Entrance - Gated Entrance 2000 W 8th Street 785.838.3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com Todolist: 1. Rent apartment for fall that's close to campus and has beautiful surroundings. 2. Stay within a budget. 3. Do it NOW!!! -get 1st choice. 15th & Crestline Dr. 842-4200 Leasing NOW for Fall Close to campus - 2 & 3 bdrm. townhomes - Studio 1,2,3 bdrm. apts. - Water paid in apts. --- - Walk to campus - Great 3 bdrm values Mon-Fri: 9-5:30 Saturday: 10-4:00 Sunday 1-4:00 meadowbrook Townhomes Apartments Village Square Now Leasing for Fall close to campus • spacious 2 bedroom • swimming pool • on bus route Village Square Village Square · Village Square · Village Square · Village Square A Quiet Relaxed Atmosphere. Village Square Apartments 91st & Avalon 842-3040 Hours: Mon-Fri 10-5 village@webserf.net $AVE YOUR MONEY - Only $405/month - All major appliances - Well kept 2 bedroom apartments - apartments - Quiet - On KU bus route - Low utilities - Now signing one year leases beginning in May, June, July and August. - No smoking/pets Spanish Crest Apartments 841-6868 10 JEFFERSON COMMONS unique student apartments Now Leasing for Fall 2003! Home is where your FRIENDS are. Individual Leases Pool Plaza and Jacuzzi Washer/Dryer in Every Apartment Updated Fitness Center 1000 Cable with HBO, MTV and ESPN Call us about our Current Specials! Lighted Basketball Court Internet Access Amenities, Rents and Incentives are subject to change. 70 6th St. 64 Kazold Drive 89 Louisiana St. Massachusetts St. University of Nebraska Clinton Pkwy. Iowa St. 23rd St. Hawaii Indian Nationals University W. 31st St. JEFFERSON INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL SCIENCE South Lawrence Trafficway 2511 West 31st Street Lawrence, KS 66047 www.jeffersoncommons.lawrence.com Call for more information: 785-842-0032 --- TUESDAY,APRIL22,2003 APARTMENT GUIDE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9B APARTMENT GUIDE Found on pages 6B, 7B, 8B, 9B, IOB Park25 - Pool/ 2 Laundry - Rooms - Volleyball Court - On KU Bus Route Enjoy living in the apartment complex with a tradition of established excellence! - Some W/D Hookups - Low Deposits We are now accepting deposits for the fall and spring semesters on very large 1 & 2 bedroom apartments - Low Deposits - Small But Wide - Small Pet Welcome hall Pet welcome Call or stop by today! 2401 W. 25th, 9A3·842-1455 Lorimar & Courtside Townhomes early high up weekly Lorimar Townhomes 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Lorimar Townhomes 2, & 3 Bedroom Townhouses • Washer/Dryers • Dishwashers • Microwaves • Dishwashers • Fireplaces • Ceiling Fans 3801 Clinton Park #F1 ask about care for duplexes! Courtside Townhome 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes • Washer Dryers • Dishwasher • Microwave • Patio • Gas Fireplaces • Ceiling Fans 4100 Clinton Parkway For More Info: 785-841-7849 Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic on 6th St.) *Luxurious 2,3, & 4 Bedroom Townhomes* - Garages; w/d Hookups - Microwave Ovens MON-FRI OPEN: - Some with Fireplaces - On KU Bus Route 10-12&1-5 - Swimming Pool 841-8400 or 841-1287 - Tennis Courts Now Leasing For Fall 2003 2003 LEAVING LAWRENCE CONGRATS GRADUATES! You finally made it. Have you landed a job in Kansas City? If so, then take advantage of the fabulous values at **The Meadows.** We offer: *1, 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments *GAS PAID on select Apartments *Minutes to Downtown, The Plaza and Corporate Woods *Lighted Carports *Tennis Courts/Heated Pool *Clubhouse w/Billards, 24 hr. Fitness Center, and Saunas The Meadows Apartments (7620 Harsey) **John** & **Quirie** Rd 1 mile west of 13 on 75th St to Quiravia Rd 2 Months tree rent Graduating? Relocating? WE CAN HELP! then I block south 913-631-4000 www.themeeadowsaptsks.com Rentals from $435 per month* aRd Enter to win a Soccer pit card with your approved cup *Affordable housing qualifications appb Check out these Apartments in Kansas City BENNINGTON RIDGE DREAMITSEEITLIVEITLOVEIT 1 & 2 BEDROOM GARDEN APARTMENTS|SECLUDED WOODED AND PARKLAND SETTING|SPARKLING OUTDOOR POOL|YEAR-ROUND HOT-TUB|SAND VOLLEYBALL COURT|24-HOUR FITNESS CENTER|WASHER AND DRYER INCLUDED IN EVERY APARTMENT HOME|SPACIOUS CLOSETS|CEILING FANS AND MINI-BLINDS INCLUDED|GENEROUS BALCONY AND PATIO AREAS|HIDDEN VALLEY PARK - 176 ACRES ACROSS THE STREET|10-15 MINUTE COMMUTE FROM DOWNTOWN AND KCI AIRPORT|AAA SCHOOLS REDUCED DEPOSIT FOR KU GRADS 4027 NORTH BENNINGTON KANSAS CITY,MO 64117 PHONE 816.455.1551 BENNINGTONRIDGE@CAMCOINC.COM FAX 816.455.4577 Leaving Lawrence? Don't miss the FINAL guide on MAY 5th. Get a pad in KC. 1 Month Free! when you sign a year lease El Camino Real - 51st & Grand Tropicana - 50th & Grand Sutton Place - 40th & McGee - $475-$775 1 & 2 Bedroom 1 & 2 Bedroom 1 & 2 Bathroom *Pool, Laundry, Gated Entry* *Close to Westport, Plaza, & Brookside* *1 Year Leases *Rent by June & Get 1 month free! *Pool, Laundry, Gated Entry - 1 & 2 Bathroom - 1 Year Leases - No Pets - Carpet, Dishwasher, Fireplace Call for an appointment: 816-931-4157 GRAB YOUR GRADUATION SPECIAL SECTION OF THE KANSAN... MAY 5,2003 YOU'RE OUTTA HERE! 1 BEDROOM 2 BEDROOMS 3 BEDROOMS of contemporary living with the comforts of seclusion convenience of a Beautiful Apartment BOME! Attentjon Graduates! Relocating to Johnson County? Explore Millcreek Woods where we combine the best of contemporary living with the comforts of seclusion. 435 W K-10 438 E College 119th MILLCREEK WOODS Woodscree Sanita Fe Major Lea Drive Land Rd MILLCREEKWOODS (913) 764-6600 119th & North Ridgesview www.PriceManagementCo.com LIVE IN THE PULSE OF ONE OF KANSAS CITY'S TRENDIEST LOCATIONS: THE COUNTRY CLUB PLAZA. ...WHERE MUSIC AND ART COME ALIVE IN RESTAURANTS AND SIDEWALK CAPES... AND WHERE UPSCALE SKOPS DECORATE THE STREET-SIDES WITH STYLISH WINDOW DISPLAYS. WHATEVER YOUR PERSONAL TASTES AND STYLES, WE WILL HAVE A HOME FOR YOU IN ONE OF OUR DISTINGUISHED PLAZA BUILDINGS. THE CHURCHILL AND SUNSET APARTMENTS THE ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON THE WASHINGTON IRVING FROM 1920 ERA BUILDINGS WITH HARDWOOD FLOORS, PRIVATE SUN FORCHES, SOME RENOVATED APARTMENT INTERIORS AND A RENOVATED MARBLE LOBBY TO THE ELEGANCE AND CONVENIENCE OF LUXURY HIGH-RISE LIVING. COMPLETE WITH MODERN INTERIORS AND LOT OR GARAGE PARKING. EACH BUILDING POSSESSES ITS OWN INIMITABLE STYLE AND PRESENTS DAZZLING PLAZA AND BRUSH CREEK VIEWS. PRICES START AT $625.00 AND INCLUDE HEAT, WATER AND TRASH REMOVAL. 4 FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL BETTY AND MARY AT 816-931-9787. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY APARTMENT GUIDE April 23, 2003 Vol. 11, Issue No. 140 Today's weather 63° APARTMENT GUIDE Found on pages 6B, 7B, 8B, 9B, 10B Check out the previous page for more Apartment Guide Sunrise Terrace Apartments Available Fall - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ Two Story, and Two baths - On Site Laundry - Some with w/d's - Digital Cable Ready - Balcony / Decks w/ view The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Check out more APARTMENT GUIDE! 6B,7B,8B,9B,10B COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@naks.com www.colonywoods.com • 1 & 2 Bedrooms • On KU Bus Route • Indoor/Outdoor Pool M-F 10-6 • 3 Hot Tubs SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 • Exercise Room • New Leasing for Summer & Fall 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@ixks.com www.colonywoods.com M-F10-6 SAT 10 T SUN 10 A $BEST VALUE$ BEST LOCATION SouthPointe Apartments & SouthPointe Park Villas Now Leasing for Fall! • 1-2-3-4 BD Floor Plans • Washer and Dryer in Units On-site Laundry • New Fitness Facility • Sparkling Pool • Video & DVD library • 24 hour maintenance (785) 843-6446 www.southpointeks.com South Point AFFILIATE Call to view Gage Management Offering a large variety of houses, apartments, duplexes and townhomes. Close to campus and downtown. Available for August 1st. Some with utilities paid. Caring and concerned management with same day maintenance service to take care of all of your housing needs. Call now for showings! 842-7644 806 W. 24th St. http://numbers.w3m.com/gagamart/item.htm Looking for a place to live? George Waters Management, Inc. Leasing Specials studios from $360 1 BR's from $350 2 BR's from $430 4 BR'S from $1,020 3 BR's from $660 Give us a call to set up a showing or visit our website for further details on available properties. O 841-5533 www.apartmentsinlawrence.net University online _on abortion Justice For All /organization be First Management Living Communities. Live with the best. By JJ Hensley "We do!" manently put the lifebudget meeting last night. Instead, I should horse spending less money Sarah will be expecting to work with her family in the until she can afford to sale. Congress will maybe need an extension addition to fund the migrants should we Highpointe 6th and Iowa 6th nity. Earlier 1,2 & 3 Bdm defeated a Fireplace Washer/Dryer made in State. For allow in state make the Fitness Center nonunion Basketball Court a pro On KU Bus Route called home to adopt Small Per Welcome the rity to 841-8468 Chase Court 19th and Iowa Walking Distance to KU OnKU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL 1,2 & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot-Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available Gated Farm High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available Brand New Community 6th Street Kyoto Drive Mountain Way Comet Lane N Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Hawthorn Townhomes 230b Melrose Court 1605 Terrace Oread Apartments 1201 Green Parkway Townhomes 1927W Regency Place 1301 Tournament Stadium View 1040 Mostra Brand New Luxury Apts 1, 2, & 3 Bdrm Washer/Dryer. Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available High-Speed Internet Connection Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 Abbotts Corner Applecroft 1735 W. 11 Canyon Court 700 CO. Carson Place 1121 CO. Chamberlain Court Hawthorn Houses 30 832-8805 目 CHINA HOUSE Wednesday April 23, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 140 Today's weather 63° Tonight: 52° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864.4810 or editor@kansan.com P THE UNIVERSITY DAILY A Diane Jeoninsen Relive the Jayhawks' emotional month from an NCAA loss to a new coach p.4B Abortion display draws reactions Abortion? BEFORE BETTER The Face of Choice What is it called when the action brings no choice? Scott Revnolds/Kansan Zach Carleton, Overland Park junior, discusses the issue of rape with Vicki Kane, Justice For All staff member (second from right), and volunteers Meagan Gilby and Lisa Stenberg (right) of Sterling College. "I'm really impressed with the open mindedness of the students," Kane said. By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan stuff writer Abrasive. That word describes the feeling of many students who yesterday passed by a lawn display showing graphic pictures of abortion. The three-sided, two-story high exhibit in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall featured photos of aborted fetuses with text explaining the pictures. Signs warned students that the display was ahead, handouts were available and two free-speech boards were set up for students to write comments on. Students had mixed reactions to the display. "Disgusting," said Andre McHugh, Chicago sophomore. "They shouldn't be out there; it's destructive to the learning environment. They're going about it in the wrong way." Kevin Culp, Lenexa senior and abortion opponent, said although the display could be offensive to some students, it might be the only time they received such a message against abortion. "Yeah, it is bold," he said. "But what's wrong with getting it out there? I don't think these kids are going to pick up a pamphlet on it." Justice For All, a student organization that formed last semester, was responsible for bringing the display to Lawrence Members of the student group asked representatives from the national division of Justice For All to bring the display to the University of Kansas to educate students on abortion. Justice For All is a national nonprofit organization based in Wichita. The stu dent group at the University has about 15 members. The group did not have to pay to bring the display to the University. Tammy Cook, administrative director for Justice For All, said the organization's mission centered on bringing the antiabortion message to college campuses to open dialogue about the issue. "We welcome people who disagree with us," she said. "We want to hear their side, and we want them to hear ours." Cook said group members received training on how to ask thought-provoking questions to students about abortion and how to defend their positions effectively. tively. The group also brought the presentation to the University in September 1998, Cook said. She said the display would be on campus again until about 4 p.m. today. About five KU Public Safety Officers monitored the display and the people who stood around talking or watching. Lt. Schuyler Bailey of the public safety office said the office placed officers by the display because of past problems with people reacting to the presentation. "When they were here before, there were fights and some of the signs were damaged." he said. Some students questioned the SEE DISPLAY ON PAGE 10A Religious community responds By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Yesterday's anti-abortion display presented by Justice for All, illicited several responses in the University of Kansas religious community. While some religious leaders supported the display and others were offended by it,it was a topic discussed by many and ignored by few. "We support their right to free speech but strongly disagree with their methods," Jay Lewis, director of Hillel said. The display showed several statistics and pictures of various states of aborted fetuses. One of the panels listed several historical genocides including the Jewish and European genocide, or Holocaust, occurring from 1939 to 1945 and the American Unborn genocide. Lewis said he didn't think the parallels drawn between the Holocaust and the American Unborn genocide were appropriate. SEE RESPONSE ON PAGE 10A Commission doesn't pass, veto Sunday liquor sales By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com kansan staff writer The Lawrence City Commission didn't pass an ordinance allowing liquor stores to open on Sundays, nor did it permanently put the kibosh on the idea at its meeting last night. Instead, the commissioners will monitor pending legislation in the Kansas Senate before making a decision. "We'll wait until the liquor stores unite and come forth with a proposal," said Commissioner Mike Rundle. Mayor David Dunfield said that in addition to following legislation commissioners should wait to see what sort of responses they got from the community. Earlier this month the Senate defeated a House bill that would have made liquor laws uniform across the state. For example, some counties don't allow liquor sales by-the-drink, which makes the Kansas liquor control act nonuniform across the state. A provision in the state constitution called 'home rule' allows communities to adopt a charter ordinance exempting the city from a nonuniform state provision. Communities such as Kansas City, Kan., and Edwardsville have taken advantage of this provision to allow liquor sales on Sundays. Kansas City and other communities The bill could come up again in the Senate when the Legislature reconvenes April 30. A Chronic Struggle Former employee at odds with air quality By Kelley Weiss kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Mark Umholtz had to leave his job at the University of Kansas in 2001 because he couldn't breathe anymore. During his eight and a half years at the craft shop in Marvin Hall, he developed chronic sinus problems chronic bronchitis and asthma. He had to use a respirator while he worked in the shop where architects nature students cut wood and plastic painted; and welded metal for small architectural models and projects. Now Umholtz is on early retirement. His doctor and the state's self-insurance company say his performance ability and his health are 40 percent below their levels before he got sick. Umholtz, 49, can't fish, ride his motorcycle do carpentry work or walk outside without packing a mask. He uses four different inhalers and takes three different pills each day. Umholtz thinks the shop was unsafe when he worked at room 109 Marvin. He thinks it still is today. His doctors have said that welding tunes and particles in the air caused his illness, plaunting the shop's ventilation system as a cause. Mike Russell, director of environment, health and safety agrees that the shop's ventilation system needs to change. The method of removing airborne particulates from the shop is not in compliance with design and engineering standards which often encourage the use of dust collection at the point of generation. Him would immediately pull metal and wood dust into a closed network of tubes that would filter and recirculate the cleaned air. Putting a big fan in the middle of a window to suck air out isn't the right way to do it," Russell said. The School of Architecture deals disagree. A (2) WEDNESDAY APRIL 23 2003 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 News briefs CAMPUS University mock trial team takes second at championship The University of Kansas mock trial team finished second in its division at the American Mock Trial Association National Championship. The championship was held in Des Moines, Iowa, on April 4 to 6. The team missed the championship round by one point and tied for second in its 32-team division. Shandy Soleimani, Olathe sophomore, and Ryan Faulconer, Colorado Springs, Colo., junior, were honored for their outstanding performances. Soleimani received an All-American Witness Award for his portrayal of a medical expert on defense, and Faulconer received an All-American Attorney Award for playing an attorney for both the plaintiff and defense. The team finished with an overall record of 38-11-3 and earned firstplace at the Mid-Missouri Invitational and Central Missouri State Invitational. "It's very rewarding," Soleimani said. "We only lost two ballots, which we should have done better on, but we're quite happy with our performance." —Kevin Wiggs Two more prominent public figures have been added to the list of people who will help dedicate the Dole Institute of Politics. Former president, mayor to help dedicate institute Former president Jimmy Carter and former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani will join former president Gerald Ford, former U.S. Rep. Jack Kemp, former Sen. George McGovern and others at the institute's "Salute Heroes." The dedication is set for July 20 to 22 at the University of Kansas. During the ceremonies, Giuliani will receive the first annual Dole Leadership Prize. Richard Norton Smith, director of the Dole Institute, said the 1,000 public tickets available for the event sold out in two days. In response to the interest, a jumbo screen will be set up outside the Lied Center to allow those interested to be able to view the program. The Dole Institute, established in 1997 in honor of former Sen. Robert Dole, works to promote student participation and citizen involvement in public service. Jessica Hood Engineering student awarded at fixture design competition Mike Snyder, Omaha senior, was the winner the 2003 Robert Bruce Thompson Annual Student Light Fixture Design Competition for his Lite Book design. The architectural engineering student is receiving his degree with an emphasis in lighting and electricity. "It's really gratifying to receive an award like this after five years of work." Snyder said. Snyder received $5,000, a trophy and trip to an international illumination trade show in New York City. He plans to use the trip as a vacation before he begins work with the consulting engineering firm Flack & Kurtz in San Francisco. — Jessica Palimenio NATIONAL White powder causes postal center evacuation TACOMA, Wash. — A Postal Service center was evacuated yesterday after a preliminary test indicated white powder found among some envelopes might be toxic. Later tests found no signs of a harmful biological substance. Nearly 100 people were cleared from the building after the powder was found about 12:45 a.m. on a table where mail was processed, fire Capt. Iolene Davis said. State and fire department officials said tests by the Army National Guard and state health officials found no signs of any biotoxin. Samples will be sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for review. Elsewhere, six Postal Service workers were taken to a hospital in Fort Myers, Fla., after they were exposed to an unknown white powder when they opened a mail container unloaded from a FedEx plane that arrived from Memphis, Tenn. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00. News: Curtis Dixon and Joy Larson Weather: Tim Bush Sports: Brian Bruce 207 GREATBRIDGE kansan.com On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU During a two-hour session on Saturday, the students worked together to create their own artwork. The class was led by a teacher who provided guidance and feedback. Students were encouraged to express their creativity and develop their artistic skills through experimentation and observation. The activity focused on the use of paint, brushes, and various tools to create intricate designs on paper. John Nowak/Kansan Emily Comstock, Student Union Activities program assistant, Jaima Barnes, Mission junior, and Megan Wesley, Hutchinson freshman, make bookmarks inside the Hawks Nest as a part of Earth Day. Yesterday's activities included ceramic pot painting, flower planting and wax hands. To submit photos to Camra on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. STATI Kansas Senate may propose second draft against sex class TOPEKA—A new proposal for preventing the purchase or showing of "obscene" videos for university human sexuality courses could be drafted. Senate President Dave Kerr said yesterday. Gov. Kathleen Sebellius. That provision would have eliminated funding for any university department in which videos deemed obscene under Kansas law were purchased or shown in undergraduate sexuality classes. Kerr (R-Hutchinson) said proponents could draft language less punitive than a budget provision vetoed Monday by The University of Kansas School of Social Welfare faced losing its $3.1 million budget. Kerr said the provision would have affected 26 additional professors and teaching assistants who are not involved in Dailey's class. "It was a bunker-buster bomb to kill a fly." Kerr said of the provision. Overriding Sebellius' veto would require a two-thirds majority in both chambers. Kerr said he doubted the Senate would support an override. As of yesterday, Wagle had not decided how to respond. "I'm taking to some senators and just deciding the best strategy," she said. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalandar.com The Associated Press Chris Robinson of Humanities and Western Civilization will hold a Brown Bag discussion on "The Kansas Sodomy Law: How It Hurts All of Us" at 12:15 p.m. today in the Multicultural Resource Center, Call 864-4350. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University Forum on "The Threat of Atrazine to Human Male Fertility," featuring Edward I. Shaw of molecular biosciences, at noon today in the ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. Adrienne Harris-Boggess of Slavic languages and literature, Andrew Debicki of Spanish and Portuguese, and John Pultz of history of art will hold a seminar on "Postmodernisms: Session II" from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Hall Center for the Humanities, Call 864-4798. KU Greens will sponsor "Ethnic Identity and Nationalism in the Modern World," featuring presentations on ethnic identity, language death and its cultural significance and perceptions of the Middle East conflict, from 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Contact Sam Hopkins at 634-6127. Elizabeth Berghou will give a carillon concert at 7tonight at the Memorial Campanile. Call 864-3421 Student Union Activities will screen the film Office Space at 7 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are $2 and can be purchased at the Hawk Shop in the Kansas Union. No free movie cards will be accepted for this event. Call 864-7469. Et Cetera The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson. Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. Latin American Solidarity will meet at 7:30 tonight in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Rebekah Moses at 812-1994. 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 26 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 68045 The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-9687) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bi-weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 65044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Bldg, Lawrence, KS 66045 titled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan On Campus is printed on a space available basis. Sunrise Terrace Apartments Available Fall VAI - Balcony / Decks w/ view - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ - Digital Cable Ready - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom Two Story, and Two baths - Some with w/d's Eingangseite im Wohnungenzentrum - On Site Laundry The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Call to view Preorder Online Avoid the Bookline Blues and save an extra 5%! It's Easy! Click on: www.javhawkbookstore.com JIRS Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill bookstore.com·1420 Crescent Rd·843-3826 at the top of Nalsmith Hill www.javhawkbookstore.com - 1420 Crescent B - 843-3826 LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 743-1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKNAM (p05-13) 4:15 7:10 CITY OF GOD (p02) 9:30 ONLY ADAPTATION. (p02) NO SHOWS $1 Free Draw on Wednesday LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749-1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM (pst-13) 4:15 7:10 CITY OF GOD (pst) 8:30 ONLY ADAPTATION (pst) NOWS $1 Free State Day Wednesdays News Now kansan.com DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street kansan com DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" • Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance • Machine Shop Service • Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street CHEVROLET --- / WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Firing up new growth John Nowak/Kansar Jerry Baker, Baker University senior, cuts down a tree in the Baker Wetlands just north of 31st and Louisiana streets. Baker University students used controlled flames yesterday afternoon to stimulate new growth in the wetlands. Couple gives $3M for hall By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Funding for the 11th scholarship hall at the University of Kansas has been found. Roger and Annette Rieger of Seattle donated the $3 million needed to build the new student living quarters on Ohio Street. Roger Rieger, a 1967 accounting alumnus, was a resident of Battenfield Hall when he attended the University and wanted to give other students the opportunity to enjoy the scholarship hall experience. Roger Reiger, a residential real estate investor and developer, and Annette Rieger, 1967 sociology and social welfare alumna, have a history of supporting education in their own area. In 1988, the couple developed the Seattle chapter of the "I Have a Dream" foundation, which provided scholarships to 65 innercity students. They have also supported the Seattle school district. Annette Rieger said she and her husband read an article in an alumni magazine about the KU First Campaign and the scholarship hall efforts and decided it was a good opportunity for them to help support the University and to help KU students succeed. The gift is an expendable pledge that will go straight to funding the construction. Jerome Davies, vice president of development for the endowment association, said the staff actively had discussions with the donors and explained some options. In this case, the donors responded favorably, Davies said. The gift also counts toward the $500 million goal of the KU First: Invest in Excellence campaign. During a two-hour meeting yesterday, the designers at Treanor Architects, 110 McDonald Drive, presented the plans for the building to the Riegers. The development and plans were explained in detail and the Riegers were able to ask questions. Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said department was trying to make the building as unique and appropriate as possible. "It will be warm, inviting and personal building," said Stoner. The building will be named as a memorial to Roger Riegers brother, Dennis, 1972 political science and 1974 MBA alum, who died of diabetes. Dennis E. Rieger Hall is sched uled open in the Fall 2005. — Edited by Anne Mantey French TV interviews students Bv Nikki Overfelt By Nikki Overfett noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Speaking in a foreign language is hard enough, but try doing it in front of a camera. That's what 26 KU students did yesterday in their "France Today" class. "It's not like you have that every day," said Michelle Chaves, Campo Grande, Brazil, junior. "Everybody was prepared. It weighs a lot more when your view is going to be on television." A French correspondent, Pascal Golomer, and a camera man, Tristan Le Bras, from France 2, a French television network, visited Bruce Hayes' French class to get students' views on current events. "We have to promote a mutual understanding," Le Bras said. Golomer and Le Bras wanted to let the French people see that some Americans supported President Bush and some didn't. They chose to focus on Kansas for their story because they wanted to "meet real Americans," Golomer said. "It's our role to explain that there are a lot of different individuals in the United States with different views," he said. Hayes' class this semester has focused on Franco-American relations surrounding the war in Iraq, so he said he thought this experience would help dispel myths on both sides. "Conflicts are always based on stereotypes, without any effort to get beneath the surface," he said. The crew only will be speaking to students only from the University of Kansas. On Monday the French journalists talked to radio hosts at a Topeka radio station for the same story. His first trip to Kansas has been a good one, Golomer said. "We have met some people with very different points of view but very friendly and happy to explain their points of view," he said. The people they have talked to have also been more tolerant and willing to listen to other points of view than most people in France, Golomer said. The story is set to run tomorrow night on the French evening news. — Edited by Anne Mantey THIS WEEK GRANADA at the WEDNESDAY it's the OWNER'S BIRTHDAY! (but we're gonna part like it's your birthday) Come help us celebrate James' 24th! 25 CENT DRAWS! FREE BACARDI sampling with the Bacardi girls SIN THU RSDA "It's like Spring Break, Cancun every week." Every Thursday $2 Double Wells DJ Nick Riddell DESTINATION: Spring Break Granada Bring your student ID for 1/2 off cover! DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink S Granada www.thegranada.com WEDNESDAY APRIL 30, 2009 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ONE DINER FRI DAILY KANSAS #64 OPINION WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khendarson@kansan.com --managing editors 864 4854 jcefont.com/kmean.com and jhmn.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lahaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Eric Keltting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsale@kansan.com Malecol Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mailbison@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kanan.com Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com Hey, I'm pro-life, too, but that whole display in front of Wescoc was just too much. It shouldn't be allowed on campus and it shouldn't be allowed in our society. If anything, that was obscenity. My friend and I were trying to decide whether or not to go to class this morning, so we decided to flip a coin. Heads, we don't go; tails, we skip. I'm staring at 15 packages of Marshmallow Peeps. In each package are three crates. In each crate reside five Peeps. That's 210 total Peeps. Divide 210 Peeps by four dudes, and that's 52.5 Peeps per dude. of the ruling lies in the Court's supposed concern to protect us from intimidation, while simultaneously giving a ruling that would give way to the intimidation of exercising our expressive freedom. I'm watching VH-1's / Love the Eighties television show. I was born in 1981, and that's the year they're covering today. If I'm not in there as one of the most memorable events of 1981, I'm gonna be pissed. 图 I was just wondering how bad it really sounds when I say my Peeps are hard. Just hoping everyone is watching Lucy Camden's wedding on Seventh Heaven It's a good one. 图 Lucy Camden has a mad case of postcoitus bliss. If we're going to have an 18-percent tuition increase, I'd better see twice as many chocolate doughnuts at the Union on Mondays or else. I'm sitting in the Melrose Court apartments right now and I'm looking out the window and I can see the Phi Delt house and there are a bunch of Phi Delts out playing Frisbee, and I'm wondering — why aren't they inside watching Lucy Camden's wedding on *Saventh Heaven*? I mean, seriously. of the ruling lies in the Court's supposed concern to protect us from intimidation, while simultaneously giving a ruling that would give way to the intimidation of exercising our expressive freedom. My boobs are itchy. If I scratch them, is that sexy or weird? Introducing the Midwest Metal Mullet ake, the Scorpion, the Bitchin' Vixen and the Hello Cleveland. Did I just enter a time warp, or did the Real World/Road Rules Battle of the Sexes just start over? 简 I would just like the parking department guy to know that I definitely outsmarted you and beat you back to my car, so screw you, KU Parking! 癌 There's 24-cent hamburgers at McDonald's on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, so everyone needs to get down there and get some. A couple of weeks ago, cocaine was the silent drug. Today, chlamydia is the silent epidemic. You guys really have to get better headline writers. 图 NAGLE'S VIEW ¡FIESTA DE BUSH! i2003! IRAP MADE IN USA DEMOCRACY JOLE! IRAPUS OIL! KURDS SYRIA JM'03 Joseph M. Nagle for The University Daily Kansan PERSPECTIVE Court ruling threatens free speech GUEST COMMENTARY Question: Which form of expression is protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution? A) Desecrating a religious artifact, such as the Star of David. B) Burning an effigy of the president. B) Burning an effigy of the president. C) Ripping a photo of Osama bin Laden to shreds. Ben McCarthy opinion@kansan.com D) All of the above. The correct answer is "D." They all exemplify symbols being used as a means of free expression. According to the Constitution, that constitutes a level of protection from the government. Recently, the Supreme Court made its ruling in Virginia v. Black, deciding to uphold a 50-year-old Virginia law banning cross burning. At a time when students here at the University of Kansas use symbols to express unpopular sentiments concerning the war in Iraq, there appears to be little concern with how this ruling might threaten expression through unpopular symbols. Pioneering communication theorist Kenneth Burke defined Homo sapiens as symbol-using animals. Symbols are based on an ever-evolving social agreement, not resemblance or cause, and therefore are arbitrary in nature. Every act of communication — talking, walking and flying a flag — is both speech and conduct. The Supreme Court's past interpretations of the First Amendment seem to agree with Burke's position. They have extended protections beyond "speech" to include expression or "expressive conduct" that is associated with a political attitude. The Court's ruling does little to reduce methods of intimidation, while signaling willingness by the nine justices to ban symbols to which they object. The irony A cross burning is clearly an example of conduct that can be interpreted as having political attitude. Often, the burning cross is a ceremonial symbol used in festivities conjured up by bigots covered in white sheets. The Court ruled against expression calculated to inflict injury and cause disturbance. Expression with the intent to communicate unlawful violence has also not received protection from the Court. How much longer will Americans enjoy the freedom to express dissent with this Court's attitude toward the First Amendment? Whether it is burning a cross, carrying an anti-war protest sign or burning a flag, these symbols of expression (and dissent from popular opinion) are threatened by the Court's recent ruling. Justice Clarence Thomas, an African American who was born and raised in Georgia, argued that intimidation and terrorizing was the only communication present in the burning cross. Thomas' passion is understandable, but his ruling in the case contradicts earlier rulings that he and the court have made. In 1992, he joined the Court in invalidating the St. Paul cross-burning ordinance in R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul. Three years later, he joined the Court majority in allowing the Ku Klux Klan to place a cross in a public square during Christmas season, acknowledging that an Ohio law made the square a "public forum" for the expression of citizens' opinions. This highly unpopular form of communication allowed a group of people to express a powerful message. This decision carries a number of differing interpretations for the global community. Whether it is desecrating a religious artifact, burning an effigy of the president or burning a photo of Osama bin Laden, all of these examples of symbolic speech deserve equal constitutional protection. We must protect freedom of expression for those we despise or else we cannot protect it at all. McCarthy is a Lenexa graduate student. EDITORIAL BOARD Anti-Roy backlash 'shall pass' Reactions to Roy's decision to leave have been running the gamut of emotion. There are those who wish him well and thank him for the memories of his 15 years. There are those whose anger has caused them to lash out. These outbursts have taken many forms, from wearing certain T-shirts to chalking obscene messages in opposition to Roy on campus to ranting in the Free for All. While these may not be the classiest of moves, we should refrain from being overly critical of those who feel the need to express frustration. After all, this is the biggest blow to the University that most of us have witnessed. Collective feelings of resentment are as valid as any other reaction. The University of Kansas is, after all, a university that revolves around basketball. It hardly seems appropriate to condemn in harsh terms those who have hurt feelings after this. That said, let's be happy the worst is behind us. We have a new coach. It is still KU basketball, after all, and this, too, shall pass. Matt Pirotte for the editorial board PERSPECTIVE Individuals' actions toward world problems a must People today have little sense of duty to others. As someone who gathers political research over the phone, I tend to relearn this lesson on a daily basis. COMMENTARY POLICE Many don't even bother to let me explain the topic of the academic research before hanging up. I've been screamed at, mocked, cursed at and even had one woman tell me that the University of Kansas should be burned. Matthew Dunavan opinion@kansan.com But it doesn't end with phone calls. The mentality of "I don't know you, so it's OK not to be nice to you" is prevalent even here at the University. Who here can honestly say that they've never seen people standing in the middle of a crosswalk on campus, talking to each other and not moving? I've seen them do it while vehicular traffic waited for them to finish their conversation. The real issue is the nature of the obligation that we owe one other, as a moral duty. The people who insult me on the phone and who stop to talk in crosswalks must believe that we owe one another very little. But surely this is not the case. All over the world, people are starving to death. People are dying because they lack medical care and shelter. Right now, we have the power to ease and, in some cases, prevent the suffering of people all over the world. Charitable organizations donate resources. people and time to help solve the problems of the world. Is helping people in this way simply a good thing we are not obligated to do? No. Distance is an irrelevant factor. If they were 10 feet from you, you'd say it was an obligation. If they were 1,000 feet away, you'd say the same thing. Distance does not make something less of an obligation; it only makes it harder to fulfill your duty. That's what charitable organizations are for. They extend the reach of every human on the planet to reach every other human without much difficulty. If we can prevent suffering without giving up something more morally significant than the suffering we could We all must do more. That some people do not pitch in is just as irrelevant as distance. You would still regard it as an obligation to help someone next door if others could do it just as easily. stop, we are obliged to do it. This seems to be a relatively uncontroversial moral precept for most, but what would it mean for the way we live? Stop and think about it. Every dollar you spend on a beer is a dollar that didn't provide someone with food. Every dollar for a new CD or piece of clothing would have given a young child the needed medical care to prevent a common childhood illness that kills him. Can we ever totally end suffering? No. The real issue is whether we can ease it. The answer is a decided "yes." Not to do so is a grave moral wrong. I won't plead with people to be charitable. I demand that we live up to our obligations as humans to rectify the wrongs of this world. 0 Dunavan is a Topeka senior in political science and philosophy. 2 WEDNESDAY, APRIL23, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A New senators take position tonight By Cate Batchelder catbachelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Senators old and new will join tonight for the ceremonial transition of Student Senate. Everyone is hoping for smooth transition — not like the clash last year. "It was a mess," said Johanna Maska, Nunemaker senator and Student Legislative Awareness Board director. Maska talked about the tension created by Referendum B, which gave fraternity and sorority members off-campus status, when Senate changed hands from Delta Force to KUnited leadership. Jayme Aschemeyer, Wiggins, Colo., junior, is a Delta Gamma STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Aaron Jacobs, off-campus senator, lost his seat in the elections this year. He ran with Delta Force. sorority member and credits her off-campus seat this year to Referendum B passing last year. She failed to win in her last two attempts. "When Referendum B came, allowing Greeks to vote for off-campus, it swung the elections." he said. Aschemeyer is the only greek member of the five winning KUnited off-campus seats. Because there are 3,000 greek students at the University of Kansas, she finally sees Student Senate as proportional to the student population. Before this year, Jacobs said Delta Force had lost only one off-campus seat in its seven years off-campus being its representative base. "I definitely think that's in the greek favor and definitely in the student body favor to be able to have representative percentages," she said. Referendum 1, concerning freshmen representation, will also throw new faces in the mix in hopes of Senate fully representing the student body. In October, freshmen will vote online for five seats from the freshman class. "I tried running for three years in a row: KU Voice, KUnited, KUnited," she said. Serving The 14 newly-elected freshman/sophomore seats will remain. KUnited overwhelmingly swept the category. The difference between winning and losing candidates was 417. Kevin McKenzie, AURH senator and Delta Force freshman/sophomore candidate, was the highest-losing vote recipient in his category. He garnered 390 votes to lowest winning candidate's 807 votes. He also was one of the Referendum 1 organizers. "I lost, but Referendum 1 won," McKenzie said election night. KU Paul Van Cleave, winning KUnited nontraditional senator, said he was excited about his seat. This year was his first time running, but he said he was disappointed that some of his running mates weren't able to vote for themselves because of computer glitches. "Honestly, it feels absolutely fantastic," said Dunlap, returning CLAS senator. "We feel like we have a mandate from the student body." Jeff Dunlap, current Nunemaker senator and KUnited winning College of Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said he was a total optimist after hearing the election results in which his coalition won student body presidency and 46 of 66 Senate seats. — Edited by Anne Mantey Freshman gets involved with Pride Week ACHERS EER AndySamuelson/Kansan Christopher Entwhistle, Palatine, Ill., freshman and student senator, spent several hours planning for Pride week this week and said the most interesting event was the Brown Bag Drag Show on Friday. "The drag show is so popular because it's so outlandish," Entwhistle said. By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Christopher Entwhistle helps bridge the gap between the gay community and the community at large. Although his mom needed some time to get used to the idea of having a gay son, Entwhistle's younger brother disowned him for nine months. "He eventually told me that it's not that I was gay, it was that I didn't tell him first," Entwistle said. that meant so much to me to hear him say that." which the Student Senate office needs sometimes," the Coffeyville junior said. "He always makes us laugh "Anyone who didn't know anyone else that was gay was pretty surprised," he said. "I grew up being Catholic and a Boy Scout." Student Body Vice President-elect Catherine Bell appreciates Entwhistle's work ethics and cheerful attitude. Edited by Anne Mantey Because of Entwhistle's involvement in the Student Senate and the Queens and Allies office, he was one of three nominated to be KU Queer Activist of the Year. "Anyone who didn't know anyone else that was gay was pretty surprised.I grew up being Catholic and a Boy Scout." Need a Job? TREY HAWKINS BE ABARTENDER! - Special student discount (details on website/club setting) BOSTON BARTENDERS SCHOOL OF AMERICA The winner will be announced on May 8. Chirstopher Entwhistle Queers and Allies student senator - Hands on training/niteclub setting Entwistle's mom and brother are both coming to Lawrence for the weekend to celebrate his birthday and to attend some of the Pride Week events that he's been planning. "The drag show is so popular because it's so outlandish," Ent-whistle said. "It's also a good way for students to get out of classes." - National Alcohol Awareness Certification "I think the drag show will be a big shock to them," he said. - Special student discount Entwistle said that the Lawrence community was accepting and diverse. He said that in his Chicago suburb hometown, he turned a few heads when he came out his sophomore year of high school. The Palatine, Ill., freshman is the Queers and Allies student senator at the University of Kansas. Entwistle spends 20 hours a week in the Queers and Allies' office and has been preparing events for Pride Week. He has helped plan events such as an open forum on homosexuality and religion and the Brown Bag Drag Show on Friday. - Super job placement assistance - Super job placement - Conveniently located in downtown Kansas City CALL TODAY! CALL TODAY! 1-816-221-8555 www.bostonbartender.com SUMMER STORAGE PICK-UP FREE DELIVERY FREE BOXES TAPE SAVE $25 when you reserve your store space by May 2nd Store Anything: Furniture, Futons, Bikes, computers, etc. Basic Package is $135 for the entire summer! FREE WE CAN PACK AND SHIP ANYTHING RIGHT FROM YOUR DORM OR RESIDENCE AT UPS COUNTER RATES! Formerly Mail Boxes Etc. 865-0004 The UPS Store ups Try the Iced Snow Tiger! La Prima Tazza "Double strong, double rich." Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! Fiorini Torte 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE The Princeton Review --- Free Practice MCAT Test April 26, 2003 University of Kansas KU Memorial Union 9:00am - 2:00pm Space is limited. Call to register today! MCAF is a registered trademark of the American Association of Medical Colleges (AAMC) The Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton University or AAMC Ferocio RDP III FUJI RDP III RDP III 17 Fossil Brad Kemp, Assistant Director of Public Programs KU Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Center KU's awe-inspiring camarasaurs fossil dwarfs the 200,000 visitors who come to the Natural History Museum each year to view this remarkable specimen. KU First; Invest in Excellence made it possible. Donations to KU First, the University's $500 million fund-raising campaign, paid for the reconstruction and mounting of this rare fossil. Now, visitors can stand tooth to tooth with the past and discover more about life on Earth. INVEST IN EXCELLENCE ku first NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews Now. Now. kansan.com --- 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 Freshman takes helm of dance organizers Top of the HILI is KU students' chance to vote for the best of Lawrence. Fill out this form and return it to Room 119 Stauffer-Flint or visit Kansan.com to complete the online survey. Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. 2003 RESTAURANTS Best Chinese: Best Breakfast: Best Burgers: Best Subs: Best Italian: Best Steakhouse: Best Vegetarian: Best Pizza: Best French Fries: Best Wings: Best Buffet: Best Ice Cream: Best Custard: Best Coffee House: Best Atmosphere: Best Delivery Service: Best Bakery: Best Post-Party Food Restaurant: Best Customer Service: Best KC Restaurant: Best Local Restaurant: Best Overall: BARS Best Sports Bar:___ Best Drink Specials:___ Best Martinis:___ Best Margaritas:___ Best Wells:___ Best Selection of Beers:___ Best Dance Club:___ Best Place to Play Pool:___ DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25,2003 BARS,continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTY SERVICES Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING BestApartment Complex: ___ BestTownhomes: ___ BestLandlord: ___ Best Neighborhood to live in: ___ SCHOOL Best Place to Study:___ Best Bookstore:___ Best Residence Hall:___ Best Scholarship Hall:___ Best Building on Campus:___ Best Fraternity:___ Best Sorority:___ Best Student Organization:___ THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: ___ BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas XI WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Freshman takes helm of dance organization By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Hannah Franko wasn't allowed to dance at her small Christian high school in Pennsylvania — but she's making up for it now. The Gilbert, Pa., freshman is the Ballroom Dance Club president at the University of Kansas. "I had never danced a step before I came to KU," Franko said. After a friend dragged her to a dance practice last semester, Frankojoined the club and began to learn the steps. Club members delegated her president about two weeks ago. "It was a shock at first that a freshman was able to take charge," she said. "My friend actually quit the club and joined the lacrosse team." The club, which has existed for 15 years, meets every Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom to practice, and members have weekly professional dance lessons at the Walters Dance Studio in Kansas City, Kan. Franko and the other 20 club members have learned two types of dancing, Latin and smooth dancing. Latin dancing includes salsa, chacha and the meringue, and smooth dancing includes dances such as the waltz, the tango and the foxtrot. "The tango is my favorite," Franko said. "It's really straightforward and direct." Max Wick, McPherson sophomore and member of the club said he appreciated the more traditional dancing styles. "I love the waltz," Wick said. "It's so graceful and everyone knows the basics. There's so much technique involved." Although there are a few local restaurants and bars that offer Latin dancing in Lawrence, there are no places in Lawrence that offer smooth dancing. "La Tasca has a salsa band once a week, but I think I'll have to wait for a wedding to practice my smooth dancing," Franko said. Membership is $25 a year, and "It was a shock at first that a freshman was able to take charge, My friend actually quit the club and joined the lacrosse team." Hannah Franko Gilbert, Pa., freshman this includes all private dance lessons. Although the club has yet to compete with other schools, Franko and other members hope to hold competitions and balls next fall. The club welcomes anyone who is interested in ballroom dancing. While traditional ball gowns and tuxedos are left behind, most club members prefer to dance barefoot. "No uniform is required —but you have to wear clothes," Franko said. Aaron Showalter/Kansan - Edited by Leah Shaffer Bogdan Pathak, Albuquerque, N.M., graduate student, and Hannah Franko, Gilbert, Pa., freshman, take advantage of last night's Swing Night at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., to show off what they learned in the Ballroom Dance Club. Franko, the club's president, said the people were the best part of participating in the dance group. Legislators grapple with larger than expected state deficit The Associated Press TOPEKA — Kansas now appears headed for a $254 million budget deficit in the next fiscal year, a team of economic forecasters said yesterday in handing legislators a tougher chore than earlier thought. The new fiscal forecast adds $29 million to the previously anticipated difference between revenue and budgeted spending in the 2004 fiscal year, which starts July 1. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius has already signed a $10 billion budget for fiscal 2004, which legislators had drafted and passed based on a March revenue prediction calculated by the governor's aides. Erasing the deficit is legislators' main task when they return April 30 from an extended recess. Sebelius has been discussing budget issues with legislative leaders this week and was relieved that the latest revenue forecast was not worse, according to her spokeswoman, Nicole Corcoran-Basso. The forecasting team is made up of state officials, legislative staff and university economists who meet twice a year to study trends and issue official predictions on which budget decisions are based. The mid-April outlook takes into account tax receipts. Yesterday's report reflects economists' belief that the Kansas economy continues a slow recovery from a slump that started before the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The fresh forecast shows total revenue collections of $4.23 billion in the current fiscal year, or $14.9 million less than was predicted in March. General revenue in fiscal 2004 is now expected to total $4.39 billion, or $8.6 million less than earlier thought. If those forecasts are borne out, general revenue would rise next year by 3.7 percent from this year an increase that state Budget Director Duane Goossen called below average. The deficit prediction also assumes a $5.5 million net rise in social services costs next year. Sebelius has proposed to cover the deficit by issuing bonds, accelerating some tax collections and expanding legalized gambling measures generally rejected by the Republican-led Legislature. Republicans have proposed to balance revenue and spending partly by postponing a scheduled June payment of state aid to public schools until the new fiscal year starts in July. The GOP also proposes to pay some tax refunds more slowly next year. Senate President Dave Kerr (R-Hutchinson), called the latest fiscal forecast "just a smidgeon worse" than the earlier outlook. House Speaker Doug Mays (R-Topeka) saw the new numbers as good news. "It could have been so much worse." Mays said. Estimators predicted that personal income tax revenues would grow by 3.7 percent in fiscal 2004 and that corporate income tax revenues would remain steady. But Rep. Rocky Nichols, D-Topeka, who serves on the House Appropriations Committee, said the forecast for revenue growth next year was too optimistic given Kansas' current economic picture. "The aviation sector is still sucking air," Nichols said. "The farm economy is still the pits." PRIDE WEEK EVENTS 2003 SPONSORED BY QUEERS AND ALLIES MONDAY: PRIDE WEEK KICKOFF 10:00 AM Wescoe Beach TUESDAY: QUEER MOVIE: BETTER THAN CHOCOLATE 7:30 PM Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union SPEAKERS BUREAU OPEN FORUM 7:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union WEDNESDAY: ESDAY: BROWN BAG DIVERSITY SERIES: CHRISTINE ROBINSON: SODOMY LAWS 12 noon Multicultural Resource Center THURSDAY: BISEXUALITY 101:ROBYN OCHS 7:30 PM Malott Room, Kansas Union FRIDAY: TENTH ANNUAL BROWN BAG DRAG SHOW 12 noon Kansas Union Front Plaza COMEDIAN: DEIDRE SULLIVAN 8:00 PM Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SATURDAY: PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 11:00AM Watson Park along Massachusetts to South Park SPONSORSED BY STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE Coca-Cola STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAX THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Learning Through DIVEROSITY Multicultural Resource Center Student Development Center Coca-Cola Learning Through Diversity Multicultural Resource Center PAUL SIEGEL: WHY QUEER RIGHTS IS A FREE SPEECH ISSUE 2:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union QUEER THEATER 7:30-9:00 PM Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union: $2 donation Featuring Crooked Rain PRIDEDANCE 10:00 PM-1:00 AM Ecumenical Christian Ministries: $2 donation Refreshments provided, bring your own drink Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A CHRONIC STRUGGLE WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 Bayer Mark Umholtz, former Marvin Hall shop supervisor, displays the mask he has to have with him if he goes outside of the house and the seven different medications he takes a day. Umholtz said he developed a chronic respiratory disease from the air quality conditions in the craft shop. Kelley Weiss/Kansan Struggle CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A When Umholtz got sick, the department of environmental health and safety tested the shop's air quality, said John Gaunt, dean of the school. Results showed that the shop's air quality met Occupational Safety Health Administration regulations, he said. Because the shop met federal standards, the law did not bind the school to install a new ventilation system. "We had one person who has had respiratory problems that he attributes to the shop,following which we have made many,many accommodations," Gaunt said. "It could seem as if somehow we did nothing about it,which would not be true." Mike Swann, associate dean of the school, said there was not enough evidence to prove Umholtz fell sick because of the shop's air quality. "If a number of shop users started saying 'We think the air quality is bad,' then we would probably very quickly go back to Mike Russell and discuss installing a new ventilation system." Swann said. Nathan Witte, the shop supervisor now, said a dust collection system would improve safety and make cleaning easier because there would be less dust accumulation. "I've thought all along that a dust collection system should be implemented," Witte said. "You could say there really isn't a dust collection system," he said. "It really isn't a complete system." AN ILNESS EVOLVES Only 50 percent of tools are hooked up to any type of collection system, Witte said. That leaves the other half putting dust particles in the air because there is no collection system. In late 1999, Umholtz's health problems climaxed. He'd been on sick leave for three months when he said he realized the University was not going to fully accommodate him. Shortly after Umholtz returned to work on Jan. 3, 2000, the school told him he had to leave. The School of Architecture and the department of human resources asked Umholtz to take sick leave, without pay, because he could not perform his required work duties. Umholtz thought differently and took a claim to workers' compensation court for review. In February 2000, Brad E. Avery, the administrative judge for the division of workers' compensation for the state of Kansas, ruled that the University had "compelled" Umholtz to leave his job and that he must be reinstated to his job as shop supervisor. Avery also ruled that Umholtz be compensated for the time and wages he lost while on leave. Umholtz requested a new respiratory specialist during the claim review. The judge agreed to appoint Umholtz a new doctor, Shawn Magee, a pulmonologist in Topeka. Magee did breathing tests on Umholtz in early 2000 and looked at his medical history before and after he got sick. Through his medical evaluation, Magee found that Umholtz had developed occupational asthma and chronic sinus problems from the work environment in the shop. Magee still concedes that the shop caused Umholtz's respiratory problems. "We think both his asthma and chronic sinus problems are related to the fumes and exposures in the shop." Magee said. When Magee determined that Umholtz was sick because of the poor ventilation in the shop, he made a list of accommodations for the School of Architecture to meet. Swann, the school's associate dean, said that of the seven requests, the school had met five: - Only one person could use the welding hood at a time; - The number of people allowed to use the shop at once was reduced; Umholtz could take five minute breaks every hour; The physical activities of Umholtzwere limited; And an office that could not be contaminated by airborne particulates and fumes, called a "clean room," was built for Umholz. Because of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the last two changes that Magee suggested circulating outside air inside his office and installing a new ventilation system — were considered unreasonable. The act says that when an employee request would cause the employer "undue hardship" the employer does not have to meet the accommodations. The last two changes did fall under ADA's "unreasonable accommodations" category, according to Steve Ramirez, assistant director of the Equal Opportunity Office. He said installing a new ventilation system in December 2001 would have cost about $70,000. The school's budget for improvements that year was $90,000. Spending a large portion of the budget is considered an "undue hardship," said Swann, associate dean of architecture. "I think ideally they should have been met," Magee said. "For him, that's what he needed to be able to stay there." Magee, the doctor, said Umholtz was forced to leave his job because not all of the accommodations he suggested were met. Because the new dust collection system was never installed, Umholtz's doctor told him he had to leave his job. CRUNCHING THE NUMBERS Both dears of the school said a new ventilation system had not been installed because the school did not have the money. In December 2001, Gaurit and Swann said the school had weighed the value of improvements. Installing a new ventilation system was not a high priority, he said, because the current system met OSHA regulations. "To do that would take money away from academic problems," Swann said. "I think there would be great reluctance to shut down a computer lab or something else." Gaunt said the estimates for replacing the ventilation system were all relative. "As those things go, $70,000 is not an enormous amount of money." Gaunt said. "As our things go, it's an astronomical amount of money." But money was not the issue, because the deans did not have to pay for everything, said Russell, director of environment, health and safety. He said that if the School of Architecture could not SEE STRUGGLE ON PAGE 9A THERE'S A BETTER WAY TO VENT! 20 SECONDS TO SPEAK YOUR MIND free for all 864-0500 KANSAN THERE'S A BETTER WAY TO VENT. The Yellow A play based on the true story of a young The Yellow Dress A play based on the true story of a young woman's relationship that begins as love and ends in tragedy. Come see the The Yellow Dress and do your part to help prevent relationship violence and sexual assault. Alderson Auditorium, KS Union Friday, April 25th 7:00 pm (will be followed by panel discussion on sexual and domestic violence) Presented by: Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and Women's Transitional Care Services, Rape Victim Survivor Services, The KU Theatre Department, KU Student Senate, Man Can Stop Rape, and Deana's Fund STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE KANSAN everyday 1 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN *9A* A CHRONIC STRUGGLE Struggle CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8A fund a new ventilation system as Gaunt said, the University would work to make other revenue available. Some of that money could have come from the $2.5 million a year that Legislature gives to the University for repair and rehabilitation, Russell said. With the help of the provost's office, the School of Architecture could have used some of that money to improve the air quality in the shop. Judging from past experience, Russell said the deans who were adamant about their proposals had almost always been successful in financial negotiations with the provost. In one example, a couple of years ago the School of Fine Arts wanted to make improvements to its common shop in the Art and Design Building. The renovations to the shop were to cost approximately $200,000. Within six weeks, Russell said, the deals with the provost's office and used some of its own money for improvements. A similar financial agreement was made between the office of the provost and the School of Architecture, but the deans did not accept the offer. Lindy Eakin, vice provost, said that in 2001, he offered to give the School of Architecture $50,000, which would cover about two-thirds of the cost to install a new ventilation system. The School of Architecture would have had to fund the rest — about $25,000. Gaunt and Swann declined the offer because they said they did not have the $25,000 at the time. Eakin said. "We had to look at the bigger picture," Eakin said. "For accreditation purposes we had to move into the digital age, and the shop could be managed through other ways besides a new ventilation system." In the same year, Eakin said the University spent $500,000 on improving the electrical infra- Kelley Weiss/Kansan studios could convert to a digital format. That money came from the repair and rehabilitation fund, not the School of Architecture's budget. Improvements on electrical distribution had to be made so the School of Architecture could keep its accreditation from the National Architecture Accreditation Board. Eakin said keeping accreditation was more important than improving the shop. "They had to ask what's more important," Eakin said. "If we can improve the education of students to become professional architects, it's a no-brainer." If the provost's office thought the shop was enough of a risk to people, it would shut the shop down, Eakin said. The deciding factor, Eakin said, was that the shop did not pose an immediate threat and that the digital upgrade needed to be made. SAFETY STANDARDS Mark Umholtz displays the respirator he wore during the last year he worked at the craft shop in Marvin Hall. He said he had to wear the respirator at all times while in the shop because it was too difficult for him to breathe without it. He no longer works at the shop because of his respiratory condition. If a person works in the shop for 40 hours a week, the risk increases for health hazards, as in the case of Umholtz, Russell said. The ventilation and dust collection system in the shop are not at the proper level for engineering design, which increases the risk for shop users, Russell said. The school is not legally bound to make the improvements, but replacing the ventilation system is the right thing to do, Russell said. The exhaust ventilation for the welding area also is not at the level for modern safety standards, Russell said. "What they have in there isn't prudent practice design," Russell said. "It could easily be changed for $10,000 to $15,000." Welding fumes can be some of the most toxic in a shop, Russell said, so it is important to test the air of the indoor welding facilities. Tests have not been conducted because students must be using the welding area and creating the toxic fumes for four to six hours straight for an accurate reading. But the use of the welding equipment in the shop is sporadic, and much of the welding is done outside in an open area. In the last three years, the school has not made arrangements to conduct the testing, Russell said. Russell said he did not understand why the school had not installed a new ventilation and dust-collection system. "The recommendations were very reasonable," Russell said. "They just took care of all the easy stuff." Umholtz was awarded full workers' compensation for all his medical expenses from the state when he had to leave his job in December of 2001. DISSENT FROM THE DEANS Linda Fund, assistant director of human resources, said an employee was never awarded workers' compensation unless he could prove that his work environment injured him. But Gaunt and Swann said Umholtz's award of workers' compensation was not an indication that the air quality in the Marvin Hall craft shop harmed him. KUJH04 INTERNET TV Gaunt said the respiratory specialist's medical evaluations of the cause of Umholtz's illness were inconclusive. "We can all speculate on these things," Gaunt said. "I don't really know what his situation is specifically, so I don't see the value in evaluating the situation." "Our concern would be at a much greater level if we had evidence that was conclusive in any respect about the air quality in the shop," Gaunt said. "We don't. And we take every precaution that we should take." But Gaunt said he wanted to know what caused the development of chronic respiratory illness. But Witte is not concerned about respiratory problems. "I've been around a wood shop for over 15 years," Witte said. "I'll protect myself." LOOKING FOR CHANGE "It would be nice ... to know exactly the cause of Mark's problem and to know exactly what role his job and the environment played in that," Gaunt said. "We don't know, and all we can do is the best we can do." Gaunt said he could not say whether the employee who had replaced Umholtz was in danger of developing occupational asthma or chronic respiratory conditions. When Witte, the new shop supervisor, was hired, Gaunt and Swann said they did not tell him that Umholtz had left because of health reasons. LOOKING FOR CHANGE "The University needs to be accountable for protecting the health of all students and employees." Although Umholtz says he is upset for what happened, he still has strong ties to the University. His father, two brothers, himself and his mother have a combined 80 years of attendance and work at the University. Tune in to KUJH, Channel 66, tonight at 5:30 p.m., 7:00 and 9:00 to see Greg Barry's television package to find out more about the air quality conditions in room 109 Marvin Hall and how those conditions have affected Mark Umholtz. - Edited by Lindsay Hanson Do you feel endangered by the shop's air quality? Should the University put in a new ventilation system? S "I've personally never had any problems working here; I wasn't here as much as Umholtz was. What he did was great for the school. He was very nice and always concerned about safety. The school should be taking care of him." Jake Johannes Powhattan senior MATTHEW SMITH "We haven't had any other complaints. We wear the masks, and I totally feel safe. I didn't know enough about it to have an opinion." Jason Newland Springfield, Mo., senior and shop assistant CARLOS CABUERAS "I don't feel in danger in the shop. But Mark was in there a lot more than I was. There's been talk about getting a new ventilation system, but nothing has been done. From an employee's perspective, it needs to be replaced." Vincent Duet Chicago senior and shop assistant Roommates stuck to the couch? Kansan Classifieds • Find them a job. • Find new roommates. • Sell the couch. START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MISS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE CHER NIGHT TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT •14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells EVENING AT ET DELI INC OSE 10.00 sauce $10.00 sauce or $5.00 r $3.95 EVERY NIGHT •1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 •Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 O OVER 80 DIFFERENT BOTTLES OF BEER! THURSDAYS $150 U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea-- EVERYTHING! $200 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! ALL WEEKEND $200 DOMESTIC TAPS $250 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! LIVE MUSIC! April 25th SoundsGood with Jive Turkey every Saturday! DJ MARLON & friends NOT, FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE! at the walk-up window! Open 7pm Mon-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS LAWRENCE'S 1016 Mass. OVER 80 DIFFERENT BOTTLES OF BEER! THURSDAYS $150 U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea-- EVERYTHING! $200 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! ALL WEEKEND $200 DOMESTIC TAPS $250 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! LIVE MUSIC! April 25th SoundsGood with Jive Turkey every Saturday! DJ MARLON & friends HOT. FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE!! at the walk-up window! Open 7pm Mon-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS'S LAWRENCE 1016 Mass. Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1915 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1915 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 A CHRONIC STRUGGLE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A Struggle CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8A fund a new ventilation system as Gaunt said, the University would work to make other revenue available. Some of that money could have come from the $2.5 million a year that Legislature gives to the University for repair and rehabilitation, Russell said. With the help of the provost's office, the School of Architecture could have used some of that money to improve the air quality in the shop. Judging from past experience, Russell said the deans who were adamant about their proposals had almost always been successful in financial negotiations with the provost. In one example, a couple of years ago the School of Fine Arts wanted to make improvements to its common shop in the Art and Design Building. The renovations to the shop were to cost approximately $200,000. Within six weeks, Russell said, the deals with the provost's office and used some of its own money for improvements. A similar financial agreement was made between the office of the provost and the School of Architecture, but the deans did not accept the offer. Lindy Eakin, vice provost, said that in 2001, he offered to give the School of Architecture $50,000, which would cover about two-thirds of the cost to install a new ventilation system. The School of Architecture would have had to fund the rest — about $25,000. Gaunt and Swann declined the offer because they said they did not have the $25,000 at the time, Eakin said. "We had to look at the bigger picture," Eakin said. "For accreditation purposes we had to move into the digital age, and the shop could be managed through other ways besides a new ventilation system." In the same year, Eakin said the University spent $500,000 on improving the electrical infra- studios could convert to a digital format. That money came from the repair and rehabilitation fund, not the School of Architecture's budget. Improvements on electrical distribution had to be made so the School of Architecture could keep its accreditation from the National Architecture Accreditation Board. Eakin said keeping accreditation was more important than improving the shop. Kelley Weiss/Kansan "They had to ask what's more important," Eakin said. "If we can improve the education of students to become professional architects, it's a no-brainer." If the provost's office thought the shop was enough of a risk to people, it would shut the shop down, Eakin said. The deciding factor, Eakin said, was that the shop did not pose an immediate threat and that the digital upgrade needed to be made. SAFETY STANDARDS (1) Mark Umholtz displays the respirator he wore during the last year he worked at the craft shop in Marvin Hall. He said he had to wear the respirator at all times while in the shop because it was too difficult for him to breathe without it. He no longer works at the shop because of his respiratory condition. If a person works in the shop for 40 hours a week, the risk increases for health hazards, as in the case of Umholtz, Russell said. The ventilation and dust collection system in the shop are not at the proper level for engineering design, which increases the risk for shop users, Russell said. The school is not legally bound to make the improvements, but replacing the ventilation system is the right thing to do, Russell said. The exhaust ventilation for the welding area also is not at the level for modern safety standards, Russell said. "What they have in there isn't prudent practice design," Russell said. "It could easily be changed for $10,000 to $15,000." Welding fumes can be some of the most toxic in a shop, Russell said, so it is important to test the air of the indoor welding facilities. Tests have not been conducted because students must be using the welding area and creating the toxic fumes for four to six hours straight for an accurate reading. But the use of the welding equipment in the shop is sporadic, and much of the welding is done outside in an open area. In the last three years, the school has not made arrangements to conduct the testing, Russell said. Russell said he did not understand why the school had not installed a new ventilation and dust-collection system. "The recommendations were very reasonable," Russell said. They just took care of all the easy stuff." Umholtz was awarded full workers' compensation for all his medical expenses from the state when he had to leave his job in December of 2001. DISSENT FROM THE DEANS Linda Fund, assistant director of human resources, said an employee was never awarded workers' compensation unless he could prove that his work environment injured him. But Gaunt and Swann said Umholtz's award of workers' compensation was not an indication that the air quality in the Marvin Hall craft shop harmed him. Gaunt said the respiratory specialist's medical evaluations of the cause of Umholtz's illness were inconclusive. "We can all speculate on these things," Gaunt said. "I don't really know what his situation is specifically, so I don't see the value in evaluating the situation." KUJHQ INTERNET TV "Our concern would be at a much greater level if we had evidence that was conclusive in any respect about the air quality in the shop," Gaunt said. "We don't. And we take every precaution that we should take." Gaunt said he could not say whether the employee who had replaced Umholtz was in danger of developing occupational asthma or chronic respiratory conditions. When Witte, the new shop supervisor, was hired, Gaunt and Swann said they did not tell him that Umholtz had left because of health reasons. But Witte is not concerned about respiratory problems. But Gaunt said he wanted to know what caused the development of chronic respiratory illness. "It would be nice ... to know exactly the cause of Mark's problem and to know exactly what role his job and the environment played in that," Gaunt said. "We don't know, and all we can do is the best we can do." "I've been around a wood shop for over 15 years," Witte said. "I'll protect myself." LOOKING FOR CHANGE Although Umholtz says he is upset for what happened,he still has strong ties to the University. His father, two brothers, himself and his mother have a combined 80 years of attendance and work at the University. "The University needs to be accountable for protecting the health of all students and employees." Tune in to KUJH, Channel 66, tonight at 5:30 p.m., 7:00 and 9:00 to see Greg Barry's television package to find out more about the air quality conditions in room 109 Marvin Hall and how those conditions have affected Mark Umholtz. — Edited by Lindsay Hanson Do you feel endangered by the shop's air quality? Should the University put in a new ventilation system? S "I've personally never had any problems working here; I wasn't here as much as Umholtz was. What he did was great for the school. He was very nice and always concerned about safety. The school should be taking care of him." Jake Johannes Powhatton senior "We haven't had any other complaints. We wear the masks, and I totally feel safe. I didn't know enough about it to have an opinion." Jason Newland Springfield, Mo., senior and shop assistant JOHN LEWIS "I don't feel in danger in the shop. But Mark was in there a lot more than I was. There's been talk about getting a new ventilation system, but nothing has been done. From an employee's perspective, it needs to be replaced." Vincent Duet Chicago senior and shop assistant Roommates stuck to the couch? Kansan Classifieds ·Find them a job. ·Find new roommates. ·Sell the couch. START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MASS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE BITCHER NIGHT TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT" NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT •Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 •$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis •$2.00 Wells EVENING AT ET DELI INC. 1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 Fat Tire pints for $2.00 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 0 OVER 80 DIFFERENT BOTTLES OF BEER! THURSDAYS ALL WEEKEND $150 U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea-- EVERYTHING! $200 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! $200 DOMESTIC TAPS $250 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! LIVE MUSIC! April 25th SoundsGood with Jive Turkey every Saturday! DJ MARLON & friends NOT. FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE!! at the walk-up window! Open 7pm Mon-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS 5 1016 Mass. OVER 80 DIFFERENT BOTTLES OF BEER! THURSDAYS $150 U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea-- EVERYTHING! $200 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! ALL WEEKEND $200 DOMESTIC TAPS $250 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! LIVE MUSIC! April 25th SoundsGood with Jive Turkey every Saturday! DJ MARLON MARSHALL & friends HOT. FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE! at the walk-up window! Open 7pm Mon-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS LAWRENCE'S 1016 Mass. Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. 10A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 Display CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A presence of the display on campus, but Danny Kaiser, director of Organizations and Leadership, said the University events committee could make judgments based on time, place and manner but not on content. "One thing the University events committee will always strive to do is to protect free speech while at the same time helping planners work within University policy." Kaiser said. The display sparked abortion-rights advocates to inform students of their viewpoint. Jessica St. Clair, Valley Center senior, and about eight others stood at the corner of Sunflower Road and Jayhawk Boulevard holding poster boards of their own. One of the signs read "Prochoice is not anti-life." Jana Mackey, Haysville junior, was holding the sign and said she was there because she thought the display was tasteless. "I have a huge problem with this because it's based on shock value," she said. Mackey said many of the pictures showed late-term abortions, which were not the time most abortions were performed. St. Clair and others offended by the anti-abortion display were particularly upset by abortion opponents' use of the terms "genocide" and "Holocaust" as synonyms for abortion. She said the group that gathered to support abortion rights was there to let women know there were other options and that abortion was not genocide. Rachel Leland, Wichita junior and president of the Justice For All group at the University, said abortion was an important issue to confront students with. She said it was difficult to stand behind an opinion that could come under attack, but she thought the issue was worth standing up for. "Abortion is a horrible thing, but I don't necessarily like to think about it, and I think that's the case with a lot of people," she said. "If we save even one life, it's worth it." —Edited by Julie Jantzer Response CONTINUED FROM PAGE 14 Members of Hillel knew the Justice for All display would be on campus today. Rather than confront the display with a counter protest and draw more attention to it, Lewis said the group decided to walk on the other side of the street. "There's no winning an argument with zealots like these." Lewis said. The Rev. Vince Krische of the St. Lawrence Catholic campus center was more supportive of the display. Krische said although St. Lawrence didn't have an official position on the display he thought it was necessary for people to face the reality of abortion "Iw as a culture and a society, if we want to promote abortion then we have to face the consequences," Krische said. "It's not pretty." Muslim perspectives on campus were a little more divisive than other religious perspectives. "Islam respects life in all Ariful Huq, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, junior and president of the Muslim Student Association saw the display when he was on campus yesterday. Huq said as a Muslim he agreed that abortion was inappropriate, but he thought the display was explicit. forms in all stages. No one has a right to take a life without reason," said Moussa Elbayoumy, director of the board for the Islamic Center of Lawrence. "Nobody should promote something like that." Huq said. something like that. Tqa said. The display was met by a group of counter protesters, one of whom was Stephanie Kirmer, Topeka freshman and president of the Society of Open-Minded Atheists and Agnostics. "I think they're using graphic photographs because their argumentation is so weak," she said. Kirmer said she protested the display not as a member of SOMA but as an individual. She said that the humanist perspective considered the wellbeing of the pregnant woman before anything else. Edited by Julie Jantzer Investigators find U.S.money in Iraq The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Piles of U.S. currency, hundreds of millions of dollars so far, are being found in Iraq, even though the country has been under economic sanctions for nearly 13 years. Investigators — on the ground in Iraq and in the United States — are trying to track the money back to where it came from, a Herculean task, both officials and outside experts say. The experts said there are plenty of possibilities, including oil and cash smuggling schemes, illegal trade deals, sham businesses and a web of middlemen located outside the country to conceal the true destination of the funds. "Identifying a money trail can be very difficult to do," said Jimmy Gurule, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame. "That's why it is so essential that some documentation of financial records is discovered. Then investigators can go backward and trace the movements of the funds." Gurule recently served as the Treasury Department's undersecretary for enforcement in charge of the government's efforts to catch terrorists' financiers. He left the job in early February. "We are working with the military to authenticate the seized currency," said John Gill, a spokesman for the Secret Service, which handles counterfeiting investigations. Investigators also are looking into whether any of the cash found in Iraq was counterfeited. tightly wrapped packets of new $100 dollar bills hidden behind a false wall, U.S. military officials said yesterday. The $100 bill is the most counterfeited U.S. note outside the United States. In Baghdad, U.S. soldiers — trying to stop looting — discovered more than $600 million in In a neighborhood along the Tigris River, where senior Baath Party and Republican Guard officials lived, U.S. forces found some $656 million in U.S. currency, the Los Angeles Times reported last week. It was not clear if the find described by the military officials was the same as the one reported by the Times. "When you discover such a huge amount of U.S. currency, you know you are not dealing with Boy Scouts," said Robert Bonner, commissioner of the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection. The Bush administration wants any genuine, U.S. currency found in Iraq to be used to help the people of the country, Treasury Department officials said Tracing the movement of cash is difficult. Serial numbers on U.S. currency are sometimes useful, but their help is limited, experts said. Information is kept allowing people to track bills' movements from the Federal Reserve to their first destination point, but not beyond that, a Treasury official explained. Separately, roughly $1.2 billion in illicit Iraqi assets have been recently uncovered abroad, said Treasury Department officials, who wouldn't disclose details. U. S. officials believe there is more Iraqi money that hasn't been found, a major focus of investigators. Seal gap may have caused shuttle crash The Associated Press HOUSTON — Columbia investigators said yesterday they were growing more certain of what brought down the shuttle: A seal on the left wing was struck by foam during liftoff and fell off the next day, creating a gap that let in enough scratching gases during re-entry to rip the ship apart. A seal from Columbia's left wing is now believed to be the mystery object that floated away in orbit and it was almost certainly struck by something — like a chunk of foam — before it came off, the accident investigators said. ticular scenarios, any favorite scenarios," said retired Navy Adm. Harold Gehman Jr., chairman of the investigation board. "But I think 11 weeks into this, it's time that we attempted to see where the evidence was pointing us," and so the board will meet with NASA officials later this week to begin reaching a hypothesis. "For 11 weeks, we have been saying that we don't have any par- At their weekly news conference, the investigators also said numerous defects had been found in insulating foam on a fuel tank practically identical to the one on Columbia. A chunk of the foam peeled away from Columbia's fuel tank begin receiving a reply. The final report is not expected until midsummer. shortly after liftoff and slammed into the leading edge of the left wing, believed to be a key element of the Feb. 1 disaster that killed all seven astronauts. The investigators said the long narrow gap from a broken or missing seal on the left wing probably expanded during Columbia's descent two weeks later because of the intense heat of re-entry. The resulting breach would have been large enough for atmospheric gases to burn their way through the wing and lead to the spaceship's disintegration over Texas. Navy Rear Adm. Stephen Turcotte, a board member, said it was still too soon to say that was exactly what happened, but the evidence was pointing strongly in that direction. "To say it was, in fact, a T-seal 100 percent, we suspect that," Turcotte said. "I mean, we're up there. We're up there near the 70s and 80s percent." Radar and other tests indicate a so-called T-seal is what was seen floating away from Columbia on its second day in orbit; the object was not noticed during the flight but only in analysis after the accident. More work is planned to ascertain whether it may have been a complete seal or just a fragment of one, or possibly a blanket insulator or part of an actual wing panel. Sunday CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Jeff Jensen, owner of Jensen Retail Liquor, 620 W. Ninth St., said he thought there was bordering Missouri have a vested interest in allowing Sunday liquor sales because they lose revenue across the state line, said Rundle. Rundle thought there was no such revenue loss in Lawrence. enough of a buffer zone between here and Kansas City. It wasn't as big an issue in Lawrewnce as it was in border communities, he said. "People here have been conditioned long enough to buy on Saturday nights for picnics on Sunday or whatever," Jensen said. "I have a feeling you'd end up doing six days worth of sales in seven days." Edited by Christy Dendurent Court won't postpone Terry Nichols' trial OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma Supreme Court denied a request yesterday to postpone bombing conspirator Terry Nichols' preliminary hearing, the second straight day Nichols sought a stay in a dispute over payment of legal bills. The ruling, signed by Chief Justice Joseph M. Watt, was praised by about a dozen bombing survivors and members of victims' families who attended a hearing before Supreme Court Referee Greg Albert. Diane Leonard, whose husband, Donald R. Leonard, was among the bombing's victims, said the decision indicated the state would bear the financial burden of prosecuting Nichols in spite of a revenue shortfall. The Associated Press KANSAS.COM Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew FRY-WAGNER MOVING & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Equal-Employment-Opportunity Employer BROWN BAG CLASSICS 12:30 - 1:00PM MOST WEDNESDAYS KANSAS UNION Make your lunch a classic. Please join the School of Fine Arts for free noon-time performances. Just bring your lunch because the drinks are on the Kansas Union. TODAY'S PERFORMER: EUNGOO HWANG, PIANO (Alderson Auditorium, 4th FLOOR) S Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew FRY WAGNER MOVING & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Equal-Employment-Opportunity Employer $ Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew YOUR CHOICE LEASING LEASE PURCHASE OPTIONS AVAILABLE ALL OF YOUR FURNITURE NEEDS TWO DAY DELIVERY CORPORATE LEASING AVAILABLE ONE PIECE OR COMPLETE HOME WIDE SELECTION 841-7111 Showroom hours: M & F 8:30 - 5:30 T - Th 12:00 - 5:30 Closed Weekends 601 KASOLD LAWRENCE, KS 66049-3236 KU Campus Workout Join us for a workout around campus! We will meet at the west doors of Robinson Gym. Runs from 3:00 – 4:30 PM. Sunday, April 27 We will be running stairs and jogging through campus. Pull ups, pushups, and a little yoga will be incorporated with the workout. Tel: 785 864 3546 $ $ FREE: BROWN BAG CLASSICS 12:30 - 1:00PM MOST WEDNESDAYS KANSAS UNION Thompson Crawley FURNITURE LEASING Since 1971 FREE : Equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts I am a man who is not afraid to be strong. KU RECREATION SERVICES STUDENT SENATE JOGGER WEDNESDAY. APRIL 23, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 11A Shiites make once-banned pilgrimage Holy cities crowded; France proposes end to UN's sanctions The Associated Press BAGHDAD, Iraq — Hundreds of thousands of Shiite Muslims crowded two holy cities yesterday in a fervent pilgrimage that had been banned for decades under Saddam, while at the United Nations. France proposed suspending sanctions targeting Iraqi civilians. The surprise move by France's U.N. ambassador, Jean-Marc de La Sabiere, would be an important step toward the U.S. goal of ending trade embargoes that have crippled Iraq's economy. U. S. soldiers trying to stop looting discovered more than $600 million in $100 U.S. bills behind a false wall in Baghdad, Central Command spokesman Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks said. More than 800 explosive suicide vests also have been found in various places, he said. In northern Iraq, Jay Garner, the retired American general overseeing the rebuilding of Iraq, got a warm welcome when he visited the Kurdish region. "You always make me feel at home," Garner told one Kurdish leader. At the largely peaceful Shiite pilgrimage in the southern city of Karbala, U.S. military officials said police arrested six men who had been planning to blow up two of Karbala's mosques. Five of those arrested were members of Saddam's Baath Party, and one said he belonged to al-Qaida, said Army Capt. Jimmie Cummings. One of Saddam's most-feared lieutenants Muhammad Hamza al-Zubaydi was cap tured Monday by the Iraqi opposition and turned over to American authorities for trial on war crimes charges. He is the highest-ranking figure — No, 18 — on the U.S. military's most-wanted list to be caught so far. Al-Zubaydi was known as Saddam's "Shite Thug" for his role in the bloody suppression of the Shite uprising of 1991. Tens of thousands of people died in the revolt. Iraqi opposition groups have also accused al-Zubaydi of the 1999 assassination of a top Shiite cleric. Al-Zubaydi, a Shiite himself, was featured in an Iraqi videotape brutalizing Shiite disidents. "This is very significant—he is one of the most hated men in the former regime," said Haider Ahmad, a spokesman for the Iraqi National Congress, an exile group. Eight of the 55 most-wanted are now in custody. A ninth figure, Ali Hassan al-Majid — known as "Chemical Ali" for his use of poison gas against Kurds — is believed to have been killed in an airstrike. During Saddam's rule, the Shites were forbidden to march. This year, they marched openly under black banners of mourning. Shiites streamed toward Najaf — burial shrine of Imam Ali, son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad — and Karbala, where Hussein, Muhammad's grandson, was martyred in the 7th century. "We were prohibited from visiting these shrines for a long time by the Baath Party and their agents," Abed Ali Ghilan said. "This year we thank God for ridding us of the dictator Saddam Hussein and for letting us visit these shrines." Karbala was packed shoulder toshoulder with hundreds of thousands of pilgrims,waving black and green flags, chanting and beating their chests. Others carried photos of revered cheers. SARS quarantine successful in Hong Kong The Associated Press HONG KONG — Quarantine measures appear to be paying off in Hong Kong's fight against SARS and its leader voiced growing confidence about beating the disease, but experts said yesterday it's unclear when the crisis will end. The number of new cases reported daily seems to be declining in hard-hit Hong Kong. Some doctors, however, say there needs to be a sharper, more sustained drop before anyone can say severe acute respiratory syndrome is under control. "My prediction is in three months' time Hong Kong can return to almost normal, not completely normal," said Dr. Lo Wing-lok, president of the Hong Kong Medical Association. Lo, an infectious disease expert and a lawmaker, said that under his projected scenario, SARS mostly would be contained but Hong Kong "might see sporadic cases." Neighboring mainland China said Tuesday that 11 more people died from SARS, raising its total death toll to 97. Hong Kong took a step toward normalley yesterday when 200,000 students returned to school after a three-week closure. But students and teachers were told to wear surgical masks and have their temperatures taken daily. Younger students still were staying home, and a few schools refused to open. Singapore's Ministry of Education said yesterday it will distribute up to 500,000 thermometers to the city-state's students so they will be able to check themselves for fever twice a day to prevent the spread of SARS. "My prediction is in three months' time Hong Kong can return to almost normal, not completely normal." Dr. Lo Wing-Iok Hong Kong Medical Association president Singapore has had 186 cases and 16 deaths, including two more cases yesterday. One of those was linked to an outbreak at its largest wholesale fruit and vegetable market, which closed for 10 days to stem the illness spread. Hong Kong Chief Executive Tung Chee-haw said Monday that Hong Kong was "slowly but surely getting the figures stabilized" and added he was increasingly optimistic about containing SARS. He has not predicted how soon that could happen and officials have not said what would need to be seen before claiming victory. The disease now has sickened more than 1,400 people in Hong Kong and killed 99. The five people whose deaths were reported yesterday were elderly with other chronic illnesses. Hong Kong reported 32 new SARS cases yesterday,following back-to-back reports of just 22 each Sunday and Monday,which were the lowest totals this month. Experts call that decline encouraging, but said Hong Kong needs to see lower numbers for more than just a few days. Some warned that the territory's proximity to mainland China, where the disease originated and still is spreading, could complicate matters. Palestine government disagreements persist The Associated Press RAMALLAH, West Bank — Yasser Arafat and his prime minister-designate, Mahmoud Abbas, clung to their positions yesterday in a bitter dispute over naming a security chief, raising the possibility that Abbas will fail to form a Cabinet and resign. Abbas' resignation could cause considerable delays in unveiling a U.S.-backed "road map" to full Palestinian statehood within three years. Abbas must present a list of ministers to Arafat by the end of the day Wednesday, as required by Palestinian regulations, and the Palestinian parliament then would have a week to vote on the new Cabinet. Palestinian law does not provide for additional time, so if the deadline is missed, Arafat would have to appoint a new person and start the process over. International mediators have urged Arafat not to stand in Abbas' way, British Prime Minister Tony Blair called Arafat yesterday and, according to one Palestinian official, delivered a stern message that everything must be done to assure that Abbas is installed as prime minister. Arafat consulted with Cabinet ministers and senior members of the ruling Fatah party at his West Bank headquarters yesterday. The meeting apparently was stormy, with yelling heard in the background when a reporter spoke to one of the participants by phone. A senior Palestinian official close to Arafat said on condition of anonymity there was little hope for compromise and he expected Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, to resign. Arafat already is considering Parliament Speaker Ahmed Qureia as a possible replacement for Abbas, the official said. Ostensibly, the disagreement is over Mohammed Dahlan, a former Gaza security chief whom Abbas wants to name to a key security position but whom Arafat opposes. Beyond that, there is a broader struggle over how much authority Arafat is ready to relinquish. The wrangling "is part of the labor pains of the transition to a new era" in Palestinian politics, Cabinet minister Saeb Erekat said, adding that a failure to install Abbas as prime minister would be devastating for the Palestinians. Arafat does not want the independent-minded Dahlan in the Cabinet and prefers a confidant, Hani al-Hassan, as security chief. Dahlan has promised to crack down on Palestinian militias, and enjoys Israeli and U.S. support. Al-Hassan has not confronted militant groups since being named interior minister last year and has been unable to persuade them to halt attacks on Israel. Hassan Khreisheh, a Palestinian legislator, said yesterday that Arafat was trying to sabotage 'Abbas' Cabinet list because he was unwilling to surrender power. "He fears he will not be the strongman in the coming phase," Khreisheh said about Arafat. Lawmaker Hanan Ashrawi said the wrangling showed Arafat is having a hard time letting go of power, but she also accused Abbas of making some Cabinet appointments based on loyalty rather than merit. I am a teacher. I love reading and writing. I enjoy the beauty of nature. I enjoy the comfort of my own space. I enjoy the company of my friends. I enjoy the freedom of my mind. I enjoy the joy of discovery. I enjoy the satisfaction of achievement. I enjoy the peace of mind. I enjoy the happiness of life. I enjoy the joy of creation. I enjoy the pleasure of sharing. I enjoy the joy of learning. I enjoy the joy of growth. I enjoy the joy of wisdom. I enjoy the joy of understanding. I enjoy the joy of respecting. I enjoy the joy of empathy. 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YOU HAVE A TON OF BOOKS AND TEN MINUTES TO MAKE IT ACROSS CAMPUS. 8011 4303 0123 6900 JA HAWK TU 000000 The University of Kansas KU Card Student 8017 4303 0127 6907 JAY HAWK ID 000000 NOW YOU CAN USE YOUR KU CARD AT ANY MERCHANT THAT DISPLAYS THE STAR LOGO INCLUDING STORES SUCH AS DILLON'S. KMART AND WAL-MART." Student Call, click, or come by * 864-5846 * www.commercebank.com COLLEGE IS TOUGH. 世博会 COMMERCE IS EASY. Commerce Bank ? 12A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 Expect the World" nytimes.com A B C D E A B C D E A B C D E A B C D E E E A B E C D A B C D E A B C D E A B C D Standards Sleep Deprivation Chaos Theory Study Skills Learning is all about discovering new meaning in the world around us. Enrich your learning experience by using the nation's most honored newspaper and The New York Times Knowledge Network. At nytimes.com/college, students have free access to our online archive—which dates back three years—and can receive e-mail alerts based on specific areas of interest. Also, advance your job search through links to jobmarket.com. For more information, and to order a subscription to The Times at student rates, visit nytimes.com/college or call 1-888-698-2655. The New York Times KNOWLEDGE NETWORK INSPIRING THOUGHT 14 Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS 1B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com Basketball moves past Williams to a new Self Roy Williams has never seemed so far away. A week ago, he had Lawrence in shambles. His leaving town caused great pain to many—a pain much greater than losing the national championship or any game for that matter. We can only wonder what Williams is thinking in his Tar Heel office now that Bill Self has been hired. Self is young, energetic and willing to stay at Kansas. He has Jayhawk fans once again talking about basketball and next year, something we never could have foreseen. The new coach has also already changed fans' view of you, Roy. If you can forget about us, then we certainly have the right to forget about you. In the span of a week, you might have gone from hero to villain to forgotten. Kansas has finally gotten what it deserves: a respected coach who appreciates the job and wants to be here, having no thoughts of going elsewhere. Kansas is an outstanding school. With players such as Wilt Chamberlain and Danny Manning and coaches such as Phog Allen and James Naismith, its tradition is second to none. Now, it has a coach who believes it It was disrespectful to Kansas basketball in general for Williams to remain on the fence between Kansas and North Carolina. It was a slap in the face to the players, honor and tradition of Kansas basketball to even consider a job as more prestigious than Kansas. Self was quoted as saying that this was a "career-ending job," showing the commitment the Jayhawk fans desperately desire. We don't need a coach too good for Kansas. We need one thankful to be at Kansas. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 It appears that man is Bill Self So where does this leave you, Roy? The only place I can see is out. The only place I can see is out. You said you came back to the Kansas banquet for the players, yet you never mentioned one of the team members in your speech. You never talked about Jeff Graves' huge improvement, never about Keith Langford's development as a player and never about Nick Collison and Kirk Hinrich, possibly the best senior tandem to ever play at Kansas. No, you talked about yourself. And how much you hurt. And the pain you felt. Maybe you came back for sympathy. Or maybe just to get people to react. Those days might be over. We are finished mourning. We are finished caring. In fact, we might also be finished wanting you back. With the hiring of Self, we have officially moved on, as we have found a coach who is as committed to Kansas as we are to him. Self might have said it best in the press conference announcing his hiring, referring to talks with former North Carolina, UCLA and Kansas coach Larry Brown. "He used to tell me that those places are great," Self said. "But there is no place like Kansas." True, but only when you can consider it home. Here's hoping the grass in North Carolina is as green as you think it is. It's too bad, Roy. You might just figure this out too late. Newell is an Emporia freshman in journalism. Andy Samuelson/Kansan Dan Nelson/Kansan KU Junior first baseman Ryan Baty will return to his hometown of Wichita to take on the Wichita State Shockers tonight. Baty has hit 9 home runs so far this season. Ready for the'Roos Kansas will take on the University of Missouri-Kansas City in a doubleheader at 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. today at Jayhawk Field. The Kangaroos, 13-27, are making their first trip to Lawrence this season. They are meeting the 23-20 Jayhawks. Jayhawks to battle Shockers 350 15 Ry Daniel Berk By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas baseball team will play its biggest nonconference game tonight. The Jayhawks will travel to Wichita will battle Wichita State at 7 p.m. The Shockers are 29-15 this season. With a 13-3 home record, Wichita State has proven it is tough to beat on its home field. Wichita State is led offensively by Nick McCoola, who is batting .355, and Drew Moffitt, who has 13 home runs on the season and 52 RBI. Moffitt leads the team in both categories. The Jayhawks will send senior left-hander Pat Holmes to the mound. Holmes is 3-1 on the season with an earned run average of 5.26. Kansas coach Ritch Price said he expected to use five or six pitches during the game to break it up and confuse the Shocker hitters. "The strength of our club is hitting," Price said. "We have to depend on that to give us the best opportunity to win. Holmes will start, but we will give their team a lot of different looks." The game against the Shockers will be a homecoming for two Kansas players. Junior first baseman Ryan Baty and his freshman brother, second baseman Matt Baty, both grew up in Wichita and played high school baseball at Maize High School just outside of Wichita. Both of the Baty brothers are having strong seasons so far. Ryan is batting .385, second on the team and has 9 home runs, which is a tie for the team lead. Matt is batting .325 and has 10 stolen bases. he has started one game at catcher, three games in center field, 15 games at second base and one game in right field. He has also batted lead off, second, seventh and ninth. Matt Baty did not start this season as an everyday player and was expected to be used as a utility player. So far this season, When senior shortstop Brandon Shepard got into an early season slump, an opportunity knocked for the younger Baty. He became a starter at second base, and freshman Ritchie Price moved to shortstop from second base. "It should be a real exciting time for them," Price said. "They will have a lot of friends and family there to watch them, and it should be a special day. I am sure they are really looking forward to it." Kansas will to look to this game as a momentum gainer. The Jayhawks will face a nationally ranked Baylor team this weekend at Hoglund Ballpark. By winning its last two conference series, Price believes his team has put itself right back in the hunt for two postseason tournaments. "By playing well lately, we have not only an opportunity to play at the Big 12 Conference tournament, but also a chance to make the NCAA Tournament," Price said. "So, obviously this is a big one for us, and it would only boost our RPI rating." - Edited by Erin Chapman JAYHAWKS IN THE PROS By Ryan Greene rgreee@kansan.com rganes sportswriter The NBA playoffs are now underway, and every former Jayhawk playing in the NBA is on a playoff squad. Each week, The University Daily Kansan updates you on what your favorite former Jayhawks are up to in the pros. If there are any former Jayhawks you would like an update on, please e-mail your requests to rgreene@kansan.com. Paul Pierce — Boston Celtics Pierce saw limited time in Boston's regular season finale against Detroit but made sure he showed up come playoff time. On BOSTON CELTICS Saturday, in game one of the Celtics' series with Indiana, Pierce dropped in 40 points and had 11 rebounds, including a clutch three-pointer down the stretch that put Boston up for good. In Monday's game two, Pierce was fighting a severe head cold and scored 14 points on 5-of-18 shooting as Indiana evened the series at 1-1. Drew Gooden — Orlando Magic Gooden put up Gooden put up solid numbers in Orlando's final two regular season contests, combining for 28 points and 17 re bounds. Orlando MAGIC Against Detroit in the team's first playoff game, Gooden went toe-to-toe with the Pistons' Ben Wallace, scoring 18 points and grabbing 14 rebounds in an upset victory for the eighth-seeded Magic. Jacque Vaughn — Orlando Magic In the same three games that Gooden starred in, Vaughn merely fizzled. In the regular season's final game, Vaughn had 6 points and nine assists but was ineffective in the first game against Detroit with just 4 points and six assists. Raef LaFrentz — Dallas Mavericke LaFrentz provided 36 solid minutes in a huge comeback victory against Portland Saturday night. He finished with 7 points, seven MIDDLEBURGS rebounds and two blocks, but more importantly, the Mavericks lead their first round series 1-0. Greg Ostertag — Utah Jazz The Jazz has fallen into an early 0-2 hole in its first-round match-up with the Sacramento Kings. Ostertag was impressive in JAZZ game one with 18 points and 11 rebounds but responded with only 4 points and four rebounds in game two. Scot Pollard — Sacramento Kings Pollard did not play in game one against Utah but was important off the bench in the Kings' game two victory with 8 points, six rehounds and NBA GAME OF KINGS ebounds and two blocked shots. Danny Manning — Detroit Pistons Manning did not make the Pistons' playoff roster, but in the last game of the regular season, Manning saw extended minutes. He finished in the loss to Boston with 18 points, six rebounds, five steals and hit two three-pointers. PISTONS WESTERN Reader's Request — Mark Randall— Kansas Forward 1987-91 Randall was a senior on the Kansas team that made the national champi- SEE PROS ON PAGE 10B 1 "I always thought, 'How cool v.ould it be to office on Naismith Drive?' Now it actually gets to happen." 2B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas men's basketball coach Bill Self Inside Sports WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 Marquette coach signs contract extension Crean ends speculation that he would become head coach at Illinois The Associated Press MILWAUKEE — Tom Crean signed a new contract to remain coach at Marquette, ending speculation that he was a leading contender to take the Illinois job. Cream, who led Marquette to its first Final Four appearance in 26 years, said last night that he'd signed a new deal. Terms were not disclosed. "It's a long-term contract, and it's more than generous." Crean said at the Alumni Memorial Union on the Marquette campus in front of about 100 students and renorters. The 37-year-old coach was among the first names mentioned for the Illinois position when Bill Self was introduced as the new Kansas coach on Monday. Cream said he had not met with any of his players to inform them of his decision. "I don't think they ever thought I was going anywhere," he said. Cream has guided the Golden Eagles to an 83-41 record in four seasons, including 53-13 over the last two, as the team returned to the success it enjoyed under the late Al McGuire. Marquette won the 1977 NCAA championship but fell short of the title game earlier this month when the Golden Eagles lost to Kansas 94-61 in the national semifinals. During the game, Crean's 64-year-old mother, Marjorie Crean, sufered a stroke and was hospitalized. Crean had maintained since then that his focus was on his family and not his future. But he acknowledged being flattered to hear his name at the Final Four. "You'd rather be known for that than to be on a hot seat," he said. "The only time it's a problem for me is when it comes up in recruiting, and it does." The contract replaces the reworked EAGLE deal Crean signed in April 2002. Marquette, a private school, does not release contract information, but it is believed that Crean will get more than $1.1 million annually. The contract also is believed to contain a clause that would allow him to leave if the Michigan State job ever opens. After working for Ralph Willard at Western Kentucky and Pittsburgh, Crean returned to East Lansing in 1995 and became Tom Izzo's top assistant and chief recruiter, helping convince Mateen Cleaves to join the program. Crean got into coaching at the high school level when he was still an undergraduate at Central Michigan. Jud Heathcote hired him right out of college at Michigan State in 1989. In 1999, Athletics Director Bill Cords gave Crean his first head coaching job at Marquette, where he replaced Mike Deane. Crean went 15-14 in each of his first two seasons before improving to 26-7 in 2001-02; the Golden Eagles went 27-6 this past season. Three of Crean's assistants have gone on to become head coaches, including Darrin Horn, who was hired at Western Kentucky last week. Athletics Director Bill Cords said Marquette approached Crean about a better contract during the NCAA tournament, and they have been working on the details ever since. "The finishing touches are being put on it right now." Crean said. Cream is staying at a program that has at least eight returning scholarship players and strong support from the administration and fans. Also on the horizon is the new $31 million Al McGuire Center, which will replace the team's aging workout facility known simply as the "Old Gym." Ethics of basketball in the eve of the beholder The Associated Press LAWRENCE — That old expression about right and wrong depending upon whose ox is being gored never seemed truer in Kansas and Illinois right now. So many poor oxen have given up their lives in order for basketball fans to sort out their feelings on the Roy Williams-Bill Self saga the games might well be moved from an arena to a slaughterhouse. In the beginning, Jayhawk faithful were outraged that North Carolina would talk of' Roy into breaking his contract with Kansas. Those pirates! Well, yes. The more well-heeled Jayhawk boosters are passing a hat to take care of the $500,000 buyout provision Illinois was smart enough to write into Self's deal. Then Kansas went out and persuaded Bill Self to do exactly the same thing to Illinois. Self had recently signed a five-year contract extension with the Illini. But did Kansas care? On the loyalty issue, Williams had stuck it out with the Jayhawks for 15 years. But Self was at Illinois only two years and 10 months before hopping aboard a private jet and heading for what he called "a career-ending job." Another point for Kansans to ponder is that Williams is a North Carolina grad whose family and friends and childhood memories are firmly planted on Tobacco Road. Self, on the other hand, is an Oklahoma native. His only Kansas connection was the year he spent on Larry Brown's staff in 1985-86. Nevertheless, Williams and Self had both been promising the young men they recruited that they would be with them all four years of their eligibility. To be blunt, both men broke their promise. "I think there's a problem when Roy can move with impunity and kids have a legal obligation to stay with the school unless they're released," said Don Marquis, a professor of philosophy at Kansas and longtime season ticket-holder in Allen Fieldhouse. "I think Roy was morally obligated to stay." Marquis said, "People have said what Roy did was the best for himself and his family. Well, that's not an excuse for breaking a solid promise. Kids are committing four years of their lives. To say Roy would have suffered some kind of hardship if he had stayed at Kansas, making $1 million a year, is absurd." Then there's the case of the disappearing recruit. Anti-Williams fever hit a boiling point last week when he appeared to be hinting that he wanted blue-chip prospects Omar Wilkes and David Padgett to seek release from the letters-of-intent they've signed with Kansas. Jayhawk officials even lodged a complaint directly with North Carolina. They publicly reminded their former coach that NCAA rules prohibit schools from messing with a prospect once he's signed the letter. But Self, it turns out, has formed a great relationship with an enormously gifted kid from New Jersey named Charlie Villanueva. The 6-foot-9 can't-miss blue-chipper has orally committed to Illinois, but now says he might decide on Kansas. To be sure, there is an important legal distinction here. The Kansas recruits have signed binding letters-of-intent, while Villanueva has made only a nonbinding oral commitment. So now, many of those same people who were outraged that Williams might woo Kansas recruits are positively giddy at the prospect of Self's snatching Villanueva away from Illinois. But wasn't it Illinois that in good faith paid for every letter, phone call, plane ticket and minute of time that Self spent getting to know the young man? "I have no problem with that," said Drue Jennings, Kansas' interim athletic director. "He hasn't signed a letter of intent. Legally and by NCAA rules and morally and ethically, that's OK. It will be (Self's) decision what other talent he wants to go after." But because of legal ramifications, you'd have protested Williams' action? Free forAll Yeah, I'm uh, uh, uh, uh, real happy to have, uh, Bill Self as uh, uh, coach of the Kansas Jayhawks. 图 I'm going to support Bill Self 150 percent, and yes, Tim, that is possible. Forget about Roy Williams being my grandpa. I want Bill Self to be my dad. 需 I'd just like to warn everybody that we're in for about 20 years of bad Bill Self puns from 圆 media types and T-shirt manufacturers. Brace your Selfs. I'm watching the KU press conference, and Bill Self just said "stellar" twice. Rock on! G-g-g-g-go Bill Self athletic department need to pat themselves on the back for bringing that sexy Self here. --athletic department need to pat themselves on the back for bringing that sexy Self here. Boy, I have a David Padgett-sized crush on that new Bill Self. Mmm, mmm good. Are those basketball fans at Illinois who are vilifying their coach in the newspaper practicing Self abuse? Man, Chancellor Bob and interim athletic director Drue and everyone else at the Bill Self, welcome back to Kansas, and can I just say how nice it is to have a sexy basketball coach? athletic department need to pat themselves on the back for bringing that sexy Self here. athletic department need to pat themselves on the back for bringing that sexy Self here. If Bill Self pulls a Roy, we can call him Billy Selfish. first season at Kansas? Welcome to the University of Kansas, Bill Self. (singing) I don't want anybody else, when I think about you, I touch my Self. 图 I love my Self. I'm not being narcissistic, I just love my new coach. Roy thought about himself, so we're thinking about our Self. UNC sucks. Tryouts for Self's Elves will be held first season at Kansas? --first season at Kansas? --first season at Kansas? Wednesday at 4:00 at 19th and Mass. Be there or be square. I love my Self! first season at Kansas? Billy Self is a baller, shock caller, 20-inch blades on the Impala. Hey, if you're going to trash our basketball team, at least know who you're trashing. It was Jeff Graves, not Jeff Hawkins, who had on the velour outfit. Thanks, and have a nice day. first season at Kansas? B Self, Self, he's our man, if he can't do it ... he'll go to North Carolina. first season at Kansas? If you don't know what L-7 means, then you are a square. B-B-B-Bill Self has a st-st-st-stuttering problem. POLL QUESTION kansan.com How successful will Bill Self be in his The Jayhawks will struggle in his first year. He will have a winning record. He will lead the Jayhawks to a Big 12 Conference title. 12 Conference title. He will take Kansas to the Elite Eight. He will take Kansas to the Elite Light Kansas will see another Final Four berth. He will win the championship. Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY TOMORROW Baseball at Wichita State, 7 p.m., Wichita Softball vs. University of Missouri-Kansas City, doubleheader, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., Jayhawk Field Women's golf at Big 12 Championships, all dev. Columbia, Mo. Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. FRIDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 7 p.m., Hogland Ballpark Softball vs. Nebraska, 5 p.m., Jayhawk Field SATURDAY Tennis at big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Rowing at the University of Cincinnati, all day,Cincinnati Softball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Jayhawk Field SUNDAY Baseball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Softball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., Jayhawk Field MEN'S BASKETBALL Western Illinois basketball hires former UNLV assistant coach MACOMB, III. — UNLV assistant Derek Thomas was hired yesterday as head basketball coach at Western Illinois, taking over a program that has lost 20 or more games in three of the past four years. Thomas, 36, replaces Jim Kerwin, who resigned for health reasons last month after going 135-174 in 11 seasons at Macomb. Thomas spent two years as an assistant to Charlie Spoonhour at UNLV, which finished 21-11 last season and lost in the first round of the NIT. Thomas' father, Emmitt, played 13 years for the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs. The Associated Press The Associated Press Wednesdays at Henry T's Bar & Grill Hot Wings 25¢ Hot Wings 6 pm-Midnight Happy to be back with our old price $2.25 Domestic Longnecks Every Wednesday Only at Henry T's 3520 West 6th Street 785-749-2999 25c BUY ONE GET ONE FREE BUY ONE GET ONE FREE Men's Suits EASTON'S NEW LOWER PRICES Starting at just 2 for $ 299 LIMITED 839 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KS 60644 843-72R 1 WEDNESDAY,APRIL 23,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Unruly fans may be jailed, fined $1.000 The Associated Press CHICAGO — White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf insists unruly fans are not limited to his team's ballpark, and tougher laws are the best way to keep spectators off the field. "This is not a White Sox problem. It's a problem at all facilities across the country that has to be addressed," Reinsdorf said yesterday. These were his first public comments since a fan attacked an umpine last week at U.S. Cellular Field during a game against Kansas City. Seven months earlier, a Royals' coach was attacked by a man and his son at what was then Comiskey Park. Reinsdorf spoke yesterday at a stadium news conference to announce another proposal by a lawmaker aimed at strengthening penalties against disorderly fans. "There are a variety of responses that may be necessary in order to solve the problem."Reinsdorf said. He stressed that the most important thing is a legal system that provides mandatory penalties that "will cause people to think more than once before they do something like this." Reinsdorf left before reporters asked questions. State senator Mattie Hunter announced she would propose a bill that would jail fans for 30 days and fine them a minimum of $1,000 if they are convicted of trespassing onto a field, basketball court or hockey rink during a pro sports event. On Monday, a Chicago alderman proposed a city ordinance raising the fine from $100 to $1,000 for running onto the field during a pro sports event. State representative John Fritchey has said he would introduce a bill to increase penalties. In the most recent attack, 24-year-old Eric Dybas of suburban Bolingbrook was charged with one count of felony aggravated battery and one count of misdemeanor criminal trespass. If convicted, he faces two to five years in prison. Three other men were charged with misdemeanors after they ran out onto the field during the same game, but they didn't jump anyone. Reinsdorf said the White Sox had worked hard to create a family-friendly ballpark. He said the atmosphere was far different from how it had been more than two decades ago when the stadium was billed as the world's largest outdoor saloon and "hundreds of people used to be arrested and thrown out of the place on Friday night." While few fans run out onto a baseball field, Reinsdorf said, "It's very, very important that we get that down to zero and we eliminate the problems caused by just a very, very few irresponsible people." NEW YORK — Nothing goes right for the Cincinnati Bengals, even when they own the No. 1 choice in the NFL draft. The Associated Press Cincinnati facing draft difficulties Yes, the Bengals will have the first pick Saturday. And they don't really want it. Cincinnati has talked to the agent for Southern California's Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Carson Palmer and the agents for Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich and Kansas State cornerback Terence Newman. Typically, money already is an issue — Palmer wants far more than Bengals president Mike Brown is willing to pay. The guess here is that the Bengals will stay put and take Carson Palmer, quarterback, Southern California. 2. DETROIT Nothing goes right for the Lions, either. They want Charles Rogers, wide receiver, Michigan State, although there are questions about a drug test he took at the scouting combine. 3. HOUSTON: The Texans decide not to trade up for Rogers and take Andre Johnson, wide receiver, Miami, giving David Carr, last year's No. 1, a target. 5. DALLAS: Terrell Suggs' disappointing times in the 40-yard dash mean Bill Parcelsi instead will go with Terence Newman, cornerback, Kansas State, an instant stopper at a position that killed the Cowboys last season. 4. CHICAGO: Kordell Stewart is a decent stopgap at quarterback and the Bears might get Chris Simms in the second round. 6. ARIZONA: The Cardinals will try to get a local, Terrell Suggs, defensive end, Arizona State, whose 4.85 40-yard dash times don't wipe away his 24 sacks last season. 7. MINNESOTA: The Vikings would love to take Suggs, Robertson or Newman. They "settle" for Jimmy Kennedy, defensive tight end, Penn State. 8. JACKSONWILLE: Mark Brunell can't go on for forever. Byron Leftwish, quarterback, Marshall. 9. CAROLINA: Coach John Fox likes big guys like Jordan Gross, offensive tackle, Utah. 10. BALTIMORE: Brian Billick will try to get Kyle Boller, quarterback, California, has been moving up the draft board. 11. SEATTLE: Kevin Williams, defensive tackle, Oklahoma State. 12. ST. LOUIS: The Rams still need defense. They take Marcus Trufant, cornerback, Washington State. 14. NEW ENGLAND: Johnathan Sullivan, defensive tackle, Georgia. 13. NEW YORK JETS: Boss Bailey, linebacker, Georgia; he is neither old nor slow. 15. SAN DIEGO: The run on defensive linemen continues with William Joseph, defensive tackle, Miami. 16. KANSAS CITY: Andre Woolfolk, cornerback, Oklahoma, is the latest addition. 17, 18. NEW ORLEANS: Another couple of picks to package and move up. Or the Saints will take Troy Polamalu, safety, Southern California, and Jerome McDougle, defensive end, Miami. 19. NEW ENGLAND: More defense: E.J. Henderson, line-backer, Maryland. 20. DENVER: Kwame Harris, offensive tackle, Stanford, fits here. 21. CLEVELAND: Eric Steinbach, guard, Iowa. 22. NEWYORK JETS: They signed Curtis Conway to replace Laveranues Coles, but Taylor Jacobs. wide receiver, Florida, is the long-term solution. 23. BUFFALO: The Bills gave up their first pick for Drew Bledsoe, then got this one for Peerless Price. Kenny Peterson, defensive tackle, Ohio State, helps the defensive rebuilding. 24. INDIANAPOLIS: Another defensive unit that needs help. Mike Doss, safety, Ohio State. 25. NEW YORK GIANTS: general manager Ernie Accorsi has moved up in the first round the last two years and it could happen again. Michael Haynes, defensive end, Penn State provides much-needed defensive line depth. 26. SAN FRANCISCO: Defensive line needs rebuilding. But there are defensive linemen lower, and Bryant Johnson, wide receiver, Penn State, is needed to complement Terrell Owens. 27. PITTSBURGH: Tommy Maddox is fine for now, but the Steelers' future is Rex Grossman, quarterback, Florida. 28. TENNESSEE: Eddie George won't go on forever. Larry Johnson, running back, Penn State, the first running back in a draft that lacks quality at the position. 29. GREEN BAY: Assuming Grossman's gone, they'll look lower for Brett Favre's eventual successor, perhaps even homestate hero Brooks Bollinger. Defense here: Ty Warren, defensive tackle, Texas A&M. 30. PHILADELPHIA: A pass rusher to replace Hugh Douglas, Chris Kelsav, defensive end, Nebraska. 31, 32. OAKLAND: Jerry Rice and Tim Brown are nearing the end of superb careers. Kelly Washington, wide receiver, Tennessee, and a classic Raiders pick: Willis McGahee, running back, Miami, who would have been in the top five if he hadn't torn up his knee in the national title game. Wildcat not expected for first choice The Associated Press MANHATTAN — Terence Newman has already resigned himself to not being the No. 1 pick in Saturday's NFL draft. But yesterday, the Kansas State cornerback had a promise for the teams that pass him up. Cincinnati has the first pick, and Newman said he had been told the Bengals wouldn't use it on him. Newman's 4.3 speed in the 40-yard dash and his versatility he can also play on special teams and at wide receiver make it likely he will be the first defensive back selected. He had five interceptions last season for the Wildcats and was third on the team with 903 all-purpose yards. Still, not even winning the Thorpe award prepared him for the national attention he's getting as the draft approaches. Linebacker Terry Pierce also could be drafted in the first or second round on Saturday, after deciding to leave school following a standout junior season. Snyder also said Newman's fame would do nothing but good for his program's image. Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said the Wildcats would miss Pierce, but he didn't think his decision was a bad one. Kansas State's last firstround pick was Chris Canty, taken with the 29th overall selection by the New England Patriots in 1997. ATTENTION KU STUDENTS WIN $1500 AWARD The Senior Class Gift to the University of Kansas for 2003 will be a painting of a memorable KU scene or place. This painting will be selected by contest. The theme is "Jayhawks United" and all entries will be displayed in the Kansas Union gallery this summer. The Senior Class Officers, the Senior Class Advisory Board, and selected members of the faculty and staff will judge the entries and choose one (1) work of art. The winning painting will be framed and permanently hung in the newly renovated Kansas Union with a plaque recognizing the artist. The selected artist will receive a $1500 prize in June 2003. - Contest is open to all currently enrolled KU students. - Entries must be completed in oil or acrylic paint on 24"x30" canvas. Entries must be submitted by May 12,2003, at 5:00pm to the Office of Student Support, 213 Strong Hall, with the completed application form. - All entries will hang in the Kansas Union Gallery from May 13,2003 to July 1,2003. - This is a wonderful opportunity to express your creativity, show your KU pride, receive exposure, win a prize, and add a meaningful piece to your portfolio. - Winner will be notified May 14,2003 If you are artistic and have a strong love for KU — this contest is for you! For more information, please contact Roarke Gordon, Senior Class President, at 785.550.7363 B B O C O O C Board of Class Officers News NOW THE FIRST SPRING BREAK REALITY MOVIE! NO SCRIPTS. NO ACTORS. NO RULES. APRIL 25 ONLY IN THEATRES FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE REAL WORLD THE REAL CANCUN time for the battle you've been waiting for... KJHK presents the 2003 Farmer's Ball!! - TUE APRIL 22- captain overreact hearts to waste boskk [reference to blue] the afternoons FINALS: SAT APRIL 26 for a full day of recording at the BLACK LODGE all shows $3 18+ 9:00 doors @ the BOTTLENECK -WED APRIL 23- esau vibralux ike turner overdrive kelpie sotonightimaysleep 4B - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 'An emotional WHIRLWIND' Kansas athletics has been on a wild roller coaster ride. The department and the fans of its teams have seen more in the past three and a half weeks than in the past three and a half years. Now that the excitement of a national championship game is gone, along with Athletics Director Al Bohl and men's basketball coach Roy Williams, The University Daily Kansan is looking back on the recent craziness. Now that the madness is over, we hope you can enjoy what we have all been lucky to witness. Jessica Tims, Sports Editor NCAA Championship, April 7 I will not disclose your identity or personal information. NEAL COUNTY Anron Showalter/Kansan Brandon Baker/Kansan LEFT: Sophomore guard Wayne Simien reflects on the team's loss in the locker room after the game. The Jayhawks lost to the Syracuse Orangemen in the NCAA Championship game 78-81. ABOVE: Dominick Parretta, Kansas City, Mo., senior, comforts Kelly Laughlin, Kansas City, Mo., junior, while she grieves after the Jayhawks' loss. Many fans like Laughlin and Parretta showed their support for the Jayhawks at games exceeded by Buffalo Wild Wings. 1012 Massachusetts St., which exceeded its capacity limit of 257 people. Al Bohl fired, April 9 13 Two days after the Jayhawks lost in the NCAA Finals and an hour after Chancellor Robert Hemenway announced his firing, Athletics Director Al Bohl held a press conference at his house. Bohl, who was hired in 2001, blamed men's basketball coach Roy Williams for his firing. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan First Management Living Communities Live with the best. Highpointe 6th and Iowa 1-2-8 3 Bdrm Fireplace Wather Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 Chase Court 19th and Iowa 1-6-2 Bdrm Fireplace Wather Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Walking Districts to KU On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 1-2-8 3 Bdrm Wather Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available Lated Entry High Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available On KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 Brand New Community Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apts 1-2-8 3 Bdrm Wather Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitness Center Basketball Court Garages Available High Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 832-8805 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL OTHER LOCATIONS Abbotts Corner -410 W.18th St Applecroft -1736 W.19th St Canyon Court -700 Comet Lane Carson Place -1121 Township Chamberlain Court -1731 Ohaa Hawthorn Houses -3600 W.24th Hawthorn Townhomes -2300 Hawthorn Dr. Melrose Court -1665 Tennessee Oread Apartments -1800 Oread Parkway Townhomes -10,29 W.22nd Regency Piece -1500 Guernica Stadium View -1090 Mustang HOURS Mon-Fri: 9-6 Sat: 10-4 Sun: 12-4 Highpointe Chase Court. Highpointe 6th and Iowa 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Fireplace Washers Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Basketball Court On-KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 Chase Court 19th and Iowa 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Fireplace Washers Dryer Swimming Pool Fitness Center Walking Distance to RU On-KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 843-8220 Parkway Commons 3601 Clinton Parkway 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Washers Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitnes Center Basketball Court Garages Available Rated Entry High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available On-KU Bus Route Small Pet Welcome 842-3280 Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Brand New Luxury Apts 1.2 & 3 Bdrm Washers Dryer Swimming Pool & Hot Tub Fitnes Center Basketball Court Garages Available High-Speed Internet Connections Security Systems Available Small Pet Welcome 832-8805 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL OTHER LOCATIONS Abbotts Corner 410 W. 10th St. Applecroft 1745 W. 19th St. Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane Carson Place 1121 Lexington Chamberlain Court 1731 Ohio Hawthorne Houses 3600 W. 24th Hawthorn Townhomes 2,800 FlowNorth Dr. Melrose Court 1,665 Tennessee Oread Apartments 1,007 Oregon Parkway Townhomes 10,210 W. 22nd Ave. Regency Place 1,001 Louisiana Stadium View 1,040 Mississippi HOURS Mon-Fri: 9-6 Sat: 10-4 Sun: 12-4 Parkway Commons 4th Blvd. Central Ln. Parking Area Norwalk Yard AN Canyon Court kansan.com News Now --- the only address you need to know. WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) 1520 WESCOE let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. 1520wescoe 1520 WESCOE let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. services available: - copies - printing from disk or electronic file - full color printing - large format print - uv lamination of large format prints - thesis and dissertation printing - resume printing - binding services - transparencies - large selection of papers 864-3354 open7am-10pm FORALLYOUR PRINTINGAND BINDING NEEDS please stop by or call us for more information about our services --- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B Roy Williams leaves for University of North Carolina, April 14 Men's basketball coach Roy Williams says some final words and thanks the fans for their support before he parked his car and boarded a chartered jet bound for North Carolina at Lawrence Municipal Airport. Williams accepted the position as men's basketball coach at his alma mater, UNC, later that evening. "Last time I decided to stay because it was the right thing," he said at the press conference in Chapel Hill, N.C. "This time I decided to leave because it was the right thing." JOSH CAMPbell Jared Soares/Kansan The Ford Center Eric Braem/Kansan Former men's basketball coach Roy Williams returned to Lawrence for the basketball awards banquet last Thursday. Many fans questioned Williams' decision to return, given the hostile reaction he had received after leaving Lawrence. "Oh yes," Williams said when asked whether he considered skipping the banquet. "There seemed to be a little storm building, and maybe it wasn't the best, but that would have the easy way out, and I've talked to my guys all the time that you can't take the easy way out. You have to do what's right." Bill Selfhired, April 21 COLUMBIA POLICE DEFENSE Eric Braem/Kansan Eric Braem/Kansan LEFT. Bill Self speaks at a press conference that was called to announce his acceptance of the position as Kansas men's basketball coach. Self, who had been head coach at Oral Roberts University, Tulsa and Illinois, began his coaching career as an assistant coach at Kansas under Larry Brown. "This is a once in a lifetime opportunity." Self said about his new job. ABOVE: Players listen to their new coach, Bill Self, speak at the press conference Monday. Sophomore guard Keith Langford had been upset by William's announcement that he was leaving Kansas, but his emotions had since subsided."It worked out for the better," said Langford, who was recruited by Self out of high school."Some of the kids get torn between coaches and schools and things like that, but I got to play for two coaches that I could build a relationship to." Lindsey Gold/Kansan JOIN OUR TEAM The award-winning advertising staff of The University Daily Kansan is looking for self-motivated, forward thinking students to apply for positions in sales and creative departments. Pick up your application today in Room 119 in Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applications are due April 25, 2003. While working at The Kansan I've had more responsibility, freedom and room to innovate than any other job or internship I've ever had." Tim Zepick KANSAN Advertising EVERYTHING BUTICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass. I became a woman who tucks her shirt in. Curves is 30-minute fitness, commonsense weight loss, and all the support you need to achieve your goals (785) 841-1431 Holiday Plaza, 25th & Iowa Lawrence, KS 66047 Curves The power to amaze yourself* Over 4,000 locations to serve you. www.curvesinternational.com Join Now 60% OFF Science Fic $ 40 for the rest of the semester $75 for summer semester *with this ad* (Only valid on first site only, admission is 12 mos. a program) 6B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 CLASSELECTIONS FOR SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS, AND SENIORS Positions available: President, Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer - Applications available in the Organizations and Leadership Office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union. - Applications due Tuesday, april 29, 2003 at 5:00 pm at a mandatory meeting - Elections will be Tuesday, May 6,2003 from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm - Elections will be Tuesday, May 6, 2003 from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm - If you have any questions please contact Roarke Gordon, Senior Class President, at 785.550.7363 B O C O Board of Cases Officers O C O Board of Class Officers LOUISE'S DOWNTOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five $1.50 wells 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE must be 21 to enter color • nails • waxing • texture • massage Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - BWest 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) Thursday, April 24 Friday, April 25 7:30 p.m. Lied Center UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY Tickets on sale at the East Center, Maple Hall, and SDA flex officer. No public SS students and senior citizens for tickets only. 864-2787 featured events: Remembering & Yes, Indeed! by Bill Loughnay Courographic Offering For Local Students through June 30th By Zach Ewing The Maneater via U-wire University of Missouri Missouri suspends guard after plea COLUMBIA, Mo. — Ricky Clemons, a junior point guard on Missouri's men's basketball team, pleaded guilty Monday to misdemeanor charges of third-degree assault and false imprisonment, leading the athletics department to suspend him for next season. "In response to today's decision, Ricky Clemons has been suspended for one year from competition, effective for the 2003-04 season," coach Quin Snyder said in a press release. "Ricky will need to meet certain academic and personal criteria which will be evaluated throughout the year." Clemons was arrested in January on suspicion of choking his girlfriend and preventing her He was suspended from the team for one game but was reinstated when Snyder and Athletics Director Mike Alden decided to wait for a ruling from the court before taking action. He spent several hours in jail, missing the Oklahoma State game, before being released on bail. from leaving his apartment. "As we have maintained all along, we would await the outcome of the judicial process until taking further action in this situation," Snyder said in the statement. Clemons was originally charged with second-degree assault, a felony. He pled guilty to two misdemeanor charges, so the felony charge was dropped. Boone County Prosecutor Kevin Crane said he was not surprised by Clemons' decision to accept the deal his office offered. "I never know what a defendant's going to do," Crane said. Crane said he would seek 90 days in jail for the false imprisonment crime. Clemons is due back in court for sentencing on June 23. Clemons' Attorney Wally Bley declined to comment. In another statement, Alden said Clemons would keep his scholarship for next year. Clemons would have one year of eligibility still available after the suspension is over. For the third-degree assault crime, Crane said he would push for a two-year probationary period immediately following the 90-day sentence, which, if violated, would result in an extra year in prison. The probation would include 100 hours of community service. These two convictions would permanently be on Clemons' criminal record. "The idea is, if the judge follows my recommendation, after he gets done doing three months, he gets two years probation," Crane said. "If he violates that probation, he gets an extra year." "We will honor Ricky's scholarship next year, provided he continues to progress toward his degree and meets his academic and social responsibilities," Alden said in the statement. "I believe that we have taken fair actions at every point during this difficult process, and now we're following through with what we believe to be appropriate measures." Clemons was third on the team in scoring last season with 14.2 points per game and led the team in steals with 49. Symons is Tech's new quarterback By Kyle Clark By Lynn Clark University Daily via U-wire Texas Tech University LUBBOCK, Texas — B.J. Symons stepped into the role of starting quarterback at Texas Tech's annual Red and Black Game, and after throwing 19 completions for 218 yards and two touchdowns, he said he did not care about the expectations building for next season. Symons will have one season of opportunity in the No.1 role after backing up Kliff Kingsbury for the last three seasons. Symons got his first score of the game on a 10-yard touchdown pass to Nehemiiah Glover. He later connected with receiver Carlos Francis on a fade into the corner of the end zone for his second touchdown of the game. Francis, who finished the game with three catches for 51 yards and a touchdown, said Symons established himself as the man leading the Tech attack. The starting receiving group finished with 182 yards in the game, seeing time against several defensive units, which were being alternated each series. The spring game was organized as an offense-againstdefense setup instead of a game between two teams with offensive and defensive players because of a lack of healthy offensive lineman. On the defensive side of the ball, Tech finished with three sacks, a safety and an interception. The game was the first in new defensive coordinator Lyle Seten eich's defensive system, and players on both sides of the ball said the defense was much more physical. Leach said Tech tried to not show as much defensively to maintain some secrecy but said he was pleased with how the defense had developed in the spring. Tech finished spring football yesterday with its last practice of the season at 3 p.m. The Raiders will return to Jones SBC Stadium to play August 30 in the season opener against SMU. Possible Self successor has Illinois ties By Frank Rusnak DEKALB, Ill. — Rob Judson had some good times at Illinois. By Frank Rusnak Northern Star via U-wire Northern Illinois University With the head coaching job open at Illinois, if Judson wants the position, he isn't letting on. While Judson has been mentioned by ESPN's Andy Katz as a possible replacement, he said Illinois Athletics Director Ron Guenther had not contacted him since the position opened. On the road recruiting all of Monday, Judson avoided directly answering if he'd take the Illinois job, but his days in Champaign, Ill., have been some of his most memorable. The current Northern Illinois basketball coach was a studentathlete at Illinois from 1976 to 1980. The 45-year-old Judson met his wife, the former Kim McCarty, in college. He was a proud member of Alpha Tau Omega and was a star on the hardwood. A four-year varsity player for the Illini, he started a couple of games his freshman year, eight or nine his sophomore season and gradually more his junior and senior years. He has guarded Michigan State's Earvin "Magic" Johnson, among other future NBA superstars. When he left the central Illinois campus, he set the Illinois career free-throw percentage record with a .875 mark. He returned to Illinois for five years, 1996-2001, as an assistant coach and left with a .659 winning percentage. Passed up for the head coaching job when Lon Krueger left to take the Atlanta Hawks position in 2000, Judson stuck around for a year with Bill Self at the helm before coming to Northern Illinois. While Judson said he hadn't applied for the job, he added that "you don't really apply for a Big Ten school like Illinois," because the administration sought its possible candidates. Student Recreation Fitness Center Suspended Track KU RECREATION SERVICES The New Fitness Center will be 98,000 Square Feet How many laps will equal a mile on the suspended track? courts are there? Answer: 4 Indoor,2 outdoor. All high school sized courts. Winner: Catherine Harrison Pick up prize at 208 Robinson. STUDENT SENATE Name: Phone #: E-mail: Answer: TONIGHT LAST CALL HAWK ROCK Wednesday Night Special $3.00 Cover - $3.00 Doubles - $1.50 Anything OTHER HOT NIGHTS INCLUDE : $1.75 Pints - $1.50 Shots Thursday Night Friday Night Ladies Night - Ita Cover Ladies SZ Ceraphn - S2,25 Smirnoff Ladies Night - No Cover Ladies $Z Corona - $2.25 Smirnoff S2 Corona - $2.25 Shifton Saturday Night Saturday Night $3 Double Redhull Vodka's - $4 Pitchers Please Join us at Lawrence's Hottest and Newest Dance Club/Bars Presented by Blue Moon Doors open at 8:00 p.m. 729 New Hampshire (785)836-4623 WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B Faculty, players show frustrations after Self leaves By Colleen Kane Daily Illini illini staff writer CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Nick Smith could see it in Bill Self's demeanor at the basketball awards banquet on April 15. Dee Brown knew from some verbal hints Friday. The team found out Saturday. The rest of the world, Sunday. Monday it became official. Self stood in front of a crowd of reporters and administration in Lawrence, Kan., Monday afternoon and announced that he couldn't "tell you enough that I am thrilled to be the basketball coach at Kansas University." The hire took place after just one week of speculation about who would replace Roy Williams as Kansas' eighth basketball coach. For Self, who began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Kansas, his five-year contract with the Jayhawks was the fulfillment of a lifelong dream. "The year that I was here, I saw the best that college basketball had to offer. Right then, I knew this place was different," Self said. "Once you've been here, you know what it's like." "In my opinion, this is the most prestigious chair in all of college basketball." For those left in the Jayhawk dust, the cloud of disappointment and anger is far from settled. "I think it's harder (to hear the official decision)," Brown said. "I knew in my mind he was leaving, but just to hear him say it — I didn't want to hear it. When he told me, it kind of hurt." "How could you not be (mad)?" Illinois Athletics Director Ron Guenther said Monday. "When we talked with Bill Self three years ago, we thought this was a stop he could live with for a long time. "It's disappointing for the kids because when you make a commitment to get the job done, the right thing is for him to stay. You finish the job, and then you move on." But apparently, a Kansas history that included the inventor of basketball was enough to lure Self away. "I've always thought, 'How cool would it be to office on Naismith Drive?' And now it actually gets to happen," Self said. "This program is bigger than one player. It's bigger than one coach." An annual contract of $1.1 million, one that Illinois did not try to match, couldn't have hurt either — though Guenther said he did not need to try to outbid Kansas. "This was not about money," Guenther said. "There wasn't any countering. Everything was in his court trying to come to grips with the move." Self also announced Monday that he's taking his coaching staff with him. Illinois Associate head coach Norm Roberts was at the press conference in Kansas as Self announced him as the Jayhawks' new associate head coach. Assistant coach Tim Jankovich will also join Self. Assistant Wayne McClain is the only member of the coaching staff to decline Self's invitation to join him at Kansas. He will remain at Illinois next year. "Coach Self is great, but for me this is just so natural," McClain said. "Being in Illinois, my family's here, my daughter's here in school. I'm 90 miles from where I was born, and I know the coaches in the area, so for me, it just fits better." Guenther, who will be the sole force in finding a new coach, said he had not contacted coaches yet but always had a list of possible replacements tucked away. He said he would look for a coach with integrity, a commitment to seeing athletes graduate and someone familiar with state institutions. He denied rumors that he will try to hire a coach who will stay longer than his last two hires (Lon Kruger, four years; Bill Self, three years). Guenther said he hoped to have the job filled in seven to 14 days. An Illinois affirmative action law requires that a state job be open for 14 days, but the high profile nature of the Illinois coaching position could overstep that law. Kenyan, Russian race to victory in 107th Boston Marathon By Jordan Carteo-Evangelist The Daily Free Press via U-wire Boston University BOSTON — You might say Kenyan legman Robert Cheruiyot ran away with it. His 23-second margin of victory in the 107th annual Boston Marathon Monday, as far as marathons go, might as well have been a mile. Cheruiyot, 24, led the race uncontested from just after the 20-mile mark around the infamous Heartbreak Hill, at some points opening a lead as wide as 20 meters over his nearest challenger. He defeated the 20,222 other runners who left Hopkinson at noon, becoming the first to break the finish-line tape in Copley Square 26 miles,eight towns, minus 12 degrees and more than two hours later in just his second Boston Marathon. Among those outpaced by Cheruyilot in this year's contest were last year's champion and runner-up. His official time of 2 hours, 10 minutes and 11 seconds was a few minutes short of his personal best (2:08:58) and the men's course record (2:07:15 by Kenyan Cosmas Ndeti in 1994), but it was fast enough to edge fellow Kenyans Benjamin Kimutai and Martin Lei and earn him the $80,000 purse. For perspective, hopping the commuter railroad from Ashland to South Station, roughly the same distance, would take slightly less than half the time. Monday's race marked the second straight year Kenyans have swept the top three slots in the men's division. Last year's champion, Rodgers Rop, finished just more than six minutes after Cheruiyot, landing him in seventh place overall. But on a day when there were more people on Hereford Street than Newbury Street and one of the swankiest hotels in town was full of half-naked, sweaty bodies, the biggest surprise was not Kenyan dominance, but a lack thereof in the women's division. Russian runners Svetlana Zakharova and Lyubov Denisova strode to the top two slots in the women's division, finishing first and second and banishing last year's women's champion and course record holder, Kenyan Margaret Okayo, to a distant fourth place. Zakharova, 32, fought a see-saw battle with Okayo from the half-way mark on, but she took a permanent lead after the 20-mile mark. American Marla Runyan led the race at points but fell behind late and finished in fifth overall with a time of 2 hours, 30 minutes and 28 seconds. But Runyan, who is visually impaired, posted the best finish by an American woman in 10 years. The only American to finish first in any division yesterday was Christina M. Ripp, who rolled to a 10-second victory over fellow American Cheri Blauwet in the women's wheelchair division. Ripp's time of 1 hour, 54 minutes and 47 seconds, however, was a full 20 minutes off the course record set by American Jean Driscoll in 1994. A duo of South Africans dominated the men's wheelchair division, with Ernst Van Dyk swiping first and Krige Schabort finishing second. American Saul Mendoza finished fourth in the division. student union activities The University of Kansas 705-864-SHOW www.suaevents.com upcoming Events student union activities The University of Kansas 765-884-SHOW www.suaevents.com upcoming Events wednesday 23 OFFICE SPACE 7:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 $2.00 tickets at the hawkshop thursday 24 FEATURE FILM Lord of the Rings 2: The Twin Towers 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 friday 25 FEATURE FILM Lord of the Rings 2: The Twin Towers 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 TUNES @ NOON O&A Brown Bag Grab 12:00 pm Union Plaza sunday 27 BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE 6:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 Bowling 8:00 pm Free shoe rental Jaybowl kansas union, level 1 monday 28 WTCS LIFETIME MOVIE Together: We Can Stop Violence Against Women 7:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 tuesday 29 SUA COMMITTEE MEETINGS 5:00, 6:00, 7:00 pm Kansas Union TAYLOR MALE Saint Peter 7:00 pm Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 ALL tickets for movies are $2.00 at the hawk shop, level 4 kansas union or FREE WITH AN SUA MOVIE CARD. QUESTIONS about these or other SUA events? CHECK suaevents.com or call THE SUA OFFICE AT 864-5HOW Wednesday office space 7:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 $2.00 tickets at the hawkshop thursday feature film Lord of the Rings 2: The Twin Towers 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 friday feature film Lord of the Rings 2: The Twin Tower's 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 tunes noon O&A Brown Bag Grab 12:00 pm Union Plaza sunday bowling for columbine 6:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 Bowling 8:00 pm free slide rental Jaybowl kansas union, level 1 monday wtcs lifetime movie Together We Can Stop Violence Against Women 7:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 tuesday sua committee meetings 5:00, 6:00, 7:00 pm Kansas Union taylor mali Slam Poet Fruit Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 ALL TICKETS FOR MOVIES ARE $2.00 AT THE HAWK SHOP, LEVEL 4 KANSAS UNION OR FREE WITH AN SUA MOVIE CARD. QUESTIONS ABOUT THESE OR OTHER SUA EVENTS? CHECK suaevents.com or call THE SUA OFFICE AT 864-5000. News now kansan com LAUNDRY DETERGENT $1.99 EA. PRICES GOOD APRIL 23 THRU APRIL 30, 2003 THURSDAY SPECIAL BANANAS $19¢ FRIDAY SPECIAL JALAPENOS $78¢ BONELESS ARM CHUCK ROAST $138 LB. COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS $88 LB. PORK TENDERLOIN $298 LB. BONELESS SHRLON PORK CHOPS $138 LB. FRYER LEG QUARTERS $29 LB. SPIT FRYER BREASTS $98 LB. PEARS 58¢ FRESH CRISP SEEDLESS GRAPES $99 LB. ORACLES 99¢ CRISP ICEBERG HEAD LETTUCE $59¢ ALL PURPOSE RUSSET POTATOES $199 EA. YELLOW SWEET CORN 4/$1 CANTALOUPEES OR HONEY DEW MELONS 39¢ TONY'S ITALIAN PIZZA $188 EA. BLUE BELL ICE CREAM 1/2 GL. $298 EA. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE Transition 101: Student Skills to Work Place Leaders • entrepreneurship • effective workplace communication • diversity in the workplace • translation: talking about your skills in "employer language" April 24th 5:00 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center April 29th 7:00 - 8:30 pm Big 12 Room KS Union Employment Issues for Women • finding jobs to "fit" your needs • wardrobe on a budget • handling your 1st year with finesse May 7th 5:30 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center Grad Grill: • free dinner, soft drinks, & door prizes! • info on alumni programs & services free registration at www ku.edu/uces CU 2.7 BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE 6:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, Level 5 Bowling 8:00 pm Free shoe rental Jaybowl kansas union, Level 1 WTCS LIFETIME MOVIE Together We Can Stop Violence Against Women 7:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 CITY OF MILWAUKEE 29 SUA COMMITTEE meetings 5:00, 6:00, 7:00 pm Kansas Union TAYLOR MALI showroom 1:00 pm Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 ALL TICKETS FOR MOVIES ARE $2.00 AT THE HAWK SHOP, LEVEL 4 kansas union OR FREE WITH AN SUA MOVIE CARD. questions about these or other sua events? check suaevents.com or call THE SUA OFFICE at 864-SHOW PARKSIDE CHILDREN'S MUSEUM News woN kansan com ARM & HAMMER LAUNDRY DETERGENT H.B., S.B. WB, C.M. 100 OZ. LOWRICE $1.99 EA. PRICES GOOD APRIL 23 THRU APRIL 30, 2003 THURSDAY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ FRIDAY SPECIAL JALAPENOS 78¢ BONELESS ARM CHUCK ROAST ECONOMY PAK 138 LB. COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS ECONOMY PAK, CUT FROM THE PORK BUTT 88¢ LB. PORK TENDOLOIN WITH BEEF 298 LB. BONELESS BEET CHARCOAL STEAK ECONOMY PAK 168 LB. BONELESS SIRLOIN PORK CHOPS ECONOMY PAK 138 LB. FRYER LEG QUARTERS 10 LB. BAG 29¢ LB. SPLIT FRYER BREASTS WITH BB BONE, ECONOMY PAK 98¢ LB. BRAKELET PEARS 58¢ LB. FRESH CHISP BROCCOLI LARGE BUNCH 78¢ EA. SWEET ORANGES 99¢ EA. ALL PURPOSE RUSSET POTATOES 199 EA. SMART OATS 148 EA. CANTALOUPEES OR HONEY DEW MELONS 39¢ LB. TONY'S ITALIAN PIZZA 188 EA. DOUBLE 4X PRINTS for $6.99 (price per print) BLUE BELL ICE CREAM 1/3 QAL. 298 EA. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES 23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE Open 24 HOURS Everyday It's BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL Lawrence, KS 1105 Mass Lawrence, KS 10¢ W...W...W...WINGS! TONIGHT! Get 'em While They're HOT (8pm-PPP) SPECIAL WINGS SERVED ONLY ON WEDNESDAYS! "ORIGINAL" or Red Hot "Ass Burners!" $2 RED BULL/ VODKAS & $1.50 U-CALL-IT! "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" A professional development series for 2003 grads "BACKPACKS 2 BRIEFCASES" It's BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL 1105 Mass Lawrence, KS 10¢ W...W...WINGS! TONIGHT! Get 'em While They're HOT (8pm-PP?) SPECIAL WINGS SERVED ON WEDNESDAYS! "ORIGINAL" or Red Hot "Ass Burners!" $2 RED BULL/VODKAS & $1 U-CALL-IT! "Always the ‘Best’ Specials, Always the ‘Most’ Fun!" A professional development series for 2003 grads April 24th 5:00 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center Transition 101: Student Skills to Work Place Leaders* • entrepreneurship • effective workplace communication. • diversity in the workplace • translation: talking about your skills in “employer language” April 29th 7:00 - 8:30 pm Big 12 Room KS Union Employment Issues for Women* • finding jobs to “fit” your needs. • wardrobe on a budget • handling your 1st year with finesse May 7th 5:30 - 7:30 pm Adams Alumni Center Grad Grill* • free dinner, soft drinks, & door prizes! • info on alumni programs & services free registration at www.ku.edu/uces 8B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ENTERTAINMENT WEDNESDAY,APRIL23,2003 WEATHER TODAY 63 52 evening showers TOMORROW 67 48 evening thunderstorms FRIDAY 64 47 few showers —WWW.WEATHER.COM HOUSE by Brian Godinez, for The University Daily Kansas WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING? YOU DON'T WANNA KNOW. I'M GOING ONE HOUR WITHOUT SWALLOWING. YOU MEAN SPIT?! TOLD YOU. WHY? MY REASONS ARE MY OWN. HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 23). Recent experiences have made you stronger and brought you up to new challenges. These take more than persistence and willpower to overcome. Also use your inquisitiveness and imagination. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. You can make more money without doing any more work. Cut expenses and streamline your entire operation. Taurus (April20-May20). Today's a7. Your practical insight may be too advanced for a scholarly type to comprehend. If you're persistent, the person who thinks he's smarter than you are might eventually understand. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 7. You deserve a nice reward for a battle you've recently won. Where would you like to go, and whom do you want to go with? When there's a will and a win, there's a way. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 6. When you and your partner and/or teammates set your goals, the next step is setting your budget. Talk it over and start forming a plan. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. It may initially look as if your dreams are being thwarted, Hang on — it looks like help will come from an unexpected direction. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is an 8. As you get into a new routine, your efficiency improves. It may take more time, however. Have faith in yourself and in others. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is an 8. Friends provide a lot of good ideas, but they can't make your savings grow. You're going to have to do that yourself. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a You're starting to come up with good ideas, but you need time to think them over. You worry that one of them won't really work, and with good reason. Fix it. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21), Today is a 7. Ever feel as if you're doing your job the hard way? Maybe you are. More education might help, but how to squeeze it in? Start with a basic plan. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is an 8. The more of your old tasks you complete, the better prepared you'll be. There's a new challenge coming your way, so continue clearing the decks. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 6. You're under more pressure than you like, and you might feel stuck. It's a temporary condition. You can study your way out of it. SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 Classified Policy The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housers against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept I 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements advertising that is in violation of University of Kentucky institution or law F Do you speak English as a second language? Learn the secrets of getting a job in the United States! Attend a 90 minute seminar on April 26 or April 29. Topics: Applications, resumes, interviews, Cost: $20.00, 105 page handbook included. Call 841-0701 to register. WANTED: Caucasian female, 21-34 years old for oocyte (egg) donation through a Wichita donation site. Must have red/auburn hair; brown, green or hazel eyes, and some college experience. Financial compensation provided. Write to RJE, c/o PMB #119, 13505 M. Bur-Len Suite 105, Olathe, KS 60082-1600. versity or Kansas regulation or law, real estate advertising, news media, new federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based race, color, religion, ACROSS 1 Puzzling problem 6 Financial hole 10 Head cook 14 Vibrant 15 Gumbo ingredient 16 Abode 17 Waits for the green 18 Ardor 19 New York canal 20 Maternity ward VIPs 22 Meet parts 24 Stored, as fodder 25 Cut short 26 Mick Jagger film "___ Kelly" 27 Certified 31 Vipers' weapons 34 Layers 35 Park in NYC? 36 Alimony payers 37 $1,000 38 Major tennis event 39 Pub potable 40 Plug projection 41 Exhausted 42 Carrot-tops 44 Addams Family cousin 45 Concludes 46 Long steps 50 Chain of inns 53 Impassiveness 54 Touched ground 55 Rend 57 Post-crucifixion depiction 58 Sleeper spy 59 Tranquil rest 60 Avid 61 Equal 62 Funnyman Carey 63 Sty sound DOWN 1 "Common Sense" writer 2 Of bygone times 3 Farm outbuildings 4 Prime times Crossword $ \textcircled{2} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | 04/23/03 offerings 6 Took a nap 7 Scrapes (by) 8 Bikini part 9 Accomplished 10 Coop calls 11 Bugle 12 Give off 13 Charges 21 Mack or Knight 23 Contends 25 Scarn 27 Arkin and Alda 28 Alternative to a CD 29 Fifty-fifty 30 Fender flaw 31 Cold feet 32 Shaft in a car 33 Requisite 34 Goads 37 Arranged by scores 38 Eyeglasses merchant 40 Await action 41 Flag feature 43 Thug's rod Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 44 Ice-skater Midori 46 Scatter 47 Artist Rivera 48 Perfume compound 49 Astute 50 Freeway L O S S F R A N K P S A T A L E E R U P E E H O B O T I N A E N T E R R O A N H O T S E E A T C H A T T Y B R I C K C A N I N E S S L A N K C C O I L E D A R M O T T M O L I I F Y Y E A T E E U N L E S S V E N T R E S T A R T S I R E S R E C I T E R S L O S E V E L Y N J U N I P E R M A D E D I V A N T A P E I D E E E L E N A E R I E T E R N D E T E R D E C K entrance 51 Shaving-cream additive 52 Race distance 53 Unsolicited ms. enclosure 56 Corn unit 130 - Entertainment life SUPPORT HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 785/841-2345 www.hqcc.lawrence.ks.us SUPPORT HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 785/841-2345 Dance lessons; ballet, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 3131-2227 I Study Abroad in Madrid, Spain. Request a Free Catalog. (800) 266-4441. Or Visit www.GoWithCEA.com Experience Life Abroad Fall 2003. CEA awards over $60,000 in scholarships. Apply by April 30th. GoWithCEA.com 125 - Travel or just read them for the fun of it --- Find it, sell it buy it in the Kansan Classified Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swbell.net 200s Employment 1 男 女 120 - Announcements 205 - Help Wanted F 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcamp Jobs.com. Associate Director of Adult Education The Kansas Board of Regents seeks an Associate Director of Adult Education to provide technical assistance with the Adult Education data collection system and to serve as the State Administrator of Kansas GED Testing. Minimum requirements include a graduate degree and at least three years of full-time professional experience in teaching or administration, experience in data systems development and administration, and fluency with major statistical packages. Send letter of application, current vita, copies of postsecondary education transcripts, and contact information (names, titles, e-mail addresses, business addresses, and business telephone numbers) of three references. Confidentiality of all applicant materials will be maintained. References will be contacted only after obtaining permission from the candidate. Review of applications will begin April 29, 2003 and continue until the position is filled. The Kansas Board of Regents is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. All materials should be sent to the Human Resources Office of the Kansas Board of Regents, preferably as a MS Word attachment to 561H@kspor.org or otherwise in hard copy to 1000 SW Jackson Street, Suite 520, Topkea, Kansas 66512-1358. MOVIE EXTRAS) MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 / 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-8154-0777 1029 TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE PLAY & COACH SPORTS HAVE FUN! MAKE $ $ Openings in: ALL TEAM & IN DIVIDUAL SPORTS ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS Camp/Hike; Ropes/Rock Climbing; Ice/ Roller Hockey, Office/Secretaries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUNDRY. Travel allowance ONLINE APPLICATION: www.campcobbossee.com or call:(800)473-6104 sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." 120 - Announcements Fraternities • Sororities • Clubs • Student Groups Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program! It works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 932-3288, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 1 205 - Help Wanted Hold hands EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER Heart of America. Photography is seeking 12-14 full/part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season - April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment! Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7109 or drop by 2449 Iowa, Ste J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGee's EOE Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentleman's club. 785-766 7600 or 1-785-2191-5900. Get Paid For Your Opinion! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7834, events. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary. Students well informed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.colleen.com Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa, Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554 BARTENDER POSITION BARTENDER POSITION Make up to 300 per shift. Flexible hours, great pay Call 1-800-606-0082 ext 1422. Nanny for 3 girls ages 8 to 14 for summer. Monday, Tuesday, & 8-12th approx. 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Send resume to Brent Conrad, 1019 Mass. Lawrence 66044 OFFICE HELP NEEDED Part-time job help needed (approx. 20 hours per week Monday - Friday 1 PM - 5 PM). Duties include answering phones, filing, data entry & customer service, Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Alvamar, PO Box 3467, Lawrence, KS 66046. Attention Tracy, EOE. Personal Care attendant jobs available for the summer. Flexible schedule, no experience needed, $9/hr. 20-40 hrs/wk + nights. Must have own transportation. For info call 218-7535, leave message. Private Female Ballet Instructor Needed. To teach ballet major fundamental ballet for summer. May contact Amanda Zehr at 785-842-6325 or you may email at ballet@ku.edu, preferred method of contact is phone. Please leave message Willing to pay $30.hr SUMMER INTERNTS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. Apply online at www.piqimapimage.com/intern.htm Summer to remember in woods of Maine. Camp Androdcoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference, 6/18- 8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call collect 914-839-5800. Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531. BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band, All Effects. Call 785-749-3649. --- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9P 405 - Apartments for Rent City of Lawrence The Parks and Recreation dept is looking for adult league, summer softball umpires. Job offers excellent pay & flexible schedules starting May thru Oct. Must be 18 yrs of age w/ expr in the sport. Training provided & required. Anyone interested must attend orientation; Saturday, May 3 at 10:00am Community Building 115 W11 Street For questions contact Adult Sports Office 832-7922. EOE M/F/D Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 9-5 Mon-Sat. 811 New Hampshire. X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale 9 Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $355/month. Call 841-1074 Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext. 4565. For Sale: 4 adiposing seat to Bill Cosby May 31st, Starlight Theatre. $60 each. min. Will sell together of separate. Contact Jeff at 855-1617 or 550-3799. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 191 Haskell. Spring runmage sale. First Presbyterian Church 2415 Clinton Pkwy Fri, 8am-6pm, Sat, 8am-12pm. Bag sale, Sat 11am - clothing, toys, books, puzzles, games, household goods, linens, and much more. H 405 - Apartments for Rent Maison de vacances 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 643-4000. 1 BR apt, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9070 1, 2 & 3 BR aparts. in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings. $425-841-3633. 1712 OHIO 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail. for summer and fall. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU bus rte, laundry facility, Call 843-001-61 Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt. DW, CA, micro. laundry, on site. 382 BRA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 815-4534 www.appartmentslawrence.com 2 BR apartments, CA, off street parking. 1737 & 41 Tennessee. $500/month. 913-441-4169. masonproperties@aol.com 3 & 4 BR townhouses @ 1125 Tennessee. W/D, CA, DW, off street parking. $900 & $1200 / month. Call 913-441-4169 or masonproperties@aol.com 3 BR apte. 1/2 BA, FP, skylights. 1 car garment, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 Avail. May, June, or Aug. Very nice remodeled studio and 1 bedroom apts. close to campus. No pets/smoking. Starting at $360. Call 550-8111 or 841-3192. 405 - Apartments for Rent CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870; 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-4090. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room On North side of 24th between Naismith & Oussahl 841-5533 Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 Excellent location, 1341/Ohio/1104 2. BR in 4-plex. C/A, D/W, W/D hook-ups $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1, no Pets, bk84-4242 Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NO PETS, 841-5533. Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Bristolton. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emry Rd. $490 per month. Washer/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5171 colany@kxks.com www.colonywoods.com 1&2Bedrooms - On KU Bus Route M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 HOLIDAY APARTMENTS - On RO Bus Route • Indoor/Outdoor Pool - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall NOW LEASING May 2003 3HotTubs THE LEGENDS L ed years FULLY FURNISHED 2. 2 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY (785) ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOKES UP, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPED FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPARTS CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNFLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 405 - Apartments for Rent 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL West Hills Apartments NICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 785-843-001/1785-843-4005 MON-FRI 9-6 LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 PARKWAY COMMONS 405 - Apartments for Rent Open House Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample parking on site laundry. Call 843-4090. Great location, 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex, Hardwood floors, CA, no pets, pets$610/mo Avail Aug 18, 842-4242 CLOSE TO CAMPUS 3, BR. 3 BA town-houses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closes, phone, cable in br2, complete kitchen w microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 BK. Arkansas 843-4090. Town home-3 bedroom, 2 bath. W/D. fire- place, kitchen appl, garage/opener, pet. Sublease 6-1/7-31 $600. 766-5080. 2 BDR $750 2 BDR $600 Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! 5 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes - , 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790 [90] savings on select units with new 12 month lease. - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom OPEN HOUSE Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 Some with fireplaces and Garages 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com Models Open Daily W/D,all appliances - Digital Cable & Internet Monday - Friday 1:00-5:00 NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED HIGHPOINTE - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome - Reasonable Rates www.firstmanagementinc.com 841-8468 405 - Apartments for Rent - Great Location Near Campus Now Leasing for Fall 2003 6th & Iowa Lorimar Townhomes 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes *1,2,3,Bedroom very good up special! Lorimar & Courtside Townhomes see about one or two deepest! *Washer/Dryers* *Dishwasher* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Fireplaces* *Cooling Fans* 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 405 - Apartments for Rent - Dishwasher * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Fireplaces * Ceiling Fans Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. 4100 Clinton Parkway For More Info: 785-841-7849 Now signing 1 YR, leases starting May/ June/July Aug. No smoking rooms. Extra nice, well kept 2 Bpt. apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/month. Spanish Creator Bqs. 841-6886. Save Your Money! Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU, Hardwood flora, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hill Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday, Call 841-3800. Tuckaway Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street 2600 w 6th Street 105 - Apartments for Rent HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs,basketball court, fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com Need a place to live next year? LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - car ports - approx. 1600 sq feet Williams Pointe Townhomes - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - full size washer/ dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) - 1421 sq feet Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 MASTERCRAFT WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 ✨ Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas* 749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Avail. Aug. Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR, 15' B. DA, WD, WD, CA, balthy 9, & Emery. No smoking/pets. $590 + utilities. Call 550-111 or 841-3192. Equal Housing Opportunity 1.2.3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KL AVAILABLE August 1st 841-6254 OPEN HOUSE Saturday, April 26th 12:00 am to 3:00 pm - 1,2,3 Bedroom & Ceramic Tile Swimming Pool Luxury Apartments Upgraded Carpet - Upgraded Carpet & Ceramic Tile. - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center Canyon Court • 700 Comet Lane • 842-3280 VILLAGE SQUARE apartment Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 william@wahkeef.net village@webserf.net Apartments & Town Homes Blue Mass Management Inst Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments Blue Menu Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price! 5200 W 15th, Suite 101 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 *Washer & Dryer* *Fully Equipped Kitchen* *Serving Bar* 5200 W.15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment Bedroom Apartments 1.2.&3 *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All apps. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com NOW LEASING for Fall - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm - Swimming Pool - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - On KO Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome - Small Pet Welcome - Model Open Daily - Model Open Daily CHASE COURT Ask About Our Specials! www.firstmanagementinc.com 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE. 410 - Condos For Rent השמות הנקראים עליהן 415 - Homes For Rent Very nice condo. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. *Call Eli B41-4470.* --- 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Erdridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained. 2-car garage, dishwasher, WD, AC, 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/mo. Call 842-1376 10.m. p.m. or 842-2556. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jacuzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/view, two car garage, fenced landscapeback yard,$1450,841-3633 anytime. BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent at August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit. 749-7207 - 766-6622 between 6:30-10 p.m. 420 - Real Estate For Sale House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath. CAWD In- cluded. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/maj-218-4113 430 - Roommate Wanted Moving to KC? Own a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbeatable at 105k. Call 913-522-5360. Realty Exec. Aerial View of a House Female Graduate Student seeking non- smoking tomate to share quiet 2 BR 1 BA apt. Startting Aug. 1st. $260/mo plus utilities. Tackle 766-6582 Female Roommate Needed Female Roostmate released For 3 BR, 1 BA house N/S, No Pets Close to Campus. $275/mo + 1/3 units. Aug. 18, Call 913-5837-3124 after. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 843-5540 Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, W/D and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2 unit Avail A84-4540 440 - Sublease 1 bedroom apartment, 16th & Tennessee. No smoking, no pets. Summer sublease. Rent negotiable. Call Kristin at 393-1549 Sublease 1 bedroom at 527 California. Washer/dryer. Nice neighborhood. Call 841- 5533 for information. 1 BR in 4 BR apartment. Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool. $370/mo. Leave message 785-691-9048. 2 BR 2 BA apt, at Parkway Commons. Avail. mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room. $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jess at 312-9170. 2 people needed to sublease 2 BR 2 BA apartment. Avail. June & July. W/D and cable incl. Close to campus. $350/mo/ perroom. 1011 Mound Call 785-749-5289. 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus, Garage, W/D, CA, avail. mid-May $870.ADam 830-8076. 3 BR, 2 BA house avail. end of May W/D, A/C, near campus, all kitchen appl., 2-car gar. water pet. Petallowed 749-4926 Need sublease to live w: 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo rent paid Call: 785-830-8003 500s Services 505 - Professional --- TRAFFIC-DUTS-MLP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matters/Residency issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of D. DAVID G. STROLE Donald G. Stroke Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation 510 - Child Care --- KindergartenTours Kindergarten hours Montesson learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233 WEDNESDAY,APRIL 23,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9P 405 - Apartments for Rent City of Lawrence The Parks and Recreation dept is looking for adult league, summer softball umpires. Job offers excellent pay & flexible schedules starting May thru Oct. Must be 18 yrs of age w/ expr in the sport. Training provided & required. Anyone interested must attend orientation. Saturday, May 3 at 10:00am Community Building 115 W 11th Street For questions contact Adult Sports Office 832-7922.EOE M/F/D Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 9-5 Mon-Sat 811 New Hampshire. 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale $ Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $353/month.Call 841-1074 Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3232, ext. 4565. For Sale 4-adjoining chairs to Bill Cosby, May 31st, Starlight Theatre, $60 each. minill will sell together of separate. Contact Jeff at jc85-1517 or 550-3799. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 109 Haskell. Spring rugmage sale. First Presbyterian Church 2415 Clinton Pkwy. Bait, 8am-6pm, Bait, 8am-12pm. Bag sale. Sat 11am- Clothing, books, puzzles, games, household goods, linens, and much more. 图 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1, 2 & 3 BR apts. in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings. $425-525, 841-3633. 1 BR apt, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807. 1712 OHIO 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quit setting, swimming pool, KU bus re, laundry facility, Call 843-0011. Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt. DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site, 3BR 2 BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 81-1553 www apartmentsinawrence.com 28 BR apartments, CA, off street parking, 1737 and 41 Tennessee. $500/month. 913-441-4169. masonproperties@aol.com 3 & 4 BR townhouses @ 1125 Tennessee. W/D, CA, DW, off street parking. $900 & $1200 / month. Call 913-441-4165 or masonproperties@aol- com 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. WD hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-3047 Avail. May, June, or Aug, Very nice remodeled studio and 1 bedroom apts. close to campus. No pets/smoking. Starting at $360. Call 550-8111 or 841-3192. 405 - Apartments for Rent CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870; 900 Block Michigan. Gallon 843-409-6. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Large z birdhouse adaption x. June 12. Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool HOLIDAY APARTMENTS On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 924.5500 Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 Excellent location, 1341 Ohio/1104 Tennon 2. BR in 4-plex, C/A, D/W, D/hook-ups, $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1. No pets. Bkd 842-4242. Great 3BR's Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050 PETS: 841-5533 Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd $490 per month. Washer/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL COLONY WOODS 1301 W, 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@kkks.com www.colonywoods.com NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNSHRED 2, 3 & BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY RICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-In CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON BITE MANAGEMENT (785) (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND MOORER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPED FITNESS CENTER -3 HotTubs M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Exercise Room • Now Leasing for Summer & Fall 405 - Apartments for Rent THE LEGENDS L COLLEGE 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON-FRI 9-6 OCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME 405 - Apartments for Rent 2BDR $495 CLOSE TO CAMPUS 3, BR 3, BA town houses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 BK, Arkansas 843-4090. 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 1 & 2 Bedrooms On KU Bus Route Indoor/Outdoor Rooms - OHRC Bus Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool SCHOOL 2 BDR $750 2 BDR $600 PARKWAY Great west location. Spacious & 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample piano, on-site laundry. Call 843-4909. West Hills Apartments 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 5 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 Great location. 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. $610/mo Avail. Aug 1, 842-4242. Town home-3 bedroom 2.bath.W.D. fireplace kitchen appl. garage/opener, no pets. Sublease 1-731 $650.766-5800 Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Room 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $353. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. MONDAY 9:30 LOCATED JUST BEhind THE HOLIDOME Luxury Apt Homes Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom • Pool - Washer/Dryer - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - Basketball Court - Washer/ Dryer - Basketball Court - Security Systems 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com Models Open Daily - Garages Available Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Open House Some with fireplaces and Garages 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 OPENHOUSE 1,2,3 Bedrooms M-F. 1-5 Sat. 11-3 www.lawrenceapartments.com W/D, all appliances Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790. 10 savings on select units with new 12 month lease. 405 - Apartments for Rent - 1, 2, 3. Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome - Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom - Digital Cable & Internet HIGHPOINTE - Great Location Near Campus 405 - Apartments for Rent - Reasonable Rates 841-8468 6th & Iowa 105 - Apartments for Rent NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED Now Leasing for Fall 2003 get about now in by duplexer! Monday - Friday 1:00-5:00 www.firstmanagementinc.com Lorimar & Courtside Townhomes Save Your Money! Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes early keep up special *Washer/Dryers* *Dishwashers* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Fireplaces* *Celting Fans* - Washer/Dryers * Dishwasher * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Fireplaces * Ceiling Fans Courtside Townhomes 2&3 Bedroom Townhomes 4100 Clinton Parkway 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you Now signing YR. Leases starting May/ June/July Aug. No smoking beds. Extra well, keep 2 BR beds. Quiet, all apts, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/Spanish Church Apts. 841-6888 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood 4241 Briarwood Dr Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Fully Equipped Kitchen Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs, basketball court, fitness center and gated entrance. Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Briarwood pool, fitness www.tuckawavmgmt.com call 838-3377 Need a place to live next year? LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - car ports - approx. 1600 sq feet Williams Pointe Townhomes - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath - full size washer/ dryer Avail. Aug. Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR, 1.5 BAI, DW, DV, CA balcony, 9th & Emery. No smoking/pets. $590 + utilities. Call 550-1111 or 841-3192. - 1421 sq feet Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 MASTERCRAFT Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. WALK TO CAMPUS Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 ✨ Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Equal Housing Opportunity 1.2, bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. Available August 1st, 841-6254 OPEN HOUSE Saturday, April 26th 12:00 am to 3:00 pm - 1,2,3 Bedroom - Upgraded Carpet Upgraded Carpet & Ceramic Tile & Ceramic Tile Swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center Canyon Court • 700 Comet Lane 842-3280 Now Leasing! VILLAGE SQUARE apartments close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net village@webserf.net Apartments & Town Hom Blue Music Management Inc. Acquisition & Consulting, Moves Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ◆ Washer & Dryer ◆ Fully Equipped Kitchen ◆ Serving Bar 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment Bedroom Apartments 1.2.&3 *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com NOW LEASING for Fall - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm - Washer/Dryer - Washer Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome - Model Open Daily 415 - Homes For Rent CHASE COURT www.firstmanagementinc.com Ask About Our Specials! 843-8220 1943 STEWART AVE ١٢٠٣ 410 - Condos For Rent Very nice condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Eli at 841-4470. 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 s of luxury, jacuzi, firepit, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck/well, two car garage, fenced landscaped back yard, $1450,841-3633 anytime. 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Erdidge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained. 2-car garage, dishwasher, W/D, AC, 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/mo. Call 842-1376 10 a.m. 6 p.m.or 842-3556 BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$110 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit. 749-7207 or 766-6622 from 3:00 p.m. to 10 p.m. House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath. CAWD In- cluded. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/mo. 218-4113 420 - Real Estate For Sale **Moving to KC?** Owen a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbeatable at 105k. Call 913-522-5360. Realtie Exec. 430 - Roommate Wanted Female Graduate Student seeking non- smoking roommate to share quiet 2 BR 1 BA apt. Starting Aug. 1st. $260/mo. plus utilities. Call 768-6528 2 keys Female Roommate Needed Furniture ROOMMAKEUP For 3 BR, 1 BA house N/S, No Pets To Campus to Campus $275/mo + 1/3 units. Avail Aug. 1 Calgary 911-5383-3724 after 6. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 843-5540. 440 - Sublease Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, W/D and garage. No smoking.pets. $300 +1/2 Avail Aug 842-4540 key house 1 bedroom apartment. 16th & Tennessee No smoking, no pets. Summer sublease Rent negotiable. Call Kristin at 393-1549. 1 bedroom at 527 California. Wash- erdryer. Nice neighborhood. Call 841 5533 for information. 1 BR in 4 BR apartment. Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool. $370/mo. Leave message 785-691-9048 2 BR 2 BA apt. at Parkway Commons. Avail, mid May and Aug. 1. Pet friendly. Pool. Exercise room $795/mo. $300 signing bonus. Call Jessi at 312-9710. 2 people needed to sublease 2 BR 2 BA apartment. Avail. June & July W/D and cable incl. Close to campus. $350/mo/per. 101. MISSING Call 785-749-5289. 3. BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus, Garage, W/D, CA, avail. mid-May $870/mo. Adam 830-8076. 3 BR, 2 BA house avail, end of May, WD, A/C, near campus, all kitchen appl., 2-car garage, water paid. Pet allowed. 749-4926. Need subleaser to live w/ 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons. 2 mo. rent paid. Call 785-830-8003. 500s Services 505 - Professional --- TRAFFIC-DUFT-MIP'S PERSONAL INJury Student legal matters/Residency issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DONALD G. STROLE Dominic Moore Sarah G. Kelsey 16 EAST 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation 510 - Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Kinderergarten hours Montesson learning centers plus; broad c curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2232. 10B - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2003 kansan.com News Now Over 10 Toppings to choose from!! .357 Special Wednesday carry our only $5 small I topping $5 medium I topping $5 large I topping Open 7 days a week. Dine-in or Carry-On only 749-0055 794 Mass. CLASSIC MOVE. HELP SAVE LIVES and EARN $25* TODAY! --- Donate your blood plasma. Help burn, trauma and shock victims, surgery patients & more. ZLB Call or stop by: ZLB Plasma Services 816 West 24th Street Lawrence, KS 66046 785-749-5750 www.zlb.com Fees and donation time may vary. *(for approx. 2 hours. New donors only.) Find your favorite drinks ON SPECIAL In Weekly Specials Pros CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B onship game in 1991. During his four seasons at Kansas, Randall averaged 12.3 points and 5.5 rebounds per game, including averaging 16 points per game as a sophomore. After Kansas, Randall was the first-round draft pick (26th overall) of the Chicago Bulls in the 1991 NBA Draft. Randall was a member of the 1991-1992 Bulls NBA championship squad and played for Minnesota, Detroit and Denver before retiring. Since retiring. Randall has found a management position in the Denver Nuggets organization. Randall worked three seasons as a college scout for the Nuggets and just completed his second season in the organization's player development program. - Edited by Jason Ellio Pennsylvania to hold 'USA v. the World' races BvZachary Silver By Lachylin Oliver The Daily Pennsylvanian via U-wire University of Pennsylvania PHILADELPHIA — The largest track meet in the world will be without one of its most recognizable faces this weekend. An official at U.S. Track and Field told The Daily Pennsylvanian Monday that Olympic gold medalist Maurice Green would not run in the Penn Relays this weekend. The world's fastest woman, Marion Jones, also will not compete this weekend, as she has canceled all competitions during her pregnancy. She will return to training for the 2004 Olympics following the birth of her child. Penn Relays Director Dave Johnson said last week that Olympic champion Gall Devers Don't be surprised to see Jones on the sidelines during track's biggest national weekend, though. According to U.S. Track and Field, 100-meter world record-holder and father of Jones' child, Tim Montgomery, will compete in the Olympic Development "USA.v. the World" races this weekend. was likely to compete in the "USA v. the World" competitions on Saturday afternoon, too. As of Monday, the following athletes were also likely to compete for the United States — Jon Drummond, Joshua "J.J." Johnson, Terrence Trammell, Justin Gatlin, Tyrese Washington, Jerome Davis, Bernard Williams, James Carter, Angela Williams, Demetria Washington, Kelli White, Jearl Miles-Clark and Christy Gaines. U. S. Track had no information regarding whether distance sensation Alan Webb will compete this weekend. Two years ago, Webb blazed to a sub-4 minute split to push South Lakes High School to the distance medley relav title at Penn Relays. According to U.S. Track and Field, spinner Michelle Collins and world champion hurdler Felix Sanchez recently announced that they also would not be competing. The "USA v. the World" events headline the Penn Relays and begin this weekend Saturday with the men's 4x100 meter relay at 1:40 p.m. MASTERCRAFT IT'S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. Tanglewood 951 Arkansas (785) 749-2415 95MF Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished studios, 2 and 2-born apartment homes. Hanover Place 14th and Mass. (785) 841-1212 95MF Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! 15th & Kasold 749-1226 95MF Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! Models open daily BK - 2 baths/w/hab 4 BR - 2 baths/w/hab 4 BN - 2 baths Furnished & multigenerational apartments Private parking only On KJ flat costs Small per unit home Occupied property Tanglewood Hanover Place Hanover Place 2014 Orchard Corners Thursday April 24, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No.141 Today's weather 64° Tonight: 49° 乌鸦在雨中奔跑 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Tell us your news A look at William S. Burroughs and his legacy in Lawrence Jayplay Jay William S Burroughs New vice provost spot filled Position puts focus on student success By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Marlesa Roney, a Kansas native who currently oversees student services at the University of Akron in Ohio, has been named vice provost for student success at the University of Kansas, Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, senior vice provost, said yesterday. Roney, vice president of student affairs at Akron since 2000, will begin her new duties in the Office for Student Success at the University June 23. Loren Malone, a member of the search committee, said Roney was enthusiastic and concerned with what was in the best interest of the students. "She did a lot of things at her previous universities to help students out," Malone said. "She was very compassionate and she seemed like she would fit into the University very well." Roney Roney will oversee academic and student services that promote student retention, academic success and graduation at the University. She replaces the vice provost of student affairs, David Ambler, who retired after 25 years at the University. The title change reflects reorganization and streamlining of services that were approved last year. P The Office of Student Success includes the KU Memorial Unions, Stu "We are very pleased to have someone of Marlesa Roney's caliber join us at KU." McCluskey-Fawcett said in a press release yesterday. "She has an outstanding record as a student advocate and is a visionary administrator." dent Health Services,Student Housing Student Financial Aid and the Department of Student Life. At Akron, Roney oversees 13 departments, including admissions, financial aid, international programs, student recreation and student health. She served for six years as the registrar of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., and received her doctoral degree in student personnel administration in 1985 from Purdue. She earned her master's and two undergraduate degrees from Kansas State University in 1981 and 1980 and is a graduate of Concordia High School. "As an administrator and a colleague, she is a problem solver, a person of great integrity and a great advocate for student issues," said Oletha Thompson, associate vice president for campus life at the University of Akron. "We will certainly miss her, but talented people are always identified and its hard to keep them." Edited by Melissa Hermreck The image shows a man wearing a black robe with a white stole, gesturing with his hand extended outward. He appears to be speaking or reacting to something, possibly during a religious service or a formal event. The background is blurry and indistinct. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan Sam Pierron, nontraditional senator, asked why the proposed student fee increase for the Multicultural Resource Center should not be voted on by the student body. He suggested an online vote for the issue yesterday night using the same setup used in the recent elections. Courtney Kublen/Kansan Jonathan Ng and Loren Malone react to comments about their past year as student body president and vice president. Yesterday night's Senate meeting was the final one of the year and Ng and Malone's last at their positions. Senate ends with fee approval By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer There was some crying, good crying. There were some shout-outs. There was the drama, always the drama. At last night's joint Student Senate meeting, the old showed the new what to look forward to next year. The instigator creating the drama this time around was Sam Pierron, nontraditional senator. Pierron proposed to make the student fee for the new Multicultural Resource Center go to a special referendum for students to vote on. The vote would take place in two weeks in an online vote at the election polling sites. He said he supported the fee, which is $3.50 for students enrolled in more than six hours, but thought the online referendum would hold the next year's KUnited coalition to its "Have a say before you pay" campaign promise. Andy Knopp, KUnited student body president-elect, sat a few rows behind Pierron. He smiled when his coalition's slogan was mentioned. "I think this is a good testament," he said. HOLDOVER SENATORS The 2002-2003 Student Senate elected next year's holdover senators last night. They are: Drew Thomas Casey Collier Jeff Allmon "I'd hate to have seen a political joke interfere with a year's work of progress with the new MRC," Knopp said. Knopp said he planned to stand by nts campaign promise of asking students' opinions about student fees. But he also said previous resolutions and bills already passed in Student Senate supporting the new Multicultural Resource Center were enough to make the decision last night without a special referendum. The motion to put the fee to referendum failed 13-45. The Multicultural Resource Center student fee passed 55-2. "It's out of our hands, thank God," Ng said. "Hopefully, we can open this bad boy up by Fall 2005." — Edited by Melissa Hermreck Queer group revives idea to establish fraternity By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Since the late '80s, gay, bisexual and lesbian fraternities and sororities have been forming at universities across the country. One of the largest organizations is Delta Lambda Phi national social fraternity. The original chapter was formed in Washington, D.C., in 1986 and has now grown to 20 active chapters and five colonies across the country. The organization's mission states that it was formed "To enhance the quality of life among gay, bisexual, and progressive men by providing See story on Asian groups' efforts to create fraternity and sorority on page 3A dignified and purposeful social, service, and recreational activities." In the past, efforts to create a similar organization at the University of Kansas have not been successful, but the idea has been revived. In November, Jimmie Manning. Lawrence graduate student, took the responsibility of forming the fraternity, which he believes is important. Manning said people claimed that gay men had difficulty connecting and this was a positive outlet for them to accomplish that. The organization's mission states that it was formed "to enhance the quality of life among gay, bisexual, and progressive men by providing dignified and purposeful social, service, and recreational activities." Past attempts to start a fraternity have failed because of a simple lack of follow through, Manning said To be registered as a fraternity by the University of Kansas, it will have to be recognized by one of the three councils that oversee the the fraternity and sorority community: the Interfraternity Council, the National Pan-Hellenic Council and the Panthellenic Association. A request for recognition will be reviewed and voted on by the council that receives the request. The fraternity can only apply to the Interfraternity Council or the National Pan-Hellenic Council; the Panhellenic Association is composed of only sororities. Angie Carr, coordinator for fraternity and sorority life, said past efforts to form the organization were well received by the fraternity and sorority system. "I feel quite confident that they will be given the opportunity to participate in whichever council they choose," Carr said. SEE FRATERNITY ON PAGE 10A Regents to consider use of private funding By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The Board of Regents is trying to keep pace with other Big 12 Universities and the rest of the country when it comes to administrative salaries, said the Regents president. President Reginald Robinson said the Regents recognized the national trend toward higher salaries for university presidents and chancellors by forming a working group to consider the use of private donations to build on state-paid salaries. 'It's the same way that state universities use private funds for salaries for distinguished professors or endowed funds to The issue of private salary supplements is still in the early stages and a date has not been set for the working group's first meeting, Carter said. At the March Regents meeting, Robinson told the Regents a trend had been developing to establish private salary supplements to attract and retain university chief executive officers. Robinson appointed nine people, including the Kansas University Endowment Association president Dale Seuferling, to a working group to gather data and information about private supplements and make a recommendation to the Regents. attract and retain top faculty," Dick Carter, director of external relations for the Regents, said. "It's adding value to state dollars." "There is a need for this, given that other states and universities do this combination of support with state support and private donations," Seuferling said. None of the five state university presidents or Chancellor Robert Hemenway currently receive private funds as part of their salaries. Robinson said a private donor had initiated steps to create a fund to supplement the salaries of the CEOs at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University. Three university presidents in the Big 12, including Kansas State President Jon Wefalid, earn less than Hemenway. The University will pay Hemenway $219,420 next year. It also provides him with his house and a car. COMPENSATION FOR PUBLIC-COLLEGE PRESIDENTS $ ^{*} $ Texas A&M at College Station $365,400 University of Oklahoma $285,304 Iowa State University $281,875 University of Texas at Austin $253,224 Texas Tech University $245,440 University of Nebraska-Lincoln $228,000 University of Colorado-Boulder $225,000 University of Kansas $191,420 Oklahoma State University $215,000 University of Missouri-Columbia $212,920 Kansas State University $209,820 Hemenway's secretary said the chancellor was not available for comment. Only one public university in the Big 12 supplements the salary of its CEO with private donations. Larry Faulkner, president of the University of Texas at Austin, has $187,279 of his $253,224 - does not include Baylor University, a private university. Source: The Chronicle of Higher Education salary paid with private funds, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. Seuferling said he was not yet aware of a timeline for the group to present a recommendation on the issue of private donations. V Edited by Andrew Ward 1 它 1. 2A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 News briefs STATE Woodlands general manager faces charges of embezzlement KANSAS CITY, Kan. - A judge has ordered the former general manager of The Woodlands to face trial on charges that he stole money from the pari-mutual track through a purchasing and expense account scheme. Wyandotte County District Judge Robert L. Serra ruled Tuesday that the nearly eight hours of testimony he heard over two days at a preliminary hearing established probable cause to try August J. Masciotra, 53, formerly of Spring Hill. No date was set for the trial on three felony theft counts. Masciotra remains free on $5,000 bond and his attorney, Tom Bath, said, "This thing is not over." Details of the alleged scheme involving Masciotra and others were disclosed last summer by the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission. Evidence of phony purchasing and expense account transactions appeared to cover up at least $180,376 in track funds stolen over two years. The allegations led to the firing of Masciotra and five other employees, including his son-in-law Eugene Brundige, 36, now of San Antonio, Texas. Among the others were Brundige's brother, Mike Brundige, and Masciotra's daughter, Antoinette Brundige. Last month Eugene Brundige pleaded guilty to one count of theft and agreed to repay the money. NATION Grocery chains race lawsuit regarding pink salmon dye YAKIMA, Wash. - A law firm is suing the country's three largest grocery chains, contending they should tell shoppers that the farm-raised salmon they sell has been dyed pink. The three lawsuits, proposed as class actions, were filed Wednesday against the Kroger Co., Safeway Inc. and Albertsons Inc., said lawyer Paul Kampmeier of Smith & Lowney of Seattle. "Pink sells salmon," he said. "To artificially color salmon without giving that information to consumers, we believe that's unfair and deceptive, and it's also against federal law." The flesh of farmed salmon is naturally grayish. Wild salmon's brightly colored flesh is the result of pigment the fish get from eating krill or other small crustaceans, says the British Columbia Salmon Farmers Association, a trade group. The same pigments are added to the diets of farmed fish to give them the same color, it says. A spokesman for Cincinnati-based Kroger said the company had not seen the lawsuit and declined to comment. Representatives of Boise, Idaho-based Albertsons and Pleasanton, Calif.-based Safeway did not immediately return calls seeking comment. The lawsuits, filed in King County Superior Court in Seattle, seek unspecified damages and a court order requiring the chains to inform shoppers that the salmon are artificially colored. Civil liberties group protests Shippensburg speech policy PHILADELPHIA - Civil liberties group has filed suit against Shippensburg University, saying the state school's policy on speech is among the most unconstitutionally restrictive in the nation. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education filed the lawsuit Tuesday in federal court, said Thor Halvorssen, the group's chief executive. The nonprofit group, which focuses on civil liberties issues on college campuses, said the suit was the first of many it would file across the country. "Too many colleges and universities attempt to outlaw free speech and expression that does not conform to a specific orthodoxy," he said. The complaint cites what it alleges is unconstitutionally vague or overly broad language in the school's racism and cultural diversity policy, which cautions among other things against "unconscious attitudes toward individuals which surface through the use of discriminatory semantics." The Associated Press KUJHTV NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH-TV News Women taking birth control should be aware of all potential side effects. KUJH TV's Robyn Flohrschutz reports tonight at 5:30, 7:30, 9:00, and 11:00. News: Ashley Earnest and Cary Dreher Weather: Tim Bush Sports: Zach Lee kansan.com On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7, 8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 207 K109 Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU SINCE 2013 Lindsey Gold/Kansan To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Kristyn Smith, Olathe junior, performs with the Unity Hip-Hop Dance Troupe in front of Wescoe Hall. The demonstration yesterday was to preview the KU Step Show at the Lied Center where the group will be performing twice Saturday. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Melissa Hunt of the anthropology department will give a Merienda Brown Bag Lecture on "Women and Resistance: A Cross-Border Response to the Maquiladora Industry of Mexico's Northern Border" today at noon at room 318 in Bailey Hall. Call 864-4213. Susan Earle will give a Tour du Jour lecture on "Defining Craft I: Collecting for the New Millennium" at 12:15 p.m. today in the Spencer Museum of Art.Call 864-4710. Queers and Allies will sponsor a religious panel on "What Does the Bible Say about Homosexuality?" at 3 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3091. Cameron Currie of ecology and evolutionary biology will give a lecture on "Diversity and Habitat Relationships of Hypogeous Fungi in Southeastern Australia: Factors Contributing to the Occurrence and Number of Taxa" at 3:30 p.m. today at room 1005 in Haworth Hall, Call 864-5887 John Goodge of the University of Minnesota will give a lecture on "Detrital Mineral Geochronology: Record of Sedimentary Provenance, Changes in Tectonic Setting and Rates of Denudation, Ross Orogen, Antarctica" at 4 p.m. today at room 103 in Lindley Hall. Call 864-4974. Jeff Werner of the University of Gotland in Sweden will lecture on "The Motorways of Modernism and Sweden's Blind Alleys" at 5:15 p.m. today at room 211 in the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4713. Glen Brown of Kansas State University will give an art lecture on "The Condition of Craft" at 7 tonight at room 211 in the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4710. KU Greens will sponsor "Perspectives of Free and Fair Trade" from 6 p.m. to 9 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave, Dinner provided by Food not Bombs. Contact Sam Hopkins at 913-634-6127. ■ Mary Robinson, the first female president of Ireland and the former U.N. high commissioner for human rights, will lecture on "Human Rights and Ethical Globalization" at 7 tonight at room 120 in Budig Hall. Call 864-4550. Student Union Activities will screen the film Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers at 7 and 10:30 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are free with an SUA movie card or $2 at the Hawk Shop in the Kansas Union. Call 864-7469. The University Dance Company will perform at 7:30 tonight at the Lied Center. Call 864-4264. Queers and Allies will sponsor a lecture and workshop on "Bisexuality 101" at 7:30 tonight at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3091. ON THE RECORD A 33-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged his 1994 Jeep Cherokee between 8 p.m. April 15 and 8 a.m. April 16 in the 700 block of Connecticut Street, according to reports. Damage was estimated at $265. Et Cetera A 22-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took her Samsung cell phone between 12:30 a.m. and 1:45 a.m. Saturday in the 800 block of East Sixth Street, according to reports. The phone was valued at $100. A 20-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone took his Samsung cell phone between 10:30 p.m. Sunday and 8:30 a.m. Monday in the 3500 block of Clinton Parkway, according to reports. The phone was valued at $90. The University Daily Kansan is the student news paper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 60454. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Bi-weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 68044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawl Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045 which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749.1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM (PG-13) 4:15 7:10 9:40 CITY OF GOD (P) 4:00 9:30 ADAPTATION. (P) 7:00 ONLY Today's times only! Students $4.00 today Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care MONDAY $2 off Big Pasta $2 off Schooners TUESDAY $2.00 Killian's Red Bud Light Schooners Wednesday $1 Boulevard Draws $5 Pitchers $2 Wheat Bottles LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. "We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!" 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. Weekly specials BAMBINO'S ITALIAN CAFÉ 1801 MASSACHUSETTS MONDAY $2 off Big Pasta $2 off Schooners 832-8800 thursday $2 Bottles $2 Red Bull Vodka Live Music at 10:00PM Sunday $2.50 Bloody Marys Family-Style Pasta TUESDAY $2.00 Killian's Red Bud Light Schooners WEDNESDAY $1 Boulevard Draws $5 Pitchers $2 Wheat Bottles FRIDAY and Saturday $3 Jumbo (32 oz.) Margaritas NOW OPEN LATE FRIDAY and Saturday Academic Computing Services free computing workshops All workshops are FREE for KU students, staff and faculty, but REQUIRE registration for everyone Register at ku.edu/acs/train or 864-0494. Workshop descriptions and schedule: www.ku.iacs/calend Questions? Get help at question@ku.edu or call the ACS Help Desk at 864-0200. Directions & map: www.ku.edu/acs/directions Become A Microsoft Office Specialist Set yourself apart from your peers and get certified as a skilled desktop computer user in Microsoft Office programs. Certification is available to all KU faculty, staff and students. Each exam costs $65; fees must be paid prior to the exam you wish to take. To register or to find out more, visit www.ku.edu/acs/certification, send email to workshoo@ku.edu, or call 864-0494. NEW! Microsoft Office Specialist Certification Exam Prerequisite: For KU faculty, staff and students only. Requires registration for all and a $65 fee. Mon.-April 28, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Budig Media Lab UNIX Prerequisite: None. Requires registration for all. Tues., April 29, 1:30-4:30 p.m. . Budin Media Lab Excel: Data Management Prerequisite: Excel: Introduction. Requires registration for all and a $75 fee for non-KU. Wed., April 30, 1-4 p.m., Budig Media Lab 心 Workshops begin again in June! Check the ACS training schedule in May at www.ku.edu/acs/train 馆 4 THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 24 MP3 copyright law enforcement increasing It turns out that *Hail to the Thief*, Radiohead's sixth album, couldn't be more aptly titled. The unfinished album was leaked online in late March and downloaded by thousands of eager fans — much to the dismay of the band members. "All the attention is gratifying, but we want it when all our hard work's done and the best it can be," bassist Colin Greenwood said recently. "Until then, this is all just unhelpful noise." Despite angry artists, most of us don't give MP3 downloads a second thought — an oversight that could mean trouble for frequent users. Copyright infringement notices have nearly doubled at the University of Kansas in the past semester, said Jenny Mehmedovic, coordinator of information technology policy and planning. 218 copyright-violating downloads were reported from corporations such as the Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association. That's compared to 115 violations reported from August 2002 to December 2002. COMMON CENTS From January to mid-April. Nicole Roche nroche@kansan.com These all took place on a KU network connection, which is used by residents in the residence halls, scholarship halls, Jayhawker Towers and some off-campus dial-up users. Mehmedovic said it wasn't the downloads that had increased. The higher number of violations can be attributed to increased enforcement of laws such as the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Could casual KaZaA users finally be held accountable for all those illegal downloads? Show me a single MP3 virgin at this University and I'll show you someone living in a digital dark age — many people have entire libraries of music downloaded on their computers. "What we find is that most students don't realize that this is an issue," Mehmedovic said. "But we feel like we ought to educate students about what is legal and what is ethical when it comes to electronic downloads." Mehmedovic e-mails first-time offenders asking them to delete the illegal material within 24 hours. A second offense will land students in a required educational meeting about copyright law. Students who are caught downloading copyrighted material for the third time will lose their Internet connection for the remainder of their stay in the residence halls — a punishment imposed by the Digital Millennium Act. According to an article in the April issue of PC World, this act is helping organizations such as the Recording Industry Association of America target commercial Internet providers like Verizon or AOL. Recently the association subpoenaed Verizon to release the name of a user who had downloaded more than 600 songs, and a U.S. district court judge ordered Verizon to comply. If the ruling stands, Mehmedovic said, then off-campus users could be targeted as aggressively as those currently on the University network. Michele Kessler, associate director of Legal Services for Students, said groups such as the Recording Industry Association or America and Motion Picture Association probably weren't as concerned with "the little fish." "It's probably not going to be a problem unless they think you're some big-time distributor charging everyone $1 to join your network," Kessler said. Still, students should play it safe, she said. Those who download occasionally should turn off the file sharing feature on their download program, she said, so at least you're not sending the file to other users. Even if you occasionally indulge in the sins of MP3 downloading, it's still a good idea to protect yourself from the watchful eye of the law. In the end, if you can't keep the KaZaA to a minimum, it might be time to abstain. Each week reporter Nicole Roché covers a different consumer issue. She is a Wichita senior in journalism. Asian interest groups work to start chapters By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Because some Asian students think their culture goes unnoticed on campus, they are trying to form local chapters of Lambda Phi Epsilon fraternity and Alpha Phi Gamma sorority. "We thought it was a great way to get Asian culture involved in campus," said Robbie Ray, Derby junior and Lambda Phi Epsilon pledge captain. Sota Thach, Wichita sophomore and Alpha Phi Gamma president, said she thought everyone should have the opportunity to participate in the sorority and fraternity system, but some students might feel more comfortable joining a group like theirs. The groups are currently known as "interest groups" until they receive their national charter and recognition from one of the three governing councils at the University of Kansas. Shelby Gigous, Topeka junior and president of Panhellenic Council, said the council was happy to have the Asian interest group's participation and activity in the council. "We are excited to see what they are going to do next fall and in future semester." Gigous said. Both groups are currently working to receive their charters by traveling to host chapters around the country and learning about their histories. Ray said the 12 members of Lambda Phi Epsilon had learned about brotherhood from the other chapters. Ray said he realized that his group had earned a reputation for throwing parties, but there was more to the organization than that. The parties are thrown to raise money for the group to travel to its host chapters. The group also participates in community service throughout Lawrence. When the group receives its charter, members will be required to complete 10 hours of service each month, Ray said. "I don't want people to think that if they are not Asian they can't understand our culture. We can teach them. People can really learn from the experience.' Sota Thach Wichita sophomore and Alpha Phi Gamma president Neither group is limiting itself to the 3.2 percent of the University's population that is made up of Asian students. The groups would like to include people of different cultures. "I don't want people to think that if they are not Asian they can't understand our culture," Thach said. "We can teach them. People can really learn from the experience." Ray said his organization was trying to recruit men with "academic leadership" who are "leaders among men." The men of Lambda Phi Epsilon plan to cross over, or be initiated, within the next month. The 14 members of Alpha Phi Gamma hope to have the group established next fall. - Edited by Amber Byarlay Fraternity loses food during weekend theft Hamburger patties and chicken strips are not on this week's menu at Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. Someone broke into the house during the weekend and took boxes of the frozen food from a freezer and an Internet adapter from the computer room, said Phil Howes. Leawood sophomore and fraternity president. Lt. David Cobb of Lawrence Police Department said the thief forced entry into the back door of the house, 1645 Tennessee St., and broke off a key in the door. Estimated damage to the door was about $300, according to reports. The metal door had a deadbolt, and Cobb said police were not sure how the thief entered the house. "We were pretty concerned at first when we couldn't lock our door for two nights after it," Howes said. "Now we're just wondering who did it." He said the door lock had been fixed temporarily and would be replaced over the summer. Police have no suspects in the burglary. A locked food pantry door was also damaged. Howes said the thief knocked the wooden frame off the door and was then able to access the freezer. The adapter taken from the computer room connected four computers to the Internet. Howes said the adapter belonged to the fraternity house and likely would not be replaced because the house would be switching to a wireless Internet connection over the summer. — Erin Ohm THIS WEEK at The New Granada THURSDAY DESTINATION: Spring Break Granada Every Thursday $2 Double Wells DJ Nick Riddell “It’s like Spring Break, Cancun every week.” Bring your student ID for 1/2 off cover! FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink student owned and operated WWW.THEGRANADA.COM THIS WEEK at The New Granada THURSDAY FRIDAY DESTINATION: Spring Break Granada Every Thursday $2 Double Wells DJ Nick Riddell “It’s like Spring Break, Cancun every week.” Bring your student ID for 1/2 off cover! DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink FREE MOVIE REFRESH FOR THIS SUMMER'S BLOCKBUSTER: 'MATRIX RELOADED' KEANU REEVES LAURENCE FISHBURNE 7:30 PM APRIL 29th WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM kansas union JOIN US FOR PRIZES. LIMITED TIME MATRIX BEVERAGES & MORE. FREE 320Z, 'MATRIX reloaded' powerade (TO FIRST 300 PEOPLE) Coca-Cola student owned and operated WWW.THEGRANADA.COM FREE MOVIE REFRESH FOR THIS SUMMER'S BLOCKBUSTER: 'MATRIX RELOADED' KEANU REEVES LAURENCE FISHBURNE THE MATRIX www.whatisthematrix.com 7:30 p.m. APRIL 29TH WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM kansas union - JOIN US FOR PRIZES; LIMITED TIME MATRIX BEVERAGES & MORE - FREE 320Z, 'MATRIX RELOADED' POWERADE [TO FIRST 300 PEOPLE] Coca-Cola AAV 4A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepfert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com Time to be Self-ish Late Night with my Self Self-less Illini await new coach I love my new Self Kansas Self-absorbed KU finds itself Self-employed Self-analysis A NEW ERA OF BAD PUNS BEGINS, WRITE YOUR LOCAL NEWS PAPER TO STOP ANNOYING HEADLINES! EDITORIAL BOARD Zach Stinson for The University Daily Kansan Signs of tolerance abound on campus STINSON'S VIEW K U students are incredibly lucky. No, not just because we have dozens of acclaimed academic departments and programs,a fabulous basketball team,and a flat-out gorgeous campus—though those are all pretty cool. But we're also lucky because the student organization KU Students for a Sensible Drug Policy was recently able to raffle off a water pipe on Wescoe Beach. Dude. Yes, a water pipe. Lauren Stewart for the editorial board Our campus is what we make it. We are lucky to know that we have the administration's support, no matter what our political viewpoint may be. But, seriously, this successful water pipe auction is more than a symbol of the liberal attitude and diversity of opinions on- and off-campus. The fact that such activities have been allowed on campus is a symbol of our fabulously tolerant administration, faculty and staff, who are encouraging freedom of expression and student participation on campus. Though some of us may wonder why anyone let these groups do these events on-campus, we shouldn't be too hasty in our judgments. This collaboration and open dialogue between students and administration deserves to be commended. All student organizations who want to table at Wescoe Beach or organize almost any other event must have approval from the University Events Committee. So, KU Students for a Sensible Drug Policy members were able to sell raffle tickets for a 1-foot colored glass bong in March. In addition, several student organizations have programmed controversial events this week. The organization also brought lecturer George McMahon, one of the few people who can legally smoke medicinal marijuana in America, to campus on Tuesday. The new student organization Justice for All displayed their anti-abortion billboards on Stauffer-Flint lawn on Tuesday and Wednesday. PERSPECTIVE Separation of church and state needs clarification in America The Bush administration has claimed, on several occasions, that the war in Iraq is about liberation. This liberation entails the idea that, once Iraq is a relatively safe place and institutions are built back up to functionality, Iraqi citizens will select a leader and some sort of parliament at their own discretion. COMMENTARY 1234567890 Before we push democracy on another country, we should examine the functionality of our own. Matt Zaller opinion@kansan.com If Iraqis are to follow our lead and build up the press, the legislative, the judicial and the executive branches, they need to be wary of religions adverse effects on democracy, especially U.S. democracy. The three governmental branches and the free press are the cornerstones of democracy, but within the United States, how democratic are these institutions? Let's start with the press. I used to think that the media was generally balanced, until Fox News surpassed CNN as the most-watched television channel. Fox News is a hard-core conservative station where Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity, the two most popular talking heads on the network, are devout Christian and nearly proselytize on the air. This is a bad trend in news dissemination, which people rely on for facts. Democratic values need mainstream media that offer two sides. Is our Congress democratic? Well, sure, they are elected. But out of the 585 elected officials (100 senators, 435 Representatives, and 50 state governors), only 18 are not affiliated with a religion. Those 18 make up only 3 percent of Congress, In implementing a system of democracy in Iraq, the judiciary system would be tricky. First of all, Muslim nations operate under Sharia Law, which is the Islamic court system required by the Quran in Muslim countries. Sharia varies from country to country. For example, Saudi Arabia has a much stricter version than Iran. Sharia and democracy are compatible institutions given this premise: All the citizens are Islamic. But the branches of Islam in Iraq have historically opposed one another. One, the Shiite population, makes up about 65 percent of the Iraqi population. The other, the Sunni population, account for about 35 percent. This disparity will make Sharia much more difficult to reach a consensus on. which serves to represent the U.S. population, which is nearly 40 percent unreligious. In other words, 97 percent of our public officials are Christian or Jewish, but about only 60 percent of Americans are. Let's look at the executive branch. The United States has never had a woman president, a black president or any minority president to represent those populations. Even though 40 percent of America is nonreligious and more are non-Christian, those sectors have always been governed by presidents who believe the Christian Bible to be the truth. What that says is, yes, we are democratic, but we have a long way to go to be a true representative democracy. George Bush is a born-again Christian who wants to further bolster churches with his "faith-based initiative" program. Church-run organizations are tremendously helpful in communities, and they should be supported. But before we're so quick to throw more money at strengthening religious institutions, Congress needs a little introspection. More importantly, voting Americans need to recognize that nonreligious Americans have little say in Congress, and Congress wants to further the divide between itself and the secular population by bolstering the religious community. "In God we trust" is on our money, and "one nation under God" is in our pledge. President Bush once said that the Lord told him the war in Iraq was the right move. Our country was founded on the ideas of religious freedom. That freedom exists here, but it is not reflected in our institutions. Gandhi once said you must be the change you wish to see in the world. If the United States wants to see secular democracy in other parts of the world, the United States must be that change. Zeller is a Tulsa, Okla., senior in political science and humanities and western civilization. READERS' REPRESENTATIVE 'Tis the season to get involved At the group meetings I attend as Readers' Representative, someone will occasionally mention that they'd like to get involved with The University Daily Kansan. Most of the time, I say, "Great, talk to our opinion editors." But there are other ways to get involved, besides the opinion page. It's just matter of timing. --- READERS' REPRESENTATIVE Leah Shaffer readersrey@kansan.com Every year, near the end of the spring semester, the Kansan starts hiring staff for the next summer and fall semesters. Within that staff, there are certain positions that are open to the public and others that are not. Although anyone can apply for the main editor position, a person with Kansan and journalism experience is most likely to get the job. And now is the time. The Kansan Board has already chosen next year's fall editor. The editor then hires the managing editors, who then hire the section editors, who then hire their assistants and so forth. You may be wondering where, in this long chain, do non-journalism majors fit in? The Kansan may be the students' newspaper, but it is also a learning tool for journalism students. In order to be a reporter or copy editor at the Kansan, you have to be enrolled in the class. The Jayplay section has now changed so that more class work will be involved, unless you are a columnist. But that doesn't mean that non-journalism majors can only be involved in Jayplay. There is a day side and a night side of the Kansan. The day side involves planning the paper, shooting photos and writing the stories. But around 5 p.m., production starts, which includes the design and layout of the paper. Getting involved in your University paper doesn't mean you have to just write; crucial functional and readability aspects of the Kansan need help, too. its potential. This position needs people with programming, user interface and design skills and a basic understanding of communications. Graphic designers looking for practical use of their skills can also find a place at the Kansan. The paper needs designers to lay out pages and artists to design graphics. If you are comfortable using Kansan software, such as Quark XPress, and would like to be involved in the newsroom atmosphere, then being a production assistant is a great way to get involved and get paid as well. The Kansan has a position of Web editor open to anyone with ideas about redesigning Kansan.com to the best of Although journalism majors are encouraged to take these positions, anyone can benefit from experience with the paper. For designers, it looks great on a resume, and for all majors, it can only add to your skills. We need people with design skills and programming skills to make the visual aspect of the Kansan the best it can be. Of course the Kansan is always interested in getting involvement on the editorial pages, but that's not the only place to look. Shaffer is a Hays senior in journalism and environmental studies. She will be a Kansan managing editor in Fall 2003. Free forAll Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com - I think that the university should take a timeout for love. 冒 The anti-abortion guy who was wearing the UNC hat; you can go straight to hell. - --- After watching Dr. Holmes tackle somebody today, I just wanted to say that he's officially a badass. Personally, I think we should bring back the word "rad." 图 Happy Pride Week 2003 What am I supposed to do with my "I Love Roy" T-shirt? I'd just like to thank all you hot girls out there who smoke. You sure give us regular girls a chance, and I just wanted to say thanks. - 望 If you're going to steal a joke from Saturday Night Live, at least make it something funny. The pro-lifers need to know that the same medical technology that makes a fetus viable at 20 weeks is the same medical technology that gives us safe abortions. It's all about choice. I'm getting all the college education I need to know: how to put a condom on top of your head and keep it there. 图 - Is there a reason that at such a huge university we have such a crappy television station? KUJH is worse than my high school's television station. 醫 Itchy boob disease — it's spreading. - Hey pro-choice people, if those babies were never alive, why did it bother you so much to see their flesh all over the place? --- I think that the people protesting abortion on campus should get a dictionary and look up the word "genocide" before they put it all over the place, because they obviously have no idea what they're talking about. The Lawrence Police should encourage pot smoking while driving, because those are the only times I actually drive the speed limit. I think that Commerce gets the money to advertise in the UDK from all of my freaking overdraft fees. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or email at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com 8 Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Stauffer-Flint A THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 ADVERTISEMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Top of the HILI is KU students' chance to vote for the best of Lawrence. Fill out this form and return it to Room 119 Stauffer-Flint or visit Kansan.com to complete the online survey. Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. TOP OF THE HILL RESTAURANTS 2003 Best Mexican:___ Best Chinese:___ Best Breakfast:___ Best Burgers:___ Best Subs:___ Best Italian:___ Best Steakhouse:___ Best Vegetarian:___ Best Pizza:___ Best French Fries:___ Best Wings:___ Best Buffet:___ Best Ice Cream:___ Best Custard:___ Best Coffee House:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Delivery Service:___ Best Bakery ___ Best Post-Party Food Restaurant:___ Best Customer Service ___ Best KC Restaurant ___ Best Local Restaurant:___ Best Overall:___ BARS Best Sports Bar:___ Best Drink Specials:___ Best Martinis:___ Best Margaritas:___ Best Wells:___ Best Selection of Beers:___ Best Dance Club:___ Best Place to Play Pool:___ DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25,2003 BARS,continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ BEAUTY SERVICES Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:_ Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING Best Apartment Complex:___ Best Townhomes:___ Best Landlord:___ Best Neighborhood to live in: ___ SCHOOL Best Place to Study:___ Best Bookstore:___ Best Residence Hall:___ Best Scholarship Hall:___ Best Building on Campus:___ Best Fraternity:___ Best Sorority:___ THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas 1 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 NEWS GREAT COFFEE IN A COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE SHENNIO WORKSHOPS HOMEADE SCONES BISCUIT ANNOUNCEMENTS 1025 MASS. AIMEE'S COFFEEHOUSE Thursday, April 24 Friday, April 25 7:30 p.m. Lied Center UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY SPRING 2003 Tickets on sale at the Lied Center, Miaphys Hall, and SUA box offices. $7 public; $5 students- and senior citizens for tickets call: 864-2787 featured events: Remembering & Yes, Indeed! by Bill Evans Choreographic Offering by Jane Lester staged by Sarah Stackhouse. Brandon Baker/Kansan Brent Larson and Sean Washatka, both Topeka seniors, lower the back end of their concrete canoe onto a packing brace. The Concrete Canoe Club has completed its project for the competition to be held at Tuttle Creek Lake in Manhattan Saturday. Concrete Canoe Club to compete By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Christopher Bauer jokingly said after his experience building a concrete canoe that his next task would be to build a concrete SUV. Probably not. The competition is sponsored by the American Society of Civil Engineers. Bauer, Lake Five, Mont., senior, and 20 other students in the University of Kansas Concrete Canoe Club have been working since November on their concrete canoe for this weekend's regional concrete canoe competition in Manhattan. They will compete starting at 8:30 a.m. at the Spillway at Tuttle Creek Lake. The competitions include concrete canoe racing, concrete bowling ball, steel bridge and writing technical papers. Jennifer Gunby, Roeland Park senior, said people underestimated the use of concrete. To make the concrete, the group used a mix lighter than regular concrete. In fact, Bauer said the density of the mix is less than water. The team wants to win it all this year and regain the reputation the University of Kansas once had, said Andres Vicuna, Lima, Peru senior. "Way back in the day KU was known as the historical winner," Vicuna said. The team is applying what they learned from their mistakes to this year's canoe. "Last year our boat sank and folded in half so we came home," Bauer said. "This year we have a good chance." The group has faced some challenges during the construction. It is on its three canoe in eight weeks. The first two canoes were tested at Clinton Lake so paddlers could become accustomed to the shape of the canoe and prepare for the race. "We had a weak spot. It was a predictable structure failure," Gunby said. Each team from the region will be scored on concrete mix, design and a technical paper. The winners of the regional competition go on to nationals in Pennsylvania. The three top finishers at the national level win $9,000. - Edited by Brandon Gay PRIDE WEEK EVENTS 2003 MONDAY: SPONSORED BY QUEERS AND ALLIES PRIDE WEEK KICKOFF 10:00 AM Wescoe Beach SPEAKERS BUREAU OPEN FORUM 7:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union TUESDAY: QUEER MOVIE: BETTER THAN CHOCOLATE 7:30 PM Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union WEDNESDAY: BROWN BAG DIVERSITY SERIES: CHRISTINE ROBINSON: SODOMY LAWS 12 noon Multicultural Resource Center THURSDAY: BISEXUALITY 101: ROBYN OCHS 7:30 PM Malott Room, Kansas Union FRIDAY: TENTH ANNUAL BROWN BAG DRAG SHOW 12 noon Kansas Union Front Plaza COMEDIAN: DEIDRE SULLIVAN 8:00 PM Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SATURDAY: sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UMION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Coca-Cola Learning Through DIVOROITT Multicultural Resource Center STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Coca-Cola Learning Through DIGROROTT Multicultural Resource Center Student Development Center PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 11:00 AM South Park along Massachusetts to Watson Park PAUL SIEGEL: WHY QUEER RIGHTS IS A FREE SPEECH ISSUE 2:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union QUEER THEATER 7:30 PM Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union: $2 donation PRIDE DANCE 10:00 PM - 1:00 AM Ecumenical Christian Ministries: $2 donation Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY A 4 THURSDAY, APRIL24, 2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 7A Events offer work force preparation By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Students nervous about graduating this semester are not alone, and now they have an organized way to get prepared. Tonight is "Transition 101:Student Skills to Workplace Leaders," part six of an eight-part series entitled "Backpacks to Briefcases." The series is a collective effort by several University of Kansas organizations to help students prepare for the change from student to professional. Transi ion 101 will be from 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.at the Adams Alumni Center. All remaining events are free and open to the public. "We hope to provide the graduating seniors with the tools to ease the transition to the work force," said Rueben Perez, coordinator of Organizations and Leadership at KU. "We'll give them hints on how to better market themselves to an employer." Topics at Transition 101 will include entrepreneurship, diversity in the workplace and effective communication. don'ts fashion show. The remaining event of Backpacks to Briefcases will be "Employment Issues for Women" at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Big 12 room in the Kansas Union. This workshop will discuss the issues women face while seeking jobs and issues they face in the workplace. It will include a do's and The final event will be the Grad Grill from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on May 7 at the Adams Alumni Center. It will be a celebration for graduates and will have information tables and promotional items. The Alumni Association will provide graduates with free dinner; soft drinks and door prizes. "The Grad Grill is to recognize and celebrate the time graduates have spent at KU," Perez said. This is the first year the events were bundled together and sponsored by several University organizations, including: Emily Taylor's Women's Resource Center, Graduate School, University of Kansas Alumni Association, Multicultural Resource Center. Office of Multicultural Affairs, Organizations and Leadership, and University Career and Employment Services. In previous years the events were offered independently. "It's never been packaged before," said Mary Andrade, assistant director of University Career and Employment Services. "People always say, 'I wish someone would have told me'. I can't emphasize enough that these are the things that will be important later." For more information and handouts from the previous events, e-mail Andrade at andradec@ku.edu. Edited by Brandon Gay World music featured tonight at Union By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer A diverse group of musicians will play at the Kansas Union tonight as part of the World Music and Diversity concerts. "Every culture should strive for peace and solidarity,"said Clarence Henry, assistant professor of music and dance and coordinator of the concerts. "We can accomplish this by learning about others,and music is a wav to do that." Henry said he wanted to showcase the world in music. At 5:30 p.m.,11 local groups will take the stage at the Kansas Union Ballroom in the Union playing music from different cultures. "We also want to showcase what we have here in our own community," he said. Among the groups to perform are a Haitian drumming ensemble, the New Dawn Native Dancers, Inspirational Gospel Voices, Hip Hop and the African Step Student Association Dance group. Henry said each act would perform for about 10 minutes. Alberta Wright, administrative specialist in social welfare, will be one of the local musicians featured in the concert. She will perform a belly dance and drum to Middle Eastern rhythms At 7:30 p.m. the featured performer, Thomas Mapfumo, and the Blacks Unlimited, will take the stage. Mapfumo plays a combination of African pop music with western instruments such as the electric piano, guitars and the chimurenga. "I saw them play at The Bottleneck last year, and I was fortunate enough to have them come play," Henry said. Mapfumo was born in Marondera, Zimbabwe, in 1945 and is sometimes referred to as the 'Lion of Zimbabwe'. He is responsible for blending traditional Shona mbira music with western instruments and a political message full of innuendo and traditional proverbs. Shona mbira is a style of music that includes numerous melodies, often with contrasting rhythms. He also established the musical style chimurenga. Chimurenga is the Shona word for struggle. During the day Mapfumo will give a presentation from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. at Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. He will talk about his life, give a demonstration of chimurenga music and field questions from the audience. All the events are free and open to the public. "We are having this concert because the students wanted to have it," Henry said. "The Student Senate provided the $5,000 it took to bring Mapfumo here." Henry said Chancellor Robert Hemenway was the first person to donate funding for the concerts, which cost approximately $8.000. Wright said the importance of the concert was to get different people together. "Before the international club was huge and everyone seemed to know what events they were putting on," Wright said. "Now it seems so cold and distant. Being a part in events like this is paramount for those relationships." Edited by Brandon Gay France defends opposition to war in Iraq The Associated Press PARIS — France yesterday defended its opposition to the Iraq war, despite a warning from Secretary of State Colin Powell that Paris could face consequences for its stance. Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said France would continue to uphold its principles. "Throughout the Iraq crisis, France, along with a very large majority of the international community, acted in conformity with its convictions and its principles to defend international law," the Foreign Ministry quoted de Villepin as saying. "It will continue to do so in all circumstances," said de Villepin, who was in Turkey and Jordan yesterday en route to Iran. France was a top opponent of U.S. military action against Saddam Hussein and threatened to use its veto on the U.N. Security Council to stop any U.N. resolution authorizing war. In an interview Tuesday on PBS, Powell said France would face consequences for opposing the United States. "We didn't believe that France was playing a helpful role. There's no secret about that." "We have to look at all aspects of our relationship with France in light of this," Powell said on The Asked whether France would face consequences for its anti-war position. Powell said "yes," but did not elaborate. "Relations ... have been strained over this very issue. That's a consequence that we have to deal with in terms of the bilateral relationship between the United States and France," he said. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, in answer to a question at a briefing yesterday, appeared to play down any consequences. Both Paris and Washington have tried to underscore that France and the United States are, above all, allies. "In the end, the president continues to believe because of our common values between the United States people and the French people, and the government of France and the United States, the alliance will continue, of course," Fleischer said. "But it has put a strain on the relationship and that's a consequence that was paid." De Villepin said, "We are friends, allies and our relationship is strong. We shouldn't speak about sanctions but friendship." kansan.com the student perspective Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County To Do List: Take a Study Break Add something to my resume. Be someone's friend. Make a difference Complete your list. 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(785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO --- . 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 CLASS ELECTIONS FOR SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS, AND SENIORS Positions available: President, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer - Applications available in the Organizations and Leadership Office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union - Applications due Tuesday, april 29, 2003 at 5:00 pm at a mandatory meeting - Elections will be Tuesday, May 6, 2003 from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm * If you have any questions please contact Roarke Gordon, Senior Class President. at 785.550.7363 Board of Class Officers B O C O NEWS NEWS NEWS KANSA NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS NEWS Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - BWest 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any S20 service (coupon #8) N.CO Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - B West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 Bring this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) Dance Company to perform tonight (1) By Nicole Roché By Nicole Roche nroche@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Allison Mize, Salina sophomore, (far left) rehearses "Yes, Indeed!" with the University Dance Company. The company's performance will start at 7:30 tonight in the Lied Center. Dan Nelson/Kansan A semester of hard work will culminate tonight for members of the University Dance Company as it performs its spring program. Kendra Hollman, president of the University Dance Company, said the company would perform nine pieces from jazz to tap at 7:30 tonight and tomorrow night in the Lied Center. "If you ve never seen dance before," Kendra Hollman, Lincoln. Neb., senior, said, "you'll see something you like." seethingsyouneed About 600 people attend the spring program each year, said Fred Pawlicki, associate director of the Lied Center. "There are some wonderfully talented dancers at KU," Pawlicki said. "The Lied Center is the place for them to showcase their talent." Jerel Hilding, director of the University Dance Company, said the group spent its entire budget, $1,100, on its fall and spring semester programs. Although Student Senate provides this budget. Hilding said the group didn't make a profit because all program proceeds went back to the music and dance department. This means that the group does a lot of hard work but makes no money from the show. The group must start from square one at the beginning of each year. "it's not a freebie," he said. "We don't see a dime of the ticket sales." Brandi Green, 2002 graduate, said hard work was part of the satisfaction of the program. She's been dancing since age 3 and still craves the on-stage adrenaline rush. "It's just like if you play basketball,you want to play games," Green said. "If you dance,you want to perform." Guest choreographer Bill Evans, a University of New Mexico professor of dance, worked with students early in the semester to develop the tap piece "Yes, Indeed!" Dancers sit side-by-side on metal chairs for this piece, each tapping out the syncopated rhythm while yawning, performing scat or even falling out of a chair. "It's more like a mix between Broadway and Stomp," Hollman said. Despite spraining her ankle this week, Hollman said the tough practices had been gratifying. This will be Hollman's fourth program with the company. "As a senior, I'm sorry it's going to be over," she said. Tickets are $5 for students and can be purchased at the Student Union Activities box office, the Lied Center and Murphy Hall. General admission tickets are $7. Nebraska vet students keep tuition break — Edited by Amber Byarlay The Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. — Current Nebraska residents enrolled in a veterinary medicine program at Kansas State University will continue to get tuition breaks, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chancellor Harvey Perlman said yesterday. The university also will study creating a new, more targeted program for veterinary students. Perlman said. Under the current program, Nebraska residents pay UNL's instate tuition to attend Kansas State University's College of Veterinary Medicine. currently enrolled, Perlman said. But faced with state budget cuts, UNL plans to eliminate the subsidy. Perlman yesterday said students currently enrolled would be able to continue paying in-state tuition through the remainder of their education. The university always sought to continue the program for students Funding for continuing the program for the 74 currently enrolled students will come from savings made within the university's current budget, such as not filling vacancies, said John Owens, vice chancellor of the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources. The 26 students who were to begin the program in the fall also would only have to pay in-state tuition if the funding request included in the budget proposal by the Legislature's Appropriations Committee was passed, Perlman said. The committee included $1.9 million to pay for the subsidy for the incoming students next year, with the intent the subsidy would continue until their graduation. Debate of that proposal, part of the committee's plan to address a $761 million state budget shortfall, is to begin in early May. BOWLING COLUMBINE the award winning documentary by Michael Moore Sunday, April 27, 2003 6:00 pm screening at Woodruff Auditorium Arizona Bowling at Jaybowl 4:30 pm free shop rental with ticket Tickets $2.00 at the Hawk Shop America West Theater 1189 W. 5th St., Phoenix, AZ 85022 Spicy Red Wine Sauce!! Almost the Weekend Thursday Special!!! 16" Pizza 2 toppings 2 drinks ONLY $0.99 pike place Open 7 days a week Voted Best Pizza RUDY'S PIZZIRA 749-0055 704 Mass. time for the battle you've been waiting for... KJHK presents the 2003 Farmer's Ball!!! 90.7 FM 90.7 FM FINALS: -TUE APRIL 22- captain overreact hearts to waste boskk (reference to blue) the afternoons SAT APRIL 26 for a full day of recording at the BLACK LODGE aK shows S3 18+ 9:00 doors @ the BOTTLENECK -WED APRIL 23- esau vibralux ike turner overdrive kelpie sotonightimaysleep KU Campus Workout Join us for a workout around campus! We will meet at the west doors of Robinson Gym. Runs from 3:00 - 4:30 PM. KU RECREATION SERVICES Sunday, April 27 Check us out! STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE SENATE We will be running stairs and jogging through campus. Pull ups, pushups, and a little yoga will be incorporated with the workout. Tel: 785 864 3546 Running THEATRE The University of Kansas The University Theatre and the Department of Theatre and Film Invite you to a Sneak Preview of KU Alumnus Neil LaBute $ _{3} $ new film they're back...! they're back...! welcomes our wonderful alumni for alums come home in April 24 - 27, 2019 The Shape of Things 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 25, 2003 Liberty Hall See our former students perform for open mic night immediately following the film For additional information call The University Theatre, 785/864-3381 Cash bar available at Liberty Hall General admission tickets are on sale through the University Theatre Ticket Office and at the door; for reservations, call 785/864-3982; all seats $10; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. + --- A THUR THURSDAY, APRIL 24. 2003 S NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A The A Student defends Mary Kay mission Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan BETTE B. JOHNSON Preethi Chandrasekharan,Wichita senior,has been selling Mary Kay products for about a year.She said she enjoyed it because she set her own hours and controlled how much money she earned. By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Every face in the crowd and every name in the phonebook has a story behind it. Each week, The University Daily Kansan writer Megan Hickerson tells the story of a randomly selected KU student. Preethi Chandrasekharan helps dispel myths about the Mary Kay Cosmetic company. Faces in the Crowd ZEN ZERO The Wichita senior has been selling Mary Kay products for almost a year. She got involved when she went to a meet- "A lot of women surprisingly don't wash their face," she said. Although Chandrasekharan has yet to drive Mary Kay's trademark car, a pink Cadillac, she just won a cruise for two to the Bahamas from the company. She won the trip for selling products and recruiting her mother. Her mom won the trip as well, but the two won't be together. Chad Ross, Chandrasekharan's boyfriend of one year, has tried out a few Mary Kay products himself. "My mom called and asked when my boyfriend and I are going," she said. "She wanted to know so we don't go at the same time." an Asian Noodle Shop & Thai Restaurant Dumplings, Satays, Salads, Needles Curries & Vegetarian Dishes said. "I'm not really into all that stuff — but it was a learning experience." ing with Jennifer Nobbli, her roommate, who sold Mary Kay at the time. "She did a whole facial thing on me," Ross — Edited by Brandon Gav She sells makeup to classmates and friends and provides clients with skin-care information. "She's very intelligent and doesn't pressure people into doing what they don't want to do," Noblit said. Noblitt, Overland Park senior, said Chandrasekharan's patience was what made her so good at her job. "Lots of people think that Mary Kay is a company where women wear lots of makeup and they can't do anything else besides sell cosmetics," Chandrasekharan said. "That's not the case. The company helps women feel good about themselves." "If you're lazy and don't want to work, you don't have to," she said. "But if you want to make lots of money, you can." Chandrasekharan enjoys her job because she sets her own hours and she is in complete control of how much money she earns. She works six hours a week and nockets $60. Introducing Our Lunch Card... Buy 10 Lunch Entrees & Get 1 FREE! Up to a value of $6.95 Sun,Mon~ 11:00 AM-9:00 PM Tue-Sat~ 11:00 AM-10:00 PM Downtown • 811 Massachusetts • 832-0001 Regents Court Apartments Starting at $855 - $944 Large 3&4 BR,2 full bath apartments for rent with Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Large fully Applianced Kitchen including Microwave & Dishwasher Gas Heat & Hot Water Central Heat & Air Off street parking On KU bus route 24 hr. Emergency maintenance For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 EHO Mon.-Fri. 9-5 Need a magic wand to graduate on time? Well, it may not be magic, but summer school at Wichita State can do some pretty incredible things — like make an entire semester disappear in as little as two weeks. It's not smoke and mirrors, just an easy, convenient way to get in a class or two while you're home between semesters. And as always, credits earned at WSU are easily transferable to KU. So, take summer school at Wichita State, and in the blink of an eye you'll be closer to graduation and still have plenty of time to enjoy summer before heading back to Lawrence. Enrollment is now open so che www.v to get a Need a magic wand to graduate on time? Thinkers, Doers, Movers & Shockers WSU SINCE 1907 ATTENTION KU STUDENTS WIN $1500 AWARD The Senior Class Gift to the University of Kansas for 2003 will be a painting of a memorable KU scene or place. This painting will be selected by contest. The theme is "Jayhawks United" and all entries will be displayed in the Kansas Union gallery this summer. The Senior Class Officers, the Senior Class Advisory Board, and selected members of the faculty and staff will judge the entries and choose one (1) work of art. The winning painting will be framed and permanently hung in the newly renovated Kansas Union with a plaque recognizing the artist. The selected artist will receive a $1500 prize in June 2003. - Contest is open to all currently enrolled KU students. - Entries must be completed in oil or acrylic paint on 24"x30" canvas. - Entries must be submitted by May 12,2003, at 5:00pm to the Office Student Support,213 Strong Hall, with the completed application form. - All entries will hang in the Kansas Union Gallery from May 13,2003 to July 1,2003. - Winner will be notified May 14,2003 This is a wonderful opportunity to express your creativity, show your KU pride, receive exposure, win a prize,and add a meaningful piece to your portfolio. If you are artistic and have a strong love for KU — this contest is for you! For more information, please contact Roarke Gordon, Senior Class President, at 785.550.7363 B B O C O Board of Class Officers --- 10A= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 kansan.com COUNTRY HILL MOTORS INC. since 1894 96 Mitzu Spyder $8950 00 Pontiac Sunfire $3950 97 Sebring Conv. $6950 97 Honda Civic EX $6995 96 Ford Mustang Conv. $5950 95 Honda Civic DX $4850 92 Ford Mustang Conv. $4250 93 Honda Accord SE $4850 1/2 Block East of I-35 on Johnson Drive in KC WWW.COUNTRYHILL.COM 913-645-7968 Ask for Danny and get a student discount! Visit our website for more info on these and other vehicles in stock rickrecht Sunday May 4, 2003 6:30 PM rickrecht Sunday May 4, 2003 6:30 PM Yom Haatzma'ut/ End of the Year BBQ and Concert Lawrence Jewish Community Center 9th and Iowa Presented by KU Hillel BBQ Dinner at 5:30 PM FREE for Students and Kids under 18, $5 for Community For more information call Corey at 749.5397 www.kuhillel.org WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET Sandwiches THE VEGGIE REASON JIMMY JOHN ALWAYS SAYS THE BEST WAY TO EAT A SALAD IS ON A SANDWICH. THAT'S WHY WE PILE OUR SANDWICHES HIGH WITH LOTS OF FRESH VEGGIES THAT WE SLICE RIGHT HERE FOR YOU TO EAT RIGHT NOW. JIMMY JOHN'S Since 1933 SUPPLIES SEAL WORLD'S GREATEST GOVENET SANDWICKS Simon TITLE OF SEAL 1983 WORLD'S GREATEST COUNTRY GREECE WE DELIVER! NOW OPEN 922 MASSACHUSETTS ST. - 841.0011 LAWRENCE JIMMYJOHNS.COM The group has not faced any opposition from the campus community, but Manning said he realized that opposition was still a possibility in the future when more people find out about the organization. Fraternity CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A "Campus really does have a lot of tolerance," Manning said. "Even if people don't want to join they won't come banging down our door." organization had been fortunate and had not had negative backlash at any of the other universities Charlie Grandinetci national executive director of Delta Lambda Phi, said the Manning has been communicating with Delta Lambda Phi in order to have association with a national fraternity. Manning said he was working with them to establish a timeline for the organization but did not want to make a commitment to the national organization until he was sure there was enough interest and initiative from the student body. "It takes more than interest to motivate people," Manning "Campus really does have a lot of tolerance. Even if people don't want to join they won't come banging down our door." Jimmie Manning Lawrence graduate student said. Grandinetci said it usually took about 18 months for a group to receive a charter from the national office, which would make the group an official chapter. There are about 15 men interested in joining, and Manning said he was surprised there was a large interest from incoming freshmen. He said people were becoming aware of their sexual orientation earlier, before they reach college. The group plans to begin having meetings this summer. For more information about Delta Lambda Phi go to www.dlp.org. "Everyone is excited to get everything up and running," Manning said. Edited by Todd Rapp Cruise ship diverted by threat letters The Associated Press HONOLULU — A Hilobound cruise ship was diverted to Honolulu yesterday after two threatening notes were found in a ladies restroom, the FBI said. Royal Caribbean's Legend of the Seas was diverted to waters off Honolulu yesterday afternoon and officials from the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force boarded to investigate. The two anonymous handwritten notes contained vague threats against the ship, its passengers and its crew, said Daniel Dzwilewski, special agent in charge of the FBI's Honolulu office. They were found separately by a passenger and a maintenance staff member sometime late Tuesday while the ship was en route from Ensenada, Mexico. Officials did not release the text of the letters but said they did not specify the potential methods the writer planned to use to carry out the threats. Dzwilewski said it was not certain if both letters appeared to come from the same source, though the handwriting would eventually be analyzed. At a news conference yesterday afternoon, Dzwilewski indicated that passengers had been restricted to an area of the boat perceived to be safe, though he offered no further details. Security sweeps for bombs or other threats were underway yesterday afternoon and officials began questioning the estimated 2,500 passengers and crew members, Dzwilewski said. Officials said they were unsure how long the investigation would take. The Legend of the Seas was anchored about a mile off Sand Island, said Lt. Jacqueline Brunette, a Coast Guard spokeswoman. It was unknown how long the ship would be detained. The diversion from Hilo was a nuisance for some passengers. Michelle Stottlemire, 28. of Topeka, said her sister, Crystal Unruh, was aboard the ship to attend a wedding. The minister was to board in Hilo yesterday to perform the ceremony. "She wasn't panicking but she was taking it seriously," said Stottlemire, whose mother was reached by Unruh by phone yesterday afternoon. Stottlemire said when she inquired about the ship's status to Miami-based Royal Caribbean, an official there "said 'we sporadically place notes on the ships' and that's why the Coast Guard was involved," she said. "She didn't flat out say it but she made it sound like it was under the control of Royal Caribbean." Dzwilewski would not comment on the possibility that the situation was a drill. Missouri school districts face budget cuts The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. Craig Rogers is one of many teachers in Missouri who learned this month he's not guaranteed a job for the coming school year. Faced with the possibility of significant cuts in state education funding, the Independence school district is preparing to cut 121 teaching positions, most through retirements and resignations. But 19 district teachers, including Rogers, got the equivalent of a pink slip. "I guess how I look at this is we have a president who said no child should be left behind, but it's going to be hard with classroom sizes larger and teachers' workloads increased," said Rogers, a social studies teacher at William Chrisman High School. The state Senate passed a budget yesterday that would cut funding for public schools by around $300 million in the next school year. The Senate's Republican majority says the cuts are regrettable but necessary in order to balance the state budget for the fiscal year starting July 1. Gov. Bob Holden has said the cuts could result in the layoff of 5,000 teachers. Independence, like many other school districts, has prepared for the worst case scenario, handing out dozens of the nonrenewal notices with the hopes of hiring some of the teachers back later if the budget situation improves. Districts had until April 15 to tell teachers that their contracts weren't being renewed. The Independence district also has eliminated several central-office jobs in the last year, saving $1 million, and is cutting an assistant middle school principal job. Elsewhere in Missouri, the proposed funding reductions have left districts thinking about cutting everything from transportation to maintenance to custodial jobs. And several districts were reducing the number of days some employees worked, so the district could pay them less. Jim Morris, a state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education spokesman, said districts are dealing with the proposed cuts differently. Some have reserves to fall back on. Others — particularly poorer districts that are more dependent on state funding — are looking at cutting staff. In Kansas City, the school board has discussed cutting $418,980 worth of administrative jobs and $4 million worth of classroom teaching positions. The teaching cuts would come from not filling vacancies, said Jan Toliver, director of accounting and investments for the Kansas City district. In Hickman Mills, the district has proposed cutting about 70 teaching positions through attrition and not renewing the contracts of about 40 first-year teachers. "The hardest part is there is nowhere for these folks to go." said Terry Murphy-Latta, a spokeswoman for the district. "Everyone is in the same boat." In Nixa, the Springfield-area district has hired 20 to 30 new teachers for each of the past five years as its population grows by an average of 200 students each year, said Superintendent Stephen Kleinsmith. He said the district will be able to add only one or two new teachers in the fall, and its likely class sizes will increase as a result. The district also plans to cut several positions, including the jobs of six coaches. Some bus drivers will lose their jobs as the district stops transporting students living "anywhere reasonably" close to their school. Base pay increases will be frozen, and principals won't be paid extra to run summer school programs. In the Hazelwood school district in northern St. Louis County, the district has come up with a budget-reduction plan that would cut at least a dozen teaching positions, a bus mechanic, three security officers and two curriculum coordinators. Gene Oakley, the presiding Carter County commissioner and a retired school superintendent, said the small districts in his area are cutting everything from a high school English teacher to the band and industrial arts programs. The former legislator was part of a group that successfully challenged the state's old education funding formula in court, leading lawmakers to rewrite it in 1993. Walk to Campus Campus Place APARTMENTS 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Apartments Available for Summer 2003 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft 4 bedroom/2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath • Fully Equipped Kitchens • Furnished & Unfurnished Apt. available • Gas, Heat and Water • Private Balconies & Patios • Off Street Parking • 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance • On -site Manager Call or stop in TODAY for private showing Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm EHO 21 to Enter NO COVER! BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL FEATURING The AREAS LARGEST APPETIZER MENU! SERVED TIL CLOSE! Lawrence, KS 1105 Mass. Lawrence, KS COME IN TONIGHT FOR... $2 Pit-cheers while they last! NEW 2 upie Wells 40 Taps with 28 Flavors Flowing. It's like a Kid in a Candy Store! $2 50 JUMBO LONG ISLANDS $2 U-CALL-ITS "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" ( THURSDAY, APRIL 24. 2003 WORLD THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 11A SARS leads China to close schools Serving KU The Associated Press BEIJING - China ordered all public schools in its capital closed yesterday, leaving almost 2 million students to study at home following a major jump in the number of reported SARS cases in the city. The rise in SARS cases in China and Canada led the World Health Organization yesterday to warn against unnecessary travel to parts of China and Toronto, where officials said the advisory was not warranted because the disease is being brought under control. Canada has been the most affected area outside Asia, with 15 deaths so far, all in the Toronto area, but Dr. Sheela Basrur, Toronto's medical officer of health, said the WHO travel warning was a "gross misrepresentation of the facts." The true situation in Toronto, she said, was that the outbreak is "serious and it is contained largely in hospitals which is, frankly, where it belongs. So we don't have widespread community spread." The WHO warning will have "an unnecessary as well as a detrimental impact on our city and we can't afford that," she said. Experts from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention arrived in Toronto to help officials figure out how to stop the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome within hospitals. Ontario Premier Ernie Eves, under pressure to provide some relief to businesses affected by SARS, said such compensation could run into the "tens of billions of dollars. I don't see how any level of government can really get into that." Rick Naylor, head of Accucom, a company that organizes trade shows to Toronto, said the WHO warning will be economically devastating. "The ripple effect is huge because the hotel industry, the restaurant industry, sporting events, everything filters out of that," he said. Major League Baseball also will advise teams visiting Toronto in the coming weeks against signing autographs, visiting hospitals, using public transportation or mingling with large crowds. "These areas now have quite a high magnitude of disease, a great risk of transmission locally outside of the usual health workers and also they've been exporting cases to other countries," Heymann said. Dr. David Heymann, WHO's communicable diseases chief, said the travel warning for Toronto, Beijing and China's Shanxi province will be in effect for at least three weeks. province of Guangdong, where the disease is believed to have originated. The WHO already issued similar warnings about Hong Kong and the southern Chinese An estimated 4,000 people worldwide have been infected by SARS, and about 250 have died, mostly in Asia. The United States has reported 38 probable cases and no deaths. Beijing authorities said yesterday they plan to invoke emergency measures to quarantine people exposed to SARS and restrict access to buildings where there are infections. The statement, released by the local television station, did not provide details on how the new measures will be enforced or where people will be quarantined. The Chinese school closure begins Thursday and lasts for two weeks through the May Day school holiday, said an official of the Beijing Municipal Education Commission who would give her name only as Miss Cui. Orchard Corners Apartments Enjoy the comfort of a small community Now Leasing! We offer: - 2 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - On KU bus route - 4 BR - 2 Bath w/Study - Small pets welcome - 4 BR - 2 Bath - On-site laundry - 4 BR 2 DBA * Furnished & unfurnished apartments - Friendly on-site manager - Private patio or balcony - Sparkling pool Models open daily 749-4226 15th & Kasold Mon.- Fri. 9:00 - 5:00 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Iraqi oil flows again; power restored The Associated Press BAGHDAD, Iraq — Oil from Iraq's southern fields began flowing through pipelines yesterday for the first time since the war, and power at last was restored to parts of Baghdad. In the holy city of Karbala, thousands of Shiite Muslims demonstrated against the United States. An accident took the lives of three Marines near the southern city of Kut. They were trying out a rocket-propelled grenade launcher when it malfunctioned on Tuesday, and seven other Marines were wounded, U.S. Central Command said. southern city of Basra. The southern oil fields had been among the first installations secured when U.S. and British forces launched the ground war March 20. Coalition forces, aided by Iraqi oil workers, yesterday fired up a gas-oil separation plant that sent oil to a pumping station and storage tank outside the "Our focus in restoring the oil is to give the biggest benefit to the Iraqi people," said Brig. Gen. Robert Crear, the top U.S. official charged with getting Iraq's oil production up and running. Many Iraqis have complained bitterly about U.S. forces rushing to secure oil fields and the capital's oil ministry, leaving other ministries, universities, museums, hospitals and businesses to be looted and burned. U.S. officials have acknowledged they were surprised by the rampage, and said troops were too occupied by combat to intervene when they first reached Baghdad. Crear said the southern Rumeila oil field could be producing up to 1.1 million barrels a day in six to 15 weeks. Northern oil fields around Kirkuk remain out of production; when they are reopened, Crear said, Iraq could move toward its prewar production of 2.8 million barrels a day, and provide crucial revenue for reconstruction. The first group of U.N. international staff returned to northern Iraq since the war started when a half-dozen workers crossed the border from Turkey yesterday. They had waited more than a week for clearance to fly in. In the holy cities of Karbala and Najaf, yesterday was the climax of an emotional pilgrimage that has drawn an estimated 1 million Shiites. With Saddam Hussein's regime toppled, it was the first time since the 1970s that Iraq's Shiite majority could participate freely in the march mourning the martyrred grandson of the Prophet Muhammad. Thousands of the pilgrims took part in an anti-American demonstration yesterday. Among the banners were some that read, "No to America, no to Israel, yes to Islam." American investigators were trying to figure out how hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars — possibly genuine, perhaps counterfeit — ended up in Iraq despite economic sanctions in place since 1990. The latest stash — $112 million — was found by Army civil affairs soldiers inside seven dog kennels in a wealthy neighborhood where top regime officials once lived, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday. The Times and the New York Post said four soldiers were under investigation in the alleged theft of about $900,000 of a huge stash of dollars found earlier in the same neighborhood. Some of the cash has been stumbled upon almost by accident, while the intensive nationwide search by U.S. teams for banned weapons of mass destruction has yet to turn up conclusive evidence of chemical or biological weapons. HELP SAVE LIVES and EARN $25* TODAY! --- ZLB Donate your blood plasma. Help burn, trauma and shock victims, surgery patients & more. 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WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. 1520 wescoe services available: - copies - printing from disk or electronic file - full color printing - large format print - uv lamination of large format prints - thesis and dissertation printing - binding services - large selection of papers 864-3354 open 7am-10pm FORALLYOUR PRINTING AND BINDING NEEDS please stop by or call us for more information about our services --- 12A= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS THURSDAY,APRIL 24,2003 PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS PUNIT IT FORENS SPORTS 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Skyh Feature Film Series 4/24/03 4/25/03 7:00 8:00 WOODLIGHT DUST TO GLUE FREE WESTERN LIGHT 12 NO WEEKDAY THE LAWS OF THE RINGS Summit House Apartments Now taking applications for Fall 2003 • $475-490 • 1 BR & 1 BR Loft Apartment Available • Water and trash paid • Walking distance to Campus • Laundry facilities on site • Private off street parking • 24 hr. 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Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m kansan com SUMMER STORAGE FREE FREE BOXES DELIVERY FREE TAPE PICK-UP FREE SAVE $25 when you reserve your store space by May 2nd Store Anything: Furniture, Futons, Bikes, computers, etc. Basic Package is $135 for the entire summer! ups WE CAN PACK AND SHIP ANYTHING RIGHT FROM YOUR DORM OR RESIDENCE AT UPS COUNTER RATES! 865-0004 The UPS Store Formerly Mail Boxes Etc. COSMAL WELCOME OPPORTUNITY --- the bouncer didn't think so... everyone says you look just like your older sister loaning an ID and possessing a false ID is punishable by law Legal Services for Students 148 Burge + 864.5665 Jo Hardesty, Director STUDENT THE GOVEN SCHOOL OF KANSAS SENATE LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID Sunday - must be 21 to enter 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE Softball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A Kansas added to its lead in the fifth when Torres scored from first after Wallach got her second double, this one bouncing off the left center field wall. Milhoan — the team's lone full-time pitcher after Kara Pierce hurt her shoulder against Texas last weekend — said she was pleased by how quickly she was able to get strikes. In contrast to Kansas, the University of Missouri-Kansas City (13-28) managed only three hits as senior pitcher Kirsten Milhoan shut out the Kangarooos for the victory, bringing her record to 9-8 on the year. Destiny Frankenstein and junior right fielder Sylvia Pfeiffer. "When I was struggling I wasn't getting ahead in the count," Milhoan said. She said the last few games had been rough, but her team had stuck by her through it all. "I've had a lot of support from my teammates," she said. "Our team has told me they're behind me." She added that Pierce's condition has been improving, but no one knows when the junior will step back on the field. Next up for Kansas is a home game tomorrow against Nebraska at 5 p.m. Last time the teams played in Lincoln on April 10, the Cornhuskers thrashed Kansas 8-0 as Nebraska's Peaches James threw a no-hitter. "Nebraska's always tough but we think we still have played the best that we're capable of," Milhoan said. "We think we're going to give them a good game." - Edited by Melissa Hermreck Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A backer; senior Adrian Jones, offensive tackle; and junior Travis Watkins, defensive tackle. Newcomers Lionel Anderson, tight end and Joe Vaughn, center, both played well and surprised Mangino with their effort level. Mangino said Kemp had an outstanding spring and was challenging incumbent sophomore Clark Green for the starting running back position. Floodman, Jones and Watkins were all named captains for the 2003 season. "I told the rest of the coaching staff that if the rest of our recruits come in this fall with that same sort of attitude, we'd really have something," Mangino said. Vaughn won the starting center position through the spring, Mangino said. Mangino said although he was happy with the team he put on the field during the spring, he looked forward to the talent the new recruits will bring when they join the team in the summer. Most of the recruits will come to campus this summer to work out and practice two times per day. Several of them could get good, long looks at starting positions. Twice-daily practices will begin in mid-to-late summer. Starting lineups will be formed then. Malashock CONTINUED FROM PAGE 16A Edited by Todd Rapp How many people climb the job ladder in this country? Wait, let's rephrase that. How many people in this country wouldn't climb the job ladder? Not many. In some regard, the system, the NCAA, must take blame for the ongoing coaching carousel around the nation. The NCAA has turned into a dollars and cents entity, not an association hell-bent on graduating student-athletes, as it would like you to believe. There is no cap on coaching salaries. No limit for institutions searching to lure away coaching talent. Television revenues have transformed the sport, at least at the Division I level, into a semiprofessional entertainment extravaganza. Marquette coach Tom Crean, who was a top candidate to replace Self, re-injected a dose of faith into people who hoped coaches would follow their values at all costs. But even Crean's move is up for inspection. He stayed at Marquette, but only after the university matched the kind of dough he'd be making if he had left the Golden Eagles for Illinois. Bottom line, as long as the NCAA treats major college basketball as a money-making cash cow, as long as coaching salaries elevate to ridiculous amounts, coaches will continue to hop from one university to the next. Which also means that recruits' fathers like Pete Padgett will keep hearing false promises, like the one Williams issued about being in Lawrence all four years for Pete's son David. But it's hard and surely not fair to point the finger at coaches like Williams and Self. They did care, and still do, for their ex-players. They just took better jobs, just like you and I would. Malashock is an Omaha senior in journalism. $150U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... You get the idea-- EVERYTHING! THURSDAYS $200 VODKA RED BULL MIXERS! LIVE MUSIC April 18th ALL WEEKEND $200 DOMESTIC TAPS $250 Jumbo Long Islands! $1 Shots of Pucker or DR! PYRAMID at the walk-up window! HOT, FRESH PIZZA BY THE SLICE!! Distance every to Empty Saturday! DJ MARLON MARSHALL & friends open 7pm M-Sat 21 to enter Please Drink Responsibly, After 9pm, Sodas are Free! FATS'S LAWRENCE'S 1016 Mass. The Yellow A play based on the true story of a young wo The Yellow Dress A play based on the true story of a young woman's relationship that begins as love and ends in tragedy. Come see the The Yellow Dress and do your part to help prevent relationship violence and sexual assault. Alderson Auditorium, KS Union Friday, April 25th 7:00 pm (will be followed by panel discussion on sexual and domestic violence) Presented by: Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and Women's Transitional Care Services, Rape Victim Survivor Services, The KU Theatre Department, KU Student Senate, Man Can Stop Rape, and Deana's Fund STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF SENATE A 3 THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 ENTERTAINMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 13A WEATHER TODAY 64 49 thunderstorms TOMORROW 66 49 rain SATURDAY 69 58 partly cloudy —WWW.WEATHER.COM DOCK BOYS by Scott Drummond, for The University Daily Kansas THIS CLASS IS SO BORING. ILL REST MY EYES FOR JUST A SECOND... DOCK BOYS by Scott Drummond, for The University Daily Kansas THIS CLASS IS SO BORING, I'LL REST MY SYSS FOR JUST A SECOND... AW, HELL. HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 24) You could actually get paid this year for establishing a structure and sticking to it. Luckily, you're good at this. Unfortunately, it's a structure somebody else wants. Fortunately, the pay is steady. Unfortunately, the pay isn't abundant yet. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. Keep most of what you know to yourself, especially where money is concerned. Don't discuss a project that's still under construction! Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 6. Your contribution may be acknowledged with a financial reward. Just accept any compliments or gratuities you get. You've earned them. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 7. Hassles you encounter as you make your plans don't have to stop you cold. They're just testing your self-discipline and resolve. You can get past them. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 10. The going is slow and sometimes tedious, but that's how it needs to be. The more problems you solve on paper now, the more smoothly your plan will evolve. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 6. When the direct approach isn't working, try moving toward your goal at an angle. Don't try to do the whole job by yourself. Appreciate assistance. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 7. You may feel as if you're slogging through mud, and you may wonder if progress is being made. It is, along with a good impression on someone who's watching your efforts. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is an 8. When there's a will, there's a way, they say, but you may wonder if this project is really worth the trouble. Keep at it, and eventually you'll get through the mess. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 5. Others may think you're an obstruc- tionist,but you just want to be sure. It's good that you make them all recheck their work. They'll all be more confident, too. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is an 8. It may seem that what you're doing now is interfering with your future, but it's not. You're building a stairway, one step at a time, to your dreams. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. Neither a borrower nor a lender be. If you really need a little more cash, take on an extra job. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is an 8. You don't have to tell everybody what it is you have in mind. But do listen to their comments so that you can fine-tune your plan. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 6. Progress has been slowed temporarily. Take time to go over your notes. Something you thought would work out, won't. And something you thought wouldn't, will. Crossword ACROSS 1 Guisewite's comic strip 6 Anti-alcohol org. 10 Ground grain 14 Eagle's abode 15 Elvis' middle name 16 Shaft between wheels 17 Snares 18 Chamber 19 Eur. defense assn. 20 Father's boy 21 Nursery rhyme character 24 Leveling wedges 26 Now I get it! 27 Long-haired cat 29 Extinct reptile 34 Actor Calhoun 35 Manufacture 37 Young women's grp. 38 Button on an iron 40 Director Lee 41 Spectacle 43 CIA, once 44 Singer Krauss 47 On the house 48 Rocket top 50 Puts forward 52 Charlton Heston's org. 53 Deuce toppers 54 Bakery buy 59 Hot tub 62 Jason's ship 63 Cupid 64 Vidalia veggie 66 Actor Newman 67 Mob violence 68 Enthused wildly 69 Huskies' pull 70 Tennis units 71 Fences the loot, e.g. DOWN 1 Webber play 2 Dynamic introduction? 3 Violate the rules 4 Groovy 5 Subordinate's response 6 Rebeats 04/24/03 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | 20 | | | | 21 22 | | | | | 23 | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| 27 28 | | 24 25 | | | | | 29 30 | | | 31 32 33 | 34 | | | | | 35 36 | | | | 37 | | | 38 | | | | 39 | 40 | | | 41 42 | | | | 43 | | | 44 45 | | | 46 | 47 | | | | 48 | | | 49 | | | 50 51 | | | | | |---|---|---| 52 | | | 53 | | | | | | 54 55 58 | | | | 57 58 | | | | 59 60 61 | 62 | | | | 63 | | | 64 65 | | | | 66 | | | | 67 | | | 68 | | | | 69 | | | | 70 | | | 71 | | | | $ \textcircled{c} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. gathering 8 Implement 9 Not deliberate 10 Crazes 11 Midterm 12 Choir member 13 Trotsky or Redbone 22 Colorful Apple 23 Imelda's collection 25 Georgetown hoopster 27 Firey felony 28 Untrue 29 Slow-witted 30 "Othello" villain 31 Belligerent 32 Member of the wedding party 33 Proportions 34 Downpour 34 Prefix meaning large 32 Chancy 45 Gooi-offs 46 Dunn of "SNL" 49 Wrap around Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. P O S E R R D E B T C H E F A L I V E O K R A H O M E I D L E S Z E A L E R I E N E O N A T E S E V E N T S E N S I L E D S N I P N E D A T T E S T E D F A N G S P L I E S A V E E X E S G R A N D O P E N A L E P R O N G S P E N T R E D H E A D S I T T E N D S S T R I D E S R A M A D A S T O I C I S M A L I T T E A R P I E T A M O L E E A S E E A G E R P E E R D R E W S N O R T 51 Rakish hat 53 Experiments 54 Swimmer's regimen 55 Spoken 56 Chills and fever 57 Soft, French cheese 58 Square or cube follower 60 Yeats or Keats 61 Common conjunctions 65 Collar windshield wiper fluid? transmission? spark plug? alternator? starter? we do it all! A-1 Automotive high tech repair with old fashioned service. 802 Lynn St. 842-0865 need help? Serving Serving KU START YOUR MASS STREET EVENING AT MASS. STREET DELI INC. DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT TUESDAY-PIZZA & PITCHER NIGHT 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 -Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT ET DELI INC. - Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce - Cocktail Appetizer platter - Platter of 20 mags or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 -$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis -$2.00 Wells 1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 Fat Tire pints for $2.00 0 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 As an engineer in the U.S. Air Force, there's no telling what you'll work on. (Seriously, we can't tell you.) United States Air Force applied technology is years ahead of what you'll touch in the private sector, and as a new engineer you'll likely be involved at the ground level of new and sometimes classified developments. You'll begin leading and managing within this highly respected group from day one. Find out what's waiting behind the scenes for you in the Air Force today. To request more information, call 1-800-423-USAF or log on to airforce.com. U.S. AIR FORCE CROSS INTO THE BLUE U.S.A.F. A 14A= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 PLAY IT RIGHT SPORTS We Buy, Sell & Trade USED & NEW Sports Equipment 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts DIESEL Diesel Individuals Erogenous Zone Chart 24% lips 15% moustache 13% appetite 10% wind 8% legs 22% rear end 17% behind the ears YOU'LL FIND IT AT hobbs 700 MASS Try the Iced Snow Tiger! "Double strong, double rich." La Prima Tazza Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! Aurea Tartan 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE I am tired of hearing about "my new Self" and how "I love my Self." No one thinks it's funny when you say, "I'm going to hit my Self." Free for All Here I am, 35 minutes from Kansas City. My Royals are 14-3 and I get no games on television. Sunflower Broadband is crap. I'm all for freedom of the press and whatnot, but I'm going to have to say that the Bill Self puns are going to have to come to an end. I propose a ban in the UDK on all Self puns. I'm a student at the University of Illinois who transferred from KU last year, and all I have to say is, Buck Fill. - - Bill Self, if only you were single. Right now I'm high on life, and it's not because Bill Self is the new men's basketball coach. It's because the entire campus smells like weed. 图 Bill Self was a candidate for the Missouri job when Norm Stewart retired, but he withdrew his name from consideration, and now they have Quin Snyder. Ha ha. How successful will Bill POLL QUESTION kansan.com Self be in his first season at Kansas? The Jayhawks will struggle in his first year. He will have a winning record. ■ He will take Kansas to the Elite Eight. He will win the championship. He will lead the Jayhawks to a Big 12 Conference title. - Kansas will see another Final Four berth. FOOTBALL Crouch won the 2001 Heisman Packers to give Crouch quarterback opportunity GREEN BAY, Wis. — The Green Bay Packers claimed Eric Crouch off waivers from the St. Louis Rams and said yesterday they planned to give him a shot at quarterback. Trophy as a quarterback at Nebraska, but he sat out of football last season after the Rams drafted him in the third round and tried to convert him into a wide receiver. Crouch forfeited his signing bonus after training camp last year, saying he'd rather retire if he couldn't be an NFL quarterback. He remains on the reserve/retired list. Crouch is one of three players in NCAA Division I history to rush for more than 3,000 yards and throw for more than 4,000 yards in his career. The Associated Press SATURDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Hogland Ballpark Rowing at the University of Cincinnati, all day, Cincinnati Softball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Jayhawk Field. TOMORROW SUNDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Softball vs. Nebraska, 5 p.m., Jayhawk Field Kansan Classified Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m. Hogland Ballpark Softball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., Jayhawk Field Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships all day, Kansas City, Mo. 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Business Personals 115 On Campus 120 Announcements 125 Travel 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness 205 Help Wanted 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 310 Computers 315 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 400s Real Estate 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 440 Sublease 500s Services 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services Classified Policy The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 or disability. Further, the Kansas will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Y 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements Do you speak English as a second language? Learn the secrets of getting a job in the United States! Attend a 90 minute seminar on April 26 or April 29. Topics: Applications, resumes, interviews. Cost: $20.00, 105 page handbook included. Call 841-0701 to register. itation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. F Marks JEWELERS Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksinc@swbell.net life SUPPORT HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 705/841-2345 life SUPPORT HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 785/841-2345 www.hqcc.lawrence.ks.us 130 - Entertainment 130 - Entertainment Men and Women Dance lessons; ballroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-2227 Celebrate your graduation with Jacks! Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limi- 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait arm and kitchen. Apply in person 5-5 Mon-Sat 811 New Hampshire. 1800 E. 23rd St. In the 10 Marketplace Exotic dancers, immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. The Parks and Recreation dept is looking for adult league, summer softball umpires. Job offers excellent pay & flexible schedules starting May thru Oct. Must be 18 yrs of age w/ exp in the sport. Training provided & required. Anyone interested must attend orientation: City of Lawrence For questions contact Adult Sports Office 832-7922. EOE M/F/D Saturday, May 3 at 10:00am Community Building 115 W1 1st Street --- 1 130 - Entertainment Make your reservation or catering arrangements Now! 832-2030 JACKS JACKS 205 - Help Wanted Associate Director of Adult Education --- Send letter of application, current vita, copies of postsecondary education transcripts, and contact information (names, titles, e-mail addresses, business addresses, and business telephone numbers) of three references. Confidentiality of all applicant materials will be maintained. References will be contacted only after obtaining permission from the candidate. TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS. HAVE FUN MAKE $ $ Openings in: ALL TEAM & INDIVIDUAL SPORTS, ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS: Camp/Hike, Roes/Rock- Climbing, Ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Secre- taries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE BOOM/BOAR/LAUNDRY, Travel allowance ONLINE APPLICATION! All materials should be sent to the Human Resources Office of the Kansas Board of Regents, preferably as a MS Word attachment to 561H@kspbr.org or otherwise in hard copy to 1000 SW Jackson Street, Suite 520, Topeka, Kansas 66512-1386. Review of applications will begin April 29, 2003 and continue until the position is filled. The Kansas Board of Regents is an equal opportunity /affirmative action employer. The Kansas Board of Regents seeks an Associate Director of Adult Education to provide technical assistance with the Adult Education data collection system and to serve as the State Administrator of Kansas GED Testing. Minimum requirements include a graduate degree and at least three years of full-time professional experience in teaching or administration, experience in data systems development and administration, and fluency with major statistical packages. CLIENT APPELLATION www.campbobbossee.com or call:(800) 473-6104 Average Rep makes $12-15/hr. Up to $1 Raise and full Medical & Dental Ins. after 90 days. JOIN OUR TEAM! Hours Monday-Friday 4-9pm. Please call & ask for An or Ann fax resume to 785-542-5611. AMERIPURE WATER COMPANY 785-542- 5600. Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com 205 - Help Wanted --- 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcamps jobs.com. BASS PLAYER BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3965 ext. 531. OFFICE HELP NEEDED OPERATE NEEDS Part-time office help needed (approx. 20 hours per week, Monday-Friday, 1 P.M - 5 P.M); Duties include answering phones, filing, data entry & customer service. Strong computer skills required. Resume to Alvamar, PO Box 3467, Lawrence, KS 60640; TACO Trace, EOY. BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours great pay Call 800-806-0026 ext 1422 Private Female Ballet Instructor Needed. To teach ballet major fundamental ballet for summer. May contact Amanda Zehr at 785-842-6325 or you may email at ballet@ku.edu, preferred method of contact is phone. Please leave message. Willing to pay $30.00. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, e-mail us. Apply online at www.pilgrimpage.com/intern.htm SUMMER INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. SUMMER WORK $500-800/wk to start STUDENTS WELCOME Adv/Mktg co. seeks entry level, mid & upper level mgmt candidates. Int'l firm, sports and charitable organizations, tuition bonuses and paid training avail. Call Denise (913) 396-0056 Do you want to have a full time job for the summer? Do you like kids? Wanted: responsible, dependable, caring student to play with & entertain 3 yr & 10 yr old. M-F: 7:30-5:30. Need own transportation. 841-3533, leave a message or call after 5:30. 205 - Help Wanted Nanny for 3 girls ages 8-12 for summer. Monday, Tuesday, & Thursday approx. 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Send resume to Brent Conrad, 1019 Mass. Lawrence 66044 MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277 ex.1020 Spring Break was awesome! STS Arica's #1 Student Tour Operator is now hiring on-campus reps for 2003-4 1-800-648-4849 www.stsavtravel.com kansan.com FedEx Ground After-Class workout. First-Class pay. Apply at: 3211 Clinton Parkway Ct. Ste. 4 Lawrence, KS 66047 785-843-3200 - Weekly paycheck - Tuition Assistance - $2.25 raise every 90 days for a year - $100 new hire bonus - 3-5 hour shifts 5 days a week - $ 10-11/hr starting pay - Need ability to load, unload,and sort packages. - paid vacations and holidays 205 - Help Wanted Summer to remember in woods of Maine. Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6/18-8/15. Visit www.campandro.com or call collect 914-835-5800. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary. Students welcomed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277-9787. www.colleggro.com EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER Heart of America Photography is seeking 12-14 full/part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season - April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment! Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7100 or drop by 2449 Iowa. Ste J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGee's EOE. X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale S 1988 Toyota Camry, only 100,000 miles runs great, new CD player and stereo $1200 call Lela at 749-1256 Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $353/month. Call 841-1074 Cars from $500. Police Impound! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3232 ext. 4565. For Sale. 4 adjoining seats to Bill Copay May 31st, Starlight Theatre $60 each min. Will sell together of separate. Contact Jeff at 865-157 or 579-3509. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. 1 THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 CLASSIFIED THEUNIVERSITYDAILY KANSAN 15A 305 - For Sale S Spring rumage sale. First Presbyterian Church 2415 Clinton Pkwy, Fri. 8am-6pm, Sat. 8am-12pm. Bag sale, Sat 11am- Clothing, toys, books, puzzles, games, household goods, linens, and much more. 340 - Auto Sales 1990 Range Rover Clean interior. Good exterior, runs great, root rack sunroof, grill guard. 169K. David B18-221-6982. - - - - - Home 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870. 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-409-001. Great location 1801 Mississippi 3 BR apt in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets $610/mo. Avail. Aug. 182-4242 1, 2 & 3 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, high ceilings, $425-525, 841-3633. 3 BR apts 1/2 BA, PK skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up V nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Cab: 755-784-9807 Regency Place, 2 BR available now. Walking distance to campus, 1301 Louisiana Water paid, no pets $690/mo. 841-848-848 Town home 3-bedroom, 2 bath, WD, fireplace, kitchen appl. garage/opener, no pets. Sublease 6-1/7-31 $50,766-5080. Avail. Aug. Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR. 15' BA. DW. DA. CAL. bawthy 9 & Emery. No smoking/pets. $590 + utiles. Cal. 550-811 or 841-3192. Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU, Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking Call 749-2919. MASTERCRAFT WALKTOCAMPUS Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Designed with you in mind Campus Place 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Regents Court Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 19th & Mass·749-0445 Tanglewood 0th & Arkansas*749-2415 Sundance 7th & Florida841-5255 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - 9am-5pm NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Equal Housing Opportunity 405 - Apartments for Rent Excellent location. 1341. Ohio/1104 Tennesse .2 BR in 4-plex. C/A, D/W WD hook- ups. $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1. No pets. Bath 842-4242. 1 BR. apt, FP. skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive Call 785-748-9807 1,2,3. & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus tele, laundry facility, BA48-001-91 Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. **Features include:** Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 124th between Naismith & Ousdahl On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841-5533 340-Auto Sales PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Models Open Daily 8423280 www.firstmanagementinc.com 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firmanagementinc.com NOW LEASING - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - On KU Bus Route - Small B Welcome Ask About Our Specials! CHASE COURT 843-8220 www.firstmanagementinc.com HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 ·1,2,3,Bedroom - 1,2,3,Bedroom - Washer/Dryer - Fireplace - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Basketball Court - Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 [www.firstmanagementinc.com] 405 - Apartments for Rent 1,2,&3 6th & Iowa FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 thefoxrun.com Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. Bedroom Apartments *6 mo. leases avail. *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *No leases avail 2B apartments, CA, off street parking, 1737 & 41 Tennessee. $500/month. 913-441-4168. manoease properties@aol.com Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample laundry, on-site laundry. Call 843-4090. 1.3 bedroom apartments 1 block to KU. Available August 1st 841-6254 THE LEGENDS L Euro 2005 NOW LEASING May 2003 ALL INCLUDE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES WASHER AND DEPOSITS IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPPED SUPPLY CENTER FULLY FURNISHED 2,3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY GARAGES & CARPORTS / CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGE GAME ROOM | COMPUTER & CRAFT ROW SUFLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET OPEN HOUSE (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING Saturday, April 26th 12:00 pm to 3:00 pm - 1,2,3 Bedroom - Upgraded Carpet 1, 2, 3 Bedroom Luxury Apartments & Ceramic Tile - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center Canyon Court • 700 Comet Lane • 842-3280 Canyon Court 340 - Auto Sales VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Stone on 8th St.) Bedroom Townhomes - Garages; w/d Hookups - Darages; WO hookups · Microwave Ovens · Some with Fireplaces · On KI U Bus Route - Tennis Courts - 841-8400 or 841-1287 - Swimming Pool * * Tennis Courts * 10-12 & 1-5 - On KU Bus Route OPEN: • Swimming Pool MON- FRI VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Now Leasing For Fall 2003 close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net 405 - Apartments for Rent Now Leasing! 405 - Apartments for Rent Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. Washer/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788 CLOSE TO CAMPUS, 3 BR, 3 BA town-houses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in-closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas. 843-4090. Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road, 1 BR : $450; 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. 3 & 4 BR townhouses @ 1125 Tennessee. W/D, CA, DW, off street parking. $875 & $1150 / month. Call 913-441-4169 or masonproperties@aol.com Apartment & Town Home Blue Mesa Management, Inc. Save Your Money! - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Now signing 1 YR, leases starting May/July, June/Jugly. No smoking pets. Extra nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appliances, low utilities, A/C; bus route & more $405/month. Spanish Great Crest Apts 841-6668. Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes Now Leasing for Fall 93 Hondo Accord SE $4850 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675/$695 • Washer & Dryer • Fully Equipped Kitchen • Serving Bar Blue Mosaic Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment 1&2Bedrooms COLONY WOODS - OnKU Bus Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool *Leaving for Summer & Fall* M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Need a place to live next year? Exercise Room 3HotTubs LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - approx. 1600 sq feet - full size washer/dryer Williams Pointe Townhomes - car ports - 3 bedroom/2.5 bath Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 Lorimar Townhomes 1,2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes - 1421 sq feet MUNICIPAL HIGH SCHOOL 95, Hondo Civic DX S4850 - full size washer/ dryer - paid cable (ext. basic) *Wather/Dryers* *Dishwashers* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Fireplaces* *Celline Fans* 405 - Apartments for Rent 97 Sebring Conv $6950 **SPRING** 97 Wondo Civic EX $6995 **STUDENT** 1/2 Block East of 1-35 on Johnson Drive in KC: WWW.COUNTRYHILL.COM 913-645-7966 Ask for Danny and get a student discount carry help up special 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 96 Ford Mustang Conv. $5950 STORE SALE 00 Pontiac Sunfire S3950 get about our bit duplex! Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes 92 Ford Mustang Conv. $4250 405 - Apartments for Rent - Dishwasher * Microwave * Patios * Gas Flaces * Ceiling Eggs - Patios - Gas Fireplaces - Ceiling Fans 4100 Clinton Parkway Great 3BR's For More Info: 785-841-7849 BEST WAY TO SEE THE SHOWROOM Avail, Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR 48t, DW, CA, micro, onboard, on site, 384 B2 BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 814-553-3288 www apartmentsainlawrence.com 1712OHIO Avail, May, June, or Aug. Very nice remodeled studio and 1 bedroom apts. close to campus. No pets/m smoking. Starting at $360.Call 550-8111 or 841-3192. Nearly new 3BR triplexes in 3 great locations avail. Aug 1. Have all amenities. $935-1050, NO PETS; 841-5533. 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1,2,3 Bedrooms Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes W/D,all appliances Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790.0% savings on select units with new 12 month lease. OPEN HOUSE 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 Some with fireplaces and Garages NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 2 PDP $750 98 Mitzu Spyder $8950 HOLIDAY APARTMENTS 1 BDR $400 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 785-843-001/1178-423-4005 MON-FRI 9-6 LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME NICE, QUET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT Tuckaway Tuckaway at Briarwood 4241 Briarwood Dr 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street Washer/Dryer Alarm System HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Bring... on campus! 10th & Missouri Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Fully Equipped Kitchen Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Briarwood pool, fitness Tuckaway has two pools hot tubs,basketball court fitness center and gated entrance call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com 415 - Homes For Rent כי נחשב את האופרטורים שלנו. Very nice room, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $25 a person. Call Eil at 814-4470. --- **Moving to KC?** New a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24/hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbeatable at 105k. Call 913-522-5360. Realty Exec. 2 and 3 bedroom houses for rent. Have CA. Available August 1. No pets. No smoking. $725-825/month. 913-341-0952. House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath. CAWD In- cluded. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/mo. 218-413 BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent at August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit. 749-720 or 766-6622 between 6:30-10 p.m. 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Eldridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained, 2-car garage, dishwasher, W/DC, A1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/mo. Call 842-13610 a.m. - 6 p.m.or 842-3556. 420-Real Estate For Sale 430 - Roommate Wanted 4 BR, 3 BA, 3000 sf of luxury, jaccuzi, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, rec room, deck w/ view, two car garage, fenced landscaped back yard $1450.841-3633 anytime. Agricultural Research Station 4th Roommate wanted. Huge House near campus. Starting Aug. 1st. rent $330 + 1/4 utilities. Catch up to 2 keys Avail, June 1, lovely house 3 biks, from KU. Need 2 female roommates, approx. 300/mo, each. No Pets. No Smoking. Call 841-3736. Female Graduate Student seeking non- smoking roommate to share quiet 2 BR 1 BA apt. Starting Aug. 1st. $260/mo. plus utilities. Call 765-6634 Female Roommate Needed For 3 BR, 1 BA house N/S. No Pets Close to Campus $275/mo + 1/3 utils. Avail. Aug 1. Call 911-53813721 after 6. Grad student seeks female roommate. Oown BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, WID and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2 ull. Avail Aug. 842-4540. 440 - Sublease Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 843-5540. key house 1 bedroom apartment, 16th & Tennessee. No smoking, no pets. Summer sublease. Rent negotiable. Call Kristin at 393-1549 1 bedroom at 527 California, Washer/dryer. Nice neighborhood. Call 841-534 for information. 1 BR in 4 BR apartment. Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool. $370/mo. Leave message 785-691-904 1 master bedroom and private bathroom of large townhouse. Possibility to take on lease at end of summer. $300/month negotiable. Available now. Call 393-0511. 2 people needed to sublease 2 BR 2 BA apartment. Avail, June & July, W/D and cable incl. Close to campus. $350/mo/per. person. 1011 Mission, Call 785-749-5289. 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage, W/D, CA, avail. mid-May $870/mo. Adam 830-8076. 3 BR, 2 BA house avail. end of May W/D. A/C, near campus, all kitchen appl., 2-car garage, water paid. Pet allowed. 749-926. 40 MBA students need summer subleases for July. If interested e-mail italy03@ku.edu. Avail. June 1, 4 BR, 2 BA, WID, dishwasher. Newly carpeted and $240/mo per person + visit Call 842-1118. Avail, June 1, 2 BR, 1 BA, WD, DW, 6th & Florida $540/mo. Water & trash paid. Rentmove in date neg. Gap 834-0946 Need subleaser to live w/ 3 guys in 4 BD 4 BA at Jefferson Commons 2 mo. rent paid Call 785-830-8003. --- 500s Services 510- Child Care --- Kindergarten Tour Montessori learning centers plus; broad c curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acre 842-2233. tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 16A THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY Ryan Malashock rmalashock@kansan.com Don't blame coaches who follow dream Roy Williams and Bill Self are great people. Great college basketball coaches. One is a legend, a locked hall-of-famer. The other is a budding star, a success story in three previous coaching ventures. Both men truly care about their players; they honestly vow to make a lasting impact on their student-athletes. Yet, both guys have been absolutely martyred by everyone from the media to the "Benedict Williams" shirt-wearing Kansas students to the "He only cares about himSelf" shirt-donning Illinois faithful. Their complaints weren't preposterous. How could these guys turn their backs on their players? How could they go back on their living-room promises? How could they be so greedy, chasing dollar signs instead of representing integrity? OK, those are valid queries, but how about this question: How could they turn the jobs down? Let's see. Williams got to go home to the state he has spent all but 15 years of his life. His pockets got fatter. His family got happier. He got better golf courses to play. He got his dream job. As for Self, he also got his dream job. His pockets also got fatter. He got to move from a top 20 school with minimal basketball tradition to one of the five most prestigious jobs in college basketball. Both coaches bettered every part of their lives, financially and personally. Yet, they're villains, according to their previous school's fans. They're traitors. They have no integrity. They ran out in the middle of the night. In Williams' case, fans here couldn't cope with the fact that Williams simply loved North Carolina more. In Self's case, fans felt betrayed. Self promised a vision for the future and bolted right when the Illini were ready for a breakout year. But, please, can we detach ourselves from the crazed fanaticism, people? They moved jobs. It's that simple. They saw more enticing opportunities in different situations. They can't be blamed for that. SEE MALASHOCK ON PAGE 12A Softball team members cover the infield when the game between the Jayhawks and the University of Missouri-Kansas City Kangaroos is rained out. The weather ended the game at five innings, and the Jayhawks were awarded the victory over the Kangaroos yesterday at the softball field. Brandon Baker/Kansan Softball team gets victory 'Hawks shine, beat'Roos despite weather cancellation By Steve Schmidt By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter After watching the Kansas softball team in the first two innings of yesterday's game against the University of Missouri-Kansas City, it was hard to tell that the team had been struggling as of late. The Jayhawks finally woke up at the plate and hammered nine hits, leading to a 6-0 victory over the Kangaroos. The game lasted only five innings as inclement weather and threats of lightning forced officials to call the game short and cancel the second game of the would-be doubleheader. After checking the weather early in the day, Kansas coach Tracy Bunge was wondering whether any softball would be played. "It would have been nice to get the second game in, but I was glad that we could give five innings," Bunge said. Before the lightning and thunder KANSAS 6 - UMKC 0 KANSAS Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 - R H E UMKC 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 8 3 1 Kansas 2 3 0 0 1 0 - 8 3 0 KANSAS 6 - UMKC 0 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 - R H E UMKC 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 8 3 1 Kansas 2 3 0 0 1 0 - 6 9 0 Pitches: Kansas - Kraton Milhoan (6) UMKC - Karur Tandrian (1/3), Lindsey Davis (4) Win - Milhoan (9-8) Save - None Loss - Thurman (3-5) came in the top of the sixth, the Jayhawks (24-20) displayed their skill as the team scored 5 runs off seven hits in the first two innings. With freshman catcher Melaney Torres on second, and freshman second baseman Jessica Moppin on first, junior centerfielder Mel Wallach got things going with a base-clearing double as Kansas took a 2-0 lead. The 'Hawks put up three more runs off four more hits in the second, highlighted with doubles by freshman shortstop SEE SOFTBALL ON PAGE 12A Football team brings stronger work ethic to field By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Kansas football coach Mark Mangino said he was pleased with the team's progression through the spring in his postspring Big 12 Conference teleconference yesterday. "We've had a very productive spring," Mangino said, "We are a bigger, stronger and faster football team than we were last year." Mangino said the team showed vast improvement from where it was last year. Mangino said a reason for the marked improvement this year was that the coaches did not have to teach effort. Last season, his first at Kansas, Mangino sometimes had to deal with complaints of disgruntled players. This year, he said, the work ethic was "tremendous," and he didn't have a single complaint that he heard of. One of the stars of spring football was quarterback Bill Whittemore, Mangino said. "We feel very confident with Bill Whittermore as our starting quarterback," Mangino said. "He had a great spring, moved around really well, and showed a stronger arm." Whittemore said he was happy with the development of the wide receivers during the last season and the spring. "They're all young guys," Whittemore said. "Going through a year of the Big 12, you learn a lot. They're going to step it up this year — I feel like they will." Some other standout players were freshman Jerome Kemp, running back; sophomore Banks Floodman, line SEE FOOTBALL ON PAGE 12A The award-winning advertising staff of The University Daily Kansan is looking for self-motivated forward thinking students to apply for positions in sales and creative departments. Pick up your application today in Room 119 in Stauffer Flint Hall. Applications are due April 24, 2003. JOIN OUR TEAM I joined the Kansan advertising staff to get more involved in their life and know it would change my career path. Chrissie Kapling !!! At last, great financial news for all you business majors. A career-building job in Kansas City with an international financial services firm and outstanding benefits could be yours. Whether you're pre- or post-grad, State Street, a world leader in financial services, has full- or part-time job openings at its Kansas City office, right now. Join your future – today! STATE STREET. For Everything You Invest In Apply online. statestreetkc.com ©2003 State Street Corporation EDE/AA Jay The University Daily Kansan April 24,2003 The Ghost of William S. Burroughs p.8 2 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN INSIDE THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 Jayplay The University Daily Kansan 3 Campus Neil Labute screens his latest film as part of "Alums Come Home IV" 3 Live music calendar Where to go, what to do 4 Opera New virtual reality technology showcased in The Magic Flute 5 Theater Hashinger Hall Theatre stages the cult classic The Rocky Horror Show 6 Eat This Simple meal plan for the week 10 Drinking Games Learn the rules to popular drinking games 12 Film Jayplay movie critics split on Bend It Like Beckham 13 Movies Around Town What's playing and where 14 Video games Rappers wrestle in Def Jam Vendetta 15 Tongue in Beak Pirates drop anchor on campus (1) Donovan Atkinson/Kansan William S. Burroughs 8 A look at the life of the beat generation author and his time in Lawrence CLASSIC MOVE. KANSAN Tell us your news Contact Brooke Hesler at bhesler@kansan.com JJ/JG/582A10 Cover illustration Donovan Atkinson MARINO MORRIS PRIDE WEEK EVENTS 2003 SPONSORED BY OUFERS AND ALLIES FRIDAY: TENTH ANNUAL BROWN BAG DRAG SHOW 12 noon Kansas Union Front Plaza COMEDIAN: DEIDRE SULLIVAN 8:00 PM Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union SAT: PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 11:00 AM South Park along Massachusetts to Watson Park PAUL SIEGEL: WHY QUEER RIGHTS IS A FREE SPEECH ISSUE 2:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union QUEER THEATER 7:30 PM Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union: $2 donation PRIDE DANCE 10:00 PM - 1:00 AM Ecumenical Christian Ministries: $2 donation sponsored by: Student Development Center STUDENT SENATE O Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 CAMPUS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3 Alumni return for reunion activities By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Iris Wylie Nearly 75 actors, actresses, screenwriters, playwrights and other theater professionals will return home to heralma matertomorrow. The University of Kansas department of theatre and film will welcome them back as part of "Alums Come Home IV," a reunion that occurs every four to five years at the University. Kathy Pryor, associate director of University theatre said the reunion had several goals. Contributed photo "Most importantly, it provides an opportunity for current students to network with alums who can help them professionally," Pryor said. "Secondly, it allows us to keep in touch with alums that provide a glimpse of what is going on in the outside world." Film maker and KU graduate Neil LaBute will screen his latest film, The Shape of Things, Friday at Liberty Hall as part of the Alums Come Home IV celebration. The reunion showcases workshops, script readings, theatrical performances and a sneak preview of the film, The Shape of Things, written and directed by Neil LaBute, who graduated from the University in 1989 with a Master of Arts degree in theater. The film premiered at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival in Utah and opens nationally May 9. LaBute will be on hand to introduce the movie, as well as answer questions after the screening at 7:30 tomorrow night in Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Charla Jenkins, director of public relations for the University Theatre, said LaBute had quite a following. "It's a great opportunity for students, as well as theater buffs," Jenkins said. "Liberty Hall has been besieged with phone calls about the showing. Everyone is really excited about it." Following the screening, about eight alumni and current students will perform in an open-mic variety show featuring singing, dancing and comedic routines. Prvorsaid Theater students are looking forward to the event. "I'm really excited because we as students get to meet the alums and see what they have done with their degrees and see what we can do with our dreams," said Erika Crane, Tokyo, Japan, junior. "There is a lot of exciting stuff going on with the event." All events of the reunion are open to the public, including workshops. "We encourage anyone that wants to participate to pop into a workshop if they'd like to," Pryor said. A list of daily activities is available in Murphy Hall and tickets to performances can be purchased in the Murphy Hall box office. Any proceeds from the event will benefit the endowed scholarship funds and add to the Glenn Bickle Fund, which honors excellence in technical theater. — Edited by Anne Mantey CALENDAR TONIGHT Of Montreal / James William Hindle / Ghosty / The Hardaways, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck Hunter and Gatherer at The Jazzhaus Grandpa's .38, 10 p.m. at Paradise Café In Kansas City... Hot Action Cop, 7 p.m.at Beaumont Club Mindy Ellis, 8 p.m. at Davey's Uptown Karla Michaels at John's Deck Dreadnaught, 11 p.m. at Davey's Uptown Mark Reeves, 8 p.m. at Westport Coffee House Matt Pond PA / Bitter Bitter Weeks / Lefty's Deceiver at The Brick Snuff Jazz, 9 p.m. at The Cup and Saucer Blue October at The Hurricane TOMORROW SoundsGood / Art Thugs / Serengeti at Fatso's Blue Condition, 9 p.m. at Stu's Midtown Tavern Jumbo's Killcrane / Boxcar Satan / Rwake at Replay Lounge Maggie Drennon Band at The Jazzhaus Fetish Night featuring Cruz at The Bottleneck Riva, 11 p.m. at Bambino's In Kansas City.. The Role Models / The Framed / Ike Turner Overdrive / Spoiled Solidarity, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Anything But Joey / Gametime / Pomeroy, 7 p.m. at Shawnee Mission West High School Konza Swamp / The Wilders / Gary Stier, 9 p.m. at Davey's Uptown Karla Michaels at John's Deck House of Large Sizes at The Hurricane Donavan White, 9 p.m. at Westport Coffee House Hijack, 10 p.m. The Pyro Room Majestics Rhythm Revue, 10 p.m. at The Jazzhaus Human Ritual / No Flesh Spared / Nothing to Gain at The Palladium SATURDAY Meep, 9 p.m. at The Cup and Saucer Elixir / Key, 9:30 p.m. at The Pool Room Johnny I & the Receders, 9 p.m. at Stu's Midtown Tavern Sum 41 / No Use for a Name / Autopilot Off, 8 p.m. at Uptown Theater Farmer's Ball Local Band competition Finals at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... James Moody Quartet, 8 p.m. at Folly Theater Three Bad Jakes / Sister Mary Rotten Crotch, 7 p.m. at Davey's Uptown Anthony Gomes at Grand Emporium Karla Michaels at John's Deck AKA Rudie / The Uprights / The Shuffles / the Kansas City Skazz Orchestra. THE BROKE, 7 p.m. at El Torreon Full Feature / Odds Even, 10 p.m. at The Hurricane Matt Ward, 9 p.m. at Westport Coffee House Mike Knott, 7:30 p.m. at The New Earth Coffee House The Elevator Division / Nameless#Headman / Ghosty, 10 p.m. at The Brick Ad Astra Per Aspera, 3 p.m. at Recycled Sounds Jimmy March (Acoustic Set), 9 p.m. at The Cup and Saucer SUNDAY In Kansas City... Kenny Chesney / Keith Urban / Deana Carter, 7:30 p.m. at Verizon Wireless Amphitheater Hopesfall / The Beautiful Mistake / Everytime I Die / Brazil, 7:30 p.m. at El Torreon MONDAY The Dragstrip Syndicate at Replay Lounge Lance A. Fahy, 9:30 p.m. at Henry's Upstairs In Kansas City... Brodiokie at The Brick TUESDAY Cross Canadian Ragweed, 9 p.m. at The Bottleneck Fred Eaglesmith, 10 p.m. at Davey's Uptown In Kansas City... Club Wars Invitational Round feat. Scapegoat / Audio Kombat Arsenal / The Sound and The Fury at Grand Emporium Wesley Willis / Angry Atom / Rock Over London, 7 p.m. at El Torreon WEDNESDAY Dar Williams, 7 p.m. at Liberty Hall E Double at The Jazzhaus Blindside/Flattery Leads to Ruins, 7 p.m. at The Bottleneck In Kansas City... His Last Chance / Deadline at Davey's Uptown OK Go / Captain Overreact / National Fire Theory, 9 p.m. at The Hurricane Spring Annihilation Battle of the Bands featuring Soulify / Large / Amadius at America's Pub Cross Canadian Ragweed/ Back Porch Mary, 8 p.m. at Beaumont Club THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPERA THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 Technology benefits theater finale 1975 Prine Tamino, Josh Mochel, St. Charles, Mo., senior, sings about Princess Pamina, Soyoun Lim, Lawrence graduate student, during a rehearsal of The Magic Fute. Through digital help, Princess Pamina's head floated behind him while he sang during rehearsal yesterday. Kelley Weiss/Kansan By Donovan Atkinson datkinson@kansan.com Jayplay staff writer Conventional sets and costumes make way for modern technology in the University Theatre's closing show of the season. The Magic Flute, a joint effort between University Theatre and the department of music and dance, uses real-time computer animation to create elements of sets and costumes. Because it has so many elements of fantasy — ranging from dragons, Genii and powerful sorcerers, The Magic Flute, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, is a good choice for production with virtual reality technology, said Mark Reaney, professor of theater and film. "It's one of the masterpieces of the operatic repertoire," said Delbert Unruh, director and professor of theatre and film. "It's a much beloved opera." The Magic Flute, first staged in 1791, is the story of the predestined love between a prince and a princess. The Queen informs Tamino that her daughter, Pamina, is being held captive by her evil father, the sorcerer Sorastro. Conventional sets and costumes make way for modern technology in the University Theatre's closing show of the season. The Magic Flute uses real-time computer animation to create elements of sets and costumes. Tamino instantly falls in love with Pamina, and is soon charged with rescuing her. The Queen of the Night gives Tamino a magic flute that will protect him. The Queen's bird catcher, Papageno, is instructed to accompany Tamino. Tamino and Papageno reach the lands of Sorastro and soon learn that it is the Queen of the Night who is evil, not the sorcerer. Pamina is safe with her father, who will allow Tamino to marry her. But before the two can wed, Tamino must first pass a series of trials. The special effects for the production are animated in real-time, not pre- recorded, and are manipulated either backstage or by crew members in the audience. The effects are projected onto screens that are either held by stage hands or positioned on the stage as scenic backdrops. The use of projection allows for an improved flow in the production, Unruh said. Scenes can be changed quickly without closing the curtain and moving pieces of scenery around. "We can do special effects that you can't do in normal theater or are too expensive for us to do." Reaney said. Reaney has been conducting research in the use of virtual reality technology for the 'The Magic Flute' The University Theatre and the department of music and dance will present The Magic Flute by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart at 7:30 p.m. on April 26 and May 1 to 3 and at 2:30 p.m. on April 27 and May 4 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Delbert Unruh, professor of theater and film, directed the production. It will feature virtual reality scenic elements by Mark Reaney, professor of theater and film. stage for 10 years and has designed the applications used in the production of The Magic Flute. Productions that Reaney has staged using virtual reality technology include William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream at the University of Kent in England and Dinosaurus for the University Theatre's Theatre for Young People program. To save the cast's voices, for each principal role, two actors are cast. "It lessens the vocal demands of the principals," Unruh said. "We're working with student singers. There's no point in ruining their voices now." The opera will be sung in German with dialogue in English. To prepare for singing the role of Tamino in German, Brandon Snook, Richardson, Texas, sophomore, and one of the actors cast as Tamino, translated the lyrics word by word. "I still don't know German, but I know what I'm singing." Snook said. Mozart originally wrote The Magic Flute as a song play, having more spoken dialogue than a conventional opera. For the University Theatre production the dialogue has been condensed. The changes in dialogue have made the opera easier to understand, Snook said. "It's more of an opera than a play with songs," Snook said of the University Theatre production. Despite changes to the dialogue and the addition of modern technology, the story of The Magic Flute remains one of the triumph of good over evil and the triumph of love in the face of adversity. "This is a production for the young at heart," Unruh said, "which I hope includes everyone." -Edited by Christy Dendurent www.kansan.com www.kansan.com www.kansan.com THURSDAY,APRIL 24,2003 THEATER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5 Hashinger residents produce low-budget'Rocky Horror' By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Stephen Moles wants to give the "Hashinger touch" to an old classic. The Lawrence freshman is directing a cast of University of Kansas students in a rendition of the classic musical The Rocky Horror Show. But fans should not expect to see a carbon copy of the popular 1975 movie or the popular musical that inspired the movie, Moles said. "It's not the movie — we're adding our own touch," Moles said. Among the additions and amplifications Moles plans for his production are more dance sequences, more crowd participation and more reliance on sound effects. Moles' production of The Rocky Horror Show is playing at 8 tonight, tomorrow and Saturday at the Hashinger Hall Theatre. The production is sponsored by the Hashinger Arts Council. Admission to the show is free, and seats are available on a first come, first serve basis. "I think we're going to get a good crowd," Moles said. "I don't think there will be many empty seats." When Moles first began to work on the I'll just put the text where it belongs. Wait, the image has a black-and-white effect. The man's clothing is dark and light. The background is blurry, but it looks like a crowded area with people. The word "CROUZED" is clearly visible in the bottom left corner of the image. Actually, I'll just provide the text as it appears. Pilar Pena/Kansan Dylan Hilpman, Lawrence freshman, sings and dances as Dr. Frank N. Furter in a dress rehearsal of The Rocky Horror Show. Hilpman rehearsed yesterday night in the Hashinger Hall Theatre production directed by Stephen Moles, 'THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW' Richard O'Brien's The Rocky Horror Show, directed by Stephen Moles. Lawrence freshman, opens at 8 tonight and runs through Saturday at the Hashinger Hall Theatre. Admission is free. Seats are not reserved. production two months ago, he wasn't sure about filling seats in Hashinger Hall Theatre. The project's limited budget cast members made the set with whatever they could find did not offer any comfort,either. "I wasn't sure how it would turn out," Moles said. But the cast rallied around the limited budget. "Rocky Horror is kind of crazy anyway, so we kind of burned holes in things and spray painted stuff, and it came together," said Chloe Wong, Junction City freshman, who is in charge of sound and lighting for the production. Moles and the rest of the cast are excited about how the production has progressed. Though she said making Rocky Horror at Hashinger was unique from her previous theater work, Lara Mann, Lawrence freshman, said, she didn't let the differences bother her. "I took the attitude that the production could only be so big," said Mann, who is playing the role of Janet in the production. "It doesn't mean it can only be so good though." Moles said he was counting on an active audience during the show's three-day run, because of the nature of The Rocky Horror Show. "Because it's Rocky Horror, I think we'll have a pumped-up crowd," Moles said. "I think people will be rowdy. It will be great." Though the original The Rocky Horror Show debuted in the 1970s, Moles said the issues the musical brought out were still applicable. Dylan Hilpman, Lawrence freshman, who is playing the part of Dr. Frank N. Furter in the production, said he participated in the play because he enjoyed the people he was working with. "The sexuality, the blossoming of characters, it's all relevant," he said. "It's a rewarding and boisterous experience," he said. Newrence freshman. Edited by Andrew Ward. . TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 ON SALE NOW Starla Benford Erin Moran From TV's Happy Days Amy J. Carle What Do Jayhawks Call Their Vaginas? THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES by EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets, www.ticketmaster.com, 816-931-3330, The Lied Center Box Office, or 785-864-ARTS POLINA MORALES *Service Charge may apply 6 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FOOD THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 Plan simple meals for busy time Like the idea of cooking a week's worth of simple meals that take 30 minutes or less each? With the semester more than halfway through, and as the workload increases, there just isn't enough time to concentrate on being a cooking connoisseur. EAT THIS So here are a few cooking suggestions when feeling burned out. Go to the grocery store, pick up the following ingredients and follow this seven-day meal plan. AUTHORITY These easy meals will reduce stress, boost metabolism, increase nutrient and vitamin intake and lessen the chance of getting sick at such a crucial point in the semester. If it's finals week or the week when three papers and two exams are due, this plan is foolproof when schedules are at their busiest. Christina DiGiacomo cdigiacomo@kansan.com SUNDAY Grilled Pork Chop and Fast Cook Baked Potato Serve with fresh fruit With the semester more than halfway through,and as the workload increases,there just isn't enough time to concentrate on being a cooking connoisseur. 1 8 oz. boneless pork chop 1 teaspoon of Lysander's Meat Rub for pork 18 oz. baking potato, plus favorite toppings 1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Fork potato. Microwave potato for 8 minutes. Wrap in foil and bake for 25 minutes. 2. Rub seasonings over chop, and grill for 6 minutes on each side over medium-high heat or until juices run clear. Penne Pasta with Fresh Tomato Sauce and Meatballs MONDAY Serve with crusty bread and Romano cheese 1/2 lb. of penne pasta, cooked according to packaged directions 8 Roma tomatoes, chopped 1/4 cup chopped fresh basil 1 clove of garlic sliced 1 tablespoon of olive oil For Meatballs: 1 lb. ground beef 2 pieces of bread soaked in water and squeezed out 1 egg beaten 1 tablespoon dried parsley 1/8 teaspoon of garlic powder 1/4 cup of Parmesan cheese 1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Mix all meatball ingredients together, roll into balls and place on a cookie sheet. Place in oven and cook for 30 minutes or until firm. Cook pasta, drain and set aside Reserve half of pasta. Cook tomatoes and garlic and season with salt and pepper over medium heat in a pan for 3 minutes. Take off heat and add basil. Mix in and take half of tomato mixture and toss with hot pasta. Reserve sauce for later use. Serve with a meatball. Reserve meatballs for later use. TUESDAY Grilled Chicken Breast with Cool Cucumber Pasta Salad Serve with a favorite fruit drink 1 boneless, skinless chicken breast marinated in Grill Creations Marinade mix Leftover penne pasta 1 seedless cucumber, sliced and julienne CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE OK We Did It FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA C75172181C WASHINGTON, D.C. C75172181C ONE DOLLAR OK We Did It THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA $1 ONE DOLLAR ANYTHING Fridays COME BACK! BACARDI FEAR FACTOR PROMO JACK-FLANIGANS Bar and Grill Just off 23rd behind McDonald's & 740-BAWR Fridays - 21 to Enter ANYTHING Fridays COME BACK! BACARDI FEAR FACTOR PROMO JACK-FLANIGANS Bac and Grill Just off 23rd behind McDonalds 6740-HAWK Fridays - 21 to Enter NEWS SPORTS OPINION JAYFLAY SPECIALS SEE IT ALL ONLINE. kansan.com The online edition of The University Daily Kansan THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 FOOD THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7 MENU FOR THE WEEK SUNDAY Grilled Pork Chop and Fast Cook Baked Potato MONDAY Penne Pasta with Fresh Tomato Sauce and Meatballs CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE 3 scallions chopped 1/2 cup of light mayonnaise 1/4 block of cream cheese 1. Toss pasta, scallions and cucumber in a bowl. In another bowl, mix in mayo and cream cheese. Pour pasta mixture over mayo mixture, mix and let cool in refrigerator. 2. Grill chicken breast over medium heat for 15 to 20 minutes, turning once. WEDNESDAY Meatball Hoagies Serve with a glass of milk Leftover meatballs 1 hoagie bun, split 1/4 cup of mozzarella cheese Leftover tomato sauce TUESDAY Grilled Chicken Breast with Cool Cucumber Pasta Salad WEDNESDAY Meatball Hoagies 1. Mix meatballs and tomato sauce, heat in microwave until warm. Line meatballs on hoagies and sprinkle with mozzarella. Heat sandwich again until cheese has melted. THURSDAY Crab Caesar Salad Have some sorbet for desert 1/2 cup of imitation or real crab meat Packaged Caesar salad mix Juice from 1/2 a lemon 1. Toss crab, salad mix and lemon in a large bowl. Season with fresh ground pepper. FRIDAY Mrs. Wilkerson's Sliced Ham THURSDAY Crab Caesar Salad FRIDAY SATURDAY Sliced Ham with Honey Glaze and Sliced Potatoes and Peas Pesto Cheese Pizza with Honey Glaze and Sliced Potatoes and Peas 2 slices of packaged sliced honey ham 2 tablespoons of Heinz 57 sauce and honey,mixed and warmed 1 can sliced potatoes and tender peas, drained 2 tablespoons of butter 2 tablespoons of flour 1 cup of milk 1. Preheat oven to 250 degrees. Heat ham slices in a pan until warm on both sides, and place in oven, along with honey mixture to keep warm. 2. In a saucepan melt butter over low heat, add flour and stir until it's a paste consistency. Add milk and whisk over high heat until mixture thickens and bubbles. Take off heat. Add potatoes and peas to milk mixture. Season with salt and pepper and stir until blended. SATURDAY Pesto Cheese Pizza 1 can of refrigerated pizza crust 1 cup of pizza sauce and mozzarella cheese 1/2 cup of already-made pesto sauce 1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees. On a pizza pan, unroll dough. Layer pizza sauce, mozzarella cheese, and sprinkle pesto sauce over pizza. Bake for 15 minutes until brown and bubbly. Each recipe serves 1 or more. DiGiacomo is an Apple Valley, Minn., senior in communication studies. She studied at Dante Aligheri cooking school in Florence Italy. SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay SEEING MULTIPLES made easy with the new Weekly Specials yours to keep on the back of every Jayplay SAKAROFF'S the salon Voted "Best Salon on the Hill" by students head GAMES GRAHAM WEBB Nolita 12 E 8th St. • 841-4247 head GAMES MONTAGE 12 E SAKAROFF'S the salon Voted "Best Salon on the Hill" by students head GAMES MONTAGE GRAHAM WEBB Nolita 12 E 8th St. • 841-4247 8 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COVER STORY THURSDAY,APRIL 24,2003 Lawrence's literary legacy WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS THE PLACE OF DEAD ROADS "IT'S A COMEDY AND A NIGHEMAN; OF BORDS AND VISIONS, EXTRAORDINARIER PRECISION WITH HIGHLY INDIVIDUALITY GUTRAGEUS IDEAS LOVE MIND BEHAVIRE." — CLEMEN RINGOE By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Though William S. Burroughs lived longer in Lawrence than anywhere else, the community remains largely unaffected by the presence of the famous author. Burroughs, who has written more than 50 books, lived in a red prefabricated house from Sears and Roebuck Company on Learnard Avenue in southeast Lawrence. Often called the "godfather of the Beat Generation," he lived in Lawrence for 16 years. He died here of a heart attack in August 1997 at age 83. Burroughs first visited Lawrence in 1976 when he was invited for a four-day residency by the English department at the University. He decided to leave New York for good in late 1981 after he spent the summer here in an apartment across the street from what is now The Crossing, 618 W 12th St. James Grauerholz,a close friend of Burroughs, had arranged to have him stay in Lawrence after an extensive tour for his book Cities of the Red Night. Burroughs wrote two major novels while living in Lawrence, The Place of Dead Roads and The Western Lands, sequels to Cities of the Red Night. Faithful Friends His cats, Fletch, Spooner and Calico, were among the closest friends of author William S. Burroughs during the time he lived in Lawrence. Anyone who knew Burroughs while he lived here knew of his love for his cats, a love he developed after he moved to Lawrence in 1981 from New York. David Ohle, a friend of Burroughs and a lecturer at the University of Kansas who teaches screen writing and composition classes, said he had dotted on his pets. "He was completely infatuated with his cats," Ohie said. "I think he really believed all his cats were reincarnated souls, and he treated them with unbelievable indulgence." Burroughs himself stressed the importance of the companionship between himself and his cats in his book, The Cat Inside, which he wrote in Lawrence in 1982. "My relationship with cats has saved me from a deadly P. R. A. William S. Burroughs (photo from With William s. Burroughs by Victor Bockris) and pervasive ignorance," he wrote. While he was in Lawrence, Burroughs formed a circle of close friends that supported him and helped care for him, including Grauerholz, Ohle, Wayne Propst and Jim McCraary. Grauerholz, who is now executor of Burroughs' estate, said he had met Burroughs through Allen Ginsberg in New York in 1974. Grauerholz said he quickly had become friends and roommates with Burroughs, as well as his personal secretary, scheduling tours and performances. "I liked him before we ever met," said Grauerholz, who was introduced to Burroughs' Naked Lunch in high school. "I like his dark humor, his satire, his imaginative views about people in the world. He was very dedicated to his work; I understood it and tried to encourage and assist him." Though Burroughs did not circulate much in the Lawrence community as a whole, Propst said he had led an active social life among friends, hosted three or four dinner parties a week and traveled to New York, Europe and Japan. Europe and Japan Ohle was one of several friends who came over once or twice a week to cook dinner for Burroughs, who in turn CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 COVER STORY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9 CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE provided a source of entertainment and humor to those who spent time with him. "He was enormously entertaining, lively and conversational," Ohle said. "He had been all over the world and knew almost anything." Ohle said Burroughs might have had as many as two or three visitors a week, and described Burroughs as generous with his time, even when visitors showed up on his doorstep unannounced. Burroughs' knowledgeable, interesting personality drew hundreds of visitors from across the globe. Inspiration Through the Arts Burroughs was constantly reading something, Ohle said, and this was one of the reasons he was so knowledgeable in many areas. "He had a prodigious photographic memory," he said. "He cited long passages from Shakespeare from memory and read every day for hours and hours, anything from trash novels to Shakespeare. He could recite passages from almost anything he had ever read." Burroughs also painted while he lived in Lawrence, but like his writing, his techniques varied from the norm. McCrary, a Lawrence resident who also works for William Burroughs Communications, said Burroughs had disliked using paintbrushes to create his artwork. "He used spatulas, plungers, suction cups and mushrooms—all kinds of different things," McCrary said of his friend. "He said he didn't like to plan what he painted, he just applied paint to the canvas and stepped back and looked for something to appear." Propst remembered one example of Burroughs' untraditional painting technique in particular. "William shot an aerosol paint can with a gun, and the paint can, as it discharged the compressed product, chased him around the yard," Propst said. Propst said Burroughs ran around the backyard screaming, covered in red paint. Supporting a Legacy After Grauerholz met Burroughs, he began working for him and formed William Burroughs Communications, a company he still manages out of Lawrence. The company used to work out of a home on Almira Avenue, but the house is now owned by Joanna Harader. "It's a kind of a cheerful house for some of his works," Harader said. "If you read Contributed art Two paintings by William S. Burroughs. 1. The image is likely a grayscale representation of a watercolor painting. 2. Watercolor paintings are characterized by their smooth texture and varying shades of gray. 3. The strokes in the paint are soft, blending smoothly to create a fluid effect. 4. The background is composed of various shades of gray, creating a sense of depth and space. 5. The brushstrokes vary in size and intensity, contributing to the overall effect of the painting. his writing, you might expect doom and gloom." Grauerholz is working on a detailed biography of Burroughs' life, which he said he didn't expect to be finished for a couple of years. Grauerholz said his focus would be on the least-known period of Burroughs' life -up until Burroughs met friends such as Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg at Columbia University in New York at about age 30. The working title for the biography is Pilgrim on the Earth named for one of Burroughs' favorite works, a novella by Julian Green. Grauerholz was instrumental in organizing and directing the publication of "William shot an aerosol paint can with a gun, and the paint can, as it discharged the compressed product, chased him around the yard." Wayne Propst Personal friend of William S. Burroughs Burroughs' last works, including Last Words, a compilation of Burroughs' journals written during the last nine months of his life. Burroughs toured extensively throughout his life. His last trip away from Lawrence was to Los Angeles, to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in the summer of 1996. Burroughs traveled to see the opening of "Ports of Entry: William S. Burroughs and the Arts," an exhibit that was retrospective of his career. The exhibit was brought to the Spencer Museum of Art at the University in November 1996. Propst said Burroughs had thought Lawrence residents were naive, but despite the naiveté, Burroughs enjoyed the laid-back, hassle-free life he was able to lead in Lawrence. Although his friends agreed Burroughs influenced the lives of his friends and any students or Lawrence residents who took time to get to know him, they agreed he did not have a large impact on most Lawrence residents. "Fame destroys a person's personal life enormously," he said. "Most people were aware he's famous and admired him, but they still treated him like a person. He was able to be seen as a person instead of a celebrity." "I don't think Lawrence as a whole cared much as to whether he was here or not," McCrary said. "He wasn't a very visible part of the city. The people he knew, he had an impact on them. I think people would like to think Lawrence is more liberal because Burroughs lived here, but I don't think that's the case." Why Lawrence? Many people could not understand why Burroughs would choose to live in Lawrence as he grew into old age, Grauerholz said. But he said one of the features about Lawrence that attracted Burroughs most was his ability to live a quiet peaceful life within a circle of close friends. — Edited by Melissa Hermreck 10 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN DRINKING GAMES THURSDAY, APRIL24, 2003 Win or lose: qames with booze By Neil Mulka nmulka@kansan.com Jayplay writer There is nothing wrong with a little competition among friends, especially when the competition involves beer. Yes, drinking games. It's the time when people can gamble and all they have to lose is their sobriety. It doesn't matter who wins or who loses because everyone reaches that one common goal of the evening: to get, as the '80s pop band INXS puts it, elegantly wasted. There are as many drinking games as there are types of booze, ranging from simple social beer drinking to the increased complexity of games within games. Feel like watching a movie? Try the Star Wars drinking game. Wanna put a naughty spin on an innocent childhood game? Bust out "Chutes and Ladders." Feeling the need for some team spirit? Play a loud, raucous game of Cups. Of course when mixing beer and anything with rules, there will be halfdrunken arguments on how the game is supposed to be played. Never to fear, Jayplay has combed the Internet, asked experienced students and done some personal experimentation to bring about the official Jayplay guide to drinking games. Enjoy responsibly. Chutes and Ladders Equipment: Beer, Chutes and Ladders Players: Unlimited Buzz Factor: Drunk Chutes and Ladders BAND CONCERTS THE MUSIC BAND OF THE CHUTES AND LADDERS WITH THE ORIGINAL WORKS BY ANDREW M. CURTIS AND SAM SMITH 1972 MAY 10TH This is a childhood favorite with a slight twist. Simple but it gets the job done relatively quickly. All someone has to do is this: When going up a ladder, count the number of squares the player has moved over and up and distribute that many drinks among the other players (e.g. four over and three up = seven drinks: two to person A,three to B,two to C). When going down a chute, count the number of squares over and down and that player has to drink that many squares. If the spinner lands on no number, spin again and everyone takes that many drinks and proceed as normal. Quarters Equipment: Beer, a quarter, shot glass, table Players: Unlimited Buzz Factor: Moderate LIBERTY 1923 The goal of this game is simple: Bounce a quarter off the table and into a shot glass. If the quarter goes into the glass, the shooter chooses someone to nark. The shooters con- drink. The shooters continue to play until they do not make the quarter in the cup. Play then proceeds clockwise to the next shooter. If a shooter makes three quarters in a row into the shot glass he makes a rule. For example: Don't use the word drink. If anyone uses the word "drink," he has to drink. If any rules are broken, the person who broke the rule must drink. Quarters is the drinking game of choice for Lawrence resident Pat Barrett. "I like it because it reminds me of Tiddlywinks," Barrett said. Cups Equipment: Beer, Dixie cups, table Players: Minimum of six Buzz Factor: Tipsy is give beer This game is all about team spirit and encouragement. Two teams line up on opposite ends of the table. Each player en a Dixie cup of is given a Dixie cup of beer. Designate which end of the team is to go first, count to three and drink. After the first players from each team finish a drink, they must position their cups on the edge of the table. Each player then must proceed to flip his cup until it lands upside down (the mouth of the cup is face down). If a player misses he has to try again. Once the flip is achieved the next player has to repeat the process. The teams must race through the players to see which side finishes first. The round ends when one team has all of its cups emptied and upside down. This scores the team one point, and the other team has to finish its beverages, no matter where it is in line. Equipment: The official, full-length DR Chipper promotional video, available at drchipper.com. The DR Chipper drinking game. Play at least 20 rounds to achieve that funny feeling. beer Players: Unlimited Players Buzz Level: Drunk and possibly, chipper Here's a game created by Nick Amburgey, Wichita junior. Order the DR Chipper (a line of wood-chipping equipment) promotional video, pop it in and watch. Whenever the narrator mentions the word product, a type of wood or shows wood being chipped during his 12 minute sales pitch, drink. "It's nuts, it's a total frenzy of drinking," he said. "It's like drinking eight beers in a 12 minute span." Amburgey said this game is preferable to card-based games because of its simplicity. Writers note: It is not advisable to operate a DR Chipper after playing. Think back to the ending of the film Fargo. Kings (AKA, Circle of Death, Mushroom of Death) Equipment: A deck of playing cards playing cards and beer Players: At least five Buzz Level: Rovally Wasted This card game brings about the most drunken debate about the rules so let's lay down the law. Sit in a circle, and put one can of unopened beer in the middle. Spread cards in a circle around the beer. Pick a player to draw a card. If the player draws a two to a five, that player must sip from the beer the number of times shown on the card. If he draws a six to a nine, he has the privilege of giving out that many sips to his competitors. The rules for 10, Jack, Queen, King and Ace are as follows. 10: Thumb Master — the player who draws puts his thumb on the table. The last person to do so drinks. The player can put the thumb down whenever he wants until another 10 is dealt. Jack: Rhyme — the player who draws says a word. The person to the left must rhyme with the last word. This continues in clockwise order. Rhyming words must not be repeated. If you repeat a word or can't think of one, you drink and the round ends. Queen: The player who draws thinks of a category like presidents of the United States. Then, he says a president's name. Then, the person to his left must think of another one, say Jimmy Carter. This continues in clockwise order. If you repeat an item or can't think of one, you drink and the round ends. King: The person who draws this is a king and can make up his own rule and that rule can be whatever he wants such as banning a common word or changing everyone's names. Be creative. Anyone found violating this rule during the game is punished by drinking beer. Ace: Social, everyone cheers and takes a sip. After the card has been drawn, it must be placed on top of the can with at least two corners hanging off. Every card drawn must be put on. If a player knocks off ANY of the cards, he is forced to chug the entire beer. The game ends when all of the cards are done. This card is among the favorite of Adam Kostecki. "I like the options this game offers," Costecki, Topea junior, said, "The social, the categories and rules." Equipment: Cards, beer Drunken Solitaire Players: one Buzz Level: Drunk Here's a game for the lone drinker. Deal out a hand of standard solitaire and every time a new card is turned over, take a drink. "I invented this game when all of my friends were too busy to party," said Dominic Flask, Lawrence resident. The Hour of Power Equipment: Massive amounts of beer, shot glasses and a clock, preferably a digital with big red numerals. 17.4 Players: Unlimited Buzz Level: Amazing, simply amazing The daunting task of this game is to take a shot of beer every minute for an hour. Seems easy at first but by the half-hour mark people will be yearning to use the urination station. According to BarMeister.com, "If you go to the bathroom before the end of the hour you must finish a beer." A variation of this game is known as the THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 DRINKING GAMES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 11 Century Club or the Centurions. For this game, people must take shots of beer for 100 minutes. Star Wars drinking game STAR WARS TRILOGY STAR WARS TRILOGY Equipment: A Star Wars film(original trilogy),beer Players: Unlimited Buzz Level: Varies A classic film deserves a drinking game. Here are the rules as stated in BarMeister.com. Every time Luke whines, drink. Every time good guys wear black, drink. Every time bad guys wear white, drink (and yes, Storm Troopers count). ■ When you hear the word "Force," drink. ■ When you see a light saber, drink. When you feel attracted at all to the princess, drink twice. Every time Darth Vader does something evil, drink. Every time a rebel or storm trooper gets killed, drink. ■ When you feel the force, finish your beer! I Never Equipment: Beer, an urge to find out the dark lives of your friends Players: Unlimited Buzz Level: Low This game is designed for close friends who like dig up dirt on each other and is more of an ice breaker for a party then as a way to get drunk. The rules go as follows: Everyone sits in a circle. One person goes first by making a true statement that begins with "I never..." For example, "I've never been in a fraternity." Then, if any other player has done what that person has said, he takes a drink. As the game progresses,the statements tend to get more personal and explicit. But remember, honesty is the best policy to make this game work. However, if somebody drinks on an "I never...," no explanation is necessary. For example, if someone says, "I have never gone through my roommate's girlfriend's underwear drawer and sniffed her panties" and someone ends up drinking, no explanation is needed. Just let him drink. THE SIMPSONS The Simpsons Drinking Game Equipment: Beer, The Simpsons television show Players: Unlimited Buzz Level: varies What's the best way to break in a newly bought Simpsons DVD? Why, with a Simpsons drinking game, of course! Here are the rules according to BarMeister.com Take one drink when: Homer says "d'oh" Marge groans Bart says "Ay Carumba" Mr. Burns says "Excellent" Maggie sucks on her pacifier Homer says "Mmmmm..." (three drinks if it's over a non-edible object) Anyone rolls his eyes (three drinks if it's an animal) Homer burps Bart says "Eat my shorts" Lisa points out something from another culture Homer eats a doughnut The comic book store guy uses sarcasm The squeaky-voiced teenager says anything at all Otto Mann says "All right" The Simpsons watch Itchy and Scratchy Homer is seen at work Chief Wiggum displays ineptitude at his job A teacher reprimands Bart A famous movie is referenced The Simpsons eat out Lisa answers a question in class Homer does something completely against the dictates of common sense Take two drinks when: Any of the characters make fun of the Fox network Homer has a get-rich-quick scheme Santa's Little Helper licks someone The cat is talked about by name Maggie sucks on anything that is not her pacifier Marge's hair is used for physical comedy Milhouse says something geeky Professor Fink is on the show Homer is seen at work actually working Principal Skinner makes a 'Nam reference Bart says "Don't have a cow, man" Homer is seriously injured Bart scores higher than an "F" on any school work Groundskeeper Willy is shown in a kilt Anyone has a flashback Bart gets beat up by bullies Smithers says anything even remotely gay The Mexican bee-man shows up Maggie is totally left out of an episode Lenny is in a scene without Carl and vice versa Snake (the criminal guy) robs someone Homer lusts after someone Homer has a ridiculous dream — Edited by Leah Shaffer 20" SPEAKERS Lots of powerful bass. Must sell. $150. Call 555-1212. If you've got it, we can sell it. Your runs in The D Students receive 20% off. Call 864-4358 for details. KANSAN BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING BAR HOPPING MADE EASY WITH THE NEW WEEKLY SPECIALS YOURS TO KEEP ON THE BACK OF EVERY JAYPLAY 12 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FILM THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 Movie reaps mostly rave reviews A teenager's love for soccer intrudes on her family's strict Indian traditions in Bend It Like Beckham, a colorful British lark playing at Lawrence's haven for must-see movies, Liberty Hall Theater. Ayush Gandhi Stephen Shupe sshuve@kansan.com M. H. ROBERTS Aaron Passman apassman@kansan.com The ease with which Indian filmmaker Gurinder Chadha handles these difficult I mention Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., only because moviegoers generally associate this theater with students who wear black on Friday and write esoteric poems at locally owned coffee shops. Bend It Like Beckham is more commercially viable than this venue implies. Its sheer sense of optimism could slap a smile across the face of any student caught in the doldrums of a closing semester, be it a goth, a jock or even those excitable types who see irrefutable parallels between Roy Williams and Judas Iscariot. The smiles begin with the film's soccer-loving teen, Jess (Parminder Nagra), who may be the spunkiest black sheep in the history of movies. Jess worships professional soccer hero David Beckham — his pin-up posters adorn the walls of her bedroom in her family's affluent house in a London suburb — but her dream of going pro is suffering a serious setback with the impending wedding day of her older sister, Pinky (Archie Panjabi). Jess is expected to marry, young and lavishly, just like Pinky, and it doesn't help that her outspoken mom (Shaheen Khan) offers annoying daily reminders of this manifest destiny. To further complicate matters, Jess meets a fellow dreamer, Jules (Keira Knightley), who signs her up for a local girls' soccer team, one that's sparked the interests of American talent agents. All at once, Jess' dream is both far from reach and closer than ever. Jess and Jules' friendship gives the film its window into the racial harmony that exists today-Jules' white parents scarcely notice the skin color of their daughter's new mate. Even so, the lingering effects of segregation are fully evident in the character of Jess' father (Anupam Kher), who wants his family away from soccer, not because of his plans to have Jess married but because he too was once an athlete before racist fellow players chased him out of the sport. Its plot may resemble My Big Fat Greek Wedding, but Bend It Like Beckham operates on a far more profound cultural level. It never preaches, but it's always conscious of entering new territory. After all, how many films have we seen about a Sikh family living, in relative prosperity, in modern-day London? Bend It Like Beckham's sheer sense of optimism could slap a smile across the face of any student caught in the doldrums of a closing semester. themes, along with the film's eye-popping use of trick photography during the soccer sequences and the head-bopping soundtrack filled with popular cover songs, combine to make Bend It Like Beckham as crowd-pleasing as movies get. This would be more than enough for any VS. comedy (in an age where Anger Management can gross $45 million in its opening weekend, we don't seem to expect much from the genre), but as a ticklish dessert Chadha also directs appealing performers across the board Shupe is an Augusta graduate student in journalism. Allow me to burst the bubble. Bend It Like Beckham has gotten, for the most part, rave reviews from across the globe. My best guess is that I didn't see the same movie everybody else did because I left the theater unimpressed. Imagine, if you will, the Spice Girls in a Disney Channel movie about soccer. It's not all bad just most of it. Imagine the Spice Girls in a Disney Channel movie about soccer. Got that? If you do,you basically get the gist of Bend It Like Beckham.British girl BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM If Jess' familial woes grow repetitious in the film's second hour, Bend It Like Beckham hugely rewards minimal patience on the part of the audience. Its last 30 minutes are probably the most rousing movie moments you're likely to see before The Matrix Reloaded opens May 15. GRADE FROM SHUPE ... A- Nagra's smile is so blindingly beautiful it could light up the gloomy Chapter 11 aisles at Kmart. Just as radiant is Knightley (she played Natalie Portman's double in Star Wars, Episode I: The Phantom Menace), whose androgyny is never more apparent in the hilarious scenes where Jules' parents mistake the girls' friendship for a sexual relationship. Jonathan Rhys Meyers, the glam-rock poster boy from Titus and Velvet Goldmine, provides distraction of another kind as Jess' soccer coach and forbidden love interest. GRADE FROM PASSMAN ... D Starring: Parminder Nagra, Keira Knightley and Jonathan Rhys Meyers Rated PG-13 for language and sexual content Playing at Liberty Hall Theater, 642 Massachusetts St. power and soccer, with a bit of culture clash mixed in for good measure, in the most family friendly so-called "art house film" of the year. Bend It Like Beckham's contrived, Disney Channel ready, tissue-paper thin plot concerns Jess (Parminder Nagra), an Indian teenager living in Britain with her traditional Indian family. Jess' parents want her to learn to cook traditional Indian food, marry a nice Indian boy and in general live the life of her older sister Pinky (Archie Panjabi). Jess, on the other hand, just wants to play soccer (or football, in the vernacular), and her bedroom is a full-on shrine to British soccer star David Beckham. Then there's Jules (Keira Knightley), characterized as a normal teenage girl, who spots Jess playing soccer in the park and invites her to try out for the local girls soccer team. And you can guess where it goes from here: Jess' parents don't want her playing soccer, but she does it anyway, bonds with Jules and all the other girls on the team and discovers how much soccer means to her. Of course it's not quite that simple,but that's the gist of it. And the added details don't help things much, either. For example, there's a minor subplot about a love triangle between the girls' coach, Joe (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), and Jess and Jules, but it never really feels fully fleshed out. Perhaps the film's most irksome moment comes midway through, when Jess sneaks away for the weekend to accompany the team to a tournament in Germany. Joe takes the team out clubbing after the game, and they all dance around to bad pop dance music in their ultra-stylish clothes with big unnatural smiles on their faces. It's a moment so unbelievably artificial that it seems to fit in perfectly with the rest of the film. But wait, it gets better! Merely a few moments later, Jules catches Jess and their coach sharing a romantic moment! Oh, the betrayal! It was indeed at this moment when it really hit me that this movie would most likely be big with the 14-year-old Disney Channel crowd. Everyone in the cast is pretty attractive. I mean it's a movie, right? They usually are. The problem here is that, during the soccer games, the camera is more focused on the girls' faces than on the actual soccer game. Televised soccer games are shot from an extremely wide angle, so as to catch all the action. Bend It Like Bendham shoots the games so close up that you can barely catch any of the action but you can tell that all the girls are having a right good time. It's not all bad — just most of it. The culture clash in Jess' family is done well, and it's not just a flash in the pan. The filmmakers carry it throughout the film, and it's effectively done. It's just that this, the film's best aspect, is overshadowed by the sheer mediocrity of everything else. But maybe it's just me. It seemed that most everybody else in the theater besides me loved the movie. And if you're the sort of person that loses it at jokes like, "Get your lesbian feet out of my shoes!" then Bend It Like Beckham (or as I like to call it, "Girls Just Wanna Play Soccer") may just be the movie for you. But for the rest of us ... Don't believe the hype, kids. Take it from me, your old friend the film critic: Bend It Like Beckham blows. Passman is a Towanda senior in journalism and film. THURSDAY,APRIL24,2003 MOVIES AROUND TOWN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 13 All reviews and summaries were written by Jayplay film critic Stephen Shupe. LIBERTYHALL 1985 Bend It Like Beckham Reviewed on p.12 Contributed art Shia LaBeouf stars in Holes, director Andrew Davis' adaptation of the book by Louis Sachar. City of God Grade: A A modern masterpiece of epic scope and breathtaking energy, City of God is a violent plunge into a forgotten underworld the Brazilian slums that served as ground zero for drug trafficking through Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in the '60s and '70s. Director Fernando Meirelles' astonishingly clear vision of this inescapable world is like an urbanized retelling of William Golding's novel, Lord of the Flies, where savage boys quench the bloodthirsty beast within. Dizzying visuals, heartbreaking truths and surreal rock-and-roll flourishes make for an exhilarating and unforgettable film experience. SOUTH WIND 12 Anger Management Grade: C Adam Sandler goes face-to-face with a berserk Jack Nicholson in this half-assed comedy that wants to have it both ways. On one hand, it introduces a more mature Sandler to his aging fan base. On the other, it clings to the sketch-comedy tricks that made him a superstar in Billy Madison, earning a few points with the Eminem crowd. The result looks like a "HappyMadison" baby that's come sideways out of the womb. With such a promising casting coup, one might have hoped for a less rough-around-the-edge's script, which positions Sandler as a mental schnook to Nicholson's devil-may-care therapist. Better Luck Tomorrow (Opens Friday) Ben is the perfect Asian-American highschool kid, an extremely intelligent overachiever poised for acceptance at the Ivy League University of his choosing. But as Ben and his two best friends strive for social acceptance, a darker side emerges: a double life of mischief that alleviates the pressures of perfection. Their petty crimes escalate as the trio meets up with Daric, the senior valedictorian who's a ticking time bomb. Forming an increasingly violent gang, these outsiders vie for the attention of a seductive classmate, Stephanie, who, as school rumor has it, once starred in a porno film. Better Luck Tomorrow draws inspiration from A Clockwork Orange as the group's after-school activities spiral downward into a sociopathic abyss. Bulletproof Monk Grade: B Flying kung fu and an ancient artifact of great power figure heavily in this Chow Yun Fat action flick, but the Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon comparisons end there. Seann William Scott co-stars as a pick-pocket who befriends Fat's Monk with No Name, an immortal warrior who guards a powerful Tibetan scroll against infiltrating Nazis. Though its story turns overly serious in the final stretch, Bulletproof Monk wisely relies on Fat and Scott's richly comedic chemistry and Jamie King's above-the-equator sex appeal. Scott, who looks stoned out of his mind in his first scene (how's that for method acting?), replaces Keanu as Hollywood's blank-dude embodiment of irreverence. If he had played Neo in The Matrix, instead of saying "Whoa" he would have said "Huh?" Confidence (Opens Friday) Razor-sharp grifter Jake Vig (Edward Burns) has just swindled a huge load of cash from Lionel Dolby, an accountant for eccentric crime boss Winston King (Dustin Hoffman). When Dolby turns up dead, "the King" comes to collect, offering Vig one opportunity to avoid the same fate: pull off the con of a lifetime. Crime-drama stylist James Foley (At Close Range, Glengarry Glen Ross) directs, with comic-relief assists from Donal Logue and Luis Guzman as corrupt LAPD officers. Holes Grade: A- Directed by Andrew Davis from the popular Louis Sachar book, Holes is the first major surprise of the movie year, a kid flick with enough heart and brains to satisfy an audience of any age. Sachar's refreshingly intricate story concerns Stanley Yelnats IV, an unlucky youth who's wrongfully sent to Camp Green Lake, a juvenile prison in the desert where The Warden (Sigourney Weaver) forces her young charges to dig holes for, as she explains it, "personal growth." Of course, the holes have a back story, which unfolds in magnificently filmed flashbacks that alone would make for a great western. The immensely likable cast of child actors performs slang dialogue more naturally than in any Disney movie I've seen, and the plot comes full circle in a powerhouse way that's been compared to The Shawshank Redemption and can only be described as "artful." This is Davis' first great movie since 1993's The Fugitive. It Runs in the Family (Opens Friday) This multigenerational comedy focuses on the Grombergs, a highly successful, somewhat eccentric New York family. Patriarch Mitchell comes to grips with his own mortality; son Alex obsesses about not becoming his father; grandson Asher tries to "find himself" by partying away his college years. The film is notable because it features three generations of the superstar Douglas family: Kirk, Michael and Cameron. Phone Booth Grade: F Voiced by Kiefer Sutherland, the sniper is heard in stereo off-screen throughout this loud, cheaply "controversial" movie, creating a kind of Mystery Science Theater 3000 effect. At one point, Sutherland tricks Farrell into believing Sutherland is a Vietnam veteran. He then tells Farrell he's stupid by saying "I'd have to be 50 to be in that war!" Hey Kief: He can't tell how old you are, dumbass - you're talking to him on a phone. Colin Farrell makes an 80-minute phone call in Phone Booth, the new godawful Joel Schumacher thriller that seems to cater to the interests of masochists. Farrell's character is a media publicist we know nothing about and like even less. Farrell must confess his sins to his mistress and wife before a sniper blows them all away. In a nationwide college-campus search that unfortunately did not result in the casting of a University of Kansas student, filmmakers recruited 16 wild-and-crazy kids to indulge in the spring-break revelry of Cancun, Mexico. The Real Cancun (Opens Friday) The finished film includes planned group activities reminiscent of reality television and other after-dark activities too hot for prime time. The Real Cancun was shot just a month ago with six camera crews. Let's see: Six crews, 24 hours a day, seven days a week ... that's about a thousand hours of footage to edit in less than five weeks, so it should be all ready to go by the time I finish this sentence. 14 • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VIDEO GAME THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 'Vendetta'offers wrestling rappers Rappers? Wrestling? Who came up with this idea? After seeing the commercials and hype for this game, I decided to try out Electronic Arts Sports Big's Def Jam Vendetta for PlayStation 2. I found this game entertaining; however, the intro is misleading. The intro says that you become part of the Underground Fighting Circuit, which I thought meant I got to play a fighting game. I was wrong. REVIEW This isn't underground fighting; this is underground professional wrestling. I will answer any questions you may have about the image. Please provide more details or context. Chris Moore cmoore@kansan.com PlayStation.2 Def Jam VENDETTA T BIG Contributed art The story goes like this: Your friend, Manny, is in a jam. He's injured and is about to be killed. His only hope is that you can pay off his debt. The only way to do This isn't underground fighting; this is underground professional wrestling. that is to beat up a lot of people in the ring. But, things really start to get complicated when your old girlfriend shows up in the arms of D-Mob, the big man of underground wrestling. Now you're trying to win her back, but, to get to her, you have to beat D-Mob. Yet to get to him, you need to beat his minions, some of which are rappers. The game play is like any video wrestling game you've ever played. WCW/NWO Revenge, Wrestlemania 2000, it's all the same. The controls and style are the same. The only difference is the way you get your special moves. In other wrestling games, players used the same moves over and over to get their special gauge up. In Vendetta, players can't do that. The momentum meter gets fuller faster when players do different moves. The more repetition you have,the less momentum you get. One feature is picking the guy you want to fight with in the story mode. You start with four characters, each who have stats. To get stronger, players must win matches and earn money. With the money that's won, you can boost your character's stats. Also, as you progress in the game,you unlock new fighters that can be used to battle the computer or your friends. You get new costumes for your character,but you can't change your costume in story mode. After playing through half of the game, my character got a black and yellow jumpsuit, which made him look like a giant hornet. Another feature is the girlfriend DEFJAMVENDETTA B- Now available for Playstation2 Rated T for Teen Sells for an average retail price of $50 gallery. Once you progress far enough in the game you start to encounter more women. The way you get more women in the gallery is by dumping the one you've got, choosing a new girl and spending money on her. The game really doesn't have any replay value. You have four people to use in the story, but it's the same story for each character. So nothing changes for you, but it's good for multiplayer play. The game is decent, but I have never seen such gratuitous usage of a crotch hit. But hearing Redman and Method Man supply their voices for the minion characters and their music for the game is an added bonus. Moore is a Tulsa, Okla., freshman in journalism. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN IoOK for Jayplay Thursdays. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LOOK for Jayplay Thursdays. 15 This page is satire. All names are made up, except in cases when public figures are being satirized. Other use of real names is accidental unless otherwise noted. Questions? comments? Contact Lucas Wetzel at 864-4810 or beak@kansan.com. Or send smoke signals. 马 TONGUEINBEAK WWW.KANSAN.COM/SATIRE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 Lindsey Gold/Kansan Pirate ship lands on campus Several leagues removed from Clinton, Lawrence pirate the Nefarious sits with his cabin boy pining away for a woman he calls "The Sea Goddess." TOURIST CENTER By Natty Bumppo beak@kansan.com Kansan Jayplay writer An early morning windstorm swept a ship full of Clinton Lake pirates all the way to the lawn of Strong Hall yesterday. The pirates, who said they spend their time hunting sharks and searching for the lost treasure of the Wakarusa River Valley, were swept atop the concrete seas of campus in the process of a routine raid on Potter Lake. The men looked as if they had not bathed in days. KU sailing tattoos festooned their arms. "I've sailed all kinds of man-made reservoirs and been in all kinds of seaports, but this here is the scurviest," said a man who claimed he was Captain Redbeard's Bastard Son. "All of a sudden tuition is up 18 percent, I'm all out of Admiral Nelson, and some kid with a coat hanger in her hair hit me with a free frisbee from Office Depot." University talked to self, literally By Patrick Cady beak@kansan.com Kansan Jayplay writer In the wake of the loss of its former Men's Basketball coach, Roy Williams, the University of Kansas seemed to be on the verge of losing its mind. "It was at the same time fascinating and truly truly disturbing," said Mort Garflunkle, Professor of Pop Psychology and author of 120 Devious Strategies To Win At Bridge. "The university, the trees, bushes and even squirrels seemed to have manifested their own collective consciousness—and it was talking to itself." Faculty and students first noticed the phenomenon a week ago Tuesday after Williams flew to North Carolina to take the Tar Heel's vacant coaching job. "When I came to my Calculus last week, I heard this weird sort of grumbling on campus," said Jill Meahle, Kansas City, Kan. freshman. "Needless to say, it freaked me out. On Friday I could actually make out words. Never would've thought the entire campus could vocalize, dadgum it." PATRIOTIC AMERICA Garfunkle said campus quieted down Monday following the hiring, ironically enough, of former Illinois basketball coach Bill Self. Eric Braem/Kansan In addition to bringing several assistant coaches to the University of Kansas, newly-hired men's basketball coach Bill Self announced that he would also be accompanied by a slew of bad puns Although I appreciate the dress shoes, and your attempt at a shirt, I still can't accept acorns as payment. NO SHIRT NO SHOES NO SERVICE squirrel In a recent move that has surprised many,including the company itself, AT&T announced last Monday that it would lay off about 2,000 more people than the total number listed on its payroll. Mirian Graddick-Weir, Executive Vice President of Human Resources, said the discrepancy could be due to the use of separate databases for employee compensation and benefits, or possibly to a lag in updating their records of AT&T fires more employees than it thought it had in most recent round of layoffs Others offer an additional theory. An alleged internal company memo by CEO Dave Dorman is rumored to indicate the ordered termination of several people who are actually listed as employees of Sprint, SBC, and Lucent. Many within and outside the company became curious about the announcement after comparing figures. "I guess firing someone else's employees could increase efficiency," joked Kent Hodgemann, an MCI Worldcom consultant. As of press date, these rumors could not be denied or confirmed. recent hires. -Terry Pliwick BRIEFLY The Easter Bunny, candy distributor and occasional Lawrence resident, was believed to be the the DEA arrests Easter Bunny One of the most beloved holiday figures was arrested on drug charges when the Kansas Drug Enforcement Agency kicked in the door of the Easter Bunny late Sunday evening. I will do the rest of the text. The Easter Bunny prime target of a DEA raid carried out on April 20, or 4/20, a day typically associated with marijuana use. The Easter Bunny was implicated after Lawrence Police discovered someone had filled plastic eggs filled with pieces of hash and hidden them all over Lawrence citizens were saddened about the incident. "Dude," said Lyle Jackson, Kwik Shop employee. "They arrested the Easter Bunny." "The timing of this arrest is preposterous," said William H. Davis, The Easter Bunny's attorney. "If they want to nail someone, they should get the tooth fairy. She's been hopped up on painkillers so long she doesn't know an incisor from a candy corn." South Park. "We think that KU students have the right to see the pictures of things we think are wrong," said President T.J. Throckmorton, El Dorado junior about his group "We'd also like to open their minds to the use of coinage to show scale, whenever possible." The group's debut will be a McDonald's menu/photo exhibit on the aftermath of sexual self-stimulation. Students will be warned of the display as they approach with placards that read "Caution: Oil Spill Photos Ahead." The illicit eggs were found by parents of several children who had mistaken the contents for shriveled jelly beans, eaten them, and wandered to the swing sets to eat pounds of chocolate. Later that afternoon, attendants at the Jayhawk Food Mart called Police to report funny behavior on part of The Bunny, saying he had tried to for his nachos in color cellophane-wrapped chocolate pieces known as "Bunny Munny." Senate recently approved funding for a new political O&L group called Jayhawks Aimed at Grossing In Fickle Freshmen (JAGOFF). The Easter Bunny, who has no prior convictions, said he was only trying to spread cheer in a college town. DEA officials were unsympathetic and called the arrest their most important in the recent "If you think it's dry now, wait until Easter," campaign. New Student Group aims to inform, disgust "We think conjuring horrific mental images by using wording similar to, but distinct from, what we are showing is a great way to 'prime' the audience for the coup de grace," Throckmorton said. Other planned exhibits include "VOMIT: It's All on You," and "Michael Jackson: The Nose." -Sam Hopkins --- P 16 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2003 There’s a better way to vent. free for all 864-0500. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weekly Specials Dig What Lawrence Nightlife Monday 6pm Sat 7pm Mon 8pm Tues 9pm Wed $4 Dbl Red Bull/Vodka BIG PARTY $2 Coors Bottles WWW.ABEJAKES.COM WWW.ABEJAKES.COM WWW.ABEJAKES.COM $2 Shoe Revival Story Great Bluegrass 9 pm $2.50 Captain Morgan $3.50 Bubba Beers $2 Bun & Bud Lt Bottles $3 Shirrond Martinis $1.50 Snaps $2.50 Southern Comfort $3.50 Bubba Beers $5 Miller Pitchers $2 Michelob Lt & Ultra $1.50 Miller Highlife $5 Miller Pitchers $2.50 Parrot Bay Drinks $3 Bacardi O3, Citrona Smirnoff Ice, Mike's Zima $3 Imports $2 Weiss $2 Michelob Lt & Ultra Free Pool Every Day $2.50 Any Bottle 1/2 Price Appetizers 5pm-10pm $1.50 Captain Morgan & Smirnoff $2.50 oz Domestic 1/2 Price Appetizers 8pm-10pm $2.50 Cornels 1/2 oz Microbrews $2 Bloody Marys $2.20 oz Domestic 1/2 Price Appetizers 8pm-10pm Rice Wings $2.75 any 2 oz Crust (24 hours to choose from) $1 price Appetizer 8pm-10pm $2 oz Domestic $2 Old Drinks, 5oz Wings College Night 1/2 Price Appetizer 8pm-10pm $2 Well Dblk $1 Shooters DJ Nick Reddell $3 Red Bull Vodkas DJ Brandon Morgan 18+ Pub Crawl Olympics unit 19 pm Stee Show Party 11 pm Visit www.thegranada.com for upcoming shows Visit www.thegranada.com for upcoming shows Visit www.thegranada.com for upcoming shows 25c Draws Service Industry Night $1.50 U-Call-it Ladies Night $1 Anything 21 to Enter DJ & Dancing $3 Smirnoff Mixers $2.75 Long Island Ice Teas Free Pool All Day $3 Coors Light Bottles 50 c Tacos 1/2 Price Big Burgers $2 Boulevard Pins 25c Wings $2 Big Beers Family Night after 10pm $2.50 Imported Bottles $2 Bully Pint $1 Sex on the Beach $4 Smirnoff Dblk The Crest & Pickle Corps Squad DJ Skody Project Grouse The Pub Crawl, Bar Olympics Starts at 2pm $1.50 Screwdriver $9 Orange Juices $3 Douglas Bottles Free Pool Midnight, 24 hrs $2.41 Well Singles $1 Dom Costa $4 Captain Morgan Dblk Free Pool Midnight, 24 hrs $2 Dom Bottles $1 Fuzzy Squids $3 Long Island Free Pool Midnight, 24 hrs $3 Dom Gusto $2 Daddy $3 Blue Husklings Free Pool Midnight, 24 hrs $1.50 Bus/Bud Lt. Bottles No Cover $2 Vokks & Red Bull $2 Coors Lt. Draft DJ Randy Foster $2 Flavored Backmuff Vodkas $2 Smirnoff Ice Boz DJs Mike Scott & Tan Lucero $2 All Absolutees No Cover DJs Chris & Mike McD $2 Micro/Import Drinks $1 off all Martinis $1 Wells $2 Calls DJ Randy Foster Prime Rib/Dinner $2 Business Import & Microbrew Pinus $2 Dumbledroom $2 Home Improvement $19 oz Tables $2 Microbrew Pinus $1.50 Dumplings $2 Domestic Big Beers 1/2 Price Burgers $2.50 Domestic Big Beers 50 c Tacos $2 Coronas $2.50 Microbrew Pinus BUBBA'S Pool Room BUFFALO WILD WING! JACK TEENIGANS JACPS Friday April 25, 2003 Vol.113.Issue No.142 Today's weather 60° Tonight: 40° To Today's weather 60° Tonight: 40° KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com 'Hawks look to finish season strong; take on Cornhuskers today p.1B Destiny Frankenstein Show to dance into Lied ByJessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Stomps and claps will fill the Lied Center during the annual Step Show tomorrow night. Eight organizations, mostly minority fraternities and sororities, will compete in the competition, a tradition since 1996. Anthony Brown, Leawood senior and Alpha Phi Alpha president, said the stepping tradition developed from the skits and dances that groups used to preform on campus for recognition. The stomping, clapping and chanting was developed with a military influence. Some of the movements are based in tradition while others are impromptu. Because of low membership numbers, each member must participate, even if he or she doesn't have dancing ability. rhythm get thrown into this," Brown said. "Some people who don't have any The groups have been practicing for months to perfect their routines. Because of intense competition, the groups practice at undisclosed locations. Alpha Phi Alpha members refer to their practice space as "the igloo," because they are "ice cold," Brown said. Alpha Phi Alpha has won the competition for the past three years. Members said that if they won again, they would retire the trophy. Sigma Lambda Beta fraternity and Sigma Lambda Gamma sorority, both traditionally Latino organizations, are also participating in the show. Sigma Lambda Gamma has several African-American members. Kristy Croom, Independence junior and Sigma Lambda Gamma president, said the group wanted to participate to integrate African-American history into the sorority's tradition. "We try to celebrate their culture as well, and this is one way to do that," Croom said. David Interiano, Wichita sophomore and Sigma Lambda Beta president, said his organization wanted to use the show as an opportunity to make its presence known on campus. "It will be a diverse audience," Interiano said. "We wanted to promote our culture and let people know who we are." TITANS South High School Tickets for the show are $10 and are available through the Lied Center and Student Union Activities box offices. Proceeds support scholarships and National Pan-Hellenic Council operating costs. "We are expecting a really explosive show this year, so come fast and come early," said Mike Conley, graduate intern of fraternity and sorority life and adviser to the council. — Edited by Lindsay Hanson David Interiano, Wichita sophomore, and Raymond Rico, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, practice step dance moves in the Multicultural Resource Center. "It takes a lot of time and dedication to make things right," Rico said. Rico and Interiano are part of a six-man team representing the Sigma Lambda Beta fraternity. The step show competition is at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Lied Center. Scott Revnolds/Kansan Remembering the Railroad Dan Nelson/Kansan The Miller Home, built in 1858, still stands at 1111 E. 19th St.Before the Civil War, the smokehouse that stood behind the home is believed to have been one of about 30 stops in Douglas County on the Underground Railroad. Slaves fled to Douglas County in pursuit of freedom Area homes gave slaves safe haven Contrary to its name, the Underground Railroad was neither underground nor a railroad. By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer It was a series of trails connecting hideouts in barns and basements that fleeing slaves relied on as they tried to gain their freedom. And it was a highly illegal, dangerous, clandestine activity. That makes determining the people and locations involved difficult, said Douglas County Historical Society SEE LOCAL HOMES ON PAGE 8A By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Nearly 1,000 escaped slaves from western Missouri used the Underground Railroad through Douglas County between 1854 and the early 1860s, historians estimate. Moving along the Wakarusa River, through sympathetic communities in the Wakarusa Valley, the slaves relied on abolitionists to hide them in barns and houses, some of which are still standing, until they could get to the next stop along the way. For many, the goal was Topeka, and the Jim Lane Trail — today it's called Highway 75. From there, the slaves went north to Nebraska, Iowa and ultimately a new life. But some decided to stay in the area. In the dead of winter in 1862, a slave named George Washington escaped from a farm in Platte County, Mo., about five kilometers south of what is now Kansas City International Airport. Though few records were kept at the "In Lawrence the Jayhawkers would wait for the rewards to be posted in Kansas City about escaped slaves and they would come take them off the streets." Steve Jansen Douglas County historian time, Washington's escape is recorded because his owner, Jess Miller, reported the slave to newspapers and the authorities. After fighting his way across streams and through thick brush, Washington arrived in Parkville, Mo., to find a frozen Missouri River separating him from freedom in Kansas. "He literally walked on water to freedom," said Washington's great-grandson, Jimmy Johnson, an archeologist living in Kansas City, Mo. "He couldn't read or write, but they talked on the farm, and he knew to head someplace in Kansas." Across the river, Washington found a sympathetic community of abolitionists in Quindaro, who harbored fugitive slaves in a series of caves until transportation, generally wagons, could take them to their next stop on the Underground Railroad. The journey to Topeka and the Jim Lane Trail was often the most dangerous, said Douglas County historian Steve Jansen. "It took weeks to get from western Missouri to Douglas County — largely because of the absence of good roads and the need to travel in a secretive manner," he said. But even after the slaves arrived at an abolitionist enclave like Lawrence, it wasn't safe for them to be seen in public, Jansen said. "In Lawrence the Jayhawkers would wait for the rewards to be posted in Kansas City about escaped slaves and they would come take them off the streets," he said, citing the infamous William C. Quantrill among those Jayhawkers. "It wasn't safe in Lawrence because SEE FREEDOM ON PAGE 8A Former Irish leader speaks on civil rights By Lauren Britow lbristow@kansan.com Kansas man writer Mary Robinson, the first female president of Ireland and former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, was scheduled to give a lecture last night in Budig Hall. Instead of that lecture, Robinson told audience members, including Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, that she would rather have a conversation. "Lecture' sounds too intimidating," Robinson said. "I'd like to have a conversation, not a lecture, about where the world is today and where we want to be." I am a child of great love and joy. I will always remember my mother, Jane Doe. She was a kind and caring woman who loved me deeply. Her presence in my life was so special that I will always carry her spirit with me. I hope that she will be well loved by her family and that she will continue to inspire others. Thank you, Jane Doe! Robinson Robinson, who served as Ireland's president from 1990 to 1997, talked about the United Nations' goal of making globalization work for all the world's people and focusing on the protection and promotion of human rights. Robinson informed audience members of U.N. resolutions that the U.S. government had not ratified that dealt SEE CIVIL RIGHTS ON PAGE 7A New whistle to be tested this afternoon By Amy Potter potter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer KU students and faculty members should get their ear plugs out because they are going to hear a sound they haven't heard in a while. Facilities Operations will begin installing the new whistle this morning. They hope to start testing it by 3 p.m. The new whistle was designed from a whistle found on a steam boat called the George M. Verde, said George Cone, assistant director of mechanical systems and utilities. Cone said Watson Library would be the best place for students to view the installation of the whistle and hear it blow. A 2A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 News briefs CAMPUS Douglas County AIDS Walk begins tomorrow morning The 13th-annual AIDS Walk, sponsored by the Douglas County AIDS Project, starts tomorrow at 10 a.m. by the South Park gazebo, 11th and Massachusetts streets. Registration begins at 9 a.m. The walk will be follow a five-kilometer route down Massachusetts Street. The goal for this year's event is to raise $10,000, said Sidney Hardgrave executive director of the project. Hardgrave wants to host about 200 walkers with an average of $50 in pledges this year. Even if students haven't collected pledges, Hardgrave said, they should feel free to join in the walk to show their support. The AIDS Walk is one of the Project's three major fund-raisers, but another aim of the walk is to continue to raise awareness of the disease and to support those who have been affected by it. Hardgrave said. "Part of our goal is to help the broader community realize this impacts our neighbors and community," she said. — Nikki Overfelt STATE Sebelius relaxes security at Statehouse and offices TOPEKA — Visitors to the State house will no longer have to sign in, and an additional entrance will be open for them, Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said Wednesday. Sebelius said she ordered relaxed security at the Statehouse and nearby government office buildings effective immediately because federal homeland security officials last week downgraded the national terrorist alert level to "yellow" from "orange." Federal officials still perceive a significant risk of attacks, but not a high risk. Visitors had been required to sign in at the Statehouse and were subject to random searches of backpacks and briefcases since March 20, the day after the U.S.-led war against Iraq began. Visitors could enter the Statehouse only through the east door on the ground floor. In a memo for "all interested parties," Sebelius said that visitors would now be able to use the west wing's ground floor entrance. NATION Director of Kansas City Zoo resigns amid drop in visitors KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Mark Wourms, director of the Kansas City Zoo, has resigned so the struggling animal park can hire a more business-minded leader in hopes of boosting attendance. Zoo attendance has dropped steadily the past few years, down from 715,000 in 1998 to 425,000 last year. The zoo has been losing money and was forced to borrow against a "founder's fund." James E. Stowers III, president of the Friends of the Zoo board, praised Wourms passion for animals and conservation but said the zoo needed to be equally attentive to its human guests. "This zoo, if we're successful with the master plan, is going to require a CEO that is familiar with all the business aspects," Stowers said. Stowers spoke between a closed session of the board and a general staff meeting to inform zoo employees of Wourm's departure. Wourms, formerly of New York's Bronx Zoo, became director of the Kansas City Zoo in 1992 and oversaw the park's expansion to include Australian- and African-themed areas after voters approved funding. "Mark has guided our zoo for 11 years through a time of transformation and transition." Stowers said. "He has led the zoo through good times and bad and through it all had only one goal in mind and that was to make the Kansas City Zoo the best it could be." Wourms and Stowers said the resignation came by mutual agreement. The zoo announced in February that it would acquire as many as 300 new animals and enhance some of its exhibits. The changes followed a consultant's warning last fall that the zoo needed to change its focus on education and natural settings,the principles that guided the $71 million makeover in the 1990s. The Associated Press KUJH TV NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7, 9, and 11. News: Tawny Bach and Brooke Wehner Weather: Matt Jacobs Sports: Mike Alzamora 807 kansan.com On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU Jared Soares/Kansan 10 Ryan Burton, Wichita senior, bends a heated a rod to form a light fixture. Burton's studio class is designing and building light fixtures for Hillcrest Elementary School, 1045 Hilltop Drive. Six other groups are working on the same project. To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Queers and Allies will sponsor a Brown Bag Drag Show at noon today on the patio in front of the Kansas Union. Call 864-3091. The Center for East Asian Studies will screen the Iranian film The Circle at 7 tonight at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Call 864- 3849. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor the play The Yellow Dress at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3552. The Department of Theatre and Film will sponsor a screening of the upcoming film The Shape of Things, starring KU alumnus Paul Rudd, at 7:30 tonight at Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Call 844-3982. The University Dance Company will perform at 7:30 tonight at the Lied Center. Call 864-4264. Comedian Deidre Sullivan will perform at 8 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3091. The Center for East Asian Studies will sponsor "Silk Road," a conference that will explore ethnicity and Islam along the silk road, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Union. Register online at http://www.ceas.ku.edu or call 864-3843. The Kansas Woodwind Quintet will perform at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Central Court in the Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4710. Paul Siegel, legal communications professor, will lecture on "Why Queer Rights is a Free Speech Issue" at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3091. University Theatre will present the play The Magic Flute at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow and 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Call 864-3381. The University will present Museum Day, with activities for all ages at all KU museums, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. For more information, call 864-4710. Et Cetera The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 68044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS60445. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauzer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Bldvd, Lawrence, KS 66045 which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. The Yellow Dress The Yello A play based on the true... A play based on the true story of a young woman's relationship that begins as love and ends in tragedy. Come see the The Yellow Dress and do your part to help prevent relationship violence and sexual assault. Alderson Auditorium,KS Union Friday, April 25th 7:00 pm (will be followed by panel discussion on sexual and domestic violence) Presented by: Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and Women's Transitional Care Services, Rape Victim Survivor Services, The KU Theatre Department, KU Student Senate, Man Can Stop Rape, and Deana's Fund STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO SENATE BOWLING COLUMBINE the museum of bowling by Michael Moore Sunday, April 27, 2003 8:00 pm screening at Woodruff Auditorium bowling alley Bowling at Jaybowl 8:30 pm free shoe rental with hook Tickets $1.00 at the Hawk Shop Kansas University Jennifer & Kenneth Jones 719-846-5000 www.jenniferandkenneth.com Kentucky Place Apartments Now Leasing 2 BR Apartments For E.H.00031 Fall 2003! - Furnished apt. available - Within walking distance to campus - Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves & dishwashers - Large walk-in closets - Laundry facilities on site for more information call 841-1212 or 749-0445 Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 . FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Religious panel discusses homosexuality, the Bible By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansas staff writer "Jesus loves Fags." Several signs and fliers on campus relayed this sentiment as an advertisement for a panel discussion that examined what the Bible and Christianity say about homosexuality. The five-member panel discussed much more than the Bible's views on homosexuality, including the role of women in the Bible, the differences between sex and sexuality and violence towards homosexuals in the name of religion. Rev. Joseph Dang of St. John the Baptist Catholic Apostolic Church International asked the audience at the beginning of the program to respect one another and to "keep it cool." Robert Minor, professor of religious studies, said that people often blame their prejudices on the Bible. To prevent this, he said he always prefaced his Biblical comments by saying, "This is how I understand it" not "This is what the Bible says." Minor said almost every major religion had accepted homosexuals at one time and rejected them at another. As a representative of Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Corrina Beck spoke to the audience about violence toward the queer community. "Religion has been used as a weapon against me and people I love," Beck said. Beck told the story of her partner, who had been beaten and raped. On one occasion, her rapist told her God hates fags. Each religious leader on the panel discussed his or her church's view on homosexuality, both in the clergy as well as the "Religion has been used as a weapon against me and people I love." Corrina Beck Corrina Beck representative of Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center congregation. "The Catholic Church teaches it's okay to be gay, but don't act," Dang said. Dang said this was equivalent to sitting down to at a table to a nice meal and being told to not eat. The Rev. Phil Shull of the United Methodist Campus Ministry said the Methodist Church was split on the issue. Among the clergy, he said, the pastors practiced a "don't ask don't tell" policy. As the program drew to a close, panelists answered questions from the audience. The topics of questions ranged from the issue of homophobia in politics to the use of "homosexual" and "gay" in the Bible when those terms were created in the 19th century. The panel was organized by Christopher Entwistle, Palatine, Ill., freshman and the palate. Queers and Allies senator for Student Senate. "I just wanted to help educate the community, show them the differences, hopefully open their eyes to some new thoughts," Entwhistle said. Entwhistle organized the discussion as a part of Pride Week. Despite the more liberal representation of Christianity, Entwhistle said he invited every religious leader in the community. He said many e-mailed him back but declined to come to the discussion. Pride Week finale more than a 'drag' for participants Edited by Ryan Wood Radio show host and local celebrity drag queen, Flo, flaunts herself for the crowd during the 2002 Brown Bag Drag Show. The annual event will be held at noon today in front of the Kansas Union. By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Students passing by the Kansas Union's front plaza will see lively performances,but the performers are not what they appear to be. Kansan file photo The 10th annual Brown Bag Drag Show will be at noon today in front of the Kansas Union. It will last about an hour, and students are invited to bring a lunch and watch cross-dressing students sing and dance. The drag show is part of Pride Week, sponsored by University of Kansas Queers and Allies. "It's one of the most entertaining things we do," he said. "It was so popular it was done the next year, and here we are in year number 10." Director Patrick Ross, Lawrence freshman and Jayplay columnist, said the event was probably started on a whim and had continued ever since. The 10th annual Brown Bag Drag Show will be at noon today in front of the Kansas Union. It will last about an hour, and students are invited to bring a lunch and watch cross-dressing students sing and dance. There will be eight individuals or groups performing, including both men and women dressed as the opposite sex. "It will be the same general theme as in the past," Ross said. "Mostly lip-synching and dancing, with a pretty involved cabaret show." This year's drag show will be hosted by Matt Patton, also known as Ms. Robin Banks, whose singing and magic show is popular in the Midwest and New York. He has been a professional female impersonator for more than two years. Patton hosted the show as Banks in 2001 and said he came back because of how much he enjoyed the event. "It's probably the most fun I've had," he said. "It's an incredible experience to have so many members, and they're so nice. Plus, I missed Lawrence." Ross said the event was purely to get the Queers and Allies message out—to tell the student pop- uation that they were open for everyone and would educate anyone about gay and lesbian issues. "We are a resource, a place to come for education," he said. "It's not going to be a political message. It's just to have fun." Patrick Ross Queers and Allies director They also want to encourage students to attend the Pride Rally at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Buford Watson Park, near Sixth and Tennessee streets. "It's not going to be a political message," he said. "It's just to have fun." Ross said he hoped the drag show continued to grow and attract bigger acts. "We'll try to get more amateurs and known performers, and make it more and more popular," Ross said. "It's a tradition, so we won't mess with it too much." Patton said he hoped the drag aspect didn't dissuade students from attending. "We won't embarrass you," he said. "It's something to check out, a sure hit." —Edited by Christy Dendurent SUMMER STORAGE FREE FREE FREE FREE PICK-UP DELIVERY BOXES TAPE SAVE $25 when you reserve your store space by May 2nd Store Anything: Furniture, Futons, Bikes, computers, etc. Basic Package is $135 for the entire summer! WE CAN PACK AND SHIP ANYTHING RIGHT FROM YOUR DORM OR RESIDENCE AT UPS COUNTER RATES! ups The UPS Store 865-0004 Formerly Mail Boxes Etc. DIESEL Diesel Individuals Eregonous Zone Chart 27% ankle 19% waist 25% waist 40% hip 22% rear end 17% behind the knee YOU'LL FIND IT AT hobbs. 700 MASS. EVERYTHING BUTICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass. WE LOVE OUR KANSAN. KANSA Kansas tops Western Michigan in field goal to at Headland Caliphate Cup 7:00 PM -- Friday, April 25, 2003 BANDS IN THE SAND at pearson scholarship hall • 1426 alumni place • Down the hill from Frasier featuring Full Feature Shots Fired Podstar Sponsored by Coca-Cola & ASHC Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! - Fully applianced - kitchen w/microwave Laundry facilities - Laundry facilities - Private off street parking - Central Heat and Air - Walk-in closets - Fireplaces - Washer/Dryer hookups - Walk to K.U. - On-site Manager - 24 hour emergency maintenance 14th & Mass. (785) 841-1212 Hours: 9-5 M-F EHO FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2019 4A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION FRIDAY,APRIL 25,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goefernfart and Justin Hennining Jona Gleppert and Justin Hennings managing editors 884-4854 or jgoeffet@kansan.com and ihenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or ishaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales.kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4368 or adsales.kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news advron 864-786-3055 malcolmgibson.com Matt Fisher Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com LETTER TO THE EDITOR Protest shows no sensitivity Yesterday, as I was walking to class, I was horrified at what I saw sitting on the lawn in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. It was not the pictures that horrified me, however. It was the complete and utter lack of compassion or consideration on the University's part for women who have had an abortion. I had an abortion almost a year ago, and it was a miserable choice for me to make. I was in an extremely abusive relationship, both physically and emotionally, and I did not want to put my child in such a situation. I terminated the pregnancy when I was five weeks along. I did not want my child to live in the paralyzing state of fear that I had endured for nearly two years. Rather than subject my child to that, I chose to quietly end my baby's life. I may be able to stand getting choked, punched and thrown into walls, but my baby would have been no match for its father. I cannot protect my own child while I'm getting beaten, and the thought of him hurting my child was too much for me to stand. Being called a murderer is something I should not have to tolerate anywhere I go, let alone on my own school campus. What right do those self-righteous, so-called activists have to judge me? They should be ashamed of themselves. Don't they know I feel guilty enough without them throwing it in my face? I did what I did not because I wanted to but because I had to. Don't think for a second that a single day goes by when I don't think about what I did. I have to choke back tears every time I see a mother holding a baby. No mother should be forced into my situation, and I wouldn't wish that punishment on my worst enemy. Shame on you. Justice for All, for promoting such a vicious and senseless attack on women. You take for granted the freedom to feel secure in your personal choices. I only wish I could be so lucky. The writer, who asked that her name be withheld, is a Kansas City sophomore. SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, email the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length; Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansen will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Maximum Length: SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Staufer-Flint RERUNS OF OUR LIVES Don't flush two lives down the drain. Keep abortion safe, keep abortion legal. Emily Elmore and Neil Mulka for The University Daily Kansan Child abuse as gruesome as protest PERSPECTIVE It was nearly impossible to miss the two-story high anti-abortion display on campus this week. The graphic billboards took full advantage of the emotional effects of shock value. Supporters of this tactic explain that the public should be aware of the gruesome reality of abortion. If this is an acceptable argument, here is another gruesome reality. GUEST COMMENTARY An estimated 903,000 children were victims of abuse or neglect in 2001, according to the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System. About 1,300 of these children died because abuse or neglect. Nearly half of fatal victims were children younger than a year old while 84.5 percent of them were younger than 6, according to the NCANDS report. An average of 28 children in Missouri and Kansas enter foster care each day. In Kansas, most of these children were removed from their homes because of reports of neglect by their parents or guardians, according to an article published April 13 by The Kansas City Star. - Seventeen percent of families with children younger than 5 live below the poverty level, according to the 2000 Census. This translates into more than 2 million American families. The display used graphic photographs of abortions. How would people react to photographs of children marked with Molly Gise opinion@kansan.com In the legal and moral abortion debate, activists and politicians have largely ignored the nation's truly defenseless: the thousands of children who live or have died in the cruelest of situations. They have known fear, shame, abandonment and poverty more intimately than young hearts should. bruises, cigarette burns and cuts — the small battered bodies that social workers see daily? What adds to their helplessness is the neglect they receive on behalf of lobbyists, activists and politicians who place their money, attention and votes on unborn children—all in the name of life. If anti-abortion supporters so passionately defend the right to life, they should care as deeply about the quality of life of American children. The fight for life doesn't end at birth for all children, and support for them shouldn't end there either. April is Child Abuse Prevention Month. While the month is nearly over, we should take the opportunity as students to learn more about issues, like child abuse prevention and improved foster care, that affect the lives of children. The Kansas City Star published an indepth article April 13 about the state of foster care in Kansas and Missouri. Both foster systems lack national accreditation. Child welfare officials in both states said they were working to improve foster care but continued budget shortfalls made hiring the necessary amount of workers impossible. While busloads of students have traveled to Washington, D.C., to march for anti-abortion measures, very few lobby for their legislators to tackle problems of child abuse, substandard foster care and poverty among families, particularly those with young children. Because most University of Kansas students are not parents, it's easy for us to forget about the plight of children and focus instead on the much simpler issue of abortion. But child abuse victims have faced enough neglect. Activists on both sides of the abortion debate should refocus their efforts on our nation's most defenseless citizens. Their lives may depend on it. Gise is a Tulsa, Okla., senior in journalism and French. PERSPECTIVE Gory pictures distasteful on campus I have been writing this column in my head now for four years, since I first saw the gruesome and sensationalized photos of aborted fetuses that antiabortion activists adorned our campus with. Now, after a lovely spring day has been ruined by these photos and the offensive comments that accompany them, I have decided to exercise my First Amendment right. GUEST COMMENTARY I have no statistic as to how many young women on this campus have had abortions, but I am willing to bet that it is in the hundreds or perhaps even the thousands. Think for a minute the effect these billboards have had on these women. Mandy Schick opinion@kansan.com The purpose of this column is not to get into some sort of argument over semantics, to debate the definition of the term "baby" or "life" or to debate the morality of abortion. I only wish to defend the group of people on this campus who have been arguably the most devastated by these anti-abortion demonstrations: women who have had abortions. The abortion protesters I spoke with this week had one horrible misconception. They assume that women who have had abortions had some sort of malice towards the pregnancy they terminated. This is pure ignorance. I have several friends who have had abortions. It was not by any means an easy decision to make. These women had to make an excruciating choice that will affect them for the rest of their lives. That's not to say that they regret the choice they made; however, having an abortion was a frightening ordeal for them, one they surely do not wish to relive while attempting to cross the campus so they may receive an education. Fact: Abortion is legal in the state of Kansas. Fact: The University of Kansas is a public university. Is it a forum for people to enact moral judgment on someone who did something entirely within the realm of the law? Since when has it been appropriate to express glaring public disdain toward someone for making a choice she had every legal right to make? What is the purpose of these protesters? Is it their goal to make those who have had abortions feel guilty by posting words such as "kill" and "genocide"? (Whoever first equated this term with abortion has surely never opened a dictionary.) They assured me that their only aim was to put an end to abortion. Why must they accuse hundreds of young women of murder while trying to make a point? We all have the right to make moral judgments. We all have the right to decide whether a woman who has had an abortion is a murderer. These abortion protesters have a right to their platform. However, just because a woman has had an abortion does not mean she has to endure this. This is a state school. At a religious institution it might be acceptable to post billboards condemning peoples' actions; but this university is not such an institution. Maybe this wasn't the intent of these protesters; however, it disgusts me that any one young woman on this campus has to tolerate such blatant disdain of a choice she legally made. I do not expect these protesters to realize my point. After having several discussions with them during which they uttered unconvincing mantras, I realized that arguing with them was useless. My question is, which university official thought it appropriate that young women on this campus be harassed for exercising their legal right? I am horrified that our beautiful campus has been polluted with these horrific displays, and I am dumbfounded that it is being permitted. Schick is a graduate student in French literature. Free forAll Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 图 Don't you think the middle part of a pickle is so much better than the crunchy part? --i'd just like to thank the abortion people for the best dead baby jokes ever! If the abortion display is what really happens, then we all need to know it, shocking or not. There shouldn't be anything done behind closed doors that cannot be brought into the light. --i'd just like to thank the abortion people for the best dead baby jokes ever! I was calling about the Chi Omega fountain, Gammi Phi has their formal on Friday night, and Chi Omega has their formal on Saturday night, and we would all just really love it if the fountain was on so we could take pictures. So, yeah. North Carolina sucks. 图 Those 42-cent McDonald's hamburgers that 42-cent McDonald's hamburgers that 42-cent McDonald's hamburgers Hey pro-choice people, those pictures on those boards are what you're advocating, and if you're disturbed by those pictures, then why are you advocating it? I am so sick and tired of seeing all the PDA around this campus. This may sound childish, but if you're going to do that, get a room. i'd just like to thank the abortion people for the best dead baby jokes ever! --i'd just like to thank the abortion people for the best dead baby jokes ever! i'd just like to thank the abortion people for the best dead baby jokes ever! I have an idea for the Kansar's next headline. Mimes: The Silent Performers. A chicken and an egg are lying in bed. The chicken is smoking a cigarette with a satisfied smile on his face. The egg is frowning and looking very frustrated. The egg mutters to no one in particular, "Well, I guess we've answered that question." To the girl who was feeding her boyfriend his beoggers at Chipotle, you are a freak and that is just nasty. So why does the KU First ad, which says that KU has the only real dinosaur in Kansas, show the head, which is the only plastic part of the dinosaur? Why don't they show some of the real part? I would just like to say that Justice for All sucks. - Is anyone else concerned that my roommate has a rooster on her bed, and its name is Dan Bob? Life is a circus. Don't be the clown. - It's raining, my car's broken down, my toes are cold, my heat doesn't work, and the tow truck's not going to be here for an hour. Okay, I was just washing the dishes and I inadvertently started a wet T-shirt contest with myself. I win! --- We just took e vote. It's official. North Dakota is the most obscure state. Hey, anti-abortion people, why did it not bother you to display a dead fetus if you have so much respect for life? It's Thursday and I'm looking in the Jayplay, and there's no sex column. How can I masturbate if there's no sex column? George Bush needs to repair our country before he repairs Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Syria, and North Korea. 图 The eyeglasses that were left at the Wescoe polling site on April 10 are still in the Office of the Dean of Students waiting to be picked up. 133 Strong Hall I was raped when I was 12 and had an abortion, so I'd just like to thank Justice for All for equating me with Hitler. 图 --- FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5 Musician speaks on native music By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer African musician Thomas Mapfumo discussed his life and the进化 of chimurenga music yesterday in front of an audience of about 70 people in the Kansas Union. Mapfumo and Chaka, a member of Mapfumo's band, Blacks Unlimited, walked onto the Woodruff Auditorium stage in silence yesterday afternoon. Mapfumo discussed his life and fielded questions from the audience, and Chaka gave a demonstration of the traditional African instrument, the mbira Mapfumo wore a colorful tam and jacket with African colors, and Chaka wore a Bob Marley T-shirt. a musician Mapfumo is often compared to. "Thomas made music for the liberation of his people, just like Bob Marley did," said Hilde Dalessio, Overland Park junior. "His music has a message in it, which is rare these days." In the 1970s, Zimbabwe's people fought a war of independence against their white Rhodesian rulers. Out of that grew chimurenga music, Mapfumo said. "Chimurenga music is born out of struggle," he said. "There were a lot of my people suffering. I've been fighting for the freedom of black people in Zimbabwe." Mapfumo began making electronic interpretations of traditional mbira music. With his new interpretations of traditional music, Mapfumo became a star in Zimbabwe. "We took the mbira which is like a small wooden piano that you play with your fingers," Mapfumo said. "We tuned it to the piano and just began to play." "It was the first time that a black boy was so popular among the black people," Mapfumo said. "They (the government) asked why I was so popular and it was because of the politics in my music." Mapfumo was detained in prison for 90 days because of his song, "Hokoya." "He's also a leader for his people," he said. "In the beginning not so many people believed in me," Mapfumo said. "They thought I was crazy." Tariq Aljasser, Saudi Arabia junior, said Mapfumo was a great example of African music. Mapfumo and the Blacks Unlimited played last night at the ballroom in the Kansas Union as part of the World Music and Diversity concerts. Edited by Andrew Ward Student TV station gets Senate funding By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The Student Senate student media board doled out $138,000 on Tuesday, and for the first time, KUH received funding. KUJH will receive $8,000 from the $3-per-student media fee, but this may be a violation of Student Senate rules and regulations. A stipulation to collect funding is to have daily operations controlled by students. The station's daily operations were not controlled by students, said Dick Nelson, KUJH newsroom supervisor and lecturer in the school of Journalism. Nelson said he didn't foresee the station changing to a student-controlled operation. "It's not going to happen," he said. Students provided and determined much of the KUJH content, but Nelson said the station was never considered a student station nor was it student-managed. But Gary Hawke, KJHK KUJH and Digital Jayhawk general manager, said he considered KUJH to be student-run. Other organizations considered student media, such as The University Daily Kansan and KJHK, are managed by students, and their content, which is primarily student-focused, is decided by students. KUJH's coverage extends beyond campus to cover a larger demographic, Douglas County. KUJH is the only organization receiving money from the media fee that is not listed as a student organization. The media board gave KUJH funding with the recommendation that $5,000 of it go toward student wages. Because the student positions at the station were also requirements for classes, wages weren't given to student contributors Nelson said. Hawke said he asked the board for funding for KUJH, in part, to create paid student positions to Student media fee allocations Medium Current Next year KJHK $62,675 $70,000 The Kansan $62,675 $52,200 KUJH $0 $8,000 Kiosk $7,800 $7,800 Total $133,150 $138,000 Source: Jonathan Ng, Student Senate media board chairman expand its programming. Jonathan Ng, student body president and student media board chairman, a non-voting position, said funding decisions were based on financial need. Malcolm Gibson, general manager and news adviser at The University Daily Kansan, said KUJH should receive the $8,000 if not more. "I think they should be an equal partner in this," Gibson said. Gibson said giving the funds to KUJH might currently violate Senate regulations, but he would "The rules the way they are now should be looked into," he said. like to see Senate look into rewriting them so KUJH can continue to receive funding. Ng said the board might monitor the situation if a formal complaint or appeal was made. "The board will entertain the idea of being flexible and revisiting the issue if it warrants that," he said. No formal complaint or appeal has been made. Edited by Andrew Ward Sheriff job filled by Trego clerk WaKeeney — An unusual series of events at the Trego County's sheriff's office has left the county clerk as the county's chief law enforcement officer. The Associated Press Trego County's sheriff resigned in early April amid an investigation by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. The undersheriff quit earlier this week to take a job with the city police department. And the county's only other deputy was fired Monday by the county commission. Now, County Clerk Kathleen Conness, who says she knows virtually nothing about law enforcement, has become Trego County's sheriff until the post is filled, which is expected to take a month. State law says the county clerk will step in as sheriff when the office is vacated. Conness plans to rely heavily on the police department to keep law and order until a new sheriff is named. The process to replace the sheriff was prolonged this week when the county Democratic Party's nominee for the job withdrew his name after it had been forwarded to Gov. Kathleen Sebelius. The county's Democrats have 21 days to make a new nomination, then the governor will have a week to confirm it. In the meantime, WaKeeney Police Chief Terry Eberle likely will be asked to handle the county's day-to-day law enforcement operations. Undersheriff Chad Mann's last day on the job is today. Commissioners haven't said why deputy Dustin Shultz was fired. www.pipelineproductions.com 90.7 FARMER'S BALL FINALS PRESENTS SATURDAY, APRIL 21TH FEATURING Hearts to Waste, (the color blue) Kelpie and Vibralux CROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED with the Daybirds JASON BOLAND AND THE STRAGGLERS BATTLE FOR SILVERMEN AND PARTY TWENTY Battlement SUNDAY, MAY 4TH KOTTONMOUTH ALL AGES KINGS WITH RIDDLIN' KIDS AND ZEBRAHEA APPEARENING AT THE Dessert BOOKFEST COMING SOON TO COMING SOON TO THE BOTTLENECK 737 NEW MAMP SHREI | LAWRENCE, MD BUTTLENECH 737 NEW HAMPSHIRE | LAWRENCE, KS FRIDAY, APRIL 22TH FETISH NIGHT WITH CLOSE CELEBRATE TO EDUCATE MEMBIR KELPIE, BRIGHTEN TLINE FUSE 22, CAPTIAN OVERREACT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30TH DOORS OPEN AT 10PM DJ P MAC LETHAL APPROACH AND ARCHETYPE SHANTI GROOVE WITH 2 SNICE REVIAL STORY SHAKING TREE SUNDAY, MAY 4TH 2 SKINNEE J's* WITH FULL FEATURE AND CORE PROJECT WEDNESDAY, MAY 14TH ZUVUYA STRING CHEESE INCIDENT WITH MAKTUB THROW RAG FOR A FOLLOWING LIST OF ALL OFFERING PRODUCTIONS TO www.pipelineproductions.com PRIDE WEEK EVENTS 2003 SPONSORED BY QUEERS AND ALLIES SATURDAY: PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 11:00AM Watson Park along Massachusetts to South Park PAUL SIEGEL: WHY QUEER RIGHTS IS A FREE SPEECH ISSUE 2:30 PM Walnut Room, Kansas Union 10:00 PM -1:00 AM Ecumenical Christian Ministries: Refreshments provided, bring your own drink. $2 donation PRIDE DANCE QUEEER THEATER 7:30-9:00 PM Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union: Featuring Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain. $2 donation sponsored by: Student Development Center Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY Coca-Cola Jay hawk •Free Jersey Koozie• @ Hoglund Ballpark Friday - Softball vs. Nebraska 5:00 @ Jayhawk Field • Baseball vs. Baylor 7:00 @ Hoglund Ballpark • Free Barq's Rootbeer Floats • @ Hoglund Ballpark Saturday - Softball vs. Baylor 2:00 @ Jayhawk Field - Baseball vs. Baylor 2:00 @ Hoglund Ballpark •Free KU Pennants• @ Jayhawk Field Sunday - Softball vs. Baylor 1:00 @ Jayhawk Field - Baseball vs. Baylor 1:00 @ Hoglund Ballpark Coke Pre-Game Party - 11:30 Sunday - Live Music by Fillabuster - Free Dasani sport bottles - Inflatable games 800. 34.HAWKS KUAthletics.com KUStore.com Official KU Athletics Merchandise 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ADVERTISEMENT FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 TOP OF THE HILL Top of the HIL is KU students' chance to vote for the best of Lawrence. Fill out this form and return it to Room 119 Stauffer-Flint or visit Kansan.com to complete the online survey. Your name will be placed in a drawing for $30 gift certificate at the winner of the Best Overall Restaurant. 2003 RESTAURANTS Best Mexican: Best Chinese: Best Breakfast: Best Burgers: Best Subs: Best Italian: Best Steakhouse: Best Vegetarian: Best Pizza: Best French Fries: Best Wings: Best Buffet: Best Ice Cream: Best Custard: Best Coffee House: Best Atmosphere: Best Delivery Service: Best Bakery: Best Post-Party Food Restaurant: Best Customer Service: Best KC Restaurant: Best Local Restaurant: Best Overall: BARS Best Sports Bar: ___ Best Drink Specials: ___ Best Martinis: ___ Best Margaritas: ___ Best Wells: ___ Best Selection of Beers: ___ Best Dance Club: ___ Best Place to Play Pool: ___ DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: APRIL 25,2003 BEAUTYSERVICES BARS,continued Best Bartenders:___ Best Place to Meet Girls or Guys:___ Best Atmosphere:___ Best Place to Watch KU Basketball:___ Best Strip Club:___ Best Live Music Venue:___ Best Overall:___ Best Workout Facility:___ Best Hair Salon:___ Best Barber:___ Best Massage:___ Best Waxing:___ Best Tanning Salon:___ Best Nail Place:___ Best Tattoo Shop:___ RETAILERS Best Car Wash:___ Best Grocery Store:___ Best Gas Station:___ Best Car Services:___ Best Copy Center:___ Best Bank:___ Best Eye Doctor:___ Best Lawyer:___ Best Flower Shop:___ Best Laundromat:___ Best Golf Course:___ Best Dry Cleaners:___ Best Movie Rental:___ Best Liquor Store:___ RETAILERS,continued RETAILERS,continued Best Music Store:___ Best Shoe Store:___ Best Men's Clothing:___ Best Women's Clothing:___ Best Sporting Goods:___ Best Bike Shop:___ Best Jewelry Store:___ Best Department Store:___ Best Electronics Store:___ Best Furniture Store:___ Best Pet Store:___ Best Discount Store:___ Best Cellular Phone Carrier:___ Best Place to Sell Old CD's:___ Best Place to Sell Old Clothes:___ HOUSING Best Apartment Complex: Best apartment complete: Best Townhomes: Best Landlord: Best Neighborhood to live in: SCHOOL Best Place to study: Best Bookstore:___ Best Residence Hall:___ Best Scholarship Hall:___ Best Building on Campus:___ Best Fraternity:___ Best Sorority:___ Best Student Organization:___ THANKS FOR VOTING! PHONE: Orchard Enjoy the sunshine! THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interrupting class since 1889 kansan.com The student newspaper of the University of Kansas FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7A Undergraduates look forward to summer research By Amy Potter apotter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Cody Marrs couldn't imagine a better summer opportunity than the one he is about to have. Marrs, Wichita junior, is one of 45 undergraduate students who received a Undergraduate Research Award scholarship of $1,300 or $1,500 to research during the summer. "My first summer home I did data entry. It bored the hell out of me. It was terribly wretched," Marrs said. "Another summer I worked at a bank. I came home each day feeling like I hadn't done anything important." Though he won't be making much money, Marrs will be doing something he cares about. Marrs is studying the French cultural theorist Michel Foucault. He will look specifically at how his writings were misinterpreted during the 1980s. He will use his $1,300 scholarship to pay for living expenses, copying costs at the The scholarship gives some students an opportunity to devote an entire summer to research, said Barbara Schowen, director of the honors program. library and new books "They give up their summer to do this because they want to do projects they are interested in," Schowen said. "It allows them to do research instead of work at McDonald's and Pizza Hut, which they don't want to do." Laura Adams, Topeka sophomore, said the undergraduate award was a vital source of funding so students could have the research experience. She is studying water quality of the Arkansas River near Leadville, Colo., and California Gulch, Colo. Adams wants to present her research not only at the Undergraduate Research Symposium next spring and at the American Chemical Society, but also to the Colorado Division of Wildlife. "I'm hoping what I find will benefit them," Adams said. Schowen said research supplemented the undergraduate education. caution. "In some sense your bachelor's degree isn't complete unless you are actually doing something in your field," Schowen said. "It's certainly one way to add to the store of knowledge in that field." The awards are from funds made available by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the provost's office and KU's General Research Fund. kansan.com For a list of students who received an Undergraduate Research Award, head to www.kansan.com For Marrs, summer couldn't come fast enough. "All I could think about was that I just wanted the semester to end and the summer to get here so I could start working on it," Marrs said. "It's almost here." - Edited by Michelle Burhenn Whistle CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Anitha Rao, Overland Park senior, enjoys the whistle and is ready to have her timekeeper back. "I seriously don't think I'm going to know how much I've missed it until they put it up." Rao said. Facilities Operations has heard mixed reactions concerning the new whistle. "I hear pros and cons, people saying 'We're going to hear that again,'" Cone said. "I'm an old sailor. I kind of like whistles." The new whistle was built by Richardson's Landing in Cincinnati. It replaces a 60-year-old whistle that suffered an irreparable crack Jan. 22. Edited by Amber Byarlow Civil Rights CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A with the promotion and protection of civil and political rights of children and adults and the elimination of discrimination against women. These resolutions have been ratified by more than 145 nations, with the United States being the only nation not ratifying the Convention on the Rights of the Child. "How can you lead civil rights but not belong?" Robinson asked audience members. Robinson said she wasn't making an accusation but rather opening a debate of the importance of these issues. "She understands that these are not simple issues and there are conflicting ideas at work in implementing them," said Daniel Bernstein, University of Kansas psychology professor. "She made the crucial point that we shouldn't get lost in the talk of ideas but take whatever steps possible for implementation." Bernstein said that there was enough common ground in the global community to begin to think about the implementation of these ideas. Robinson told audience members that the cost of implementing these programs would be $50 billion a year. "At first I thought that was a big figure, but after seeing the figures associated with the recent war, the money is there. It isn't impossible," she said. "It costs $50 billion a year and I say 'Why not?' Erin Nielsen, Lincoln, Neb., graduate student thought Robinson's conversation was educational. "I don't stay as up-to-date on human rights as I'd like to," Nielsen said. "I definitely think that if the United States population was aware of these shortcomings in policies there would be more of a push to take action in the human rights stance." Robinson's lecture was sponsored by the KU School of Law and was funded partly by the Stephenson Lectures in Law and Government and the David H. Fisher funds. - Edited by Amber Byarlay Old bonds show missing $6,000 in Louisiana sale The Associated Press WASHINGTON - A find by the National Archives suggests that the United States might have shortchanged the investors who financed the Louisiana Purchase 200 years ago this week. President Thomas Jefferson's purchase from France is recorded as having cost $15 million — $230 million in today's dollars. The archives found three apparently unredeemed $2,000 bonds that the Treasury sold to finance the Louisiana Purchase from a cash-strapped Napoleon. Yesterday's display was for reporters and photographers. No public exhibit is planned. The bonds, then called "stock certificates," were not canceled or stamped, so the Treasury may never have reimbursed the money that Dutch investors paid for them—a $6,000 saving to the American taxpayer, or $86,000 in today's change. today's change... "That's what we think," said Milton Gustafson, the agency's expert on treaties. "But maybe they were just kept as samples." He said no figure survived for the total repaid. None of the otherbonds is known to have survived. "It is a tremendous find, considering the efforts in the past and the timeliness of the find," said archivist Wayne DeCesar. kansan com Get the INSIDE TRACK on UCES Become a Career Services Liaison Lap 1: Promote programs & services of University Career & Employment Services to your student organization Lap 2: Commit less than 5 hours per month Lap 3: FREE Career Connections Package ($40 Value) Lap 4: Earn $25-50 for your organization Route UCES www.ku.edu/~uces/careerliaison For more details visit: (1) Deadline: April 25th THE FIRST SPRING BREAK REALITY MOVIE! BONNIE / JUDENRY FILMENGINE AMERICA ONLINE KEYWORD: THE REAL CANCUN www.therealcancun.com NEW LINE CINEMA APRIL 25 ONLY IN THEATRES FROM THE PRODUCERS OF THE REAL WORLD NO SCRIPTS. NO ACTORS. NO RULES. 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STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 AM - 9 PM SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY 11 AM - 9 PM THURSDAY - SATURDAY All 1/3 lb. charbroiled burger platters only $3.95 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening values to $6.00 Regents Court Apartments Starting at $855 - $944 Large 3&4 BR, 2 full bath apartments for rent with Washer & Dryer Modern Decor Large fully Applianced Kitchen Including Microwave & Dishwasher Microwave & DishWash Gas Heat & Hot Water Gas Heat & Hot Water Central Heat & Air Central Heat & Air Off street parking Off street parking On KU bus route 24 hr. Emergency maintenance EHO For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 Mon.-Fri. 9-5 8A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNDERGROUND RAILROAD FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 as you see. mact/jessica tinn, jms@akansan.com. Matt Goraka, mgshiks@akansan.com. toll 364-4850 WWW.AKANSAN.COM Photo courtesy Elmer Lindell ABOVE: This popular photograph depicts the Lawrence man who rescued local resident John Doy from a St. Joseph, Mo. prison in 1859. Local abolitionist and Civil War veteran Joseph Gardner stands fourth from left. RIGHT: Posters like this were common before the Civil War. The Fugitive Slave Act placed a $100 bounty on the head of any escaped slave. From the undersigned, living on Current River, about twelve miles above Doniphan, in Niagara County, Ma., on 01st of March, 1840. To the undersigned, with a note on his hand, on brown pants and sweatpuff work, and on an old black wool hat above snow. No. J1. The above reward will be given to any person who may apprehend this offence. Freedom CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A $100 REWARD! RANAWAY there were abolitionists here, sure, but there were Free-Staters here, too, and the two groups didn't necessarily see eye-to-eye." The Free-Staters viewed slavery as an economic issue, and many wouldn't hesitate to turn in their neighbors for harboring the black fugitives, Jansen explained. Like his namesake, George Washington chose the latter. So, slaves who made it this far could continue their flight, or dig in and fight. The Fugitive Slave Act meant he had a bounty of $100 on his head after his owner reported him to authorities. Upon his arrival in Leavenworth from Quindaro, Washington did not move farther away from the potential trouble posed by bounty hunters. Instead he enlisted in the Union Army with the Kansas First Colored Infantry Division in August 1862. In 1857, John Gardner, an abolitionist from Indiana, moved his family to the Wakarusa Valley, much of which is now covered by Clinton Lake, to support the free territory of Kansas. 届 But he wanted to fight for what was right, Lindell said. "He didn't like slavery, and things were moving west, so he moved west, too." "Gardner was English and the English were non-fighters," said Elmer Lindell of Lawrence, explaining why his great-grandfather moved to the frontier. morning, some ruffians from Missouri came up there and knocked on the door," he said. Gardner was drawn to the area by his abolitionist cousin, Dr. E.G. Macy, who had settled a few years earlier in that valley in a house still standing today. This house still includes a trap door in the living room floor that leads to the basement. A gunfight ensued when Gardner refused to open the door. Before it was over, the former slave, Simpson, was dead. Only a thunderstorm stopped the fire that the Missourians started. It didn't take long for Gardner to get involved after he arrived in the area with his family in March 1857. Just two years later, in July 1859, Gardner was among the group of ten men from Lawrence who rode more than 70 miles to St. Joseph, Mo., to free Dr. John Doy, Missouri authorities had arrested Doy weeks earlier for transporting escaped slaves to Nebraska. "One night a guy in their group acted like he was drunk and the other two told the night jailer to lock this guy up," Lindell said, recounting his family's version of the rescue of John Doy. "When the jailer got his keys but, they locked the jailer in jail and took Dr. Doy and rode out of town without a shot fired." "One night, about 1 in the Gardner's cabin, on land just south of the Clinton Dam, had been a stop on the Underground Railroad for a few years by then. In the summer of 1860 an escaped slave named Napoleon Simpson was living with the Gardner family and working with the family in the fields, Lindell said. "After having his wife and kids threatened like that, he was a little more interested in fighting the war," Lindell said. So, like George Washington would do a year later, Joseph Gardner, a surveyor by trade, headed to Leavenworth to enlist in the Union Army. In July 1861, Gardner joined the ranks of the 3rd Kansas Volunteer Regiment, but his deployment didn't last long. By September 1862, Gardner's unit had been reorganized as the 10th Volunteer Infantry in Paola. Working out of Fort Scott, Gardner was one of the handful of Union troops injured in fighting at Newtonia, Mo., about 20 miles southeast of Joplin, Mo. It would be one of the last victories for Confederate troops in the area. "He was sent back to what they called a hospital then, probably just a tent strung to a tree," Lindell said. "After he got healed up, he was discharged and then he re-enlisted, and got reinstalled as a lieutenant." Less than one year later, in August 1863, Gardner would die in service as a lieutenant with the 1st Kansas Volunteer Colored Infantry near Fort Gibson in Oklahoma. Among his troops, in a regiment that included many former slaves, was George Washington. 图 Though the two men fought together, black troops did not find equality on the battlefield, said Washington's great-grandson Jimmy Johnson. "White soldiers could be officers and got paid $13 per week and they were given their uniforms. Black soldiers couldn't be officers and got paid $9 a week and had to pay for their uniform after they were done," Johnson said. After the warended, Washington came to the Lawrence area where he started farming in Bloomington-Clinton Township, not far from the Gardner family farm. Even in death the soldiers were treated differently. At the military cemetery at Fort Gibson, where Gardner is buried, the white soldiers are laid to rest on the right side and the black soldiers are on the left, Lindell said. Though there's no evidence the families were aware of each other, both have left a lasting legacy on this community and others. Lindell went on to fight in another war, some 180 years after his great-grandfather, and he was a prisoner of war in the Philippines during World War II. One of Washington's daughters, Jimmy Johnson's grandmother, went on to teach school in Quindaro and Parkville, Mo. — two communities that played an integral part in Washington's flight to freedom. One of hers sons went on to get an undergraduate degree from the University of Kansas, and one of his sons did the same. Jimmy Johnson didn't graduate from KU, though he was in the doctoral program here in the 1970s. After finishing a stint in the military and completing his Ph.D. in archeology, Johnson led students on a dig at the site of the Platte County farm where his grandfather was once a slave. The group found artifacts from the antebellum era, including cookware and chains. "When I found those chains, well, it was spooky," Johnson said. "It was spooky for me to think that they had my great-grandfather chained up every night. "Then I started thinking about UNDERSTANDING KANSAS' SLAVERY HISTORY Jayhawker: A name given to members of the bands who carried on irregular warfare in and around eastern Kansas in the Free State conflict and in the early part of the Civil War. They often combined pillage with guerilla lighting. Applied to these guerillas because of their habit of suddenly pouncing on the enemy. According to local historian Steve Jansen, Jayhawkers came from both Missouri and Kansas. Free-Stater A resident of Kansas territory who wanted to abolish slavery more for economic reasons than moral ones, Jansen said. Jansen estimates 50 to 60 percent of Lawrence residents were Free-Staters, who saw themselves as family farmers going against the slave-holding, corporate farmers. Abolitionist: A resident of Kansas territory whose desire to abolish slavery was based more on a moral concern than an economic one, Jansen said. Many abolitionists came to Lawrence with the town's founders through the Massachusetts immigrant Aide Society, but numbered only 20 to 30 percent of Lawrence residents at the time, Jansen said. Quantrill's Raid: Early in the morning on August 21, 1863, a band of more than 300 proslavery guerillas from Missouri were led into Lawrence by 25-year-old William C. Quantrill. By the time they left more than 100 Lawrence men were dead and most of the town was burned to the ground. how he got out.' He escaped and stayed free through a combination of his own fortitude and the help of abolitionists along the way, Johnson said. That same combination characterized Kansas in its formative years, said the daughter of one of Lawrence's founders. Annie Soule Prentiss, in a 1929 edition of The Kansas City Star. "I look back over the years to the hardships and dangers and sacrifices made to plant a Christian state here, and it seems we bought this freedom at a great price." Prentiss said. "Then I walk around and see this great city of Lawrence with the state university on the hill, the thousands of noble young men and women coming up from all parts of our free Kansas to be educated, and hundreds coming from free Missouri, too; when I realize that Missouri has been redeemed. I know it is worth all the sacrifices." — Edited by Michelle Burhenn Local Homes CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8A archivist Judy Sweets. "How are you going to find two independent sources of an illegal activity?" Sweets asked. "There's scanty documentation, so we have to rely on family history letters and newspaper articles for the most part." So far, historians have documented between 30 and 35 sites in the Douglas County area and around 70 between the Missouri border and Topeka, depending on the historian asked. IOWA Omaha Quincy Iowa City NEBRASKA Fall City Sabeths Kansas City KANSAS Topeka Lawrence Lexington Plymouth MISSOURI Donovan Atkinson/Kansas In Lawrence, one site everyone can agree on is Grover's Barn. Sitting four miles west of town in the mid-1800s, Grover's Barn is a stop that has been well-documented through diary entries and letters. The barn structure was incorporated into what is now Firehouse No. 4 at 2819 Stonecabin Terrace. One other site in town is more disputed 290 words The Miller Home, 1111 E. 19th St., was constructed by one of the town's first wealthy merchants, Josiah Miller, for his father. The Oregon Trail ran directly behind it, and it was one of the few structures Quantrill spared in his raid. But the few mentions of escaped slaves being hidden in the smokehouse by members of the Miller family aren't enough to convince Martha Parker of the Clinton Lake Museum of the house's validity as a stop on the Underground Railroad. Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, has lived in the home for more than 20 years. He, along with Sweets and local historian Steve Jansen, disagree with Parker. "It could have been." Parker said. "There's just not enough proof for me to say one way or the other." This map depicts the Jim Lane Trail. The Underground Railroad trail is named for an active abolitionist who would go on to become a Kansas senator and Union General in the Civil War. "There have only been three owners of this house," Dailey said of the 145-year-old structure. "The woman we bought the house from told us, and she heard it from the last Miller to own the house, who sold it to her "I don't think it was as active as some other places in the Wakarusa Valley," Dailey said. "But" definitely think there was some activity here. The Underground Railroad has taken on legendary status, Iansen said. nel, they automatically think its part of the Underground Railroad." he said. "They take the 'underground' part of that quite literally. It's unlikely though that in a pioneer community like this was, that there would have been "Whenever people find a tun- Unlikely as that may be, anything that gets people to think about, or notice, the abundant history in the area is encouraging for community historians like Iansen, Parker and Sweets "History's not only what happened, but what people think happened," Jansen said. this elaborate system of tunnels taking people from house-to-house." This summer the Watkins Community Museum of History 1047 Massachusetts St. will offer bus tours of Underground Railroad sites in the area to allow residents to see where this history really happened. Three tours will be offered as part of the Civil War Days commemoration in August, with each tour visiting 10-15 underground railroad sites in the area. --- For more information contact the Douglas County Historical Society at wemhist@sunflower.com or 841-4109 Edited by Michelle Burhenn Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 1B FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2003 Looking to finish strong Kansas tries to end slide with Big 12 home games against Nebraska, Baylor By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Jayhawks (24-20 overall, 2-13 Big 12 Conference) will take on No. 7 Nebraska at 5 p.m. The regular season roller coaster of the Kansas softball team will finally come to a stop after three more home games. They then close out the season against Baylor at 2 p.m. tomorrow and 1 p.m. Sunday. 9 One of those victories came against Kansas on April 10. In that game, Nebraska junior pitcher Peaches James threw a no-hitter in an 8-0 Cornhusker victory. The Cornhuskers (33-11, 9-6) come to Lawrence having won eight of 10 games. Andy Samuelson/Kansan File Photo James is just one member of perhaps the best one-two pitching punch in the Big 12. Freshman Summer Tobias is the second half of that combination. James is 19-9 with an ERA of 1.45. Not to be undone, Tobias has an ERA of 1.29 with a 13-2 record. Kansas coach Tracy Bunge said that her squad had been working on its low ball hitting to prepare for James and her tendency to throw sinking pitches. "We just have to shorten our strokes and not do so much and find a way to put the ball in the play," Bunge said. Sophomore outfielder Anne Steffan leads the Cornhuskers in April with a .500 batting average (11-for-22). She ranks fourth in the Big 12 with a .351 season average. "They've got some talented players,but they kind of have suffered the same things we have." Tracy Bunge Softball coach Kansas will look for a strong performance by freshman shortstop Destiny Frankenstein when it takes on Nebraska at 5 p.m. Frankenstein had a hit and two RBI in the 6-0 victory Wednesday over UMKC. Senior outfielder Kim Ogee is hitting .391 (9-for-24) in Nebraska's last six games with four doubles and 4 runs scored. She ranks among the league leaders with a .319 batting average. Kansas' already thin pitching staff got even thinner when junior Kara Pierce went down with injured shoulder in Texas last weekend. Bunge said Pierce was doubtful to play Friday but could see some action against Baylor. Baylor (28-25, 2-13) can relate to Kansas's up-and-down season. The Bears sit near the bottom of the conference standings with Kansas, and both teams have had to deal with injured pitching rotations. "They've got some talented players, but they kind of have suffered the same things we have," Bunge said. Kansas will next take its act to Oklahoma City for the Big 12 Conference Tournament May 1-4. Seedings have yet to be determined. "I'm going to let that become a gametime issue," Bunge said. Bunge said that what happens this weekend could have a big effect on happens next week in Oklahoma. The Hawks will probably have to win it all to have a shot at postseason play. "These games are big for our psyche heading in the tournament," she said. Dan Nelson/Kansan File Photo —Edited by Ryan Wood Kansas to start series with Baylor KU Sophomore third baseman Travis Metcalf shares the team home run lead with senior pitcher Kevin Wheeler and junior first baseman Ryan Baty. The tri all have 9 home runs this season. The Jayhawks will try to improve their 6-8 conference record when they play Baylor today for the first of a three-game series at Hoglund Ballpark. By Daniel Berk dberk@kanan.scan dberk.sportswriter After winning two conference series in a row, Kansas will attempt to get closer to the. 500 mark in conference play this weekend as the Jayhawks face the Baylor Bears for a three-game series at Hoglund Ballpark. The Jayhawks are 31-16 overall, and 6-9 in Conference play. Baylor brings a 28-16 record to Kansas and is 9-9 in the Big 12 Conference, good enough to be ranked No.21 in the country. Offensively, the Bears are led by David Murphy who has started all 44 games for Baylor this year, and is batting .430. He leads the team with 86 hits and is third in home runs with 7. Baylor's top pitcher is Steven White, who is 4-2 on the season. The Jayhawks will counter with their three top pitchers. Senior Kevin Wheeler and juniors Ryan Knippschild and Chris Smart will pitch this weekend against the Bears. Knippschild leads the team in victories this season with a 7-2 record. Wheeler registered his first Big 12 victory last weekend and improved his record to 5-2. Leading the way for the Kansas offense are seniors left fielder Casey Spanish and Wheeler and juniors, outfielder Matt Tribble and first baseman Ryan Baty. Spanish leads the way with a .399 batting average. Baty is next with a .385 average. Wheeler, Baty and sophomore Travis Metcalf all share the team lead in home runs with 9. "Wheeler is a warrior who is just a great competitor," coach Ritch Price said. "I was real glad to see Tribble break out last weekend, he is a streaky guy and hope his hot play will continue." With their 51 victories, this year's Jayhawks reached the 30-victory plateau for the first time since 1997, when the team Ritch Price Baseball coach "Only nine teams in Kansas history have won more than 30 games, and now we are one of those. It's special." also won 31 games. Price said winning seven more games than the year before, a "plus-seven turnaround," was good in baseball. "This year, I challenged my team to a plus-14 turnaround, something that can be done," he said. "Only nine teams in Kansas history have won more than 30 games, and now we are one of those. It's special." Price wanted his team to get one game this week, as the Jayhawks were scheduled to travel to Wichita to take on the Wichita State Shockers. However, the game was canceled because of bad weather in the Wichita area. The first pitch of the Baylor series is scheduled for 7 p.m. today. The teams will meet again at 2 p.m. tomorrow and 1 p.m. Sunday. - Edited by Andrew Ward Drake Relays host Olympians, local runners By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter Like last week's Kansas Relays, the Drake Relays are among the biggest events of the outdoor track and field season. The Drake Relays, held in Des Moines, Iowa, began Wednesday with the heptathlon and decathlon. A familiar name for the Drake Relays was leading the decathlon at the first day. Kip Janvrin is looking for his 14th Drake Relays title and his ninth straight crown. Janvrin, 37, is the track and field coach at Central Missouri State. Janvrin leads in decathlon with 3,924 points. He was an Olympian in 2000 and is still hoping to compete in the Olympics in 2004, he said. Lineese Gordon leads the heptathlon with 3,358 points after day one. The 23-year-old Ball State graduate is competing in only her second heptathlon. Gordon said she was having a good time. "I will go home and take an ice bath and get ready for tomorrow," she said. "I wouldn't be here if I wasn't going to give it 100 percent," Janvrin said. One of those athletes is sophomore Brooklyn Hann, who is scheduled to compete in the 100-meter hurdles. Hann won that event last weekend at the Kansas Relays with a time of 14.21 seconds. According to the Relays officials, around 30 Kansas athletes qualified to run in the meet. Members of the Kansas track and field team left yesterday for the meet, which runs through Saturday. "We just got to give her little bit of a break from jumping and then get her back into jumping so towards the end of the season she's right on top," said Kansas coach Stanley Redwine. Hann, who has competed in horizontal jumps in the past, is taking a break from the those to concentrate on the hurdles. Hann was looking forward to getting back to the horizontal jumping events. "I like doing all the jumps, but triple jump is my best event. Hopefully I'll be back doing that by (the conference meet)," she said. Members of the team who are not running at the Drake Relays will compete in the UMKC Invittional, which takes place today and tomorrow. The event will be held in Kansas City, Mo., at the Swinney Recreation Center Track DRAKERELAYS This is the 94th running of the Drake Relays This year is the 37th straight sellout in the 18,000 seat Drake Stadium — the longest streak in U.S. Track history 9,359 athletes are scheduled to compete 781 teams represented 65 nations represented Complex, 5030 Holmes, and Rockhurst High School, 9301 State Line Road. SPORTS COMMENTARY - Edited by Christy Dendurent SPORTS COMMENTARY Jonah Ballow jballow@kansan.com This is the time of year when college basketball has ended, college football is far from starting and college baseball does not provide excitement until the World Series begins. Considering that the University of Kansas campus and the local media are obsessed with Kansas basketball, some fans may want more Jayhawk basketball before next season. Past'Hawks show stuff in playoffs For those of you with Kansas basketball withdrawal symptoms, here's the quick fix: The NBA playoffs have begun, and every former Jayhawk in the league is on a playoff squad. The most recent Kansas player to go pro was Drew Gooden, who made an instant impact on the Orlando Magic. Recruiting Gooden from the Memphis Grizzlies, a constant cellar dweller, gave the Magic the rebounding and scoring they desired. In his first playoff outing, Gooden looked like a veteran with 18 points and 14 rebounds against the defensive player of the year. Ben Wallace. In the second game against the Pistons. Gooden had a hard time scoring but managed to grab 11 boards in the 89-77 defeat. On a team that struggles to find production outside of its leading scorer, Tracy "Trady" McGrady, Gooden helped the Magic steal a game in Detroit over the No. 1-seeded Pistons. Jacque Vaughn is a former Jayhawk who plays alongside Gooden on the Magic. To upset the Pistons, the Magic will need solid performances from the two former Jayhawks. Although Vaughn's contributions are less impressive than Gooden's, he was able to dish out six assists in both games. Another former Kansas center now plays for one of the NBA's best teams, the Dallas Mavericks. Raef LaFrentz is important to a team that possesses extreme depth at almost every position on the court. With the Jazz in a 0-2 hole heading back to Salt Lake City, Ostertag will have to step up his game to help elder players Karl Malone and John Stockton. Moving to Western Conference match-ups, the Sacramento Kings benefited from the 8 points, six rebounds and two blocked shots from Scott Pollard in game two of the playoffs against the Utah Jazz, which ended at 108-95. He scored 18 points and ripped down 11 boards only to come back in game two with 4 points and four rebounds. A coach's decision kept Pollard from the first game, but he plays a crucial role in the Kings' bench productivity. Former Kansas big man Greg Ostertag, who has spent his entire eight-year NBA career with the Jazz, was a weapon for the Jazz during game one. However, the Mavericks have struggled in the past with defense and rebounding. LaFrentz helped the Mavericks win game one with 7 points, seven rebounds and two blocked shots. He struggled in game two with only 6 points and three rebounds, but his team has the 2-0 advantage over the Portland Trailblazers. The game ended 103-99. If the Mavericks march past the Blazers, LaFrentz could be called upon to defend some of the best power forwards the western conference has to offer. SEE BALLOW ON PAGE 8B "I don't want to make it sound bad, but there's really nothing more that I could get out of college. And I'm going to get my degree — you can quote me on that." Carmelo Anthony, Syracuse freshman forward, after he announced he would make himself eligible for the NBA draft 2B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Inside Sports SPORTS COMMENTARY Brad Zollars bzollars@kansan.com Fans should remain loyal in all seasons Inside the stadium, it becomes even more eerie. The fans hang on every pitch, cheer each hustle play and, for the first time, care more about Runelvyss Hernandez's pitch count than catching a hot dog fired from Slugger's cannon. The pride is tangible. Have you been to a Kansas City Royals game lately? It's strange. There are lines out to the street. It's not just for the opportunity to receive a Mike Sweeney Bobblehead, but to actually attend the game and watch good baseball. There are some, though, who feel ashamed, and for good reason. Most of those fans, through years of hard times and continuous 100-loss seasons, were far from Kaufman Stadium with the thought of "their team" threatening to fall from the back of their minds. These same people are back again, however, blending in with those true fans who have suffered through losing season after losing season, always cheering on their players and refusing to surrender the hope of success for their beloved Royals. For those few true-blue, diehard Royals fans, this season's success is that much sweeter. When you've stumbled down the mountain and crawled slowly back to the top, the view from the summit seems that much better. For the bandwagon jumpers, who took the elevator up to the top, the feeling is not quite the same. You can feel it. You're embarrassed at your own negligence. As Kansas students, we can't allow ourselves to let this happen. Being "fair weather" is like a virus and the students of this University are becoming sicker with each passing year. But wait, there's hope. Lawrence isn't a hot zone quite yet. And this coming fall will be a great opportunity to showcase your newfound support and enthusiasm. Kansas football is on the rise. Football coach Mark Mangino is starting to get the players he needs to be competitive, and Memorial Stadium just might be the place to be in a few years. Don't be one of those fans who goes to the game just to be part of the winning team. Go out, support your school, see them grow into winners before your eyes and you'll feel like you were a part of something special. I'm not asking much. Instead of nursing your hangover in bed on Saturday morning, get your butt up and go to the game. You can tailgate with a Bloody Mary in the parking lot to cure your hangover. For the few diehard Royals fans, this season has been a long time coming. But if you ask them, they'll say it was well worth the wait. Follow their lead. Support your Jayhawks. Zollars is a Chicago senior in communications. Syracuse's star player opts for NBA The Associated Press SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse freshman Carmelo Anthony, who led the Orangemen to their first national championship, will make himself eligible for the NBA draft. Anthony said yesterday he would forgo his final three years at Syracuse to play in the NBA. Anthony delayed making the decision until after the season, preferring to focus on winning the national title. FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 He led the Orangemen in scoring, averaging 22 points, and broke Lawrence Moten's freshman scoring record and Derrick Coleman's freshman rebounding mark. month. He scored 20 points as Syracuse beat Kansas in the title game and was named Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four — just the third freshman to earn that honor. Anthony had a career-best 33 points and pulled down 14 rebounds in Syracuse's victory over Texas in the national semifinals in New Orleans earlier this "I'm here in front of you today to announce that I will not be coming back next year," Anthony said at a news conference. "I will be moving on, moving on to the pros." "It was a tough decision for me to make," said Anthony, who began crying as he spoke. Anthony said he reached his decision after talking with his mother and coach Jim Boeheim. Boeheim agreed with Anthony's decision and said his star player was ready for the next level. "This is a very happy day for Syracuse basketball, and a sad one, too," Boeheim said. "The guy sitting here has done more for Syracuse basketball than any player we've ever recruited or that's ever played here," he said. "To lead his team to a national championship as a freshman is truly a historic moment in college basketball. I'm very thankful that he was here with us." Anthony is the first Syracuse underclassman to declare early for the NBA since Billy Owens opted not to return for his senior season in 1991. Owens was the No.3 pick that year. All-American guard Pearl Washington jumped to the NBA after his junior season in 1986 and was the No.13 pick. The NBA draft is scheduled for June 25. The NBA's deadline for underclassmen to make themselves eligible for the draft is May 12. Anthony is expected to be a lottery pick. The draft lottery will be held May 22. Commissioner won't extend tenure The Associated Press NEW YORK — Bud Selig does not intend to seek a new term as baseball commissioner after his current deal expires in December 2006. Selig, 67, became acting commissioner in September 1992 after the forced resignation of Fay Vincent. Despite saying he didn't intend to take the job permanently, Selig agreed to a five-year term in July 1998. Owners then gave him a new five-term in November 2001, a contract that expires on Dec. 31, 2006. "So now here we are," Selig told a group from Associated Press Sports Editors yesterday. "I have another 3 1/2, 3 3/4 years. I expect to do it. Thankfully for me, at that point that would be enough. "For a guy who took it in Sept. 9, 1992, and I told my wife it was two-to-four months — 14 years later ... I think that will be enough. There's no question, because there are other things I really would like to do." Asked again if this was his final term, Selig responded; "Oh, there's no question." While the sport was hurt by a 232-day strike in 1994-95, players and owners agreed to a labor deal last August without a stoppage—the first time that happened since 1970. Under Selig, baseball added an extra round of playoffs in 1995, splitting each league into three divisions instead of two, and began interleague play in 1997. Selig also successfully pushed for expanded revenue sharing in the last two labor deals. KC beats Twins, wins first 10 at home The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Too bad the Kansas City Royals have to go on the road. Then again, they're playing great in all ballparks. Joe Randa hit a go-ahead double in the sixth inning and Kansas City beat the Minnesota Twins 2-1 yesterday to become the first team since 1987 to win its first 10 home games. "This is awesome. It's really something to be proud of," said Chris George, who beat the Twins' Brad Radke. "I wouldn't say we feel invincible, but certainly confident." The Royals, who overcame a four-hitter by Radke (1-3), improved to 16-3 overall and are 13 games over .500 for the first time since the final day of the 1994 season. Kansas City was 37-44 at home while losing a franchise-record 100 games last season. The Royals are the ninth team to start 10-0 at home, two shy of the major league record, set by the 1911 Detroit Tigers. Kansas City starts a nine-game road trip today at Toronto, then returns home May 5. "We have been playing good all the way around," Royals Manager Tony Pena said. "The thing about this ballclub is everybody wants to be a hero. Everybody wants to do something." Minnesota, meanwhile, has lost six straight for the second time this season. This isn't the kind of play that led the Twins to the AL Central title last year. "We're trying to force things right now. We can't seem to get relaxed at the plate." Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire said. "We're just not a very good team right now and I can't tell you why." George (3-1) allowed 1 run and four hits in six innings, giving up a tying single to Torii Hunter in the sixth inning in his first complete game since last Sept. 9 against Oakland. Mike Sweeney, in a 1-for-14 skid, had put the Royals ahead with a fourth-inning homer. Kansas City went ahead for good in the sixth when Carlos Febles singled and scored on a double to center by Randa, who has seven RBI in the last three games. Jason Grimsley pitched two innings of one-hit relief, and Mike MacDougal finished the seven-hitter for his ninth save in nine chances. Free for All We haven't asked the right questions about Roy leaving yet. Is he gonna take Shannon, too? He better not. 图 I don't care how cool Kansas basketball is, you still shouldn't wear your jersey out to the bar. I have a man-crush on Keith Langford and I'm not afraid to admit it. behind Mark Mangino. What do you suggest I do? Roy Williams physically looks like a Jayhawk. If you put a picture of a Jayhawk next to him, they look exactly the same. 图 Right now I'm at a Chinese buffet standing I think that the basketball team should come serve at Jubilee Café, because it would really make it a lot happier to wake up at 5:30 in the morning. 1 first season at Kansas? Last week, I was all sad and pissed off because Roy left us and I broke up with my girlfriend, but, this week, we got Bill Self and I got some rebound ass. I love KU. POLI kansan.com How successful will Bill Self be in his The Jayhawks will struggle in his first year. He will have a winning record. He will have a winning record. He will lead the Jayhawks to a Big 12 Conference title. - He will take Kansas to the Elite Eight - Kansas will see another Final Four berth. He will win the championship. Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Softball vs. Nebraska, 5 p.m., Jayhawk Field Baseball vs. Baylor, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Track at the Drake Relays, all day, Des Moines, Iowa TOMORROW Baseball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Hoglund Balt- park Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Rowing at the University of Cincinnati, all day. Cincinnati Softball vs. Baylor, 2 p.m., Jayhawk Field Track at the Drake Relays, all day, Des Moines, Iowa SUNDAY Tennis at Big 12 Championships, all day, Kansas City, Mo. Baseball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., Hoglund Ball-park Softball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., Jayhawk Field ROWING Rowers to race at Cincinnati in last dual before postseason The Kansas rowing team will compete in its last regatta tomorrow before the Big 12 Conference Championships in a dual against the University of Cincinnati in Cincinnati, Ohio. Kansas has met Cincinnati before, said Kansas coach Rob Catloth. With a victory, Kansas would continue its success after defeating Kansas State last Saturday to win its fifth consecutive Kansas Cup. "It should be some good racing in a dual format," he said. "We're going out to race faster to get into better position for the Big 12 Championships soon." Team members are focusing on each individual race. "We've accepted and admitted that in every race we go out there and challenge ourselves just as hard as we can," junior Kristen Reynolds said. the victory over Kansas State on April 19 gave the Jayhawks their first victory in a dual, which improved Kansas' record to 1-3 in duals in the fall and spring seasons combined. "I think momentum has a lot to do with you progress," junior Krys Corbett said. "If you come off a good race, it gets you better for the next race." — Jason Hwang BUY ONE GET ONE FREE Men's Suits EASTON'S 839 MASSACHUSETTS LA 843-51 BUY ONE GET ONE FREE NEW LOWER PRICES Men's Suits Starting at just 2 for $299 EASTON'S LIMITED 839 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KS. 66044 843-5755 THEATRE they're back...! welcomes our wonderful alumni alums come home IV April 24 - 31, 2011 General adr they're back... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and the Department of Theatre and Film Invite you to a Sneak Preview of KU Alumnus Neil LaBute's new film alums come home IV April 24 - 27, 2001 The Shape of Things 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 25, 2003 Liberty Hall See our former students perform for open mic night immediately following the film General admission tickets are on sale through the University Theatre Ticket Office and at the door; for reservations, call 785/864-3982; all seats $10; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. For additional information call The University Theatre, 785/864-3381 Cash bar available at Liberty Hall 4 U FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3B Middle Tennessee players to enter NFL draft By David Hunter Sidelines via U-wire Middle Tennessee State University MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Three of the most record-setting Middle Tennessee football players in history — Dwone Hicks, Tyrone Calico and ReShard Lee — will be showcased this weekend as they look to continue their football careers to the next level with the NFL draft. Dwone Hicks, who ran a 4.59 second 40-yard dash, had a slow start to last season because of a knee injury and missed two games. Hicks picked up where he left off and was still able to run for more than 1,000 yards for the third straight season. Hicks was named to the All-Sun Belt Conference second team. Hicks holds the school record of 53 touchdowns. He is also in the top 10 in many other Blue Raider records. According to www.cbsssportsline.com, Hicks "has a stout frame with good vision and the speed to break tackles,has the acceleration to create separation, showing a short burst through the holes."He also "has just marginal explosion when accelerating around the corner, has reliable hands, but looks stiff trying to adjust to the catch and lets too many passes absorb into his body." The Sporting News magazine has Hicks being picked in the fifth round. Wide receiver Tyrone Calico was known as a leader for MT that performed with his actions, not words. Last season, Calico was named to the All-SBC first team by leading the Blue Raiders with 45 catches and 606 yards and 4 touchdowns. Calico was a fouryear starter and caught 194 catches, gaining 2,636 yards with 12 touchdowns. Calico is second behind Kendall Newsom (1998-2001) in career receptions and yards in MT history. Newsom, who had 238 catches for 3,074 yards during his four-year career, was picked in the seventh round by the Jacksonville Jaguars at last year's draft. Newsm was cut in training camp, and is not on an NFL team at this time. According to www.cbssportsline.com, some of Calico's strong points include "well-proportioned with a rare-sized frame, very long arms, solid chest and shoulders and good definition in his legs and calves." Some of the weak points mentioned by www.cbsportsline.com include, "good agility, but he appears a little stiff in his hips." SI.com has Calico being picked in the first round by the AFC champions the Oakland Raiders with the 31st selection. "Tyrone Calico has the chance to be the highest drafted kid to ever come out of here," said Middle Tennessee head football coach Andy McCollum. The highest a former MT player "Tyrone Calico has the chance to be the highest drafted kid to ever come out of here." Andy McCollum Middle Tennessee head football coach has been selected was in the third round, twice, with quarterback Jonathan Quinn in 1998 by the Jacksonville Jaguars and linebacker Mike Caldwell in 1993 by the Cleveland Browns. MT running back ReShard Lee decided to leave school after his junior year after playing only two seasons. However, teamed with Hicks they became one of the best running back duos in the country. Lee showed last season that he could do it all-run, pass and return kicks and was named to the All-SBC second-team. Lee finished second on the team in rushing with 642 yards and 6 touchdowns. According to www.cbssportline.com, some of his positives include being a "dangerous open field runner with a muscular upper body and strong legs." On the other side, some of his negatives are he remains "untested as a pass catcher, and tends to let the ball absorb into his body rather than extend." "It's great for our program to have three, and there may be a couple more kids to get opportunities, too, but to have three guys drafted, if that works out, then that's what we want to do as far as recruiting, as far as bringing guys in here with that type of potential. That everybody across America sees Middle Tennessee, and that what we will continue doing is get those types of caliber players, and that type of character part of our program," McCollum said. The NFL draft takes place this weekend with coverage on ESPN beginning on Saturday at 11 a.m. Stolen Red Raider mascot costume returned By Angela Timmons University Daily via U-wire Texas Tech University LUBBOCK, Texas — The Raider Red mascot costume, stolen from Doak Hall on April 12, was returned to Texas Tech Police on Monday night, Maj. Eddie Huckabee said. The costume, previously referred to incorrectly as the mascot's baseball costume, is the mascot's all-purpose costume and was originally stolen from Raider Red's residence hall room following a home baseball game. Huckabee said the situation was still under investigation. The police had been questioning several suspects, he said, and one particular subject finally admitted to the theft and returned the costume to the police. "After questioning, they said they took it and agreed to retrieve it for us." Huckabee said Huckabee said as soon as the case was prepared, names and more information may be released. Huckabee reported no damage to the costume. The portion of the costume stolen, which was everything except the head and hat, is an estimated value of $2,495. While Huckabee said whether charges will be pressed is up to the Saddle Tramps, the Texas Tech cheer squad, but state law requires the police department to bring the incident to the attention of the court. "Our policy is, every time we resolve a case, we have to bring it to the district attorney's office," he said. "But they may not press charges." Bill Dean, mass communications professor and a Saddle Tramp sponsor, said the police still have the costume in their custody for some procedures they need to go through. Dean said the process of getting the costume returned involved the police investigation, and it was not voluntarily turned in. How the investigation will be handled from this point on is up to the police, Dean said. The Saddle Tramps had suggested an anonymous return, but the police ended up having to track the uniform down. "Our position was, whoever took it, if they would just turn it back in, we wouldn't prosecute," he said. "How they want to handle it is up to the police. We're just very glad to have it back." Jeff Blatt, head of the Raider Red committee, said the Saddle Tramps were thrilled to have the costume back but were disappointed the situation was being turned over to the police and district attorney. "For one thing, it's pretty sad they didn't turn it in and we had to find it because of the prosecution they have to face now." Blatt said. "I'm pretty scared for them right now." Blatt said the Saddle Tramps were looking to press quite a few charges because the procedure involved investigation instead of a voluntary, anonymous return. However, the Tramps have learned a few things about keeping the costume safe. Blatt said. "We definitely learned our lesson," he said. "We'll make sure it's never kept on campus again — this definitely opened up our eyes to the situation." Blatt said this particular circumstance is not necessarily routine with the individual playing the part of Raider Red bringing the costume back to his personal place of residence. "Usually it goes back to the chairman or to the main Raider Red," Blatt said. "This situation was different." By Richard D. Tipton The Parthenon via U-wire Marshall University Marshall athletes arrested HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — "Nice. That's the first I've heard about it," Marshall University Sports Information Director Ricky Hazel said when told of the charges against Dennis Lee Thornton, a sophomore linebacker on the football team, from Spotsylvania, Pa. Huntington Police Department arrested Thornton at 6:49 p.m.yesterday evening as part of a sting operation in which four others were arrested, according to a Huntington Police Department report. The sting focused on the 600 block of 15th Street. Thornton has been charged with solicitation of prostitution. He allegedly propositioned an undercover female officer, according to the police report. "The accused offered an undercover officer $20 for oral sex," the report said. The charge comes on the heels of last week's arrest of sophomore football player Garrett Morrison on domestic assault and battery charges. Also, Marshall Quarterback Stan Hill pleaded guilty April 15 to driving with a suspended license and going through a red light. In exchange for his plea, prosecutors dropped other charges including resisting arrest and public intoxication. When asked whether the frequency of student-athlete arrests indicate a trend Hazel said, "It's just college students being college students, nothing more than that." kansan.com Now. NewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNow. PRIDE WEEK EVENTS 2003 SPONSORED BY QUEERS AND ALLIES SATURDAY PRIDE DANCE 10:00 PM - 1:00 AM Ecumenical Christian Ministries: $2 donation FEATURING LOTS OF FOOD, DANCING AND A PSYCHIC READER Bring your own drink! Win prizes and games! PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 11:00 AM Watson Park along Massachusetts to South Park sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY 11:00 AM Watson Park along Massachusetts to South Park sponsored by: STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY The image shows a person sitting in a grassy field, deeply focused on reading a book. The individual is wearing a light-colored sweater and appears to be enjoying a moment of quiet contemplation outdoors. Don't put your education on hold this summer. Enroll in classes at Johnson County Community College! - Extensive course selections - Transferrable classes - Flexible times and locations - Online registration Classes begin June 2. 913-469-3803 Register online at www.jccc.net JCCC Johnson County Community College 12345 College Blvd., Overland Park, KS 66210 Learning comes first at JCCC. C. 4B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS FRIDAY,APRIL 25,2003 Arkansas coach reflects on season By Brandon Marcello Arkansas Traveler via U-wire University of Arkansas FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — It has been more than a year since Stan Heath took the job as Arkansas' basketball coach after the departure of former Razorback headman Nolan Richardson. Heath's inaugural year with the program has had its ups and downs. Defeating ranked Alabama and Mississippi State in Bud Walton Arena were some ups, and getting blown out by Louisiana State by more than 20 points twice in one season were some downs. One thing remains constant, though, Heath said. "Attitude." The Razorbacks appeared to have a hard time adjusting to Heath's offensive schemes as well as the grueling practices this past year, but he sees a difference this off-season. "Our attitude last year was, Why are we in the gym extra? Why are we lifting? Why are we doing extra running?" Heath said. "Now the attitude is that this is what it takes to be successful." Players adjusting to Heath was not the only problem. Heath still had to adjust to his surroundings in northwest Arkansas. "I've got a better view of things right now," said the former Kent State head coach. "My head is not spinning quite as much as it was last year." "Now, I certainly have a comfort zone for northwest Arkansas, as well as for running our basketball program," he said. The fans are to thank for that, Heath said. "I love and admire the support the fans have given us this year," he said. "I really think our team has grown some chemistry and shown an improvement on the court. I'm really excited." In many instances success starts with recruiting, and then the coaching folds into place. Heath said he hoped this came true next season with the addition of a top-five recruiting class. "I think the addition of a really strong recruiting class is really going to impact our program next season," Heath said. "I feel really good about where we're at right now." Though Heath warned there is still work to be done for the program to be successful, which includes the incoming freshmen is adjustment to and acceptance of his system. "I feel like that we'll have a much more talented team." Heath said. "We'll have better skill levels and a better ball-handling team. "The flip-side, the catch-22, is that we'll be playing a lot of freshmen and sophomores," he said. "The encouraging thing is watching the success of other teams with young players." One of the teams Heath referred to was a team of mostly freshmen and sophomores who won the National Championship in basketball this year — the Syracuse Orangemen. Heath doesn't think the Razorbacks will get that high on the mountain that quick, he said. "I definitely think we'll be a better team," he said. "A team more committed." The hard thing with our team last year was being too top-heavy and bottom-heavy." Heath said. "At least with the team next year we'll have more cohesiveness by the virtue of age with a lot of freshman and sophomores." Heath said he didn't want to look past the improvements of this season. "There was a lot of improvement across the board," said the 10th head basketball at the UA. "I think every one of our freshmen — from where they were coming in, to where they are right now — is where I've seen the most improvement." "I think if I had to identify a couple of players it would be Jonathan Modica, Rashard Sullivan and Eric Ferguson," he said. "I think everyone of those guys showed significant improvement in their play." Cowgirl golfers squeeze past Tigers From Staff reports Oklahoma Daily via U-wire University of Oklahoma NORMAN, Okla. — The Oklahoma State Cowgirls won their second straight Big 12 golf championship Wednesday in Columbia, Mo. Oklahoma State defeated host Missouri by 1 stroke. 910-909. Missouri led after the first two days of the three-day tournament and finished in second place. The Oklahoma golf team finished in fourth place with a 923. The Sooners shot a 304 on the final day, their lowest score. Oklahoma finished behind Texas, which shot a 918 to finish in third place at the 6,008-yard par-72 Country Club of Missouri. Junior Hope Edge led Oklahoma and tied for 11th place. Edge shot a 230 in three days. Her 73 on Tuesday was the lowest of any Sooner. Freshman Amparo Gala fin. ished tied for 14th place. Gala ended with a 251. She shot an 81 Monday but finished Tuesday and Wednesday with 75s. Junior Lisa Meldrum finished tied for 19th place after she shot a 254. The second-team All-Big 12 member shot a 76 on Monday, a 75 on Tuesday and ended the tournament shooting an 83. Senior Allison Johnson was tied for 25th place. She shot a 236. John scored a 77 on Monday, 82 on Tuesday and 77 on Wednesday. Sophomore Emily Milberger was tied for 35th place, finishing the tournament with a 240. Her lowest score of the tourney was on Wednesday when she shot a 75. Her score on Monday was 83 and Tuesday's score was 82. Nebraska's Sarah Sasse finished in first place with a 220, while Oklahoma State's Karin Sjodin and Missouri's Mindy Bullard finished tied for second with 223s. Emporia State star ponders his future By Jason Gaede The Bulletin via U-wire Emporia State University EMPORIA — After a star-studded, one-year career at Emporia State, All-American senior guard Robbie Ballard looks ahead to his future in professional basketball. Emporia State senior Robbie Ballard has reached the crossroads of his basketball career. With a successful one-year ESU career behind him, Ballard, who plans to graduate in May, is looking ahead to a post-graduation hoops career. "There are a lot of different options being thrown my way right now," Ballard said. "I'm new to this process so I'm taking it day by day and soaking up all the information I can. I just want to make the best decision for myself." Ballard was recently selected 41st overall in the United States Basketball League's annual draft by the Kansas Cagerz, who play their home games in Salina. The USBL consists of 11 teams and runs from April 17-June 22 with each team playing 30 regular season contests. ESU men's basketball coach David Moe said the decision to play in the USBL was one Ballard should think about. According to Moe, the two have discussed the issue briefly. "He needs to sit down and make sure it's a good situation for him." Moe said. "I don't want him to go and be overlooked for a different type of player." According to Ballard, he has yet to be contacted by the Cagerz. However, he said being drafted by a professional team was a great honor. "It's exciting being drafted by this organization," Ballard said. "It's a great opportunity. Maybe I will play. Maybe I won't. We'll just have to wait and see." While Moe said Ballard has the skills to be a good player in the league, he also said he wanted Ballard to keep his options open. "Robbie is not in a desperation situation," Moe said. "He's got a name for himself, and he's earned credibility. People know what kind of talents he has. He needs to keep working out, graduate and he will have the opportunity to play somewhere." One move that seems definite at this point is Ballard participating in the Denver Nuggets' rookie camp later this summer. According to Ballard, Moe's father, Doug Moe, who is a consultant for the Nuggets, has helped arrange the deal. Ballard, who continues to work out at least four hours a day, said he was excited about the chance to compete against NBA players. LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 2858 Four Wheel Dr. "A FUNNY SEXY SCARY POWERHOUSE! Better Luck Tomorrow is what Sundance is all about!" -Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE "TWO BIG THUMBS UP! A BRILLIANT FILM! Dazzling! Shocking!" -Roger Ebert', Richard Roeper', EBERT & ROEPER' "STYLISH and very well-acted!" -David Ansen, NEWSWEEK "****! A tour de force." -C.W. Nevius, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE OFFICIAL SELECTION SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL DRAMATIC COMPETITION MTV FILMS PRESENTS BETTER LUCK TOMORROW A FILM BY JUSTIN LIN HUDSON RIVER ENTERTAINMENT CHERRY SKY FILMS JAY O PRODUCTIONS THAILING JOHNSON BETTER LUCK TOMORROW PARTY SHEN JASON TODIN SING KANG ROGER FAIM JOHN CHO SARIN ANNA COLEONG DONNA TIMA CHARLES SINAUTOMATIC MICHAEL J. GONZALES SAMOI LEU YOUJING HAN PAYINCE LUCIEN COCHET JULIE ASAN FORNEST M. TORONTO JUSTIN LIN LERNSTO M. FORNEST JUSTIN LIN R FACIAN MARQUIZZ JUSTIN LIN "A FUNNY SEXY SCARY POWERHOUSE! Better Luck Tomorrow is what Sundance is all about!" -Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE "TWO BIG THUMBS UP! A BRILLIANT FILM! Dazzling! Shocking!" -Roger Ebert', Richard Roeper', EBERT & ROEPER' "STYLISH and very well-acted!" -David Ansen, NEWSWEEK "A tour de force." -C.W. Nevius, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE OFFICIAL SELECTION SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL DRAMATIC COMPETITION MTV FILMS PRESENTS BETTER LUCK TOMORROW A FILM BY JUSTIN LIN need help? Colony Woods would like to invite you to our Open House Sat., April 26 10 am - 4 pm Sun., April 27 12 noon - 4 pm 1301 W. 24th St. 842 - 5111 7th & Florida NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 Studios, 1BR, 2BR, 3 BR w/2 baths & 4 BR w/2 baths • Furnished Apt. Available • Gas heat & water • Fully equipped kitchens including microwaves • W/D in select Apts • Private balconies & patios • On-site laundry facility • Pool • On KU bus route • On-site Manager • 24 hr. emergency Maintenance Models Open Daily! For more information call 785-841-5255 Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished Studios, land 2 Bedroom apartment homes. • Laundry facilities on site • Fully equipped kitchens (dishwashers*, disposal, stove, refrigerator, microwave) • Within walking distance to KU campus • Telephone and cable outlets in each bedroom • Central Air • Ample off-street parking for tenants • On-site manager • 24 emergency maintenance Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Equal Housing Opportunity *Available in select units For more than two centuries, the opera's unique combination of the sublime and the ridiculous has worked its theatrical magic... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and The Department of Music & Dance PRESENT A VIRTUAL REALITY PRODUCTION OF The Magic Flute By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Directed by Delbert Unruh Virtual Reality Technology by Mark Reaney Costume Design by Ione Unruh Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet (KU MFA'98) Featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra Steven McDonald, conductor 7:30 P.M., April 26 & May 1-3, 2003 2:30 P.M., Sunday, April 27 & May 4, 2003 CRAFTON-PREVER THEATRE Reserved seat tickets are on sale through the KU ticket offices; University Theatre, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-7469; and on-line at www.kuheare.com; public $16 & $14, all students $10, senior citizens $15 & $15; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fund. Walk to Campus Campus Place APARTMENTS 1145 Louisiana • 841-1429 Apartments Available for Summer 2003 4 bedroom/2 bath with loft 4 bedroom/2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath • Fully Equipped Kitchens • Furnished & Unfurnished Apt. available • Gas, Heat and Water • Private Balconies & Patios • Off Street Parking • 24 hr. Emergency Maintenance • On-site Manager Call or stop in TODAY for private showing Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm EHO "A FUNNY SEXY SCARY POWERHOUSE! Better Luck Tomorrow is what Sundance is all about!" -Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE "TWO BIG THUMBS UP! A BRILLIANT FILM! Dazzling! Shocking!" -Roger Ebert', Richard Roeper', EBERT & ROEPER' "STYLISH and very well-acted!" -David Ansen, NEWSWEEK "****! A tour de force." -C.W. Nevius, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE OFFICIAL SELECTION SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL DRAMATIC COMPETITION MTV FILMS PRESENTS BETTER LUCK TOMORROW A FILM BY JUSTIN LIN HUDSON RIVER ENTERTAINMENT CHERRY SKY FILMS DAY 0 PRODUCTIONS TRAING JOHNSON SUNG KANG ROGER AM JOHN GROU SEM MARTOMATIC MICHAEL J GUNZALIS JASMIN ANNA CHELEN DUNNA TINA CHARLES JOHAN HUNG MUSICIAN SPOTLARSKY MICHAEL MANSHEL MICHAEL COLE TROY CRAG POON JULIE ASADA LORESTO M FORONDA JUSTIN LIN LAST MAN M FORONDA JUSTIN LIN www.betterlucktomorrow.com News Now need help? COLONY WOODS would like to invite you to our Open House Sat., April 26 10 am - 4 pm Sun., April 27 12 noon - 4 pm 1301 W. 24th St. 842 - 5111 Serving For more than two centuries, the opera's unique combination of the sublime and the ridiculous has worked its theatrical magic... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and The Department of Music & Dance PRESENT A VIRTUAL REALITY PRODUCTION OF The Magic Flute By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Directed by Delbert Unruh Virtual Reality Technology by Mark Reaney Costume Design by Iane Unruh Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet (KU MFA '98) Featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra Steven McDonald, conductor 7:30 P.M. APRIL 26 & MAY 1-1, 2003 2:30 P.M. SUNDAY, APRIL 27 & MAY 4, 2003 CRAFTON–PREVER THEATRE Reserved seat tickets are on sale through the KU ticket office; University Theatre, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-7469; and on-line at www.kultheatre.com; public $16 & $14, all students: $10, senior citizens: $15 & $13; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senior Activity Fund. STUDENT SERATE TREATRE need help? Serving KU Colony Woods would like to invite you to our Open House Sat., April 26 10 am - 4 pm Sun., April 27 12 noon - 4 pm 1301 W. 24th St. 842 - 5111 For more than two centuries, the opera's unique combination of the sublime and the ridiculous has worked its theatrical magic... The University of Kansas The University Theatre and The Department of Music & Dance PRESENT A VIRTUAL REALITY PRODUCTION OF The Magic Hate By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Directed by Delbert Unruh Virtual Reality Technology by Mark Reaney Costume Design by Ione Unruh Lighting Design by Stephen Hudson-Mairet (KU MFA '98) Featuring the KU Symphony Orchestra Steven McDonald, conductor 7:30 P.M. APRIL 26 & MAY 1-3, 2003 2:30 P.M. SUNDAY, APRIL 27 & MAY 4, 2003 CRAFTON-PREVER THEATRE Reserved sent tickets are on sale through the KU ticket office: University Theatre, 864-3982; Lied Center, 864-ARTS; SUA Office, 864-7469; and on-line at www.kuh theatre.com; public: $16 & $14, all students: $10, senior citizen: $15 & $13, VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone and on-line orders. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. SUNDBWCZ TOTAL MOVING ADMINISTRATION --- FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B 'Big guys' to dominate first-round draft picks The Associated Press NEW YORK — It's a "Save The Whales" draft. While Carson Palmer, the Heisman-winning quarterback, will be chosen first by Cincinnati tomorrow in the NFL's annual lottery. This is a draft for big guys. "Without question, this is clearly one of the best years for defensive linemen in recent memory," Cleveland coach Butch Davis said. "You could arguably say that as many as 10 and maybe even as many as 12 defensive linemen might go in the first round. That's one third of the entire group." That's not to say all whales are equal in this draft, which will go seven rounds and 262 picks. The top three, all expected to go in the first 10 selections, are very different players; 260-pound pass-rushing end Terrell Suggs of Arizona State; 325-pound tackle Jimmy Kennedy of Penn State, who not so long ago was close to 400 pounds; and Dewayne Robertson of Kentucky, a tackle in the now "average" 300-pound range. The other potential first-round defensive linemen come in all sizes and shapes. But as is often the case, quarterback comes first — for the fifth time in six years, starting with Peyton Manning in 1998. Tim Couch was chosen in 1999, Michael Vick in 2001 and David Carr a year ago. Not surprisingly, the only nonquarterback taken No. 1 overall in that span was a defensive lineman, Courtney Brown by Cleveland in 2000 Palmer, who followed a mediocre first three seasons at Southern California with abrilliant senior year, agreed to a contract with the hitherto frugal Bengals, although new Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis probably prefers a defensive player. Actually, quarterbacks seem to have been devalued beyond the top pick because so many high choices at that position have flopped: Ryan Leaf, Rick Mirer, Cade McNown and the Bengals' own Akili Smith to name four. So where in the past there might have been six quarterbacks taken in the first round, onlythree seem definite: Palmer, Marshall's Byron Leftwich and California's Kyle Boller. Rex Grossman of Florida could sneak into the late first round, Pittsburgh and Green Bay like him. And some scouts think Chris Simms of Texas could, too. But Simms, son of 1987 Super Bowl MVP Phil Simms, and Louisville's Dave Ragone seem more likely to go later, say to Chicago with the fourth pick of the second round. Still, nobody really knows what will happen when the first round begins at noon EDT at Madison Square Garden. "Between now and draft day, anything you hear from a coach or a general manager is a lie." Cardinals coach Dave McGinnis said last week. "It's a high stakes game, and you've got a group of cards in your hands. It just makes sense not to show them." As usual, after the top 10 or 12, the rest of the cards are relatively equal — there's not much difference between picks 15 and 50, depending on needs and preferences. So teams are likely to move up and down to grab a specific player, although probably not until the clock is ticking down to the deadline — 15 minutes per team in the first round. "You have to just be prepared to make changes and be flexible," says Ernie Accorsi, general manager of the New York Giants, who have broken a long-standing policy and traded up in the first round the past two seasons to take cornerback Will Allen and tight end Jeremy Shockey. Blues reflect on early playoff exit The Associated Press ST.LOUIS - Cooler heads will prevail before the St. Louis Blues deal with the fallout of their first-round playoff exit. General manager Larry Pleau acknowledged that the future of coach Joel Quenneville could be in question. Pleau's future, too. He planned to speak soon with owner Bill Laurie. "We're not going to make any knee-jerking decisions," Pleau said. "We're not going to make any emotional decisions." Players who gathered at the Savvis Center for end-of-season meetings are behind Quenneville. "I think he"s done a great job," Pleau and Quenneville have produced unprecedented regular-season success for the franchise since arriving five months apart in 1997, with 100-point range seasons on an annual basis. defenseman Chris Proner said. "This time of year, you"ve got to question everybody." But the Blues have been eliminated in the first round three times during the past seven seasons. They've also been on a backward slide since reaching the Western Conference finals in 2001, falling in the second round last year and being eliminated Tuesday by Vancouver after blowing a 3-1 series lead for the first time in franchise history. Pleau refused to give Quenneville a vote of confidence, saying he's seen that given too many times and then the coach gets fired anyway. He said Quenneville's performance will be a component of the off-season evaluation process. "He'll be part of the process, just like I will be," Pleau said. "If I'm going to wake up after what we did and everything is all right, that's wrong. I'm not sitting here worried. But the expectations weren't met, and I'm responsible." Quenneville is looking forward to working next season with a healthy Pronger, who missed almost the entire season with wrist and knee injuries. "I'm planning on coming back," Quenneville said. "The nature of this business is coaches get hired and fired all the time. "We're definitely miserable at the outcome, but we've got a lot of good things in place." Laurie already has told Pleau that the team payroll probably will remain in the $60 million range. Pleau said the nucleus of high-priced stars likely will remain in place, but said others definitely will not be back. Pleau refused to name players who won't be back, saying, "I would never discuss that in public." Kentucky football looks to get in shape The Associated Press LEXINGTON, KY. — Kentucky football coach Rich Brooks says a lot of teams already have penciled in a 'W' beside Kentucky's name on their 2003 schedules. The way Brooks sees it, most teams figure the Wildcats will fade during the fourth quarters of games, as they have in the past. "That will change," said Brooks, the former coach of the St. Louis Rams. "They can put that 'W there, but then they're going to have to go out and earn it." To make the other teams do that, the new coach is putting an emphasis on getting the Wildcats in top shape before the season even starts. "There is no excuse to be outconditioned," Brooks said. "I'm not going to say we're going to win every game in the fourth quarter, but it won't be for lack of conditioning." "He is a guy who has great energy and enthusiasm, not only for life, but for college football," said his boss, Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart. "He is committed to getting it done." That, in a nutshell, is Brooks' coaching philosophy. Kentucky's players certainly have noticed a change since Brooks' hiring on Dec. 30. Senior defensive end Jeremy Caudill said Brooks has emphasized conditioning. "He let us know we would be an in-shape football team," Caudill said. "At the end is when we're tired, and (the coaches) start pushing us." But Caudill said players get the point. The conditioning, he said, "emphasizes the fourth-quarter thing. We want to be a team that is fighting to the very last second." "There are very few things on the surface that need to be changed," he said. "The facilities are outstanding. The commitment is here administratively." He said he has a great situation at Kentucky. Suns' Stoudemire lands top rookie honors The Associated Press for the official announcement was scheduled for later in the day. PHOENIX Amare Stoudemire won the NBA Rookie of the Year award yesterday, the first player to do so after coming to the league directly from high school. Several players and coach Frank Johnson acknowledged that Stoudemire had won the award after the team practiced yesterday, and a news conference high school since Moses Malone. The Phoenix Suns' power forward — quick, powerful and barely out of his teens — beat out Houston Rockets center Yao Ming, last year's No. 1 draft pick. Stoudemire, who turned 20 two weeks into the season, averaged 13.5 points and 8.8 rebounds, better rookie statistics than any player to turn pro out of Kobe Bryant, Kevin Garnett and Tracy McGrady all had less impact in their rookie seasons than did Stoudemire. At 6-foot-10 and 245 pounds, he gave the Suns an inside presence crucial to their surprising drive to the playoffs. Stoudemire didn't begin playing basketball until he was 14, and he had no serious coaching until he came to the Suns. He began the season as a reserve, but moved into the starting lineup when Tom Gugliotta went down with a foot injury after 11 games. Stoudemire scored 38 points and grabbed 14 rebounds at Minnesota on Dec. 30. Against Memphis on Jan. 10, he grabbed 21 rebounds, a Suns' rookie record and the most by a Phoenix player since Charles Barkley's 26 against Houston in 1996. LIBERTY HALL +44 massachusetts - lawrence (785) 748-1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM FRI 4:15 7:10 SAT & SUN 1:15 4:15 7:10 9:40 CITY OF GOD Directed by Fernando Meirelles R FRI 9:30 ONLY SAT 4:00 ONLY SUN 4:00 9:30 Adaptation. R FRI NO SHOWS SAT & SUN 1:30 7:00 WEEKEND TIMES ONLY! visit www.libertyhall.net for other times rick recht Sunday May 4, 2003 6:30 PM Yom Haatzma'ut/ End of the Year BBQ and Concert Lawrence Jewish Community Center 9th and Iowa Presented by KU Hillel BBQ Dinner at 5:30 PM FREE for Students and Kids under 18, $5 for Community For more information call Corey at 749.5397 www.kuhillel.org FIND WELCOME OPPORTUNITY LIBERTY HALL +44 massachusetts • lawrence (785) 748-1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM FRI 4:15 7:10 SAT & SUN 1:15 4:15 7:10 9:40 CITY OF GOD Directed by Fernando Meirelles FRI 9:30 ONLY SAT 4:00 ONLY SUN 4:00 9:30 Adaptation. FRI NO SHOWS SAT & SUN 1:30 7:00 WEEKEND TIMES ONLY! visit www.libertyhall.net for other times Summit House Apartments Now taking applications for Fall 2003 • $475-490 • 1 BR & 1 BR Loft Apartment Available • Water and trash paid • Walking distance to Campus • Laundry facilities on site • Private off street parking • 24 hr. Emergency maintenance Call (785) 841-1429 for details Mon-Fri 9 am - 6 pm 1105 Louisiana EHO rick recht Sunday May 4, 2003 6:30 PM Yom Haatzma'ut/ End of the Year BBQ and Concert Lawrence Jewish Community Center 9th and Iowa Presented by KU Hillel BBQ Dinner at 5:30 PM FREE for Students and Kids under 18, $5 for Community For more information call Corey at 749.5397 www.kuhillel.org Free Practice MCAT Test April 26, 2003 University of Kansas KU Memorial Union 9:00am - 2:00pm Space is limited. Call to register today! www.PrincetonReview.com | 800-2Review Fridays- Fridays- Fridays- Fridays "Ladie's Night" No Cover ladies 21 and over $2 Coronas $2.25 Smirnoff Flavored Vodkas All the latest Top-40, Mainstream and Hip-Hop music 729 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks (785) 838-4623 LAST CALL DANCECLUB & BAR Wednesdays $1.50 Anything $3 Pitchers Thursdays $1.50 Shots $1.75 Pints Fridays $2 Coronas $2.25 Smirnoff Flavors Saturdays $3 Dbl. vodka/Red Bull $4 Pitchers Catch Spring Fever! Fitness Special Save $100 annual membership $25/month Can Freeze Over Summer exp. 4/15 3-Month Tanning unlimited usage $70.00 Non-members welcome! exp. 4/15 BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa 749-2424 Fridays- Fridays- Fridays- Fridays "Ladie's Night" No Cover ladies 21 and over $2 Coronas $2.25 Smirnoff Flavored Vodkas All the latest Top-40, Mainstream and Hip-Hop music 729 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks (785) 838-4623 LAST CALL DANCECLUB & BAR Wednesdays $1.50 Anything $3 Pitchers Thursdays $1.50 Shots $1.75 Pints Fridays $2 Coronas $2.25 Smirnoff Flavors Saturdays $3 Dbl. vodka/Red Bull $4 Pitchers 729 New Hampshire Lawrence, Ks (785) 838-4623 LAST CALL DANCECLUB & BAR Free Practice MCAT Test April 26, 2003 University of Kansas KU Memorial Union 9:00am - 2:00pm Space is limited. Call to register today! www.PrincetonReview.com 800-2Review MCAT is a registered trademark of the American Association of Medical Colleges (AAMC). The Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton University or AAMC. Catch Spring Fever! Fitness Special Save $100 annual membership $25/month * Can Freeze Over Summer exp. 4/15 Tanning Special 3-Month Tanning unlimited usage $70.00 * Non-members welcome! exp. 4/15 BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa 749-2424 Catch Spring Fever! Catch Spring Fever! Fitness Special Save $100 annual membership $25/month * Can Freeze Over Summer exp. 4/15 Tanning Special 3-Month Tanning unlimited usage $70.00 * Non-members welcome! exp. 4/15 BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 925 Iowa 749-2424 FRIDAY,APRIL 25.2003 6B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 WEATHER TODAY TOMORROW SUNDAY 60 40 morning showers, afternoon clouds 71 48 partly cloudy 42 29 mostly cloudy with possible afternoon thunderstorms WEATHER TODAY 60 40 morning showers, afternoon clouds TOMORROW 71 48 partly cloudy SUNDAY 42 29 mostly cloudy with possible afternoon thunderstorms — TIM BUSH, DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE CAPTAIN RIBMAN in Tele-Visions by Sprengelmeyer & Davis WITH THE WAR WINNING DOWN, AMERicans ARE TURNING OFF THEIR TVS AND THURING THEIR ATTENTION BACK TO THEIR FAMILIES. JOBS. FRIENDS. QUITTERS!! WITH THE WAR WINDING DOWN, AMERICANS ARE TURNING OFF THEIR TUS AND TURNING THEIR ATTENTION BACK TO THEIR FAMILIES, JOBS, FRIENDS QUITTERS!! HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 25) Today's Birthday (April 29). Get a steady source of income this year, if you don't have one already. Cultivate a friendship with someone who really understands. Or maybe this person (or people) will emerge in the process of life itself. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. Though input from friends can be a big help, discover the answer yourself. Keep paper and a pencil near your bed, and make time to write down your dreams. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 6. Confer with friends late in the day regarding weekend plans. Otherwise, keep your thoughts to yourself as you gather up your profits. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 7. Remember how somebody once told you to be polite? To be respectful to authority figures? You don't have to agree, but no wise cracks now. They'd be counterproductive. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 7. If you can manage it, get away for a while tonight as reward for a rather tough week. Old friends and a favorite setting are perfect for recharging your enthusiasm. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 6. You're alternately frugal and overly generous. You'll be more financially secure if you draw up a plan and stick to it. Consult an expert. Virgo(Aug.23-Sept.22).Todayisa7. Have you figured out what needs to be changed in order to make your workload easier? Make a list, because soon you'll have a chance to share your ideas. Libra (Sept, 23-Oct, 22). Today is an 8. You're drawing a lot of attention, partially because you're so cute. If you stay calm and don't let it go to your head, maybe you'll bring in more work. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21), Today is a 7. The logjam is almost unstuck, and there'll be more progress soon. Make some special time tonight to spend with one you love. Prepare a happy surprise. Keep studying, even if it seems as if you're not learning a thing. You'll find out how much you've absorbed once you finally get to use it. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 7. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan.19) Today is a7. Make the extra effort to get letters and packages out. Communications may become more difficult over the next few days -OK,weeks. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.18). Today is a 7. Postpone big decisions. Things are in a state of flux. Wait until next week to make a big decision. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Todays is a 7. Your mechanical aptitude is getting better. Combine that with your gut instincts, and you might really prove the existence of God, to yourself as well as others. Crossword ACROSS 1 Pop, to baby 5 Goodyear billboard? 10 "Picnic" playwright 14 Sign of things to come 15 Exterior 16 Desperate 17 Steal a glance 18 Native 20 Look into 22 Enroachments 23 ___ up (admit to something) 24 Caper 25 Casting list 27 Status 28 Mizzles 32 Paris street 33 Fired 35 Get steamed 36 Poems of adoration 38 Formal proclamation 40 Beget 41 Oz man 43 Young lads 4 Burns role 46 Secretarial talent, in brief 47 Cunning 48 Meadow frolickers 50 Nincompooop 52 Oscar-winner Gooding 53 Disperse widely 56 Unpredictable 59 Sailor's time off 61 Wee 62 Granny 63 Superior and Michigan 64 Book before Neheemiah 65 Choreographic move 66 Sting 67 Espied DOWN 1 Latest info 2 VISA rival 3 Cold storage 4 Leg ornament 5 Wild swine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | | 22 | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | 23 | | | | | 24 | | | | | | 25 26 | | | | | 27 | | | 28 | | 29 30 31 32 | | | | 33 34 | | | 35 | | | 36 | | | 37 | 38 | | 39 | | 40 | | 41 | | | 42 | | 43 | | 44 | 45 | | 46 | | | | | 47 | | 48 49 | | | | 60 | | 51 | | | 52 | | | | | 53 54 55 | | | | | 56 | | | | | 57 58 59 | | | | | 60 | | | 61 | 62 | | | | 63 | | | 64 | 65 | | | | 66 | | | 67 | | | 04/25/03 $ \textcircled{c} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 6 Service station job? 7 Ice-skater Midori 8 Fine Spanish wool 9 Use block letters 10 Follies 11 1492 ship 12 Alum 13 Congers 19 Laundry problem 21 Peak in Thessaly 24 Within hearing range 25 Ship fronts 26 CPA's assignment 27 Math-proof letters 29 Brand 30 Pulse 31 Kernels 34 Crossed out 35 Pig's digs 37 Hazard for Tiger 39 Coquettish 42 Course taken C A T H Y W C T U M E A L A E R I E A R O N A X L E T R A P S R O O M N A T O S O N S I M P L E S I M O N S H I M S A H A A N G O R A D I N O S A U R R O R Y C R E A T E G S A S T E A M A N G S I G H T O S S A L I S O N F R E E N O S E C O N E O F F E R S N R A T R E Y S L O A F O F B R E A D S P A A R G O E R O S O N I O N P A U L R I O T R A V E D S L E D S E T S A B E T S Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 44 Elide 47 Laugh riot 49 Calms down 51 Carter and Gwyn 52 Highest point 53 1040 IDs 54 Breezy talk 55 Top-notch 56 At any time 57 About 58 Greenish blue 60 Rap-sheet letters Friday at 7:30 pm Woodruff Auditorium You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll learn Oueer Theatre Kansas Union Featuring The Educational Theatre Company PRIDEDANCE Saturday from 10 pm - 1 am Ecumenical Christian Ministries (Next to Adam's Alumni Center) Food, dancing, games and a psychic reader! Bring your own drink Only $2.00 Student Development Center Q&A FOCUS ON THE FAMILY K Kansan Classified KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 The Kansan will not knowingly accept, any advertisement for housing or employment that characterizes group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, and other protected characteristics. The Kansan will not knowingly accept Classified Policy 1 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements F Do you speak English as a second language? Learn the secrets of getting a job in the United States! Attend a 90 minute seminar on April 26 or April 29. Topics: Applications, resumes, interviews. Cost $20.00. 105 page handbook included Call841-7071 to register. WANTED: Caucasian female, 21-34 years old for oocyte (egg) donation through a Wichita donation site. Must have redauburn hair; brown, green or nazeel red, and some college experience. Financial compensation provided Write to RJE, c/o PMB #119, 13505 S. Mur-Lan, Suite 105, Olathe, KS 6620-1600. Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast. quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4263 marksin@swbell.net Fresh Salad Bar Hot Food. Super Sandwiches. CARMENETI MEDICAL CENTER THE MERC! NATURAL FOOD GROCERY 9TH & IOWA, OPEN 7AM-10PM 130 - Entertainment 9TH & IOWA OPEN 7AM-10PM Dance lessons, ballroom, latin, and swing; Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 313-227 男厕 女厕 200s Employment advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. Real estate trustees are new members subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which prohibits discrimination, preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, 205 - Help Wanted 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan www.greatcamp Jobs.com 手拉手购物车 205 - Help Wanted BARTENDER POSITION Awesome new sports bar/b restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 5-Mon-Sat, 811 New Hampshire. Make up to $300 per shift. Flexible hours. great pay.Call 1-800-806-0082 ext 1422 Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3888 ext. 511. BASS PLAYER City of Lawrence wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3494. The Parks and Recreation dept is looking for adult league, summer softball umpires. Job offers excellent pay & flexible schedules starting May thru Oct. Must be 19 yrs of age w/ xor in the sport. Training provided & required. Anyone interested must attend orientation. Saturday May 3 at 10:00am Community Building 115 W.11th Street For questions contact Adult Sports Office 832-7922-EOE M/F/D Do you want to have a full time job for the summer? Do you like kids? Wanted: responsible, dependable, caring student to play with & entertain 3 yr & 10 yr old M-F. 7:30-5:33, Need own transportation. 841-3533, leave a message or call after 5:30. EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER Heart of America Photography is seeking 12-14 full/part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season - April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment! Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7109 or dip by 2449 Iowa. Ste J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGeese's EOE. Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentleman's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1785-2191-5900. Free Chocolate Assist people with head injuries to become independent. Flexible schedule. Great 'hands on' summer job for students in Social and Human Services/OT, SLP PT field. Flexible schedule. Lawrence & KC area. Call toll free 1-866-429-7574 x 103. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-843-7490, evenings. Hundreds of painter positions available No experience necessary, students welcomed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9277 www.collegejourney.com sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitations or discrimination. Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554. Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised, in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 205 - Help Wanted --- LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at Girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program site general (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor skills, crafts, nature, sports, challenge course, dance and drama) Early June - mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Call 303-778-0109 * x281 or email rmonda@geneh.com MOVIE EXTRAS / MODES NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277 ex.1020 vanny for 3 girls ages 8-12 for summer. Monday, Tuesday, & 8-12th approx. 1:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Send resume to Brent Conrad, 10194 Maass, Lawrence 68044 OFFICE HELP NEEDED Part-time office help needed (approx. 20 hours per week, Monday-Friday, 1 PM - 5 PM). Duties include answering phones, filing, data entry & customer service. Strong computer skills required. Send resume to Alvamar, PO Box 3467, Lawrence, KS SUMMER INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, web development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. Apply online at 66046. Attention Tracy EOE www.pilgrimage.com/intern.htm TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE PLAY & COACH SPORTS - HAVE FUN - $ $ $ Openings in ALL TEAM & IN- DIVIDUAL SPORTS, ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS Clamp/Hike, Ropes/Rock Climbing; Ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Secretaries, Top Salaries, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUNDRY, Travel allowance ONLINE APPLICATION: Summer to remember in woods of Maine. Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6/18-8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call collect 914-835-5800. www.camocobbossee.com www.campcobbpossee.com or call (800) 473-6104 Private Female Ballet Instructor Needed. To teach ballet major fundamental ballet for summer. May contact Amanda Zehr at 785-842-6325 or you may email at ballet@ku.edu, preferred method of contact is phone. Please leave message. Willing to pay $30.hr Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com Find it, sell it, buy it in the Kansan Classified or just read them for the fun of it FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7B 205 - Help Wanted Safe Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. STOP!!! Are you workinghard? Athletic Minded? Outgoing? Are you hardworking? Athletic Minded? Outgoing? If you have answered with a "yes", We may have a position for you. Starting $21,000-23,000 per year Entry level position Company Training Rapid advancement + bonuses For interview time please call 785-843-1933 SUMMER WORK $500-800/wk to start STUDENTS WELCOME Adv/Mktg co. seeks entry level, mid & upper level mgmt candidates. Int'l firm, sports and charitable organizations, tuition bonuses and paid training avail. Call Denise (913) 396-0056 --- 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale S For Sale. 4 adjoining seats to Bill Cochy. May 31st, Starlight Theatre. $60 each. min. Will sell together of separate. Contact Jeff at 865-1517 or 550-3799. MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 1910 Haskell. Spring rummage sale. First Presbyterian Church 2415 Clinton Pkwy, Fri. 8am-6pm, Sat. 8am-12pm. Bag sale, Sat. 11am--Clothing, toys, books, puzzles, games, hold hands pride, and much more. Clothing, toys, books; puzzles, games, household goods, linens, and much more. 340 - Auto Sales Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3232 ext. 4565. 1988 Toyota Camry, only 100,000 miles runs great, new CD player and stereo $1200 call Lela at 749-1256 1900 Range Rover Clean interior, good ext. Runs great, roof rack, sunroof, grill guard. 1698 $4200. Dane 816-212-6982 400s Real Estate A 405 - Apartments for Rent Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $355/month.Call 841-1074 1 & 3 BR aparts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. With wood floors, paid utilities. $410-841. 841-3633. 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1. BR apt, FP, skylights, 1. car garage, all appliances. D/W hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807. 1- BR at Tuckaway, W/D, fitness room, TV, fireplace, hot tub, alarm system, overlocks pool. Ask about apartment N7. Available June to start. Call 838-3377. Great location. 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. $610/mo. Avail. Aug. 182-4242. Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample parking, on-site laundry, Call 843-4090. Save Your Money! Now signing 1 YR leases starting May/ June/July/Aug. No smoking, pets. Extra- nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more! $405/mo. Spanish Crest Apts. 841-6868. 405 - Apartments for Rent --- 1712 OHIO Avail. Aug. 1, Large newer 384 BR apt. DW, CA, micr, onlure, onsite, 384 BR 2 BA $900, 4BR 2 BA $1040, NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, Inc. 841- 533 www.appartmentslaw.net 2 BR apartments, CA, off street parking, 1737 and 41 Tennessee. $500/month. 913-441-4168. maasonproperties@aol.com 3 & 4 BR townhouses @ 1125 Tennessee. W/D, CA, DW, off street parking. $875 & $1150 / month. Call 913-441-4169 or masonproperties@aol.com 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, BP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances, WD hook up very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. 1.2.3, & 4 BR aps avail, for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus rite, laundry facility, Call 843-0011. COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@ixks.com - On KUB Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - 3 Hot Tubs - Exercise Room - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 THE LEGENDS NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & A BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPPED FITNESS AREA GARAGES & CARPORT CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY HUGGE GAME ROOM COMPLETE & CRAFT ROOM SUNLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 Blue Mosaic Management Inc. Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apts Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ◆Washer & Dryer ◆Fully Equipped Kitchen ◆Serving Bar - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$650 Call 840.9467 for an appointment Blue Nile Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 405 - Apartments for Rent 405 - Apartments for Rent JEFFERSON Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features Include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK Great 3BR's You've heard the name. You've heard it's the place to live... VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Nearly new 3RB triplexes in 3 great locations available. Aug. 1. Have all amenities. 9355-1050, NO PETS. 841-5533. On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ouddahi Ousdahl 841-5533 Now Leasing! NOW LEASING New Buildings close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm for Fall - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - On KU Bus Route - Fitness Center Individual Leases Cable plus HBO • Resort-style Pool Plaza 24 hour Fitness Facility • On KU bus route - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome - Small Pet Welcome - Model Open Daily Ask About Our Specials! Tuckaway CHASE COURT 405 - Apartments for Rent 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Luxury Hiking... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway has two pools hot tubs, basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Tuckaway Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Washer/Dryer Alarm System Briarwood Fully Equipped Kitchen Briarwood pool, fitness www.tuckawaymgmt.com HOMES DOMESTIC BUILDINGS COMMERCIALS www.jeffersoncommons.com Located just behind SuperTarget Stop by and find out for yourself 842-0032 - Washer/Dryer in each unit - Internet access in each room - Tanning Bed - Computer Center call 838-3377 L 405 - Apartments for Rent Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Haps. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $35. Water paid, High-speed Internet available. No pets, Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday, Call 841-3800. Regency Place, 2. BR available now. Walking distance to campus, 1301 Louisiana, Water paid, no pets $590/mo. 941-8468. PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Models Open Daily 842-3280 HOLIDAY APARTMENTS 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1 BDR $400 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 4 BDR $840 NICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 785-843-0011/126-843-4005 LOCATED BEST BEHIND THE HOLDGE Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790 $^{80}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D,all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com MASTERCRAFT WALKTOCAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Hanover Place 14th & Mass·841-1212 Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 ♦ Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 + Regents Court 19th & Mass·749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas·749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 405 - Apartments for Rent Attractive studio apt, near KU at 445 Mo- avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study $400, gas & water no. Peto or smoking. Call 749-0166. Avg. Verry, nice; spacious remodeled 2 BR, 1.5 AW, DW, DW, CA, balcony, 9th & Emery. No smoking/pets. $590 + utilities. Call 550-111 or 841-3192. Avail, May, June, or Aug. Very nice remodeled studio and 1 bedroom apts. close to campus. No pets/moking. Starting at $360. Call 550-8111 or 841-3192. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in-cloats, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 Bk. Ankanas. 843-4090. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom. 1 bath duplex. $870. 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-409-300. Available, June 1, one bedroom apartment at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emmery Rd $490 per month. Washier/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. 1:2:3 bedroom apartments, 1 block to KU. August Available 1st, 841-6254 Canyon Court 790 Comgel Lane Brand New Luxury Apartments 842-3280 www.intraagagement.com *Now Leasing for Spring 2003* -1, 2, 3 Bdrm -Washer/Dryer -Swimming Pool & Hot Tub -Fitness Center -Basketball Court -Garages Available -High Speed Internet Connections -Security Systems Available -Small Pet Welcome HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 七 841-8468 6th & Iowa - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome www.firstmanagementinc.com 1.2.83 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4600 Overtand Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com 410 - Condos For Rent للعشرة 3 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom townhomes 922Tennessee 423-1223 415 - Homes For Rent Nice 2 BR 1 BA. Small house, remodeled in 1996. High cellings, wood fl. in living rm. Hooks Up. For a1st 8680. 841-3633. 2 and 3 bedroom houses for rent. Have CA. Available August 1. No pets. No smoking. $725-825-month.913-341-0952. 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Eldridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained, 2-car garage, dishwasher, W.D.C, AC 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/mail. Call 842-1750 170 a.m. - p.6 or马42-3556. 415 - Homes For Rent BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$110 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 or 766-6622 between 3:00 p.m. to 10 p.m. 4 Bedroom 2 Bathroom, W/D included, basement, off street parking 1735 Kentucky 10508 1491-4935 4 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom, 1 car garage W/D included, to KU. 1638 Inlay $1200.841-4935. 420 - Real Estate For Sale House for Rent 4BR 1.5 Bath. CAWD In- cluded. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kentucky $1100/mo. 218-413 **Moving to KC?** Kea a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24/hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbreatable at 105k, Call 913-522-5360. Really Exec. 430 - Roommate Wanted 4th Roommate wanted. Huga House near campus, Starting Aug. 1st, Rent $330 + 1/4 utilities. Call 842-0529 Avail. June 1, lovely house 3 bks. from KU. Need 2 female roommates, approx. 300/mo each. No Pets. No Smoking. Call 841-3736. Female Graduate Student sequestering non-smoking roommate to share quiet 2 BR 1 BA apt. Starting Aug. 1st. $260/mo, plus utilities. Phone: 765-6582. Female Roommate Needed Female Roommate Needed For 3 BR, 1 BA house; N/S. No Pets. Close to Campus; $275/mo + 1/3 tubs. Avail. Aug 1. Call 913-5837-312 after. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 843-5540 440 - Sublease Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, WID and garage. No smoking.pets. $300 + 1/2 Avail. Aug 42-8540 $500 Signing Bonus: 2BD 2BA at Parkway Commons, avail mid-May Thru July 31st of 4 Pet friendly, Call Jessi or Craig at 312-9710 or 760-0266. HOME BUILDING 1 bedroom apartment, 16th & Tennessee. No smoking, no pets. Summer sublease. Rent negotiable. Call Kristin at 393-1549 1 bedroom at 527 California.Washer/dryer. Nice neighborhood.Call 841-5533 for information. 1 BR in 4 BR apartment. Private bath, cable and internet hookup. Pool. $370/mo. Leave message 785-691-9048 1 master bedroom and private bathroom of large townhouse. Possibility to take on year lease at end of summer. $300/month negotiable. Available now. Call 939-0511. 1 roommate Wanted. 2 BR apartment very close to campus. W/D, D/W, $240/mo. plus utilities. Bq 829-8027 2 people needed to sublease 2 BR 2 BA apartment. Avail. June & July, W/D and cable incl. Close to campus. $350/mo/person. 1011 Missouri. Call 785-749-5289. 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage, W/D, CA, avail. mid-May $70/room. Adam 830-8076. 3 BR, 2 BA house avail. end of May, W/D, A/C, near campus, all kitchen appl., 2-car garage, water pad. Allowed: 749-4926. Avail. June 1, 4 BR, 2 BA, WID, diswasher. Newly carpeted & tiled. $240/mo per person + util. B424-1182. THE TECHNICIAN 500s Services 510 - Child Care Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad cuniculum; park-like playground. Call Sunscreen Alpine 842-223-0223 BB = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS FRIDAY,APRIL25,2003 Tennis loses to'Buffs in tourney By Jonah Ballow jballow@kansan.com Kansan sportswinner At the Big 12 Conference Tournament, the No. 9-seeded Kansas tennis team ended its season yesterday with a 4-3 loss to the No. 8-seeded Colorado Buffaloes. "We had talked about coming out fired up from the beginning," coach Kilmeny Waterman said. "We wanted to be in a position where we had a chance to win at the end, and we did." The Jayhawks started the match strong by winning two of the three doubles matches and securing the crucial doubles point The No.1 doubles team, juniors Kristen Steinbock and Emily Haylock, beat seniors Lia Diningo and Dominique Lemperle. 8-5. Junior Courtney Steinbock and sophomore Paige Brown had no trouble defeating junior Morgan Sall and sophomore Kendra Strandemo, 8-1, at the No. 2 doubles position. Singles play between the two teams would eventually decide the close match. At No. 1 singles, Courtney Steinbock in straight sets to Lemperle, 6-0, 6-4. Haylock also lost fast with a defeat to Dimingo, 6-3, 6-1 in No.5 singles. Brown was able to pull off a three-set victory against sophomore Kate Lagert, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, to tie the match at 2-2. At No. 5 singles, senior Kim Lorenz lost, but freshman Luiza Loureiro would strike back with a 6-4, 6-4, victory over Sull and again tied the match. The outcome of the match would come down to freshman Christin Skoda battling Strandemo at No. 4 singles, Skoda droppedthefirst set, 6-3, but then fought to win the second in a tiebreaker, 7-6 (8-6). In the decisive third set, Skoda jumped out to a 5-3 advantage, needing only one more game to seal the victory for the Jayhawks. However, Strandemo won three straight games and forced a tiebreaker. Standemo then won the tiebreaker, 7-4, and the match to send the Buffaloes to the next round of the tournament. "Christine did a great job." Waterman said. "Ending on this note, where we had a chance to win, will hopefully motivate us for next season." - Edited by Todd Rapp Major leaguer drops down to minors The Associated Press NEW YORK·Rickey Henderson wants another chance to reach the major leagues — even if it means starting over on the lowest rung of the minors, playing with guys half his age and making only $3,000 a month. The 44-year-old Henderson signed with the Newark Bears of the independent Atlantic League on Wednesday, hoping it will help him attract interest from the majors sometime during the season. "Yeah, I was surprised," said his manager, four-time National League batting champion Bill Madlock. "I was trying to figure out his reason for coming. Obviously, he has something he still wants to accomplish in the big leagues." Henderson is the big league record holder in runs scored, stolen bases and walks. His ascent to stardom took him "But I'm excited he'll be here," he said. "He brings even more credibility to our team and our league." through New Jersey a quarter-century ago, when he played for Jersey City in Oakland's farm system in 1978. Henderson spent last season with the Boston Red Sox, mostly in left field. Widely considered the greatest leadoff man ever, he hit .223 with five home runs and 16 RBIs in 72 games. At the end of the season, the Red Sox gave him a car to honor him for his career. "Obviously, he hasn't had enough," New York Yankees manager Joe Torre said. "He obviously doesn't want to say goodbye. But that's his choice, anyway. I don't think anybody else should tell him when to quit." "He's headed for the Hall of Fame, he's been on winners and he's done all these things," he said. But it's nice to see he still has the enthusiasm to do this stuff. I know one thing — he'll draw some people. I'm happy for the fans." Unable to find a job in the majors during the offseason, he decided to put on a new jersey in New Jersey and narrowed his choice to three teams in the Atlantic League: Newark, Camden and Somerset. "He wants scouts to see that he can still make a contribution," said his agent, jeff Borns. "He was anxious to start playing as soon as possible and the Atlantic League begins on May 1, earliest among the independent leagues," he said. "He picked Newark because he thought the Bears had the highest visibility." Newark has had its share of big-name players, including Jose Canseco in 2001. League champions last season, the Bears signed former 20-game winner Jose Limalast week. At one point in the winter, the Cincinnati Reds showed some interest. With the injury status of center fielder Ken Griffey Jr, still uncertain, perhaps there might be a chance to revisit a possibility with the Reds. There had been talk Henderson might try to return to Oakland for a fifth stint with the Athletics, but they didn't want him. "I don't know how long Rickie will be with us — a month, two months, who knows?" Madlock said. Madlock said he expected Henderson would join the team for workouts next week in Newark. The Bears open their season May 1 at home against Bridgeport, and the season runs through Sept. 14. With Newark, Henderson will earn the league maximum of $3,000 per month. He played for $350,000 last season with the Red Sox. Henderson has 3,040 hits while playing for eight major league teams. He has scored 2,288 runs, and his eight steals last year increased his total to 1,403. Henderson also holds records for walks (2,179) and leadoff home runs (80). He needs five more home runs for 500, and that might be a goal motivating him. A 10-time All-Star who played against Madlock in the 1983 showcase, Henderson was the 1990 American League MVP for Oakland. He won World Series championships with the As in 1989 and the Toronto Blue Jays in 1993. Penn State player says he's No.1 pick Bv Chris Korman Daily Collegian via U-wire Pannsylvania State University UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. When Jimmy Kennedy told reporters at Big Ten Media Day last July that he was working to be the No. 1 pick in the draft, it sounded like idle bluster. Kennedy is a fun guy, easy with a smile and quick to chuckle. Even at his most serious, the happy gleam never leaves his eyes. Sure he looked focused that day in Chicago less than a year ago. Sure he was down to 310 pounds and telling everyone his quickness would make him unstoppable Sure he had skipped the draft only months earlier to concentrate on improving his stock and returning Penn State to respectability. But, see, Kennedy was also taking shots at Lee Corso and the ESPN GameDay crew. He was also sheepishly evading all talk about his fiancée, former Penn State women's basketball player Rashana Barnes, and how they supposedly met on Valentine's Day years ago. It was tough to tell what to take seriously. Big Ten Conference, NFL scouts, draft gurus — found out just how serious Kennedy was about becoming the top defensive tackle in the nation. After what some perceived as a slow start (Kennedy wholeheartedly disagreed), the Yonkers, Pa. native became one of the most dominant tackles in Penn State history. It wouldn't take long before everyone Penn State fans,the Kennedy finished second on the team with 87 tackles, including 15 for loss, and 5.5 sacks. That earned him All-Big Ten and All-America honors, and soon enough his name was The numbers are nice, but they certainly don't tell the whole story. flowing freely from Mel Kiper's mouth. But those in the know understand that Kennedy is valuable not because of his tackles and sacks, but for what he does for the people around him, specifically the defensive end next to him and the middle linebacker behind him. In football speak, Kennedy is a two-gap tackle, meaning he's capable of taking on the hole between the tackle and guard in addition to the lane between the guard and center. Kennedy will go early, simply because he's 6-foot-5, weighs 330 pounds and runs a 5.1-second 40-yard dash. Team finishes season, places 11th in Big 12 The women's golf team's season came to an end Wednesday with a disappointing final round of the Big 12 Conference championships at the Country Club of Missouri. The team was in ninth place after round one,but was unable to make up any ground.The team finished in 11th place with 973 strokes. Oklahoma State, 909, edged Missouri, 910, by one stroke to capture its third straight conference Texas, 918, Okla- home, 923, and Nebraska, 926, rounded out the top five. Junior Jennifer Bawanan had a strong finish for the Jayhawks, firing a final round 77, to go with a first round 80 and second round 79, for a 236 total. The总计 put Bawanan in a tie for 22nd. Bawanan was the only Jayhawk to break 80 in the tournament, a feat that she accomplished twice. Freshman Chelsey Prior, 242, and senior Heather Rose, 247, recorded top-50 finishes, while seniors Tiffany Krugel, 254, and Kristy Staub, 255, finished just outside the top 50. — Paul Kramer Ballow CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B Finally, check out the performance of the most talented Jayhawk in the pros. Paul Pierce last season, Pierce proved to be clutch scorer for the Boston Celtics during their playoff run. This season is no different, Pierce put the Celtics on his shoulders during game one against the Indiana Paceers and carried the team to a victory. Even Larry Bird would have had to notice Pierce's 40 points and 11 boards, which includes hitting 21 for 21 from the free throw line. Pierce did struggle in game two with a severe head cold but still managed to score 14 points. He is the team's star and the key to upsetting the Indiana Pacers. Pierce could prove himself a league superstar if he scores sufficiently against the physical defense of Ron Artest. In last night's game, Pierce had 21 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Celtics to a 103-81 victory and a 2-1 lead in the series. If you need Kansas basketball, grab the remote. The Jayhawks are only a click away. Bollow is a Littleton, Colo., junior in journalism. Royals win again improve to 16-3 The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Too bad the Kansas City Royals have to go on the road. Then again, they're playing great in all ballparks. Joe Randa hit a go-ahead double in the sixth inning and Kansas City beat the Minnesota Twins 2-1 Thursday to become the first team since 1987 to win its first 10 home games. "This is awesome. It's really something to be proud of," said Chris George, who beat the Twins' Brad Radke. "I wouldn't say we feel invincible, but certainly confident." then returns home May 5 The Royals, who overcame a four-hitter by Radke (1-3), improved to 16-3 overall and are 13 games over .500 for the first time since the final day of the 1994 season. Kansas City was 37-44 at home while losing a franchise-record 100 games last season. The Royals are the ninth team to start 10-0 at home, two shy of the major league record, set by the 1911 Detroit Tigers. Kansas City starts a nine-game road trip Friday at Toronto. "We have been playing good all the way around," Royals manager Tony Pena said. "The thing about this bulletclub is everybody wants to be a hero. Everybody wants to do something." Kansas City went ahead for good in the sixth when Carlos Febles singled and scored on a double to center by Randa, who has seven RBI in the last three games. Jason Grimsey pitched two innings of one-hit relief, and Mike Dougail finished the seven-hitter for his ninth save in nine chances. Hunters singled leading off the ninth and advanced on a wild pitch, but Doug Mientkiewicz struck out and Michael Cuddyer filed out to left. Hunter was doubled up off second by Raul Ibanez for the final out. "I was trying too hard, just wanted to get across home plate and tie the game up." Hunter said. "But at the same time I thought he was jammed and it was going to drop in. But it stayed up. I made a big mistake, that's all." The award-winning advertising staff of The University Daily Kansan is looking for self-motivated, forward-thinking students to apply for positions in sales and creative departments. Pick up your application today in Room 119 in Stauffer Flint Hall. Applications are due April 25, 2003. JOIN OUR TEAM Work hard if the opportunity is right for you. We have had many people and have had Mansan importantly fit per hand for the real world. KANSAN Advertising A Graduation 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore It's Not Too Late Featuring: - Custom Embossed Announcements from 99¢ • choose paper, typeface, print color, and special messages • 24-48 hr turnaround, Low minimum order - Complete Regalia from $19.95 - Masters Regalia w/hood $42.90, Doctoral Regalia w/hood $49.90 - Diploma Frames from $99.95 - Free '03 graduation tshirt (with $50.00 order) Congratulations on your Achievement and thanks for shopping with us over the years! Online ordering @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com www.jayhawkbookstore.com·1420 Crescent Rd·843-3826 4 Monday April 28, 2003 Vol. 113. Issue No. 143 Today's weather 78° Tonight: 58° Vol. 113. Iss. KU Tell us your THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com Softball team's last series mirrors season's ups and downs p.1B Kara Pierce Blowing offsteam New whistle restores old University tradition By Amy Potter aporter@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Seventeen times the roar of the new whistle could be heard Friday, piercing through campus as workers adjusted the pitch. Bob Sieber, steam shop supervisor, stood atop the power plant building gazing across campus as steam came pouring out of the new whistle behind him. Sieber described his last few months as "quiet." He repairs the whistle anytime anything goes wrong. "I'm dreading the new whistle," Sieber said. "For 23 years I've listened to that thing blow." The University of Kansas has been noticeably quiet without the loud blow of a whistle, a tradition since 1912, marking the end of class. Now students and faculty need not worry because their faithful timekeeper is back. When the old whistle cracked on Jan. 22, George Cone, assistant director of mechanical systems and utilities, began the search for a new whistle. He contacted Richardson's Landing of Cincinnati and an employee told him about a Web site. www.steamboats.com Cone had 50 whistles to choose from on the Web site. He formed a SEE WHISTLE ON PAGE 8A Eric Braem/Kansan The new steam whistle on top of the Facilities and Operations building is tested for tone. Bets Off Virtual casinos present threat to college students H He did it for the rush: the adrenaline that surged when a player made a crucial three-point shot. And, to be honest, he did it for the money. For Shannon Guelbert, gambling added an element of risk to watching sports on ESPN. "You're a lot more into it," Guelbert said. "But there is never an easy bet." A friend told the Overland Park junior about Internet gambling; he tried it because he didn't know how else to place bets on sports, and he wasn't old enough to go to the riverboat casinos in Missouri. "I didn't care about playing blackjack." Guelbert said. "I was just betting on upcoming football and basketball games. It's really easy." Guelbert signed up online and gambled through his credit card by deposit ing money into an account and playing with the money in that account. When he won, the company mailed him a check for his winnings, and when he lost, it charged his credit card. But Guelbert was moving in hazy legal territory from his home computer. Internet gambling is illegal in the United States, but the laws were written before the Internet was created. Congress is considering updated laws that target owners of gambling Web sites and credit card companies. Guelbert made bets online for the winners of the NCAA tournament, the Super Bowl and the Heisman trophy. During the time he made a habit of online gambling, he didn't bet much on KU sports because he said it took the fun out of winning. "If you bet on KU to win by 10 and they win by eight, you're kind of pissed off instead of being happy that they won." Guelbert said. "At the same time, it's exciting when you win the bet." Gambling is a complex combination of anticipation and reward. Online or in a traditional casino, the basis is the same—a prize, a chance and a choice. A gambler, whether recreational or compulsive, places his bets with the knowledge that someone is going to lose. And the odds are it might be him. AN ELEMENT OF RISK Internet gambling has been growing since 1995, when the first online casino started, and has encouraged a new generation of college students to give out their credit card numbers online. Bear, Stearns & Co., a global investment banking and brokerage firm in New York, has estimated that there are 1,800 gaming Web sites, all based outside this country. Bear, Stearns found these companies take in about $4 billion annually, at least 60 percent of which comes from the United States. gamblers provide their credit card numbers or transfer money from a bank. On-site operators receive the bets and use computers to run complex programs that simulate gambling games, such as the spin of a roulette wheel. After the game is done, the onsite operator tells gamblers whether they won or lost. CAPITAL CITY INSTITUTION ASSOCIATION Capital City In about $4 percent of To open accounts in virtual casinos. One of the reasons students gamble on sporting events is to have a sense of Frank DeSalvo, director of Counseling and Psychological Services at the University of Kansas, Gambling allows students, such as Guelbert, to feel intimately involved in the game. SEE GAMBLING ON PAGE 7A Defense's new strategy may weaken Martin case By Erin Ohm eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Changes in the defense's strategy in the murder of KU student Shannon Martin could weaken the arguments against two suspects in the case. Altering testimony from the primary suspect, Kattia Cruz, might affect the prosecution's case against Rafael Zumbado and Luis Alberto Castro, the two other suspects. Defense attorney Luis Venegas admitted to "incensities" in the testimony of his client, Cruz, in an article in San Jose's The Tico Times. The Tico Times, a weekly English-language newspaper, reported Venegas met with Cruz last week to revise their strategy before a preliminary hearing. Venegas did not say how his client's testimony would change. The hearing for the case of Martin's stabbing death in May 2001 in Golfito, Costa Rica, will be held tomorrow in Golfito. Pedro Irigonegaray, a Topeka attorney representing Martin's mother, Jeanette Stauffer, has worked with Costa Rican prosecutor Erik Martinez to analyze evidence for the case. He said the arguments of the defense would not affect the strategy of the prosecution. "The good prosecutor doesn't really care what the defense strategy is," he said. "The role of the prosecutor is not to win; the role of the prosecutor is to seek justice." The Tico Times reported the evidence and testimony Costa Rican authorities have in the case. Cruz identified suspects Zumbado and Castro as perpetrators of the crime when she was taken to jail in July 2001, one month after Martin's murder. Cruz is one of only two sources Costa Rican police have found who link Zumbado and Castro to the murder. Police also have testimony from a taxi washer who claimed he saw the three suspects together shortly after Martin was killed. Lab tests performed on hair samples found in Martin's hand did not match any of the three suspects. The primary material evidence in the case is the remains of a black sweatshirt found at the scene of the crime, which police traced to Cruz. Stauffer could not be reached for comment. The Golfito judge presiding over tomorrow's hearing will have 48 hours to dismiss the case for lack of evidence or send it to a three-judge tribunal for a murder hearing. The judge could decide to send certain suspects to trial and free others. - Edited by Julie Jantzer JAMES PARKER Lindsev Gold/Kansan Drag Show turnout, donations successful Veterio Dolls entertain a crowd of 400. Her renditions of "Nutbush City Limits" and "Locomotion" helped raise $633 in donations. By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Gray, gloomy skies could not stop the women dressed as guys. The 10th annual Brown Bag Drag Show was forced inside because of a threat of rain, but many involved said it had little effect on the turnout. The show was moved from the Kansas Union Plaza to the Hawk's Nest on the first floor. The show began 20 minutes late because of the sudden move, but once it started the audience was enthusiastic. "The energy in the audience was amazing." said Jessica St. Clair, Valley Center senior, who dressed up as a man to perform in the show. "I was surprised by the amount of people." Audience members clapped and danced along with the music, and some gave dollar bills to the performers. People outside cupped their hands against the glass and squinted to get a peak. The audience inside stood shoulder to shoulder. "It was wonderful; it blew my mind," said Krystal Daugherty, Topeka junior. Krystal Daugherty Topeka junior "Everyone should come whether gay, straight or whatever — just to have a good time." Two members of Queers and Allies "It was wonderful; it blew my mind. Everyone should come whether gay, straight or whatever just to have a good time." collected donations during the performances. Kelly Carson, Littleton, Colo., freshman, was one of the two, and said it was a method of benefiting from the actions of Fred Phelps, who protested outside. People could donate $10 and receive a T-shirt, or donate per minute of Phelps' protest. "It's a passive way to work around Phelps," she said. "People want to do something, and this is a way to fight back." SEE DRAG SHOW ON PAGE 8A 刻 2A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front MONDAY,APRIL28,2003 News briefs CAMPUS Law library gets donation to make it largest in state The University of Kansas Law Library will receive $1 million to expand and enhance its collections. Douglas D. Wheat and his wife, Laura, donated $1 million to the University of Kansas endowment fund to expand the law library, which will be named the Wheat Law Library in honor of the KU alumnus. The library will have more than 370,000 books, which will make it the largest law library in the state. Some of the holdings include every statute ever passed by the Kansas Legislature; hundreds of years of art from South America, Europe and the Pacific Rim regions; federal statutes and resources pertaining to specific legal areas. Steve McAllister, dean of the law school, said the library was important to the school. "The Wheat's gift ensures that the KU Law Library will remain the premier law library in the state of Kansas and this area," McAllister said. —Kellev Weiss STATE Kansas counties can force private land owners to sell LAWRENCE — Kansas ranks second in the nation when it comes to the number of times residential property has been condemned in the past five years so it can be used for industrial and economic development projects. "People throughout your state who hear about proposals to take their land for private development should start immediately organizing," said Dana Berliner, an attorney for Institute for Justice. "Activism is the main way that people can defend themselves." The state Supreme Court ruled April 18 that Kansas counties may force private land owners to sell property to be used for industrial and economic development projects. found abuse of credit cards by employees in the University of Missouri system, a newspaper that successfully sued to get access to those audits reported yesterday. Shortcomings were found in 18 of 23 audits that covered card usage in 2001 and 2002. The system, with about 20,000 employees, had 5,286 active cards in 2002. NATION A campus mail service manager charged $5,260 in groceries, laptop computer equipment and other items on her University of Missouri-Kansas City charge card. At the University of Missouri-St. Louis College of Fine Arts and Communication, one audit found that receipts were missing for one in five credit card charges. Some with receipts, such as $1,097 for T-shirts, had unexplained business purposes. Employee credit misused at University of Missouri Auditors from PricewaterhouseCoopers found undocumented or personal card expenditures, charges without receipts, scores of cards that were issued and never used, and credit limits that often far exceeded need. WORLD Interloper arrested in Iraq U.S.wants cooperation BAGHDAD, Iraq — The U.S. military arrested a political pretender in Baghdad yesterday, while a Shiite Muslim group signaled a new willingness to cooperate on the eve of a pivotal U.S.-sponsored conference to help form a provisional government for Iraq. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Auditors The arrest of Mohammed Mohsen al-Zubaidi reflected U.S. determination to brook no interlopers in its effort to build a consensus for administering Iraq. Timed just before today's high-profile conference, it sent a clear message: Don't meddle. Al-Zubaidi was a returned exile associated with the opposition Iraqi National Congress who had declared himself mayor of Baghdad without sanction from U.S. occupation authorities. His activities, including designation of "committees" to run city affairs had complicated the efforts of postwar U.S. civil administrator Jay Garner to reorganize political life. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV KUJH-TV News Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00. News: Brett Wiard and Laine Baker News: Brett Wizard and Laine Baker Weather: Brandi Gunter Sports: Doug Dohoony On K.JHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7, 8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 907 KIDS kansan.com Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU Eric Braem Kansan Dylan Hilpman, Dylan Hilman, Lawrence freshman, as Dr. Frank-n-Furter takes a good look at Rocky Horror, played by James Garvic, Olathe sophomore, during Hashinger Hall's presentation of The Rocky Horror Show. Sponsored by The Hashinger Hall Arts Council, the event played Thursday through Saturday to full audiences, said Lindsay Taylor, music director and Salina freshman. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalandar.com To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Staircase-Fint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Nicholas Illsley of the New Jersey Medical School will lecture on "The Placenta and IGF-I: Pivotal roles in the coordination of human fetoplacental growth?" at 11:30 a.m. today at Room 100 in Simons Laboratories. Call (913) 588-5774. - **Ineta Savickiene of Vyautats Magnus University at Kaunas, Lithuania will lecture on "The Acquisition of** Noun Morphology in Lithuanian" at 2:30 p.m.today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.Call 864- 3450. Kara Northway of the English Department will lecture on "The Language of Spectacle in Renaissance Drama" from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Hall Center for the Humanities. Call 864-4798. Roy Gephart of Pacific Northwest Laboratories will lecture on "Hanford: A Conversation about Nuclear Waste and Cleanup" at 4 p.m. today at Room 2048 in Malott Hall. Call 864-4626. The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 7 to 8:30 tonight at 207 Robinson. Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. 'Reality' finds own channel on TV The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The audience appetite for reality television could be tested by a planned cable channel that will offer a diet of all reality, all the time. Reality Central, slated to debut in early 2004, is being developed by Larry Namer, co-founder of E! Entertainment Television, and Blake Mycoskie, a businessman who was a reality show contestant. Namer and Mycoskie contend that reality TV has proved its staying power and can attract and hold enough viewers for a niche channel. "Reality is now a genre, just like any other genre," Namer said in an interview last week. The venture was to be announced today. "Right now it has a cult-like following, and we're not saying that's going to exist forever," he said. "But I think this Et Cetera type of programming will remain a genre just by the basic economies of it and what it does for a network." Networks have found success with such hit series as Fox's American Idol and CBS' Survivor. The shows are especially popular among the young adult viewers favored by advertisers. "It's an interesting idea," Bruce Nash, Reality pioneer said. "Whether it will work remains to be seen." 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 68045. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stuaffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 60045 The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan On Campus is printed on a space available basis. kansan.com News Now ALVAMAR ALVAMAR 1800 Crossgate Dr. Lawrence, KS 785-842-1907 Student & Faculty Rates 18 Holes $18.00 9 Holes $11.00 See Campus Coupons Wednesdays and Fridays KU1.D_required Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU Course conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! KU INDEPENDENT STUDY offers more than 160 online and print courses ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Call 864-KUCE (5823) Dr. visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. onflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! Sunrise Terrace Apartments Available Fall - Studios & One Bedroom - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ - Two Story, and Two baths - On Site Laundry - Some with w/d's - Digital Cable Ready - Balcony / Decks w/ view P The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Call to view MONDAY,APRIL28,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A Greeks compete in step show, support scholarships ZA Scott Revnolds/Kansan From left, Jenni Valadez, Kingston alumna, Felicia Orozco, Kanopolis alumna, Kristy Croom, Independence junior, Rosie Lopez, Kansas City, Kan., junior, and Melanie Weiser, Dallas junior, perform in the step show competition at the Lied Center. The Sigma Lambda Gamma sorority produced the show Saturday. By Jessica Palimonio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Screaming, cheering and applause filled the Lied Center Saturday night as chapter members from the surrounding areas came to support the National Pan-Hellenic Council Step Show, which included five groups stomping, clapping and chanting in unison. Greek letters and colors were worn with pride by both the participants and audience members. The audience interacted throughout the show with the traditional calls and signs of each of their groups. Masters of ceremonies Angela Luttrell, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and Gabriel Roland encouraged the groups to give "shout outs" and represent their groups. Roland, Kansas City, Kan., senior, had to do double duty as he performed in the show as well. Rowland said he enjoyed having to do both. Backstage, nerves built up as groups prepared to take the stage. "I'd be lying if I said we weren't nervous," said David Interiano, Wichita sophomore. Each group was given 15 minutes to perform. Some groups used poles or canes to add to the rhythmic nature of their shows. The show integrated the diversity of several cultures. Among the stepping and chanting, groups added traditional African dance and a Latin salsa flavor. "I liked the variety of representations," said Kajuan Cummings, member of the Mu Omega graduate chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha in Kansas City. "I was just glad to be a part of it." In addition to the six fraternities and sororities, the Unity Hip-hop Dance Troupe and the Dimension Steppers, a high school-age step troupe, also preformed. The five groups were judged by graduates from each of the chapters. Representatives from each of the groups were called on stage while the fraternity and sorority winners were announced. Screams and applause filled the stage as Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity and Zeta Phi Beta sorority were given first place trophies. Daniel Crenshaw, Wichita junior, was excited about the award during his first step show. "It's nothing but pure excitement and overwhelming joy," Crenshaw said. "I wouldn't trade it for the world." Overall, organizers were happy with how the show turned out. "The house was full and the audience was great," said Enjolie Dixon, step show coordinator. Theater alums 'come home' to Lawrence to present film In the end, the group raised almost $11,000 for scholarships and operating costs, said Mike Conley, graduate intern for fraternity and sorority life. Edited by Anne Mantey By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Normally it's considered rude for an audience to applaud during the opening credits of a movie, but Friday night the audience at Liberty Hall hooted, hollered and clapped as they saw the names of two University of Kansas alums appear on screen. "It's a pleasure to be back in Lawrence," LaBute said to the Neil LaBute and Paul Rudd brought their new film, The Shape of Things, to Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., as a part of the department of theater and film's "Alums Come Home." crowd of about 350. LaBute received his master's degree in theater studies from the University in 1989. Rudd attended KU in the early '90s. The 96-minute film began as a play in London written by LaBute. The cast for the play was the same as the movie. The movie tells the story of a couple, Evelyn, played by Rachel Weisz, and Adam, played by Rudd, who meet in a museum. The audience watches their strange and quirky interactions with each other and another couple. The film climaxes into an emotional and controversial ending that comments on art, love and relationships After the film, Rudd and LaBute took questions from the audience. The questions ranged from comparisons to LaBute's first film In the Company of Men to how LaBute directed Weisz as Evelyn. "I thought this was the book-end piece to In the Company of Men," Rudd said. LaBute said the roots of Evelyn came from In the Company of Men. "I'm also lazy and try to make money off the same idea," LaBute said. Rudd and LaBute mingled with the crowd after the questionand-answer session. Charla Jenkins, public relations director for University Theater, appreciated the perspective LaBute and Rudd brought. She said both men had matured beautifully since their time at KU, and it was refreshing to see KU through their eyes. Assistant professor of theater and film Matt Jacobson said the film was going to spark a lot of discussion. He said it was well-made, well-crafted and devastating in its emotional payoff. "I think Rudd's performance was absolutely phenomenal," Jacobson said. FREDERIC J. MORRIS AND ANTONIO LUZARRO The evening concluded with an open mike night during which past and present theater and film majors performed on stage. - Edited by Ryan Wood John Nowak/Kansan KU alums Neil LaBute and Paul Rudd answer questions after a screening of their new film, The Shape of Things, at Liberty Hall Friday night. Both actors were on hand as a part of the theatre and film departments' "Alums Come Home," which brought more than 75 working Jayhawk alumni back to Lawrence this week. Need a magic wand to graduate on time? Need a magic wand to graduate on time? Well, it may not be magic, but summer school at Wichita State can do some pretty incredible things — like make an entire semester disappear in as little as two weeks. It's not smoke and mirrors, just an easy, convenient way to get in a class or two while you're home between semesters. And as always, credits earned at WSU are easily transferable to KU. So, take summer school at Wichita State, and in the blink of an eye you'll be closer to graduation and still have plenty of time to enjoy summer before heading back to Lawrence. Enrollment is now open. so check out our schedule www.wichita.edu/schedule to get a copy by mail and to find out how you can register on-line. FREE MOVIE REFRESH FOR THIS SUMMER'S BLOCKBUSTER; 'MATRIX RELOADED' KEANU REEVES LAURENCE FISHBURNE THE MATRIX www.whatisthematrix.com 7:30 pm APRIL 29TH WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM kansas union JOIN US FOR PRIZES, LIMITED TIME matrix beverages & MORE FREE 320Z, 'MATRIX RELOADED' POWERADE [TO FIRST 100 PEOPLE] Coca-Cola 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION MONDAY,APRIL28,2003 TALK TO US Kristi Henderson editor Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or ishaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Ketting business manager 864-4358 or adsaies@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsaies@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news.adviser 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com REALITY CHECK I DON'T GIVE A SHAT ABOUT NORTH CAROLINA EITHER! RUCK FOY I LOVE MY SELF MY SPORTS PROGRAM KEEPS CHANGING AND ALL I GET ARE THESE LOUSY T-SHIRTS JWADE EDITORIAL BOARD Jilted fans need to support Bill Self lemmerti Bear for The University of Dayton Kaiser lennerti Bear for The University of Dayton Kaiser While the dust continues to settle after Roy Williams' untimely departure to coach at North Carolina, a new era of Kansas basketball begins. As students, we shouldn't forget the 15 years of great things Williams did for our future alma mater, but it is time that we begin to prepare for and support the coaching era of Bill Self. In light of his achievements in his head coaching career, we shouldn't be surprised if Self's tenure at Kansas equals or even surpasses those of the great Jayhawk basketball coaches before him. In less than 10 years as a head coach, Self made two Division I programs, Tulsa and Illinois, nationally prominent. He's earned national coaching honors and consecutive Big Ten titles in a growing list of accolades. Every indication points to future accomplishments of great magnitude at Kansas, and if Self continues the success of his past coaching jobs, they will come with lightning speed the national sports media portrayed our University largely as a bunch of frustrated whinners (which we had every right to be) after Williams abruptly took off for his North Carolina press conference. Williams could have been slightly more tactful in how he chose to end a 15-year relationship with the University. However, we shouldn't allow the University to adopt a complaining image despite the residual mixed feelings harbored for Williams. This can be accomplished in large part by embracing Self and everything we hope his career brings to Kansas' great basketball tradition. Self, fulfilling all the criteria of successor to a century of great basketball names at Kansas, will fare far better if he is allowed the support he deserves from all members of the Jayhawk community to lead our historic program into another great era. We retain the right to express feelings of discontent and abandonment in light of Williams' recent decision to leave, and the media can say whatever they want. We know the perception that the Jayhawk community didn't "take care" of coach Williams couldn't be any further from the truth. But our next challenge will be to redirect that vital support to coach Self. Make sure through any means letters of support, attending Late Night — that coach Self knows he is welcome as a Jayhawk. Self's record should speak loudly for his potential as the next great thing in Kansas basketball. For the betterment of Kansas fans, players and the extended community, it is time to set our focus on the future. Sean Peuzuuskie for the editorial board LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Self realizing his dream As a KU graduate (journalism, 1969) and former University Daily Kansan sports editor and editor-in-chief, I am ecstatic that the powers at Kansas opted for Bill Self as the new basketball coach. I am currently the head of the department of journalism at the University of Illinois and have watched Self closely for the past three years. He is a dynamic coach who has an ability to establish a strong rapport with his players and creates a strong family atmosphere. He also teaches an aggressive, tough style of basketball. Think back a couple of years when the Illini beat up the Jayhawks during the NCAA Tournament, knocking the Drew Gooden-led team out of contention. He also not only survived, but thrived in the Big Ten—a conference known for its physical brand of basketball. Ask Bobby Knight about that. As a member of the faculty at the University of Illinois, I know students and other folks here in Champaign-Urbana are hurting. Some feel betrayed — not unlike Jayhawk fans in Lawrence when Roy Williams made what I always considered his inevitable trek back to his basketball roots at North Carolina. But most of the students and faculty here at the University of Illinois understand and respect Bill Self's motivations for taking the Kansas job. It's all about dreams. Roy Williams always dreamed of being the head coach at North Carolina. Bill Self always has dreamt of being the head guy at Kansas. When I left the University of Kansas 33 years ago, my dream was to be foreign correspondent for the Chicago Tribune. As with Roy and Bill, I achieved my dream and did that job for more than 25 years. Unlike Roy and Bill, however, my dream job brought with it much more modest financial rewards. Nevertheless, there is nothing quite like achieving one's dream job. Congratulations to Kansas for having the wisdom to select Bill Self and congratulations to Illinois for being so gracious in allowing a popular coach achieve his dream. Bohl's dismissal unjustified Ron Yates, head, department of journalism University of Illinois It is with heavy hearts that Allen Bohl and I are leaving a community that we have both grown to love. We want to thank the kind people from across Kansas who have supported us, despite the fabricated, brutal media attacks on my husband's character. Dear Lawrence. Cowards hiding behind unsub- staniated "opinions" care little about how their "opinions" affect human lives. I have read that Allen should have been politically dismissed months ago. No logical reasons have been reported, other than a basketball coach said it was "him or me!" Allen's report card as athletic director of the University of Kansas was impressive. The criteria a chancellor could have chosen to evaluate him on showed stellar accomplishments in: Diversity Academics Equity Improved competition - Improved accountability and service by all athletic staff The chancellor never took the time to give Allen a written evaluation, something that could have documented improvements and guided a new administrator. Allen's misfortune was that he trusted people to be honest. He elevated all senior staff to new positions of increased authority. Richard Konzem, in particular, used his new position in negative, rather than positive ways. Other areas that Allen focused on were changes in football and baseball staffs, dramatic improvement in football attendance and Williams Fund growth. It seems the chancellor chose to have meetings with Roy Williams, rather than to bring any hidden disagreements to the surface. Did Roy and the chancellor purposefully work behind the scenes with major donors, instead of bringing perceived problems face to face with Allen? Allen was politically dismissed because of the perception that a choice had to be made: Allen or Roy. This may have been instigated by a hidden jealousy over the renewed focus/funding of the football program. Points of concern could have been worked out months ago in an ethical, professional fashion if all parties would have been privileged to discussions. Every concern and/or request that Roy brought to his athletic director's attention was addressed in an earnest, timely fashion. Allen was condemned for his enthusiasm for people, especially students. He genuinely loved the Jayhawk student-athletes and University students. He had words of encouragement for all athletes, not just the perceived stars. University students responded enthusiastically when he went into the crowds to interact with them. Allen also toured the state, enthusiastically reaching out to alumni and fans, always praising Jayhawk sports programs. Big donors and the chancellor had no choice: Al was dismissed and now Roy would stay. Attacks were made on Allen's qualifications to lead an athletic department. He earned a Ph.D in athletic administration from Ohio State University in 1978 and has had a wonderfully successful life in athletics for 25 years. Most notably, the NCAA has selected him to review and certify the athletic programs at Utah State, Oregon State, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma. Despite all of the frenzy with the media, he recently was contacted by the NCAA to review and certify the athletic program at the University of Notre Dame in January 2004. I want to thank the excellent professors in the School of Education, especially Diane Nielsen. Their contributions to the prestige of this fine university are examples of what is most important to higher education. I will be forever proud to be an alumna of the University of Kansas. Rock Chalk! Sherry Bohl, wife of former Athletics Director Allen Bohl SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at The Kansan will run as many submissions as possible that conform to these guidelines. opinion@kansan.com.If you have general questions or comments, email the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. Guest columnists need to come to room 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall to have their pictures taken. LETTER GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: Hard copy: opinion@kansan.com Kansan newroom 111 Stauffer-Fount Free for All Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 图 Can someone please explain to me why it seems like every sorority girl is obsessed with Phi Deit? I just wanted to say that I'm watching Dr. Phil, and it's about oral sex, and they keep interrupting to broadcast the weather, and I think they're interrupting because oral sex is illegal in Kansas. 图 图 I was just wondering how to get tickets for that there Poon-tang Monologues. The political cartoon in the Wednesday April 23 issue of the UDK is just repulsive. What a simplistic, moronic idea of international politics. It's just very depressing to think what college students these days are actually believing. You don't like KUJH? No one really cares. Our ratings show that lots of people like us, and we don't care if one little person doesn't. 题 if masturbation was a sport, I think I'd be big 12 Newcomer of the Year. I cannot wait for Best Buy to open and for those junky, locally-owned record stores to go out of business. I just wanted to call in about KUJH. I just wanted to say that I think they're doing a great job covering Lawrence and KU news, and to keep up the good work. 第 if masturbation was a sport, I think I'd be big 12 Newcomer of the Year. I love the Triangles. 图 So I'm sitting here watching True Life: I'm Breaking Up With My Boyfriend. And people wonder why people in the Mideast don't like Americans. if masturbation was a sport, I think I'd be big 12 Newcomer of the Year. if masturbation was a sport, I think I'd be big 12 Newcomer of the Year. After seeing Rocky Horror, I want to have sex with everybody! Girls using other girls' vibrators is like me using my roommate's hand. Hey, I gotta know this. How come the chicks don't like the fat guys? What the hell is up with that? 图 if masturbation was a sport, I think I'd be big 12 Newcomer of the Year. I just heard one of my girl friends say he wants a breast reduction. According to George Bush and Saddam Hussein, both of their armies are acting on God's behalf. Is God on our side? Will God love us when we kill the children? If you're handicapped, that's a travesty. But it's also a travesty to take up two spaces on Mass. Street and not have to pay for parking. 图 Lucifer is my favorite angel. What's yours? So you got raped when you were 12, and you got pregnant. That sucks. But how exactly does that justify you violently, violently murdering your own defenseless baby? - - Detroit Rock City rules. Ob-gyno forever. Anyone else notice that Fred Phelps' homophobic militia is all poor, white trash? - 图 To the text commentator for Friday, don't tell me that whatever's legal is morally right. My ancestor were enslaved for 400 years because it was legal. 图 I'd just like to say to the anti-abortion activists, you should educate yourself on the reality of life before abortion was legal. Should we return to the days of hangers and poisons and crooked doctors in dark allews? --- I am pro-choice and pro-marijuana Keep your laws off my bong. --- MONDAY,APRIL28,2003 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A ADVERTISEMENT Save $183.35 next fall, right off the bat. You're coming back in the fall and moving in can be a real hassle. It can also get expensive and time-consuming. So put these coupons in your wallet and pull them out in August. 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CINEMAX MULTIMAX cinemax MULTIMAX sunflower BROADBAND LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE (785)841-2100 HBO THE WORKS sunflower BROADBAND sunflower BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785)841-2100 sunflower BROADBAND sunflower BROADBAND CABLE TELEVISION (785)841-2100 sunflower BROADBAND sunflower BROADBAND CABLE TELEVISION (785)841-2100 6A THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN GAMBLING NEWS 7 A MONDAY,APRIL 28,2003 Athletestake time out for worship By Cal Creek creek@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Every Sunday night some student athletes from the University of Kansas take time out of their schedules to profess and discuss their Christian faith. Daniel Coke, Moore Haven, Fla., senior and strong safety for the Kansas football team, leads the organization Champions for Christ. "Before Jesus came into my life, my life was all about athletics," Coke said. "Now everything else is centered around Christ and it's been great because of that." About 10 student athletes attend the meetings each Sunday at 8 p.m. at Hadi Audio- rium in Wagnon Student Athlete Center. Coke usually gives a short 25-minute sermon. Then the group prays together and discusses practical biblical principles like family, worship, character and leadership. Jesse Brinson, Houston junior and walk-on linebacker for the football team, said it was important for athletes to develop good morals and principles because of their prominent role in society. "Athletes can reach out and influence a lot of people," Brinson said. "A lot of kids look up to athletes." He said if kids saw an athlete committing a crime or acting irresponsibly, they might think it was appropriate to behave that way Brinson said athletes should be victorious not only on the field but also off the field in their day-to-day lives. themselves. Brinson spends seven to 10 hours each week helping Coke prepare the meetings and services. Both men identified several professional athletes who had taken Christ into their lives as sources of admiration. Coke admired professional baseball and football player, Deion Sanders, who, while at the top of his game with a plethora of money and success, looked to Christianity to satify an emptiness in his life. Brinson said he admired former NBA forward A.C. Green and former NFL defensive back Darrell Green. Coke said the Sunday meetings gave athletes a chance to think about things outside of their lives. "Typical athletes worship themselves," Coke said. "It's all wrong." Brinson said he appreciated the principles needed to be a Christian. He said his life improved when he applied these principles to other aspects of his life. Coke said student athletes were welcome to attend the meetings. "Show up on Sunday nights at 8 o'clock at Hadl Auditorium," Coke said, "and expect to meet God." Edited by Christy Dendurent Military official takes illegal bonuses The Associated Press TOPEKA—A report from the Pentagon found that a high-ranking official in the Kansas National Guard improperly backdated pay raises for himself and for friends, a newspaper and radio station reported. The Topeka Capital-Journal reported the Pentagon's findings in yesterday's edition. The report itself was released last week, after an investigation that ended in November, and obtained by Topeka radio station WIBW. The investigation found that Col, Joe Rose, who reports directly to Kansas Adjutant Gen. Greg Gardner, improperly influenced the backdating of his own promotion by nearly a year, giving himself an immediate bonus of at least several thousand dollars. The promotion was approved on Oct. 1, 2001. The colonel also was found to have improperly moved some personnel into desired positions within the Kansas National Guard. The investigation showed he backdated some of their pay raises as well. Rose, 54, has refused to comment. He has appealed the findings and remains head of the National Guard's human resources office. The Pentagon said its inquiry substantiated five of six allegations made by current and former employees of the Kansas National Guard. The report had been heavily edited before its release to the public and contained more than 1,700 instances of blacked-out information. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius reappointed Gardner as adjutant general after taking office in January. Gardner said he didn't know about Rose's alleged wrongdoings until the investigation began in May 2002. The investigation into Rose's behavior stemmed from an anonymous complaint filed with mill- tary officials last spring. Col. Neil Buthorne, the Kansas National Guard's inspector general, found evidence to substantiate allegations of impropriety against Rose, all taking place on Gardner's watch. According to the investigation. Rose has a history of erroneously promoting military personnel and backdating their pay raises including his own. The investigative report shows Gardner approved a personnel action form authorizing Rose's promotion on the Guard's pay scale. The form, however, did not have an effective date at the time Gardner signed it. Poisoning may have lead to cattle deaths The Associated Press The patrol was investigating yesterday's find with the Colfax County Sheriff's office, the state Department of Agriculture and the University of Nebraska. RIGHLAND, Neb. — The carcasses of 250 cattle were found dead of apparent poisoning on a ranch north of Richland in northeast Nebraska, the state patrol said. The cattle were yearlings owned by Jack Barta of Fremont who said he received word of the poisonings about 9:30 a.m. CDT on a voice mail from Brian Kluck who operates the feedlot. Barta said he had contracted with Kluck in November to feed the cattle which were to be moved to a ranch in Cherry County. Organic phosphate may have poisoned the cattle because about 30 that survived were responding to a drug used to combat nerve gas in soldiers, Barta said. The chemical is commonly used as an insecticide. No new cattle had been introduced to the lot in more than a week, Barta said. The chemical could have come in a sack of mislabeled minerals or someone intentionally put it in the cattle's feed. Barta said. The chemical was apparently in the first load of feed put out Saturday morning. The dead yearlings were found in the first three of about 10 feedlots and the rest of his cattle will be moved, Barta said. Kluck did not return a telephone message left last night by The Associated Press. A dispatcher with the Colfax County Sheriff's office who declined to give her name said she had no information to release. The preliminary conclusion by University of Nebraska representatives was that the cattle died from some type of poisoning, possibly from a pesticide. The type of poison won't be known until tests can be conducted by the University of Nebraska Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory. If the state patrol determines the animals were accidentally poisoned, the Department of Agriculture will take over the investigation. 1 Scott Reynolds/Kansan Steel erectors Glen Smith and Gary Ray adjust a steel beam from the World Trade Center that will be on display at the Dole Institute. The dedication ceremony for the beams will be July 20. Pieces of WTC in Dole Institute By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Pieces of the World Trade Center tragedy have been brought close to home. Two steel beams from the wreckage were installed Friday as part of an exhibit in the Robert J. Dole Institute for Public Service and Public Policy. The city of New York made 2-foot lengths of steel available, but Sen. Robert Dole contacted Mayor Michael Bloomberg and was able to get two 10-foot lengths to put on display. Steel erectors from Ewell Construction positioned the beams, weighing more than one ton each, on top of the metal bases and welded them in place permanently. The workers measured with a precision laser leveling tool to ensure the glass display cases fit over the beams. Among the rust, twisted metal and flame-retardant foam still attached to the beams, there are serial numbers. Steve Scannell, assistant director of design and construction management, hoped "It really brings home the emotion and reality of what happened in New York." Steve Scannell Assistant director of design and construction management the numbers would help identify the exact location of the beams within the World Trade Center. "It really brings home the emotion and reality of what happened in New York," Scannell said. When the exhibit is complete it will also contain Dole's World War II uniform and his bloody dog tags from when he was wounded in his upper right back while in Italy. Richard Norton Smith director of the Dole Institute, said he hoped the display and building would act as a "classroom in American democracy." The exhibit will be open to the public when the building is dedicated on July 20. — Edited by Anne Mantey H Graduation 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore It's Not Too Late Graduation 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore It's Not Too Late Featuring: • Custom Embossed Announcements from $99¢ • choose paper, typeface, print color, and special messages • 24-48 hr turnaround, low minimum order • Complete Regalia from $19.95 • Masters Regalia w/hood $42.90, Doctoral Regalia w/hood $49.90 • Diploma Frames from $99.95 • Free '03 graduation tshirt (with $50.00 order) Congratulations on your Achievement and thanks for shopping with us over the years! Online ordering @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com www.jayhawkbookstore.com • 1420 Crescent Rd • 843-3826 WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET SANDWICHES The French Reason OUR AUTHENTIC FRENCH BREAD IS BAKED FRESH IN OUR STORES THROUGHOUT THE DAY. 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WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location services available: • copies • printing from disk or electronic file • full color printing • large format print • uv lamination of large format prints • thesis and dissertation printing • resume printing • binding services • transparencies • large selection of papers 864-3354 open 7am-10pm FOR ALL YOUR PRINTING AND BINDING NEEDS please stop by or call us for more information about our services WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET SANDWICHES The French Reason OUR AUTHENTIC FRENCH BREAD IS BAKED FRESH IN OUR STORES THROUGHOUT THE DAY. AND IF WE DON'T SERVE IT, WE DON'T SAVE IT. THIS BREAD IS NEVER. EVER FROZEN. FREEZER BURN, AS YOU KNOW, IS NO LAUGHING MATTER. RUG BURN, ON THE OTHER HAND. NOW THAT'S A LAUGHING MATTER. JIMMY JOHN'S WORLD'S GREATEST GOURMET SANDWICHES WE DELIVER! NOW OPEN 1447 W. 23RD ST. - 838.3737 922 MASSACHUSETTS ST. - 841.0011 LAWRENCE JIMMYJOHNS.COM the only address you need to know. WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) 1520 WESCOE let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. 1520 wescoe 1520 WESCOE let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. 7 MONDAY,APRIL28,2003 GAMBLING THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN - 7A Edit View Go Favorites Tools Window Help HOME SCREENSHOTS COMMUNITY CONTACTS ABOUT CARIBBEAN POKER metro casino PROGRESSIVE JACKPOT Order Only Play With Number BET Gambling CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A photo by Scott Reynolds "The investment of putting money down means they have something to win or lose based on the result of the game." DeSalvo said. "The act of watching a game isn't enough until there is an element of risk. The introduction of money is the risk." DeSalvo also attributed gambling to a student's living environment and an element of peer pressure. "If there is an environment where gambling is a regular activity, they're more at risk," DeSalvo said. "There are college students who would never have gambled if it wasn't part of their living environment." Josh Doebele, Lenexa sophomore, agreed that living in a fraternity house with friends who gambled fed his habit. Doebele started betting on sports online last fall after his friend told him about a big win. "I think it's really common among college men, but not girls," he said. "I don't bet big amounts, just $30 or $40. Over eight months, I think I've broke even." Doebele only bets on sports because he doesn't trust online casino games. "Besides, it's more fun to watch games when you have money on it," Doebele said. DeSalvo, CAPS director, said although students at the University were involved in gambling, it didn't make them any different than students at other universities. A POTENTIAL PROBLEM "There is no reason to think we're better or worse," he said. Despite its growing popularity, potential problems abound with online gambling, including the possibility for fraud and addiction. If on-site operators fail to properly credit winnings, gamblers have little room for action because it is difficult to pinpoint on-site operators in the anonymity of cyberspace. According to a U.S. Senate committee report, online gambling may also contribute to gambling addictions because of the detached gambling environment on the Internet. The Internet provides an atmosphere where there is no tangible money, like chips, won or lost, and gamblers may lose track of how much money is won or lost. "Online gambling poses more of a threat because of its accessibility," said Jeff Lees, certified counselor at the St. Francis Health Center in Topeka. "It's in your house, in your bedroom. With a traditional casino, you have to make the effort, make a trip." The immediacy of gambling on the Internet also makes it an attractive option for students, Lees said. The most common type of gambling college students participate in is action gambling, which includes gambling on sports and events, he said. What may start as social betting in the college setting can quickly become an addiction. The American Psychiatric Association has recognized pathological, compulsive and addictive gambling as levels of a gambling behavioral disorder since 1980. Symptoms include preoccupation with gambling with the exclusion of other activities and the inability to control gambling-related behaviors, even in the face of financial and relationship costs. Lees compared problem gambling to a cocaine addiction the chasing, the debt and the depression. "It's never cured."Lees said. "But recovery is possible with support groups and credit counseling." To date, studies have not proven there is any one cause of problem gambling. But certain "Online gambling poses more of a threat because of its accessibility. It's in your house, in your bedroom. With a traditional casino, you have to make the effort, make a trip." Jeff Lees Jeff Lees Certified counselor at St. Francis Health Center in Topeka biological, psychological and sociological processes have been linked to problem gambling. Even the National Collegiate Athletics Association sees Internet gambling as a potential problem for college students because a large number of students have the necessary credit cards to register for online gambling accounts. Internet gambling is especially alluring to college students, said Bill Saum, director of agent, gambling and amateurism activities for the NCAA. He told the U.S. Senate Banking Committee last month that a recent Nellie Mae study found 90 percent of 20-year-olds have credit cards, with an average of four cards per person and an average debt of $2,264. Gaming lobbyist Frank Fahrenkopf, president of the American Gaming Association, estimated 95 percent of all online wagering is done with charge cards. A provision in the Amateur Sports Integrity Act, introduced last year by U.S. Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kansas) and two other senators, could make universities accountable for students who gamble on the Internet. The bill would require institutions of higher education, such as the University, to monitor the use of an institution's Internet facilities to detect online gambling. Any institution of higher education that fails to monitor its Internet access would be ineligible for federal education funding. Although the University is capable of monitoring student access to online gambling sites, it is extraordinarily difficult, said Allison Rose Lopez, director of external relations for Information Services. "In addition to monitoring the type of file, we would have to also monitor the type of information the student is accessing," Lopez said. "We can see if someone is downloading an MP3, but monitoring content is very difficult, as we understand it." OUTDATED LAWS Although Internet users are bombarded with pop-up ads promoting virtual casinos and the sites are easily accessed, the legal status of Internet gambling is vague. Some site operators have been prosecuted under the 1961 Wire Communications Act, which was written to regulate sports betting via telephone. But wireless Internet connections and other discrepancies in the law leave room for legal maneuvering. Jay Cohen, co-owner of the gambling site World Sports Exchange, is serving a 21-month sentence in a Las Vegas jail for operating a gambling Web site from the island nation Antigua. Cohen voluntarily returned to the United States in 1998 to fight federal criminal charges against him and his company. Cohen is the only foreign-based individual, operating entirely from a sovereign country where Internet wagering is legal and regulated, who has been convicted by the United States. He was the first person con For more coverage on athletes who gamble, see tomorrow's Kansan victed under the Wire Wager Act for operating an offshore gambling Web site that took bets from Americans. The Wire Wager Act makes it a crime to — among other things -use telephone lines in interstate or foreign commerce for the placement of sports bets, or for the transmission of information assisting in the placing of bets on sporting events and contests, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Some states, including Missouri, have relied on state gambling laws or consumer protection laws to prohibit online gambling but allow some form of legalized gambling. Larry Lawson consumer specialist in the Kansas Attorney General's office, said Kansas only recognized its own state-run lottery and all others were considered illegal. Signs of compulsive or Problem Gambling But because Internet gambling crosses state lines and is difficult for states to regulate, the federal government has taken action. To clarify outdated laws, Congress is considering several bills on the topic of online gambling. Impulsive behavior: Need to gamble with increasing amounts of money Inability to control or stop gambling despite serious negative consequences Preoccupation: Minimizing losses and exaggerating wins - Increasing frequency of gambling activities Gambling becomes the major focus of thinking, even when not gambling Minimizing of Behavior: Lying to family members or others to conceal the extent of gambling behavior In mid-March, before NCAA basketball madness officially hit, U.S. Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Arizona) proposed legislation to prohibit Disregard for The U.S. Senate Banking committee is also examining legislation aimed at shutting down virtual casinos by making it harder to use credit cards on gambling sites. Failing to pay daily living expenses The Unlawful Internet Gambling Funding Prohibition Act sponsored by U.S. Rep. James Leach (R-Iowa), which passed the U.S. House of Representatives last year but died in the Senate, would make it illegal for financial institutions to grant permission to customers to use credit cards or bank account wire transfers to pay for gambling over the Internet. The bill was approved by a voice vote in the House Financial Services Committee on March 13 and was referred to the House Judiciary Committee. Selling personal belongings to gamble or pay gambling debts Relying on others to provide money to relieve desperate financial situation caused by gambling Borrowing money from extended family members, friends and work colleagues to gamble — Isolating self from family members and friends — Less interested and less aware of personal, family and occupational issues — Gambling despite health problems related to gambling source: Addictions Foundation of Manitoba the use of credit cards, checks and electronic fund transfers to pay for online bets. The legislation was introduced against the backdrop of the NCAA basketball tournament, the most wagered-on event in college sports. In all, Americans will illegally wager more than $2 billion through offshore Internet gambling sites this year, according to testimony before the banking committee last month. Attorney Frank Catania, president of the Catania Consulting Group, told the Senate committee on behalf of the Interactive Gaming Council there was no effective way to stop Internet gambling because gamblers could find other ways to fund betting, such as virtual e-cash. But credit card issuers such as MasterCard and Visa have already begun to refuse some customer charges for Internet bets. Visa processes Internet gambling transactions on a global level but requires all online gambling companies to identify themselves so banks can decide whether to process the transaction, said Casey Watson, electronic commerce representative for Visa. About 21,000 banks worldwide are a part of the Visa association. "We give the banks the right to determine whether to process transactions based on legality," Watson said. "In the United States, where Internet gambling is illegal, the banks can decline the transaction." While he gambled online, Shannon Guelbert was losing money faster than he was winning it. Today, he doesn't gamble as much. Now that he's 21 years old, he can bet legally across the state line. An occasional trip to Missouri's riverboat casinos, where he usually loses money, and a spring break trip to Las Vegas, from which he came home short, are his only remaining forays into the world of gambling. A DECISION TO QUIT "I couldn't afford to do it anymore," Guelbert said. "I was losing more than I wanted to. It was kind of a recurring pattern." Edited by Amber Byarlay TACO TUESDAY 2 TACOS FOR 99¢ TACO JOHN'S A WHOLE LOT OF MEXICAN. LAWRENCE 23rd & Ousdahl 6th & Mawe 23rd & Haskell BONNER SPRINGS Ks.Ave. & Hwy 7 EVERYTHING BUT ICE BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County To Do List: ☑ Take a Study Break ☑ Add something to my resume. ☑ Be someone's friend. ☑ Make a difference Complete your list. Stop by or call today! 211 E. 8th St. 785-843-7359 Serving KU Listing Useful Services IT CHILDREN'S MUSIC HOURS with Melanie Dill Saturday, May 3rd @10:30am Thursday, May 22nd @10:30am Oread Books Kansas Union, Level 2, 785-864-4431, Jayhawks.com R 1960 Oread Books 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS MONDAY.APRIL 28.2003 Local bands compete in KJHK-sponsored Farmer's Ball By Lauren Biristow bristow@kansan.com Kansas state warrior Eric Braun/Kansas Four bands battled it out Satur day night amidst bubbles, smoke blue Christmas lights and fishine stockings for the title of champion of KJHK's Farmer's Ball. One local band — Kelpie came out the winner. "I'm really flattered," said John Momberg, Kelpie drummer and Lawrence resident. "Any band that got this far deserved it just as much as we did." The members of Kelpie Momberg; Casey Burge, Shawnee resident; and Nate Harold, Weskan senior received 10 hours of recording time at Blacklodge Studios in Eudora, rather than the traditional opening stage at Day on the Hill, a music concert sponsored by Student Union Activities. New arrangements had to be made because Day on the Hill was canceled this year. "Most of the band members seem pretty pleased with the new prize," said Meredith Vacek. Lawrence junior and KJHK station manager. "The recording time is worth about $500, if not more." After the four bands' performances, Vacek and other KJHK staff members appeared onstage to measure the audience vote by loudest anplause. Kelpie and the runner-up, Vibralux, received almost equal response and staff members unofficially declared Kelpie as the winner of the audience vote. The audience's decision was worth 25 percent. Judges then went upstairs at The Bottleneck, 727 New Hampshire St., to cast their vote for their favorite. Eight people from area news papers, music Websites, SUA and the Lawrence music community served as judges. In the past, staff members from KJHK selected the winners. "I think this year, it is a more democratic and fair voting process." Vacek said. "In the past, staff members have voted for their friends' bands and it just didn't seem fair." While judges decided the winner, fans waited for the decision and discussed positive qualities of their favorite band. "I saw Vibralux perform on Wednesday night and I really liked them," said Jennie Jackson, Baldwin City graduate student. "Their show was basically the same thing as on Wednesday, but it is really entertaining." Vibralux band members appeared onstage dressed in drag, including fishnet stockings, mini skirts and full make-up. "We're dressed in drag because we represent hermaphrodite space creatures," said Mercury, the band's lead singer and guitarist. After the announcement was made, band members loaded equipment into their vehicles and most left to go to parties for the bands. Edited by Ryan Wood Momberg said he was ready to begin work in the studio. "We are much, much more appreciative of the studio time," Momberg said. "We need the time to work on some new recordings and we definitely need the experience." KJHK received more than 50 entries this year and selected 10 bands to participate in two preliminary rounds; four bands continued on to the finals. Finalists were: (blue) Hearts to Waste, Kelpie and Vibralux. ave Schmidt mor Kansas City en sportswinner the Kansas softball regular season won a no nee that was a win out, which also beaten John Nowak/Kansar Facilities Operations worker Jack Bame surveys the new steam whistle afop the KU Power Plant. The new whistle was built and delivered by Aaron Richardson of Cincinnati Friday afternoon. The old whistle, "Big Tooter," is on display in the Kansas Union. Whistle CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A whistle committee that finally decided on the George M. Verity whistle. The George M. Verity was a stern twitch wowtow that pushed barges up and down the Mississippi river, said Aaron Richardson, builder of the new whistle. The original whistle is on display in the George M. Verity Riverboat Museum in Keokuk, Iowa. "You know how sometimes you walk by the whistle and it scares the hell out of you?" Cone said. "When it chimes and finishes it has the prettiest echo. I can close my eyes and picture it now." "Authoritative." That's how Richardson, builder of the new whistle would describe it. Richardson is the production supervisor of Richardson's Landing, a small, family-owned business. The replica is made out of bronze and steel and weighs 270 pounds. It has four whistles that create a single note that will last seven seconds. Richardson said that if regular maintenance was done on the whistle it should last another 30 years. "It's the biggest type of whistle he's done," said Renee Richardson, his wife. "It's a big deal to see up there knowing that it's his and it's going to be around for a while." After testing the whistle 1 times to adjust the pitch, Richardson said he was a little frustrated. "I wish it had sounded right the first time," Richardson said. Derek Breid, Oronoco, Minn, sophomore, heard the first blow of the new whistle. He said he was started when it went off, but was glad it was back "It will be a lot easier to figure out how late I am to class," Breid said. Aralee Patton, Emporia sophomore, didn't think she'd be walking in front of the whistle when it went off. "It seared me," Patton said. "It sounds good, though. It will be nice because teachers will know when to let us out." Neal Lintecum and his wife, Julie, pledged the money to cover the manufacturing and installation of a new whistle in honor of Neal's late father, Dean. "He dedicated it to his father." Cone said, "whose funeral was the same day the whistle died." Edited by Christy Dendurent Drag Show CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Queers and Allies collected more than $500 during the hour performance; said director Patrick Ross. "It exceeded my expectations," he said. "I thought the people weren't going to come, but it went great." Keith Redmond, Kansas City, Kan., junior performed three songs as Valerie Dolls. He said anyone who missed it this year shouldn't miss it next year. "It's a raw cultural experience," he said. "It represents understanding and acceptance. We're doing it because we love it, and we had a blog." Lindsev Gold/Kansar Edited by Julie Jantzer Ebony O. Varice preforms for the crowd at the Hawk's Nest Friday afternoon at the 10th Annual Brown Bag Drag Show. "Valerie Dolls," aka Keith Redmond, Kansas City, Kan., junior (center) finishes one of three songs at the 10th Annual Brown Bag Drag Show. The University's Queers and Allies put on the event Friday at the Hawk's Nest and accepted donations for the performance. Eric Braem/Kansan student union activities The University of Kansas, Level 4. Kansas Union 785 694 SHOW. www.suawenews.com Taylor Mali April 29, 2003 8:00PM Hawks Nest Level 1, Kansas Union Taylor Mali is one the founders of slam poetry in NYC area. His emphasis is on education and his goal is to inspire others to become teachers. Taylor's first experience with slam poetry was here in Lawrence, so he is very excited to return. only you can swing wings like more golfers slowly can golf well Is a Job Search in your Future? Job Search? Use Optional Campus Fees through Enroll & Pay and check off Career Job Search - Select now, pay later - Start your job search in August U C E employment career and employment services 5 1 Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims, jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke, mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS 1B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, APRIL 28, 2003 Baseball team drops 2 of 3 to Baylor Scott Reynolds Scott Revnolds/Kansan Freshman second baseman Ritchie Price tags up at first base. He made the play during the fourth inning in Saturday's game against Baylor. Kansas lost Saturday's game 11-3. By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas baseball team learned this past weekend just how tough the Big 12 Conference is. The fayhawks lost two of their three games against No. 21, Baylor. Kansas claimed the series opener, as junior Ryan Kninpschild took See page 4B for more baseball photos. Knippschild took the mound and registered his eighth victory of the season, improving his season record to 8-3. Knippschild pitched eight innings, striking out three batters and allowing seven hits and three runs. Junior Brandon Johnson pitched a perfect ninth inning, marking his seventh save of the season. The game entered the sixth inning in a 0-0 deadlock, but Baylor broke that tie and scored three runs. Kansas responded with two runs. With runners on second and third, senior designated hitter Kevin Wheeler hit a single up the middle and scored them both. After a scoreless seventh inning. Kansas took the lead in the bottom of the eighth. KANSAS 38 SEE BASEBALL ON PAGE 8B Softball series emulates season Kara Pierce, Mesa, Ariz., junior, pitches against Baylor. The Jayhawks fell to the Bears 4-0 Saturday afternoon. Lindsev Gold/Kansan By Steve Schmidt By Steve Schmidt sschmidt@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter The Kansas softball team concluded its regular season with an up and down series that was a microcosm of the team's season, which also had plenty of highs and plenty of lows. and play the Jayhawks shut out No. 7 Nebraska, (33-12, 9-7 Big 12) 1-0 on Friday and beat Baylor 4-1 on Saturday only to close out the season with a 4-0 loss to the Bears yesterday. In the weekend's first contest, Kansas senior pitcher Kirsten Milhoan was able to neutralize Nebraska's high-powered hitting attack, a role she's played her whole career with the 'Hawks. After giving up a double and single on the first two pitches of the game, Milhoan settled down and only allowed five hits. The lone senior gave joint credit to her teammates after the huge upset victory. "I'm so proud of the team today," she said. "They were intense the whole time. The odd thing is up to the conference we had been playing that way all season." The only run of the game came off a rocket homer to left field off the bat of freshman second baseman Jessica Moppin in the second inning. The shot was her 11th of the year, tying for tops in the Big 12. Going into Saturday's game against Baylor (29-27, 3-15 Big 12), Bunge wrestled with the decision of whether to let junior pitcher Kara Pierce start. Pierce did get the nod after injuring her shoulder in Texas a week ago. It turned out to be a wise choice as the junior threw a three-hitter and shut out the Bears to improve her overall record to 16-12. In the first inning freshman shortstop Destiny Frankenstein scored when sophomore first baseman Lindsey Weinstein reached first on a bunt after a throwing error from the Baylor catcher Stephanie Pomes. Freshman third baseman Nettie Fierros provided more insurance in the fourth inning with a home run to right field. See page 4B for more softball photos. "I never expected when Nettie got her she would be one of our leading home run hitters and she's got six right now." She also scored the fourth and final run in the fourth from third baseman YESTERDAY KANSAS 0- BAYLOR 4 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Baylor 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 - 4 8 1 Kansas 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 Pitchers: Kansas: Kirsten Milhoan [7] Kansas - Kirsten Milman (7) Baylor - Baker Decker (4/13, Cristin Witek (2/2, 3) Win - Decker (8-6) Save - None Loss - Milman (10-9) SATURDAY KANSAS 4-BAYLOR1 KANSAS Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 - R H E Baylor 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 - 1 3 2 Kansas 0 0 1 0 0 2 X - 4 6 1 Pitchers: Kansas - Kara Pierce (7) Baylor - Cristin Vittak (6) Win- Pierce (16-12) Save- None Loss- Vittak(12-15) after freshman right fielder Heather Stanley hit a single in the sixth. Junior center fielder Mel Wallach scored the third run after Fierros drove her home in the same inning with a single. She reached base on a double. There's a great chance that the layhawk faithful didn't remember that double because they were too busy talking about a catch she made a half-inning before. SEE SOFTBALL ON PAGE 8B Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 -R H Baylor 0 0 0 0 1 4 1 4 1 11 15 Kansas 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 -5 8 2 Pitchers: YESTERDAY KANSAS 5-BAYLOR 11 Pitchers Kevin Wheeler (5/23), Don Czyz (Jojun Shorn) (8) Brandon Johnson (1/13), Ryan Jakubovich (0), Pat Holmes (0), Kemmy Falconer (1/13), Eric Peterson (1/23) Baylor-Mark McCormick (3), Abe Woody (3/23), Zane Win-Woody (5-0) Save-Carlson (6/2) Woody (5-0) Golfers stress relaxed attitude By Paul Kramer pkramer@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter By Paul Kramer Whether it's watching movies, playing practical jokes, or watching the Final Four from The Hawk, the guys on the team try to have as normal of lives as every other student. The only difference is in addition to a full class load, they compete If one watches the teams warm up today at the Big 12 Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla., the Jayhawks will not be hard to pick out. "We watch movies in the hotel room," Marshall said. "Our favorites are Next Friday, Dumb & Dumber and of course Caddyshack." Because of the team's philosophy of being loose and relaxed, it stands out in a sport dominated by quiet and reserved preparation. Coach Ross Randall said he believed in a family atmosphere that lend itself to players talking and helping each other before tournaments began. SATURDAY SEE GOLFERS ON PAGE 8B The laid-back style aside, there is a sense of responsibility to the team and the University to play as well as they can in every tournament. And above all, they understand the importance of the Big 12 Championship. Marshall especially senses the urgency because this will be his last conference championship. at an elite level of Division I athletics IT'S IN THE BAG KANSAS 3-BAYLOR 11 That feeling is passed on to younger players by team leaders — senior Chris Marshall and junior Tyler Hall. Marshall and Hall, the only upperclassmen on the team, lead by example. Driver: Titleist 983 E 3-Wood: Titleist 980 Irons: Titleist 691 MG Wedges: Titleist Vokey Tour wedges Putter: Scotty Cameron Prototype Ball: Titleist PRO-V1 Adding to the appeal of the two sophomores and seven freshmen on the team is the bond formed by weeks spent on the road. Hall shares the sentiments, saying that the two have a mutual respect for each other and thrive on friendly competition. They compete in everything from putting contests to video games to grades. "I don't like it when coaches are real tight," Randall said. "I think it helps them to play better and get along better when they are relaxed." The duo not only complement each other as leaders, but they are best friends off the course. They lived together for two years, before Marshall moved by himself this year to focus on academics and his last season of college golf. He still considers Hall, who will be the best man at his August wedding, as close as a brother. "Chris is a more vocal leader, who works extremely hard on his swing," Randall said, "while Tyler is more quiet and is a feel player who doesn't take as many (practice) swings as Chris." Chris Marshall "Tyler is by far my best friend," Marshall said. "I couldn't imagine playing college golf without him." Tyler Hall Driver: Taylor Made 580 3-Wood: Mizuno 3 Strong 5-Wood: Mizuno 300s irons: Mizuno MP 30s / MP 29s Putter: Odyssey White Hot Ball: Titleey PRO-V1 M. C. HENRY AND JOHN D. BURKE Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 - R H E Baylor 2 0 0 0 1 6 2 0 - 0 11 13 0 Kansas 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 - 3 7 5 Senior Chris Marshall eyes the ball up close as junior Tyler Hall gives advice. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan Pitchers Pitchers: Kansas - Kaitlyn Smart(5), Don Coyz(0), Kenny Falconer(2), Wisconsin (1), Ryan Jakubov (1) Baylor - Sean Walker (5/2/3, LaMotta (2/1), Tyler Bullock) (1) Win-Walker (8/4) Save-None KANSAS 4-BAYLOR 3 Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 - B H E Baylor 2 0 0 0 1 6 2 0 0 - 3 7 1 Kansas 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 X - 4 7 0 FRIDAY Kansas - Ryan Kupcich (8), Brandon Johnson (1) Baylor - Steven White (7/23), Zane Carlson (1/3) Win - Knippschild (8-3) Sauve - Jason Willett (6), Wade (5-3) SPORTS COMMENTARY 1 Ryan Wood rwood@kansan.com Is this any way to treat one of your own? University disregards tennis team Judgingby the nightmare the Kansas tennis team has gone through this season, the Kansas Athletics Department appears to have forgotten that it cut only one of the two tennis teams in 2001. Women's tennis still exists at Kansas, hanging on by a thread with little to no support by the powers-that-be in the mismanaged department. The sad thing is the women on the tennis team are part of the minority of Kansas athletes who have actually succeeded in Big 12 Conference play the last couple of years. Not so much this season A new indoor facility should've been bumped to the top of the fundraising priority list the moment they learned Alvamar was closing down. It wasn't. the team finished ninth in the Big 12 and fizzled in the conference tournament Thursday - but it's tough to succeed when you have to drive an hour and a half round trip every day for practice. "I don't think we all realized how difficult it would be to make the drive," coach Kilmeny Waterman said. "It was so much time." Alvamar Racquet Club, Kansas' former home for indoor practice and matches, shut down a year ago, causing department officials — notably former director Al Bohl — to do nothing but yawn. "We need to fundraise money is what we've been told," Waterman said. "We're trying to find people who are interested." Sounds simple, except when the department cut men's tennis in 2001, many former players got understandably pissed off. I'm sure they're not quite ready to fork over hard-earned cash after the department got rid of the men's team So as a result, the nine women load a stretch van every day, leave Lawrence and head to various other locations in the Sunflower State. Waterman refuses to use the agonizing travel necessities as an excuse for her team's struggles, but I'll be happy to do it for her; that was a big reason these lavihawks underachieved in 2003. Kansas's outdoor home — Robinson Courts — is terrible for the fans, but it is in Lawrence. SEE WOOD ON PAGE 8B MONDAY,APRIL 28.2003 "They picked the wrong restaurant with a couple athletes who are on a losing streak." Cleveland Indians pitcher Brian Anderson, after he and a teammate chased down a thief who attempted to steal a purse from a woman in a restaurant across from the Indians' hotel. NFL 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Inside Sports MONDAY,APRIL 28,2003 SPORTS COMMENTARY CE INTO COMMENTARY Jason Hwang jhwang@kansan.com Time needed to cultivate NFL players Every year, the National Football League college draft is the one of the most anticipated events in the world of sports. A college football program's measure of success is not only through victories and defeats, but how many players from that school are playing in the NFL. Colorado and Texas A&M led the Big 12 with six players from each of their teams drafted over the weekend. Every team in the Big 12, even Baylor, had a player taken in this year's draft except you guessed it — Kansas. This is the third time in six years that Kansas has failed to have a player drafted into the NFL. During Terry Allen's five years at Kansas, only three players he coached and recruited were drafted in the NFL. Fullback Moran Norris was taken in the third round in 2001 by New Orleans. He was cut by the Saints and now is on the Houston Texans' roster. Norris has not gained a yard in his short NFL career. Two Jayhawks drafted last year have been invisible. Defensive tackle Nate Dwyer (fourth round to Arizona) did not play in any games. Guard Justin Hartwig (sixth round to Tennessee) played in three games, but had no starts. If anyone thinks that Kansas cannot become a solid manufacturer of NFL players, they need to check their facts. When Glen Mason coached at Kansas from 1988-1996, he recruited and coached 15 Jayhawks who were drafted into the NFL. Dana Stubblefield was the last Kansas player to be drafted in the first round. He was the 26th pick overall in the 1993 draft. Stubblefield went to the San Francisco 49ers and was named the defensive rookie of the year. He won the 1997 NFL Defensive Player of the Year award and is now playing for the Oakland Raiders. Minnesota took Gilbert Brown in the third round that same year. Brown is still in the league, playing for Green Bay. St. Louis selected cornerback Gerald McBurrows in the seventh round in 1995. McBurrows now plays for Atlanta. These three players were talented college players who turned into talented NFL players. Their long NFL careers prove Kansas can produce good NFL players if taught by the right coach. Fans need to give coach Mark Mangino time to recruit the talent he needs and develop them. Mason showed that he could recruit and develop quality players at Kansas. He proved that it is possible for Kansas fans to have NFL players to be proud of. Hwang is an Overland Park junior in journalism. Freshman sets record for discus By Chris Wintering cwintering@kansan.com kansan sportswriter Kansas freshman Abby Emsick is in a lot of record books for being a freshman. Emsick, a thrower for the Jayhawk track team, put herself in a few more this weekend at the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa. Emsick is from Council Bluffs, Iowa and won four straight Drake titles in the discus and two in the shot put in high school. Those six titles gave her more Drake championships than any high school athlete ever. That is remarkable considering the Drake Relays is one of the largest and oldest track meets in the country. This year was the 94th annual event and had 3,847 high school athletes competing. When recruiting Emsick, Kansas throws coach Doug Reynolds said Emsick's performance at the Drake Relays made her a priority during recruiting. "I had no question," Reynolds said. "I watched her compete at the Drake Relays last year. She's a stud, and I went after her from the get go." Emsick added her name to one more record book when she won the women's university/college discus. 171-08.00 feet, Friday at Drake. That placed her second all-time in the Kansas record book for discus. Emsick's throw of 49-03 50 feet in the shot put during the indoor season placed her third in the Kansas record book for that event. "I am taking small steps, and hopefully I will achieve more and more as time progresses," Emsick said. "I hope to one day have the record." Emsick was one of Kansas' three event winners this weekend at the Drake Relays. She was joined by senior Anson Jackson, who won the men's 110-meter hurdles with a time of 14.00 seconds, and junior Leo Bookman, who won the men's invitational 200-meter dash with a time of 20.82 seconds. Bookman's time was good enough to regionally qualify for the NCAA. On Thursday, freshman Benson Chesang ran a regional-qualifying time of 14:21.28 in the 5,000-meter run. That now gives the team a total of 20 regional qualifiers so far this season. The team will travel to Manhattan for the Ward Haylett Invitational on Saturday. for discus Seven grasp victories at invitational The Kansas track and field team had seven event winners in last weekend's UMKC Invitational. The men's team had three event winners. Sophomore Dan Ferguson won the 3,000-meter steeplechase with a time of 9:38.56, freshman Lantz Tolson won the 4000-meter hurdles with a time of 53.75 seconds and senior Jeremy Hull won the pole vault with a mark of 16-02.75 feet. The women's team had four first-place finishes. The 4x400-meter relay team took first with a time of 3:52.95, freshman Jenny Woodward won the 400-meter hurdles (1:04.71), freshman Tiffany Cherry won the 100-meter dash (12.08) and junior Emily Hess won the high jump with a leap of 5-05.00 feet. - Edited by Julie Jantzer Some Kansas athletes competed at the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa this weekend. Toronto comes back to stop K.C. The Associated Press TORONTO — Mike MacDougal and the Kansas City Royals aren't invincible. The Toronto Blue Jays overcame a 7-run deficit, scoring 6 runs in the ninth inning to beat the Royals 10-9 Sunday as MacDougal blew a save chance for the first time this season. Toronto trailed 8-1 before scoring 1 run in the seventh and 2 in the eighth. Mike Bordick's single tied it, and the winning run scored on an error by shortstop Angel Berroa. "It was a tough loss." MacDougal said. "I don't know what to say. It was a bad inning." Shannon Stewart's RBI double in the seventh pulled Toronto to 8-2, and Josh Phelps' RBI double and pinch-hitter Greg Myers' run-scoring single made it 8-4 in the eighth. Kansas City, which dropped to 17-5, boosted its lead to 9-4 in the ninth on an RBI single by Desi Relaford. Toronto then opened the bottom half with singles by Stewart and Frank Catalanotto off Ryan Buckvich and a walk by Vernon Wells that loaded the bases. Carlos Delgado's RBI grounder and Phels' 2-run double made it 9-7. MacDougal (1-1), who had been 9- for-9 in save chances, allowed a double to Eric Hinske, hit Tom Wilson with a pitch and gave up an RBI grounder to Dave Berg that pulled the Blue Jays within a run. Bordick followed with a single that tied the score, and Stewart hit an a grounder to Berroa, whose throw to second base sailed past Relaford, allowing Berg to score. "I was too quick with my throw, and I threw it away," Berroa said. Stewart was given an infield single on the play. Cliff Politte (1-2) got one out for the victory. "That was pretty exciting," Bordick said. "Kansas City has been playing really well early on. To win a series like that against them is a great confidence builder." Fans continued to turn out despite Toronto's SARS outbreak. The Blue Jays drew 16,417 spectators Friday, 17,197 on Saturday and 17,059 on Sunday, their second-, third- and fourth-biggest crowds this season. Kansas City, which outhit the Blue Jays 17-16, quickly built a lead. Relaford hit Pete Walker's first pitch of the game for a single before Joe Randa homered on Walker's second pitch. "I don't think I've ever seen that in 13 years of professional baseball," Wilson said. "A hit and a homer on the first two pitches of the game, that's different" Walker, who received a mock cheer when his third pitch of the game was called a strike, allowed Kansas City's first six hitters to reach. He gave up 5 runs in the first inning and allowed back-to-back home runs to Carlos Beltran and Mike Sweeney in the second. Sweeney's RBI single in the fourth gave Kansas City an 8-1 lead. Staked to a big lead, Kansas City's Runelvys Hernandez allowed 2 runs and seven hits in seven innings. Hernandez, who turned 25 yesterday, struck out four and walked one. Walker allowed 8 runs and 10 hits and in 31-3 innings. "The win definitely took a lot of pain away," Walker said. "I felt miserable coming out of the game that early. I felt I really let them down. Right from the getgo they were hacking. I left some balls over the plate and I never really recovered from that first inning." After Randa homered in the first, Beltran hit an infield single and Walker walked three straight batters before Brent Mayne hit into a run-scoring double play. Berroa's RBI single made it 5-0. It's cool that we have Bill Self as our new head coach now, because Late Night can now be Late Night with your Self. I just walked into Wayne Simien's room, and I saw his naked leg, and I liked it. 图 I was watching reruns of the Bill Self press conference, and he kinda looks like Lieutenant Dan from Forrest Gump. Kansas City Royals baseball, you gotta love these guys! outpatient studies Carmelo Anthony just Royed Syracuse. Free forAll 图 图 POLI kansan.com What does the University of Kansas need in an Athletics Director? A fundraiser Someone who treats all sports fairly An AD who knows where the money is — Football and Basketball Most important is a person who has a good relationship with Mark Mangino and Bill Self Log on to www.hansan.com to cast your vote LAST WEEK'S POLL RESULTS How successful will Bill Self be in his first season at Kansas? 1.497 votes were cast The Jayhawks will struggle in his first year. 60 votes for 4 percent He will have a winning record. 233 votes for 16 percent He will lead the Jahawks to a Big 12 Conference title.124 votes for 8 percent He will take Kansas to the Elite Eight. 293 votes for 20 percent Kansas will see another Final Four berth. 365 votes for 24 percent He will win the championship. 422 votes for 28 percent Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY Men's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day, Southern Hills Country Club, Tulsa, Okla. TOMORROW Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City, Okla Men's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day, Southern Hills Country Club, Tulsa, Okla. Baseball vs. Wichita State, 7 p.m. Hoglund Ballpark FRIDAY Baseball vs. Texas, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ball- nark Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City, Okla. SATURDAY Rowing, Big 12 Regatta, all day Track at Ward Haylett Invitational, all day, Manhattan Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City, Okla. Baseball vs. Texas, 2 p.m., Hoglund Ball- park SUNDAY Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City, Okla. 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You may qualify if you're. - No more than 30 lbs overweight - A healthy adult, age 18 or older - Taking no medications - Available for in-house stays or outpatient studies OUTPATIENT, WEEKEND & SHORT-TERM TRIALS ARE AVAILABLE Plus... You could earn $100 for referring a friend who completes a study with us! Call for study details! QUINTILES (913) 894-5533 (800)292-5533 O LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $5.00 Premiums LOUISE'S *DOWN TOWN* fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID SCHOONERS - COCKTAILS - CIGARS 1009 MASS. LAUNCE $1 must be 21 to enter V MONDAY, APRIL 28, 2003 NFL THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Players picked later than expected The Associated Press NEW YORK — The second day of the NFL draft provided the usual assortment of highly regarded players who had just enough questions about them to cause their status to fall. One early pick yesterday was wounded in a drive-by shooting, and another is the undersized son of a former NFL star. A third player is a quarterback who runs as well as he throws, and a fourth is a running back coming off a serious knee injury. There also was a baseball player, Drew Henson, who was chosen in the sixth round by the Houston Texans, adding to the team's collection of young quarterbacks that also includes David Carr, the No. 1 overall pick last year, and Dave Ragone, chosen Saturday in the third round. And finally, there is Ken Dorsey, who lost only two games in his career as Miami's quarterback but wasn't chosen until San Francisco drafted him 21 picks from the end. He did better than Heisman runner-up Brad Banks of Iowa and Jason Gesser of Washington State, two star QBs who weren't taken at all. It started when Dennis Weath- It started when Dennis Weathersby ,Dan Klecko, Seneca Wallace and Lee Suggs went quickly in the fourth round in the second day of the NFL draft instead of on the first ersby (the wounded player), Dan Klecko (son of the NFL star), Seneca Wallace (the versatile QB) and Lee Suggs (knee) went quickly in the fourth round in the second day of the NFL draft instead of on the first. So did other well-known college players like running backs Quentin Griffin of Oklahoma (undersized) and Onterrio Smith of Oregon (questionable durability), offensive tackle Brett Williams of Florida State (mobility), and Outland Trophy-winning defensive tackle Rien Long of Washington State (injuries and attitude). All can take heart in the fact that players chosen lower have turned into stars: Zach Thomas was a fifth-rounder and Terrell Davis and Tom Brady went in the sixth. And Troy Brown and Jessie Armstead, both were chosen in 1993 in the eighth round, which no longer exists. Weathersby was the first to go, taken by Cincinnati a week after a bullet went through his torso and lodged in his arm. The cornerback from Oregon State wasn't hurt badly enough to affect his career, but the shooting raised questions among some teams about his character, and he dropped from the early rounds. Klecko, son of former New York Jet Joe Klecko, was Big East defensive player of the year, even though he played for lowly Temple. But at a quarter-inch under 6 feet, he is considered too short. He was taken by Houston. "To get a guy of his caliber at this round of the draft is a coup for us," said Leslie Frazier, Cincinnati's defensive coordinator. "You've got to think that without that incident, he wouldn't have been on the board this morning. I think that had a lot to do with his fall to the fourth round. He had him as a second-rounder." The surprise on Wallace, the Iowa State quarterback, is that he went to Seattle rather than Pittsburgh, which has selected players of his type — Kordell Stewart, Hines Ward and Antwaan Randle El. A scrambler under 6 feet tall, he has insisted he wants to remain at QB in the NFL. Suggs, a star at Virginia Tech in 2000, injured his knee in 2001 and split time when he returned last season. He went to Cleveland. The 5-7 Griffin was chosen by Denver, which has a history of succeeding with middle-and lowround running backs. Smith was taken by Minnesota, Williams by Kansas City and Long by Tennessee. "This is an opportunity for him to start over," Titans coach Jeff Fisher said of Long, who dropped in part because of questions about his attitude. The Henson pick came in the sixth round. It had been expected; Henson is hitting under .200 at Triple-A Columbus after leaving Michigan and signing with the New York Yankees for seven figures. At Michigan, he alternated with Brady, the MVP of the 2002 Super Bowl for New England. "I am concentrating on baseball right now," he said through a spokesman for the Columbus Clippers. Cowboys select Kansas State cornerback The Associated Press IRVING, Texas The first draft pick of the Bill Parcells-Jerry Jones partnership lacked fireworks—no big trade, hardly even any debate. Making what Jones called the safe choice, the Dallas Cowboys selected cornerback-returner Terence Newman from Kansas State with the fifth overall pick Saturday. Newman's proven ability at cornerback, a position where the team needed help, plus his return skills overshadowed questions about nerve damage in his left shoulder and the fact he'll be 25 when the season begins, about two years older than the average first-rounder. But the intrigue in this draft went beyond whom Dallas took. It was about how the new coach and his new boss got along in the first pressure-packed test of their business relationship. Second-round pick Al Johnson, a center from Wisconsin, and third-rounder Jason Witten, a tight end from Tennessee, also were considered among the tops at their position, giving the Cowboys their second straight solid draft. Jones said they were "very much on the same page." Parcells described himself as "just part of the process." "As I've said from the beginning, this is a 'we' decision," Jones said after taking Newman. "Bill is very involved. He has tremendous respect from me, and I really do listen to his input. He very much does influence the decisions that we make." Parcells, speaking after all three picks were made, said, "I gave my opinion, just like everyone else. It had substantial weight, but it wasn't the entire reason anybody was taken." The biggest indication of Parcells' influence was how Newman was treated - or rather not treated. In past years, Jones has flown in top picks either on draft day or the day after. Jones joked he wasn't doing it with Newman because he was in New York, which was too expensive of a flight. "We decided not to," Parcells said adding that he'd never done anything like that before and didn't want to start now. "I like to bring them all in together," Parcells said. "I don't if care if he was drafted first or 300th. He's part of the team now." Jones loves hyping his picks, and he didn't hesitate this time, comparing Newman's speed to Deion Sanders. "He's got the skill and potential to impact our team immediately," Jones said. "We certainly feel like we're getting a player who gives us pretty good confidence he's going to be a significant contributor." Parcells said such a comparison was "a little premature ... in fact, very premature." Parcells' take: "This is a pretty "We certainly feel like we're getting a player who gives us pretty good confidence he's going to be a significant contributor." Jerry Jones Cowboys owner gifted athlete, who hopefully at some point can make a pretty significant contribution here. I've learned a long time ago not to predict how anybody will fit in. You never really know exactly how a player is going to play until you get them." The 5-foot-10, 189-pound Newman was an All-American last season, winning the Jim Thorpe Award as the nation's top defensive back. He intercepted five passes and deflected 14 despite teams often not throwing to his side of the field. He's likely to unseat Mario Edwards and join Derek Ross as the starters at cornerback. Combined with safeties Roy Williams and Darren Woodson, the defensive backfield can now be considered one of the Cowboys' strengths. Newman also can help the special teams as he returned three punts and one kickoff for touchdowns in four seasons at K-State. He even saw action at receiver. Parcells said Newman had been drafted to play corner and maybe return punts. Parcells made it clear that returning kicks in the NFL was much more difficult than in college, saying, "You have to have a certain mentality." "Now, do I know whether Terence Newman has that mentality? No. But I do coach the punt returners myself. Always have. So we'll find out very quickly," Parcells said. "And I don't know whether we'll even use him if he could do it. We'll see what we have." Although Newman was worried the cancellation meant they didn't want him, he's happy to play for a team he grew up watching. Jones and Parcells never interviewed Newman, even canceling a get-together scheduled for last week under the premise they didn't think he'd last until No. 5. His mom lives in the area and is a Cowboy fan. "This fits me perfect," he said. "All I can do is come in and do my best to compete and help out any way I can." Parcells said he was hoping the 6-foot-3, 305-pound Johnson could solidify a position that had "held me hostage," and he was looking for Witten to help fill a position that had been "an integral part of the offensive style that we try to run." "Jason Witten is a big, fast guy who's shown the ability to catch the ball well and hopefully can block adequately enough to allow us to do some things," Parcells said, offering as much praise as he gave any of the picks. Rams draft player after second round The Associated Press ST.LOUIS — Two Missouri players were drafted yesterday, the second day of the NFL draft, and one who wasn't may have the best chance to stick. It's a lot better than the end of his Missouri career as the backup to freshman Brad Smith. Farmer threw for 13 touchdowns with six interceptions in 2001, but he was 5-for-11 for 65 yards with one touchdown and one interception last season. St. Louis Rams coach Mike Martz appeared as excited about quarterback Kirk Farmer, signed after the draft, as the eight players the team selected in the final four rounds of the draft. Farmer lost the starting job last year to freshman Brad Smith, throwing only 11 passes all season as the backup but impressed Rams offensive coordinator Steve Fairchild in a March workout. "I think he's more than worthwhile, and I'm very excited about him," Martz said. "He isn't just a camp guy. Mechanically, I really like him a lot." At the time, the Rams were looking at Missouri wide receiver Justin Gage, taken in the fifth round by Chicago. "Not every team probably knows about me," Farmer said. "I'm just thankful they signed me." Martz said Farmer, who had an injury-plagued career at Missouri with a broken leg in 1999 and a broken collarbone in 2000, had a solid chance to be the Rams' No. 3 quarterback. He would be battling with Scott Covington for that spot. trate on football and turn his back on basketball paid off when the Bears took him. Gage caught 82 passes for 1,075 yards and nine touchdowns his senior year and totaled 200 catches for 2,704 yards and 18 touchdowns overall. Another Missouri player, defensive tackle Keith Wright, was taken by the Houston Texans on the last pick of the sixth round. Wright had 92 tackles last year, 24 for losses, and added six sacks. Southeast Missouri wide receiver Willie Ponder was taken by the New York Giants in the sixth round. Ponder capitalized on a big year with the Division I-AA school, with 87 receptions for 1,453 yards and 15 touchdowns. Gage was a valuable reserve as a junior for the Tigers' basketball team, which could have used him as a senior because it had no depth. But Gage was busy preparing for his football career, adding 12 pounds of muscle and working on his 40-yard dash times. He also took a semester off school, leaving him 18 hours shy of a degree. "I got the chance to focus on football," Gage said from his parents' home in Jefferson City. "That gave me the opportunity to work out full-time." Gage was hoping to be picked on the first day, so he said it had been a difficult week for him. He was the 143rd overall pick of the draft. "I'm just glad to be drafted, but I didn't know it would take so long," Gage said. "Time ticks by and rounds tick by and it gets nerve-racking." The Bears attended two of Gage's workouts, so he knew they were interested. The Associated Press Chiefs pin hopes on final round draft picks KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs hoped they were lucky enough to find another Scott Fujita in the final rounds of the draft yesterday. Fujita was the unheralded linebacker from California taken in the fifth round last year who quickly cracked the starting lineup and showed signs of star potential. In the fourth and fifth rounds yesterday, the Chiefs took tackles Brett Williams, 6-foot-5, 321 pounds, of Florida State and Jordan Black, 6-5, 314, of Notre Dame. Jimmy Wilkerson, an All-Big 12 defensive end from Oklahoma who started football as a high With two picks in the seventh and final round, the Chiefs took defensive tackle Montique Sharpe, 6-2, 296, from Wake Forest, and Willie Pile, a safety who had 14 career interceptions at Virginia Tech. In the first round on Saturday, the Chiefs took Penn State running back Larry Johnson, a 2,000-yard rusher who provides insurance if Priest Holmes fails to recover fully from his hip injury or holds out for more money. Also on Saturday, the Chiefs took linebacker Kawika Mitchell of South Florida in the second round and defensive back Julian Battle of Tennessee in the third BE THE CAMPUS RED BULL CONNECTION. BE THE CAMPUS RED BULL CONNECTION. You might be the missing link between Red Bull and your campus. Want to be the Red Bull Student Brand Manager? Go to redbullu.com school quarterback, went to the Chiefs in round No. 6. Find your favorite drinks ON SPECIAL In Weekly Specials listing useful services Serving listing useful services Serving DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street DON'S AUTO CENTER "For all your repair needs" * Import and Domestic Repair & Maintenance * Machine Shop Service * Computer Diagnostics 841-4833 920 E. 11th Street 4B* THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BASEBALL & SOFTBALL MONDAY,APRIL28,2003 TODAY TOMORROW WEDNESDAY 78 82 75 KU Scott Reynolds/Kansan Freshman second baseman Ritchie Price tags up at first base. He made the play during the fourth inning in Saturday's game against Baylor. ACHOS 1. Foot structure 2. Cost per goal 3. Infield 4. BS Fencing 5. Crutches 6. Made public 7. Huff and Jake 8. Nagger 9. Extended game Kansas outfieldder Mel Wallach scores in the sixth inning Saturday at Jayhawk Field. The Jayhawks won the game against Baylor 4-1. Scott Reynolds/Kansan Kansas Second baseman Matt Baty throws out a Baylor player at first base Saturday. Maine Scott Reynolds/Kansan Ritchie Price warms up for the fourth inning with Matt Baty Saturday at Hoglund Ballpark. Scott Reynolds/Kansan 1 Freshman Destiny Frankenstein reacts to a Baylor runner sliding into second base at the Kansas softball game against Baylor yesterday afternoon. The Jayhawks lost to Baylor 4-0. Dan Nelson/Kansan HELP SAVE LIVES and EARN $25* TODAY! 52 Was too enthusiastic 46 Spike at Brenda 47 Pub ord 48 Nappy l 51 Wapit 53 Passage ZLB Donate your blood plasma. Help burn, trauma and shock victims,surgery patients & more. 785-749-5750 Call or stop by: ZLB Plasma Services 816 West 24th Street Lawrence,KS 66046 www.zlb.com Fees and donation time may vary. *(for approx. 2 hours. New donors only.)* kansan.com News Now CA$H CA$HCA$HCA$H CA$H CA$H CA$HCA$H CA$HCA$H CA$HCA$H CA$HCA$HCA$HCA$H MORE OF IT. ALWAYS. Now Thru Finals. SELL YOUR TEXTBOOKS JBS Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill www.jayhawkbookstore.com 843-3826 • 1420 Crescent Rd. Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS We Stand Behind Our Work, and WE CARE!" INC. Living at home this summer? ACCC offers more than 100 summer courses. 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. So you can be ahead instead of behind. Check out our list of summer courses on the web at www.alliancecollege.com www.allencc.edu Allen County Community College Iola Campus 620-365-5116 Ext 268 Burlingame Campus 785-654-2416 Ext 205 SUMMER STORAGE FREE PICK-UP FREE FREE DELIVERY BOXES FREE SAVE $25 when you reserve your store space by May 2nd Store Anything: Furniture, Futons, Bikes, computers, etc. Basic Package is $135 for the entire summer! WE CAN PACK AND SHIP ANYTHING RIGHT FROM YOUR DORM OR RESIDENCE AT UPS COUNTER RATES! The UPS Store ups 865-0004 Formerly Mail Boxes Etc. MONDAY, APRIL 28, 2003 ENTERTAINMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B WEATHER Rainy day TODAY 78 58 rain in the morning TOMORROW 82 59 isolated thunderstorms WEDNESDAY 75 55 scattered thunderstorms —WWW.WEATHER.COM APARTMENT NUMBER 9 by Kevin Gritzke, for The University Daily Kansan I didn't know you could say "hell" in the comics... IF I had a comic I would use "hell" so much it would stop being funny... what the hell are you smiling About? IF I had a comic I would use "hell" so much it would stop being funny... I didn't know you could say "hell" in the comics... KANSAN magazine ag 22 I didn't know you could say "hell" in the comics... IF I had a comic I would use "hell" so much it would stop being funny... what the hell are you smiling about? what the hell are you smiling about? DBZ HOROSCOPES Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. Today's Birthday (April 28). You don't like being pushed around, even if you're being pushed toward a goal you've set. However, that could be your fate this year. Take the lead, and do your homework early. Don't wait till the last minute! Love and money are major themes for you now, and both are attainable. You don't have to choose between them. You can have both. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. You may feel pestered or even slightly guilty,but don't let that overrule your common sense. Don't cave just because a loved one throws a fit, either. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 7 Working with friends on a beneficial project improves your mood and self-esteem. It's also good for your community, so don't worry about the money. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 7. There won't be much time to gather with friends till later in the week. Stay in touch while giving work your top priority. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 7. Leo (July 23-Aug.22). Today is a 7. You may have to work harder for the same amount of pay, but you're growing in status and influence as you take care of your friends. Count your money and pay your bills. You may be in for a pleasant surprise. Set up your trip for late in the week. Meanwhile, keep saving. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 7. Stay involved in the conversation if a loved one wants a new toy. If you're not careful, you could wind up financing somebody's whim. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 7. Finish up an old task with renewed determination. Toss out the stuff that's in the way and make room for the new. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 9. You're so full of love, you ought to get the day off for good behavior. Brighten the lives of everyone you meet — even a hopeless grump. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. Sometimes acting quickly can help you beat out the competition. This time, let the other guy race on ahead while you proceed with caution. Aquarius (Jan, 20-Feb, 18). Today is a 7. Do you think that you can produce results without everybody's agreement? Odds are good that you can, so stick to your plan in spite of opposition. News NOW Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 6. People are being stubborn now, but you can get somebody's ear. Whisper to them about how to get out of the box and get things moving again. Crossword ACROSS 1 Foot structure 5 Cost per unit 9 Inclined 14 SST sound 15 Environs 16 Made public 17 Huff and Jaffe 18 Nagger 19 Extended gaze 20 Mine deposit 21 After-dinner treats 22 Raptor weapon 23 Aromatic evergreen 25 Cribbage marker 26 Pipe root 27 Exploit 29 Competent 33 Government appropriation 37 Possess 39 Armistice Day mo. 40 Crescent 41 Inc. in Islington 42 Was too enthusiastic 46 Spike and Brenda 47 Pub order 48 Nappy leather 51 Wapiti 53 Passages with lively tempos 56 Thalia's sister 59 Metal mixture 60 Part of an e-mail address 61 Former nit 62 Attired 63 Manufactured 64 Exposes 65 Sharpen 66 Man or Dogs 67 Gather up 68 School near Windsor 69 Throat-clearing sound 04/28/03 $ \textcircled{c} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. DOWN 1 Soak up 2 Lion, at times 3 Funny woman 4 "___ Pinafore" 5 Breakneck 6 Sports venue 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | 21 | | | | | 22 | | | | 23 | | | 24 | | | | | 25 | | | | 26 | | | | | | 27 | 28 | | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | | | | 33 | | | 34 | 35 | | 36 | | | | | 37 | 38 | | 39 | | | 40 | | | 41 | | | 42 | | | 43 | | | 44 | | | 45 | | | 46 | | | | 47 | | | | 48 | | | 49 | 50 | | | | | 51 | 52 | | 53 | 54 | 55 | | | | | 56 | 57 | 58 | | | 59 | | | | 60 | | | 61 | | | | | 62 | | | 63 | | | 64 | | | | | 65 | | | 66 | | | 67 | | | | | 68 | | | 69 | | | | 7 Performance trial 8 Beanery sign 9 Costume jewelry 10 Leggy actress? 11 By mouth 12 Claudius' successor 13 "East of __" 21 Spanish sheep 24 Machine part 25 Ballplayer Guerrero 28 Sudden pain 30 Nonsense! 31 Set afire 32 Call off 34 "Vertigo" star 35 Daredevil Knieve 36 "The Plough and the Stars" playwright 38 Nocturnal raptor 38 Itsy-bitsy 43 Dangerous flies 44 Change the distribution 45 Obvious toupee D A D A B L I M P I N G E O M E N O U T E R D I R E P E E K A B O R I G I N A L E X P L O R E I N R O A D S F E S S A N T I C P A R T S Q U O M I S T S R U E A X E D S E E T H E O D E S E D I C T S I R E W I Z A R D B O Y S G O D S T E N O S L Y L A M B S D U N C E C U B A S C A T T E R E R A T I C S H O R E L E A V E T I N Y N A N A L A K E S E Z R A S T E P S M A R T S E E N Solutions to last Friday's puzzle. 49 Artful scribble 50 Value highly 52 Fertile loam 54 Argentine grassland 55 Waterproof wool cloth 56 Corsica's neighbor 57 Wander widely 58 Mystique 59 Heart follower 63 Hamm or Farrow Get the INSIDE TRACK on UCES Become a Career Services Liaison Lap 1: Promote programs & services of Lap 1: Promote programs & services of University Career & Employment Services to your student organization Lap 2: Commit less than 5 hours per month Lap 2: Commit less than 3 hours per session Lap 3: FREE Career Connections Package ($40 Value) Route UCES Lap 4: Earn $25-50 for your organization For more details visit: www.ku.edu/~uces/careerliaison If Interested Call 864-3624 Deadline: April 25th BUY ONE GET ONE FREE NEW LOWER PRICES Men's Suits EASTON'S Starting at just 2 for $ 299 LIMITED 839 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KS 66044 A43-5755 THIS WEEKEND ONLY · TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 Starla Benford 1 Erin Moran From TV's Happy Days THE 1984 Maria Gutiérrez Amy J. Carle VAGINA MONOLOGUES EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets, www.ticketmaster.com 816-931-3330, The Lied Center Box Office, or 785-864-ARTS Service Charge may apply. 6B= THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NFL MONDAY,APRIL28,2003 Vermeil assures Holmes draft pick is not replacement The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Even before they drafted Penn State's Larry Johnson in the first round, the Kansas City Chiefs assured Priest Holmes he was still their starting running back. Holmes, the NFLs offensive player of the year in 2002, is still recovering from a season-ending hip injury that led to arthroscopic surgery last month. "I talked to Priest this morning because I thought this could happen," said Chiefs coach Dick Vermeil. "I didn't want Priest to hear it from ESPN. I wanted him to hear it from me." A late-bloomer, Johnson rushed for 2,087 yards in his first season as a starter. He averaged 7. 7 yards per carry for the Nittany Lions and led the nation in all-purpose yardage with 2,655 yards. The Chiefs wound up with Johnson after swapping first-round picks with Pittsburgh. They gave the Steelers their first pick in the first round, No. 16 overall, for the 27th overall choice in round one. They also picked up a third- and sixth-round choice from the Steelers. In the second round, Kansas City bypassed two better-known defensive players — Nebraska rush end Chris Kelsay and Kansas State linebacker Terry Pierce — to take South Florida linebacker Kawika Mitchell with the 47th pick overall. The 6-foot, 253-pound + Mitchell set a school record with 367 career tackles despite separating his shoulder in a car accident before his senior season. His best performance last season came against South Florida's toughest opponent when he recorded 12 tackles — including two sacks — two assists and a forced fumble against Oklahoma. "That was a big-time game for me, and I took advantage of it," said Mitchell, who transferred to South Florida — then an NCAA Division I-AA school — after redshirting his freshman season at Georgia. "Definitely the level of competition helped me out there — but I wouldn't say that game made me." The Chiefs used their third-round pick from the Steelers — the 92nd overall — to take Tennessee cornerback Julian Battle. At 6-2, 205 pounds. Battle has strong safety size. He started at that position for much of his two years at Tennessee after playing as a corner and wide receiver at Los Angeles Valley College, a two-year school. He moved to corner in the sixth game of his senior season and finished with 72 tackles fourth on the team — and one interception. The Chiefs have insisted that Holmes will be back to full speed by June. He missed the last two "I don't want him to feel like I'm coming in to replace him because it's something that even I couldn't deal with." Larry Johnson Chiefs draft pick ("Johnson) will be a great security blanket," Vermeil said. games of the 2002 season after he was injured at Denver, but still wound up rushing for a teamrecord 1,615 yards. Johnson said he did not want Holmes to think he was coming after his job. "I want to first become a friend of Priest Holmes, then to have him comfortable with me and knowing the circumstances that I'm there, to learn from him, and know that I want to come in there and be a type of a backup or something like that," Johnson said. "I don't want him to feel like I'm coming in to replace him because it's something that even I couldn't deal with." Ironically, Holmes lost his job in Baltimore under similar circumstances. He rushed for 1.098 yards in 1998, hurt his knee in 1999 and then the Ravens drafted running back Jamal Lewis in the first round in 2000. Holmes immediately lost his job, and came to the Chiefs as a free agent in 2001. Kansan Classified "That won't happen here," Vermil said. 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Business Personals 115 On Campus 120 Announcements 125 Travel 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted X 305 For Sale 310 Computers 315 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 300s Merchandise The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on sex, race, sex, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 440 Sublease 400s Real Estate 休息室 Classified Policy 500s Services disability, Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is isolation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair 500s Services 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services 864-4358 KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limit tation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements Do you speak English as a second language? Learn the secrets of getting a job in the United States! Attend a 90 minute seminar on April 26 or April 29. Topics: Applications, resumes, interviews. Cost: $20.00, 105 page handbook included. Call 843-0701 to register. 205 - Help Wanted F1 WANTED: Caucasian female, 21-34 years old for oocyte (egg) donation through a Wichita donation site. Must have red/auburn hair; brown, green or hazel eyes; and some college experience. Financial compensation provided. Write to RJE, c/o PMB #119, 13505 S, Mur-Len, Suite 105, Olathe, KS 6062-1600. 130 - Entertainment H H H H Dance lessons; ballroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 331-2227 Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers, Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Do you want to have a full time job for the summer? Do you like kids? Wanted: responsible, dependable, caring student to play with & entertain 3 yr & 10 yr old. M-F: 7-30:50. Need own transportation. 841-3533, leave a message or call after 5:30. Does Your Summer Job Suck? Does Your Summer Job Suck? I will take 5 more students to help run a business, make $700 a week this summer. Call: 832-1839 SUMMER WORK kansan.com $500-800/wk to start STUDENTS WELCOME Adv/Mktg co. seeks entry level, mid & upper level mgm candidates. Int'l firm, sports and charitable organizations tuition bonuses and paid training avail. Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydollars.com BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift, Flexible hours, great pay Call 1-800-608-0082 ext 1422 205 - Help Wanted Call Denise (913) 396-0056 Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-765 7600 or 7-185-221-5900. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary, students welcomed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepro.com Immediate openings for swim instructors Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554. MOVIE EXTRAS/ MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450 day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277. exe. u120 Safe Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. Nanny for 3 girls ages 8-12 for summer, Monday, Tuesday, & Thursday, approx. 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Send resume to Brent Crandon, 1019 Mass. Lawrence 66044. Resident Assistants 2003-2004 Resident Assistants hold academic year, live-in positions with KU Student Housing performing administrative, programming, and paraprofessional advising/facilitating for 40-50 residents and for the complex in general, directly supervised by an Assistant Complex Director. Required: At least 1 year of residential group living experience 30 or more credit hours, full-time KU student with at least 6 hours of on-campus enrollment each semester Compensation: Single room; meals; $40 00 paid biweekly. Application materials available from Complex Directors or at Student Housing, Corbin Hall. Applications accepted until positions filled. EO/AA. Men and Women Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 5-9 Mon-Sat, 811 New Hamshire. 205 - Help Wanted BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-239-3985 ext. $31. 205 - Help Wanted SPECIAL PROJECT T T T T EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER Desktop Managers hold academic year, part-time, live-in positions with KU Student Housing responsible for front desk and building security operations under the supervision of the Complex Director. Required: Desk/security staff experience; full-time KU student with at least 6 hours of on-campus enrollment each semester; Compensation: Single room or equivalent; meals: $2,530 total pay. Application materials available from Complex Directors or at Student Housing, Corbin Hall. Applications accepted until positions filled. EO/AA. Are you in need of summer employment? We have a job for your Applications are currently accepted for 50 people performing light assembly. Work M-F, 40 hours a week with overtime. 205 - Help Wanted Heart of America Photography is seeking 12-14 full-part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season - April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment! Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7100 or drop by 2449 Iowa. Ste J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGee's EOE. Happy Holiday Daytime hours available. Call MANPOWER at 785-749-2809 to inquire about this opportunity to keep busy summer, EOE. 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.greatcampjobs.com. 205 - Help Wanted SUMMER INTERNETSHIPS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment Apply online at www.pligrimage.com/intern.htm Assist people with head injuries to become independent. Flexible schedule. Great "hands on" summer job for students in Social and Human Services,OT. SLP PT field. Flexible schedule. Lawrence & KC area. Tailot free 1-866-429-6757 X 104. Desk Managers 2003-2004 Are you looking for a summer job? Earn up to $4,000 this summer while working in a fun/casual workplace. Heart of America Photography has immediate openings in its Customer Service Department. Qualified applicants must be quick learners and have an outgoing, positive attitude. Basic computer skills are a must, and previous customer service experience is preferred. For more info call 841-7100, or stop by our office at 2443 S. Iowa; Suite L to fill out an application. --- 205 - Help Wanted Average Rep makes $12-15/hr. Up to $1 Raise and full Medical & Dental Ins. after 90 days. JOIN OUR TEAM! Hours Monday-Friday 4-9pm. Please call & ask for Ann Or fax resume to 785-542-5611. AMERIPURE WATER COMPANY 785-542-5611 Expanding Company Seeking 10-12 College Students... Summer to remember in woods of Maine. Camp Androscoggin for Boys seeks specialists and cabin counselors. Have fun, be outdoors and make a difference. 6/18-8/16. Visit www.campandro.com or call collect 914-835-5800. PERFECT POSITION! Desire to Success and a Good, Honest, Work Ethic. Flexible Schedule. 400.00 Weekly and Up! Weekly Incentives and Bonuses Paid Internships for Sales and Marketing Positions and a Great Career Development Program! To Get Yourself Scheduled for an Informational Interview... JUST CALL: (785) 843-8273 We Will Provide the Tools You Need to Succeed I'll Requirements: Positive Attitude, Patiently S 340 - Auto Sales 汽车碰撞 --- 340 - Auto Sales --- 98'Milzu Spyder $8950 97 Sebring Conv. S6950 since 1984 SALE! SPRING STUDENT SALE! 1/2 Block East of I-35 on Johnson Drive in KC WWW.COUNTRYHILL.COM 913-645-7966 Ask for Danny and get a student discount! with our website for more info on these and other vehicles in stock 9 X 00 Pontiac Sunfire S3950 300s Merchandise S 305 - For Sale For Sale. 4 adjoining seats to Bill Cosby. May 31st, Starlight Theatre $60 each. mini. Will sell together of separate. Contact Jeff at 855-1517 or 550-3799. S 1988 Toyota Camry, only 100,000 miles Runs great, new CD player and stereo $1200, Call Lella at 749-1256. 340 - Auto Sales 1990 Range Rover Clean interior, good cost. Runs great, roof rack, sunroof, grill guard. 1698 $4200. Dove B16-211-6982 Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings 电话 800-319-3323 ext. 4565. 360-Miscellaneous $ $ $ $ $ CDs, games, and movies CHEAPI @ www.orbitused.com. Take General Psychology, Social Psychology, or Contemporary Social Problems online through www.bartonline.org. Summer courses begin June 9. 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 & 3 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. With wood floors, paid utilities, $410-650, 841-3633. Kansan Ads Work For You MONDAY,APRIL28 2003 CLASSIFIED 7B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 405 - Apartments for Rent CENTER FOR HOMES AND LIVING Attractive studio apt, near KU at 945 Mo. avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study. $400, gas & water paid. No pets or smoking. Call 749-0166. Avail. Aug, Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR, 1.5 BA, OW, DW, CA, balcony, 9th & Emery. No smoking/pets $590 + utili- ties Call 550-811 or 841-3192. Avail, May, June, or Aug. Very nice remodeled studio and 1 bedroom apts, close to campus. No pets/smoking. Starting at $80. Call 550-8111 or 841-3192. 3 BR apts. 1/2 BA, PF, skylights. 1 car, garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @843-4000. HIGHPOINTE APARTMENT HOMES Now Leasing for Fall 2003 *1,2,3. Bedroom - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 4 PDR $699 1 BDR $100 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $495 2 BDR $750 5 BDR $690 4 BDP $840 MASTERCRAFT ARTWORKS 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON-FRI 9-1 CATED UST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME NICE, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT WALK TO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Campus Place 1145 Louisiana·841-1429 + Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold·749-4226 Hanover Place 14th & Mass*841-1212 Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-241 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 PARKWAY Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1, 2, 3 Bedroom * Pool 405 - Apartments for Rent - Fitness Center - Washer/Dryer - Basketball Court - Security Systems - Garages Available - Security Systems Services Available Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street parking, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $353/month. Call 841-1074 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. 3601 Clinton Parkway www.intersport.com Now Leasing! VILLAGE SQUARE apartments Models Open Daily close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net 1.2.&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.theofxrun.com Blue Meer Management, Inc. Accommodation & Tour Services Now Leasing for Fall Summer Tree West Town Homes Troon Town Homes - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675 $695 ♦Washer & Drver ♦Fully Equipped Kitchen ♦Serving Bar 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Blue Mea Management, Inc. Luxury at an Affordable Price. 405 - Apartments for Rent Call 840.9467 for an appointment 405 - Apartments for Rent --- 1,2,3, & 4 BR apts avail. for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool. KU bus ride, laundry facility Call 843-0011 1 BR at Tuckaway, WD, fitness room, TV, fireplace, hot tub, alarm system,罢pool. Ask about apartment 7N. Available June 1 or before. Call 838-3377 Avail Aug. 1, Large newer 4 BR apt. DW CA, micro, laundry, on site. 4BR $1040, 10k Ask about leasing specials. NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt; 841-5533 1712 OHIO 2 BR apartments, CA off street parking, 1737 & 41 Tennessee $500 monthly, 913-441-4168 masonproperties@aol.com www.apartmentsinlawrence.net 1 bedroom apartments near KU. Possible rent reduction for various duties. Available August 1st, 841-6254 1&2Bedrooms M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 - OFFICE Bushoutte • Indoor/Outdoor Pool • 2 Hot Tubs MARY SIGGAR SPECIAL Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes *OnKU BusRoute* Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790, $^{10}$ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. Some with fireplaces and Garages COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Naismith 842-5111 colony@lxks.com - 3 Hot tubs Exercise Room - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1,2,3 Bedrooms OPEN HOUSE 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 - ExerciseRoom - No pets please NOW LEASING FOR JUNE AND AUGUST M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 405 - Apartments for Rent www.lawrenceapartments.com - *Wather-Dryers* * *Dishwashers* * *Microwaves* * *Fatios* * *Fireplaces* * *Celting Fans* W/D,all appliances For More Info: 785-841-7849 ask about our 4th displays! Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes 3801 Clinton Parkway #F1 - Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 - Great location near campus *Washer/Dryers* *Dishwasher* *Microwaves* *Patios* *Gas Fireplaces* *Cooling Fans* Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you - Digital cable & internet - Reasonable rates 4100 Clinton Parkway OPEN HOUSE MON-FRI1:00-5:00 NO APPOINTMENTS NEEDED 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 BR apt. FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2901 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807 Now signing 1YR leases starting May/ June July, Aug. no smoking extras. Extra nice, well-kept 2B apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & more $405/mo. Spanish Church Acct. 841-6888. Save Your Money! SUNRISE VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Rebald Scooter Rd. Sr.) - Luxurious 2, 3, & 4 - Bedroom Townhomes - Garages; w/wd Hookups * Microwave Ovens * Some with Fireplaces * on KU Bus Route. - Swimming Pool - Tennis Courts OPEN: MON - FRI 10-12 & 1-5 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 Canyon Court Brand New Luxury Apartments 700 Comet Lane Now Leasing for Spring 2003 - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool & Hot Tub - Basketball Court *Gearages Available* *High Speed Internet Connections* *Security Systems Available* *Small Pet Welcome* www.firstmanagementinc.com 842-3280 Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS luxury living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood 4241 Briarwood Dr Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Fully Equipped Kitchen Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs, basketball court, fitness center and gated waterfront. Briarwood pool, fitness THE LEGENDS call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ALL INCLUDED DIELECTRY BACKAGE (NO HOOK UPS, NOP DEPOSITS, NO HASLETS) WASHER AND DRYER IN EVERY UNIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH HOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY FOUNDED FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPORIES | CAR WASH & DETAIL BAY GAME HOME ROOM | COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNFLOWER BROADBAND HIGH INTERNET INTRAFRONT (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 405 - Apartments for Rent CLOSE TO CAMPUS, 3 BR, 3 BA ha- noushes, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closes, phone; cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 Bk. Arkansas, 843-4090. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870. 900 Block Call, Mcall 843-4090 Eddlingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Call info. Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 841-5533 Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Excellent location, 1341 Ohio/1104 Tennons, 2 BR in 4-plex, C/A,D/W, D hook-ups, $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1, No pets. Bkts 842-4242. Great location, 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex, Hardwood floors, CA, no pets. pets:610 mo.Avail. Aug 1.842-4242 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample appliance on-site laundry [Call 834-4909] Regency Place. 2 BR available now. Walking distance to campus. 1301 Louisiana. Water paid, no pets. $590/mo. 941-8468 Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. Washer/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7744 or 760-4788. Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets. Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday. Call 841-3800. 3 & 4 BR townhouses @ 1125 Tennessee. W/D, CA, DW, off street parking. $875 & $1150 / month. Call 913-441-4169 or masonproperties@aol.com NOW LEASING for Fall - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome • Model Open Daily - Model Open Daily Ask About Our Specials! CHASE COURT 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com 410 - Condos For Rent 3 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom townhomes 922Tennessee 423-1223 Very nice condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer, Walking distance Only $259 per room. Call Eilei B81-447-400 415 - Homes For Rent [Image of a row of houses with trees] 2 and 3 bedroom houses for rent. Have CA. Available August 1. No pets. No smoking. $725-825/month. 913-341-0952. 4 Bedroom 2 Bathroom, W/D included, basement, off street parking 1735 Kentucky 1050 841-4935 4 BR, 2 BA duplex on Eldridge. Available Aug 1. Well-maintained. 2-car garage, dishwasher, W/D, W.AC, 1300 sq. ft., mower provided. No dogs. $875/m. Call 842-1360 17 a.m. - p.6 or m.p. 825-356. 4 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom. 1 car garage. W/D included. to KU. 1638 Indiana. $1200. 841-4935. BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus use- ties. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 + 766-6662 from 6:30-10 p.m. Nice 2 BR 1 BA. Small house, remodeled in 1998. High cellings, wood fitt. in living rm. Hook ups. For Aug 1st 8600. 841-3633. HOTEL **Moving to KO?** Keep a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24/hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbreatable at 105k. Call 913-522-5360. Realty Exec. 430 - Roommate Wanted 4th Roommate wanted. Huge House near campus. Starting Aug. 1, Rent $330 + 1/4 utilities. Bqt 842-0592 Female roommate needed to sublease 3 BR town home at Hawthorne Place. Available June 1, $275/month + util 842-7064. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Very nice 2 BR 2 BA. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 844-354-550. Avail. June 1, lovely house 3 biks, from KU. Need 2 female roommates, approx. 300 mo. each. No Pets, No Smoking. Call 841-3736. Grad student seeks female roommate Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, WID and garage. No smoking/pets. $300 + 1/2 ufl. Avail Aug. 842-4540. Male roommate for 2 BR townhome Clean, quiet, close to campus. $300/mo. + half utilities. 841-1160. 435 Rooms for Rent 440 - Sublease Room for rent for mate. Nice furnished home. $350 includes utilities. W/D, private bath. No smoking. 749-1187. $500 Signing皂; 2BD_2BA at Parkway Commons, avid mid-May 7th July at 31st of Pet. friendly. Call Jess or Craig at 312-9710 or 760-0266. Sublease 1 bedroom at 527 California. Washer/dryer. Nice neighborhood. Call 841-5533 for information. 1. master bedroom and private bathroom of large townhouse. Possibility to take on year lease at end of summer. $300/month negotiable. Available now. Call 393-0511. 1 Roommate Wanted. 2 BR apartment very close to campus. W/D, D/W. $240/mo. plus utilities. Call 842-8097. a BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. WARD, W/D, CA, avail. mid-May $870 mo. Adam 830-8076. 3 BR, 2 BA house avail, end of May, WD, A/C, near campus, all kitchen appl., 2-car gar, water patent. Pet取494-6268 40 MBA students need summer subleases for July. If interested e-mail italy03@ku.edu. Avail. June 1, 4 BR, 2 BA, W/D, dishwasher. Newly carpeted & tiled. $240/mo person + ull Call 842-1118. Avail, June 1, 2 BR, I BA, WD, DW. fifth & Florida. $540/mo. Water & trash paid. Rent.move in date neg. Call 843-0494. 500s Services 505 - Professional TRAFFIC-DUTS-MIP'S PERSONAL INJURY Student legal matters/Residency issues divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of DACA D. G. STRLEE Donald G. Strele Sally G. Kelasy 16 East 13th 842-5116 Free Initial Consultation 510 - Child Care --- Kindergarten Tours Montessori learning centers plus; broad curriculum; park-like playground. Call Sunshine Acres 842-2233. Part time nanny needed. Care/transport 6y/4yr to school and other activities. $100/913-782-2717 913-845-4422 (cell) Recycle Your Kansan 8B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, APRIL 28, 2003 SPORTS IT’S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. SUNDANCE A new fire escape on the site manager's The emergency Maintenance model is open daily! Regents Court Constructed in 1936, this beautiful two-story residence offers a spacious living area with a well-appointed kitchen and dining room. Gas heat & hot water central heating & air conditioning for comfort. On-site parking. On MS bus routes. 24 hr emergency quality notice. EHO Orchard Corners Now Leasing! Models open daily Baseball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B With one out in the inning, junior first baseman Ryan Baty singled. Wheeler struck out and logged the second out of the inning, and junior right fielder Matt Trible walked. With Tribble on third, senior left fielder Casey Spanish delivered the game-winning single. That gave Tribble a score and Karsas the 4-3 lead, which became the final score. Kansas coach Ritch Price said the team had been through peaks and valleys this year. "We are over the hump now, and we just have to play against the ball and be mature," Price said. On Saturday during the second game of the series, the dynamics proved to be different when Baylor came away with an 11-3 victory. Junior pitcher Chris Smart started but lasted only five innings. Allowing nine hits and three earned runs, he was credited with the loss, which dropped his record to 1-3. The only bright moment on the Kansas offense came from Spanish. As he went 3-3 on the day and hit his seventh home run of the season, he also drove in two runs and scored once. Kansas also lost the third game. Wheeler started, pitched five and two-thirds innings and As the offense tried to claw the Jayhawks back in the game, Kansas went through seven relief pitchers. Freshman Eric Peterson lasted the longest, pitching an inning and two-thirds of another. Four of the team's pitches during the game failed to register an out. "If our starter doesn't get to the seventh inning, we are in trouble," Price said. "They definitely beat our bullpen up this series." allowed eight hits and five runs. Trailing 10-5 in the eighth inning, Spanish led the inning with a triple. Sophomore Travis Metcalf followed at the plate and hit his team-leading 10th home run of the season, cutting Baylor's lead to 5 points. Kansas failed to score again in the ninth and Baylortacked on one more, securing the final score of 11-5. Although Kansas trails Baylor in the Big 12 for hits this season, Ryan Baty said this weekend's series didn't reflect the team's No.2 rank. "We had a chance to win a series, and we did not come to play the second half of the game today." he said. With the two defeats, Kansas' record dropped to 32-18 with 7-11 in conference play. Kansas will return to the field tomorrow when they host in-state rival Wichita State at Hoglund Ballpark. - Edited by Lindsay Hanson Softball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B In yesterday's game, the 'Hawks were blanked by the Bears 4-0. "I didn't think I could get to it and in the last second it was right there," Wallach said. "I thought it was going to go straight over my head so I just tried to stay with it." With a runner on second and one out, Baylor center fielder Kelly Levesque hit a monster blast to dead center when Wallach made a miraculous leaping over-the-shoulder catch. Milhoan gave up four runs on eight hits, but the offense gave her little to work with by coming away "She's such an amazing player," Pierce said of Wallach. "I thought it was to the fence and she did a ballerina spin and made an amazing play." Golfers CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B "They are just as frustrated with their performance as the coaching staff is," she said. "This is a team that will not quit." Next up for Kansas (26-21, 4-14 Big 12) is a trip to Oklahoma City, Okla., for the Big 12 Conference Tournament. The Jayhawks finished ninth in the conference, and will play Texas Tech at 5 p.m. Thursday in the opening round. Bunge thinks her team has plenty of fight left for the tournament. The Bears did all their damage in the fourth innings with two outs. They scored all four runs off four hits, accented by a home run by left fielder Kelly Osburn. "I definitely still feel like I can win it," Marshall said. "I am playing with a lot of confidence right now." — Edited by Brandon Gay Randall said the team was right where he wanted it before the tournament. Hesaid Marshall and Hall were both hitting the ball well. “Offensively, we just tightened up,” Bunge said. “We’re much more talented than that.” with only two hits. Sadly, it's not going to change anytime soon. There are no plans to give Kansas an indoor facility in Lawrence right now. The powers-that-be just assume these women trek to Topeka or Overland Park or even the hated Show-Me-State. They don't seem to really care. Wood CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B The loss dropped her to 10-9 on the year. All this ignorance goes back to the worst hire Kansas has ever had — the nut job that was Al Bohl. Since his Fresno State days, Bohl was obviously a two-sport athletics director — football and softball. All the other sports could kiss his bizarre backside. Volleyball coach Ray Bechard said he hardly The other eight "home matches" were played from Topeka to Overland Park to Mission. The ultimate punch in the stomach came on April 19 when rain forced a "home" match with Texas A&M out of Lawrence and into the Carriage Club in Kansas City, Mo. Yes, the Kansas Jayhawks played a home match in the great state of Missouri. "We had one match at Robinson," Waterman said, shaking her head. "One home match." However, three of the four matches scheduled to be played at Robinson were either canceled or moved out of town because of bad weather. A team that next year will be without Marshall, statistically one of the best Kansas golfers ever, but will continue with a theme of strong relationships, hard work and dedication. "This tournament is so important because everyone is jockeying for position for next year," Hall said. Edited by Ryan Wood knew Bohl. Former basketball coach Roy Williams told The Kansas City Star that Bohl never did anything for him. Waterman agrees with both of them. "We had been preached that football was the priority." Waterman said. "That's all, we ever heard." Funny, because at Bohl's going-away party on his driveway April 9, he blamed Roy Williams for not letting him make the department as a whole better. Apparently, Bohl thought Kansas only had three sports football, basketball and softball. Jayhawk players, meanwhile, continue to live under neglect. They have no home, the men's team was cut two years ago and nobody at Kansas seems to care that they're getting abused. That's no way to treat one of your own. Wood is a Lee's Summit, Mo... senior in journalism. --- Tuesday April 29, 2003 Vol.113. Issue No.144 Today's weather 77° Tonight:58° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864-4810 or editor@kansan.com THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS A weekend on the road with the Kansas baseball team p.1B Josh Duran SARS slows study abroad plans By Nikki Overfelt noverfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome is putting some students' study abroad plans on hold. Todd Barrett, Hiawata senior, was planning on leaving for a three-week trip to Beijing on May 22, but the SARS outbreak has postponed his plans. "It's kind of frustrating, but we also realize it's for our best interest," he said. Barrett was scheduled to go with the Kansas Asia Scholars on a grant from the center for East Asian studies. The students going on the program plan to study different aspects of the Chinese culture and then come back and educate others about their findings, Barrett said. His project would focus on hospice programs in China. Depending on when the outbreak of SARS is under control in China, the group is looking at going during the last three weeks of the summer or over winter break, Barrett said. If neither of those options work out, two groups might go next summer. Barrett is not the only one whose plans are on hold because of SARS. The office of study abroad is postponing other summer programs, but not canceling any, said Susan Gunbeck Tedesco, director of the office. "We keep thinking the crisis will peak and then it'll be safe again," she said. A School of Business program that was slated to go to Taiwan will be relocated to Germany. One KU student who was scheduled to go to Beijing with a program through Columbia University will not be able to go because the program was canceled. Two other students scheduled to go to Beijing this summer are waiting to hear about their programs. Gronbeck-Tedesco said they would probably wait and go in the fall, but the situation was not finalized yet. So far no KU students have had to SYMPTOMS OF SARS return home from programs because of SARS. Grombeck-Tedesco said. - Fever greater than 100.4 - Overall feeling of discomfort - Headache "He's not in an area that has a lot of cases." she said. The office has been talking to one student in Hong Kong about once a week, she said. Gronbeck-Tedesco said the student has asked to stay, and she thinks he will be able to finish his semester there. - Mild respiratory symptoms - Dry cough and trouble breathing after two to seven days Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Gronbeck-Tedesco said that she realized that students plan their academic lives around these trips, so the office is trying not to let SARS change the program too much. "We're trying not to cancel unless we absolutely have to," she said. Trickling Edited by Leah Shaffer 100 Kelley Weiss/Kansan Paul Kopecky, Des Moines junior, shows the two things he wants to balance in life - time and money. "It's not the money that drives me but the ability to have a true lifestyle, which is the control of both time and money," he said. E-commerce generates money for KU student By Danielie Hillix and Robert Perkins editor@kansan.com Special to the Kansan Paul Kopecky will arrive in a Hummer stretch limousine to his graduation party in two years. He plans to invite everyone he knows to celebrate his simultaneous exit from college and the working world. "I want 3,000 people at a big retirement, I mean graduation party," the Des Moines, Iowa junior said. In fact, it will be a retirement party as well. His extravagant celebration will be funded with the millions he expects to make through Quixtar, an e-commerce mall where a variety of products from computers to laundry detergent to vitamins are sold for what the company says are discounted prices. Alticor, the company responsible for Amway, started Quixtar. A year and a half ago, Kopecky bought a multi-level marketing franchise from Quixtar. Now, instead of relying solely on the University of Kansas and his business degree, Kopecky plans to get both an education and a fortune from Quixtar. "Success with Quixtar is determined on strictly ambition," Kopecky said. "Who can develop themselves into someone who can understand success principles and apply success principles. Because they're not taught at a university, I'll say that again. Success principles are not taught at a university." Kopecky is one of the thousands of people who have bought into the multilevel marketing business craz and its promise of riches. More than 720,000 people joined Quixtar in 2001 with the thoughts of building their own fortune through the multilevel business plan. Anyone can become an independent business owner, or IBO, through the Quixtar franchise. A one-time setup fee of $125 gives a member IBO status, as well as access to Quixtar's Web site. "This is a business concept most people aren't familiar with," Kopecky said. An IBO gets his first paycheck by purchasing items from this Web site themselves, Robin Luymes, manager SEE TRICKLE ON PAGE 7A Quixtar pricing offers little advantage By Danielle Hillix and Robert Perkins editor@kansan.com Special to the Kansan When making a sales pitch, Quixtar independent business owners, or IBOs, repeatedly mention that they receive discounts on items they buy through quixtar.com. They say that the $125 setup fee that an IBO pays can be quickly and easily recouped through the savings offered on the Web site The Better Business Bureau says that Quixtar members can buy products at preferred pricing. But a little research raises some big questions about Quixtar discounts. IBO Carlos Borda, La Paz, Bolivia sophomore, allowed the Kansan to use his account to log on to the password-protected quixtar.com Web site. In the online mall, we chose three common items and looked up the prices on quixtar.com. The items we chose were an IBM ThinkPad computer, standard bathroom cleaner and Dr. Marten sandals. Note that no price included shipping and handling fees. We wanted to see if the prices offered on quixtar.com were indeed lower than what an average shopper could get with a little bit of bargain hunting. The computer was an IBM ThinkPad A31 2652 with a Mobil Intel Pentium 4 Processor, a CD-ROM drive, 20 gigabyte hard-drive, 128 megabytes of memory and Windows XP. Quixtar offered its IBOs the "discounted" price of $1.574. We went to ibm.com and found the same computer retailing for $1,419. That's a difference of $155. Advantage: ibm.com. Quixtar fared no better on the bathroom cleaner. The online mall offered the L.O.C.-brand Plus Bathroom Cleaner Starter Pack for $18.05. The kit includes a spray bottle and 16.9 ounces of concentrated cleaner, which when added to water makes 67.9 ounces of cleaner. This translates to approximately 27 cents per ounce of cleaner. Quixtar touts its partnership with Dr. Martens on its Web site's front page. Quixtar IBOs can buy a pair of Dr. Marten's men's Fisherman sandals for $91.08. The Web site drugstore.com charges $4.99 for 29.3 ounces of Lysol Basin, Tub, and Tile Cleaner, already mixed and packaged in a spray bottle. This translates to 17 cents per ounce of cleaner. Advantage:drugstore.com. Or they could go to nordstrom.com and buy an identical pair for $89.95. Advantage: nordstrom.com. — Edited by Andrew Ward Architecture Studio 804 burglarized over weekend By JJ Hensley jhensley@kansan.com Kansan staff writer What he got was a bizarre foot chase after a suspected burglar that didn't end until officers caught up with Spainhour, a colleague and the suspect walking down the road. Graduate architect Brian Spainhour was just looking to get to architecture Studio 804 early on Saturday morning to get work done before the other architecture students arrived. Based on police reports and recollections of student workers at Studio 804, 1718 Atherton Court, here's what happened: One or two young men broke into the house in East Lawrence designed and built by upperclass and graduate architecture students, sometime after 3 a.m. SEE BURGLARIZED ON PAGE 8A By Aaron Showalter and Mandalee Meisner editor@kansan.com Special to the Kansan Legislation to peck out cockfighting This time last year, Wayne Woody spent 10 hours a day caring for his 200 roosters. Now, only empty pens greet him in the morning on his property outside of Baldwin City. Last summer, Woody, a 1954 graduate of the University of Kansas, gave away all of his chickens because he knew that impending laws would soon make his hobby, breeding roosters for fighting, pointless. "Up until last year, the Legislature didn't see anything wrong with it," Woody said. "It's not just about chickens. People got to stop and figure out they're taking our freedoms away." Next month, a federal law will take effect that prohibits the transport of roosters across state lines for the purposes of fighting. Although animal rights activists scored a major victory with the new anti-cockfighting legislation, breeders like Woody see it as a loss of a longstanding and cherished rural pastime. Cockfighting has been illegal in Kansas since 1976, but some breeders 45 SEE COCKFIGHTING ON PAGE 8A 4 . 1 2A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front TUESDAY,APRIL29,2003 News briefs CAMPUS Graduate school lecture to focus on legal issues The University of Kansas' graduate school will host a public lecture highlighting how scholarly works influence the legal system today. The lecture will feature Robert L. Gernon, a Kansas Supreme Court Justice, Milton Diamond, a professor at the University of Hawaii and Charlene Muehlenhard, professor of psychology and women's studies. Diana Carlin, dean of the graduate school, said she thought the program would show graduate students that their work can have a broad effect. "The program is designed to show how the graduate community influences society," she said. "The impact is not just on our individual students." Gernon will discuss how scholarly work has been cited in court decisions, including his own. The lecture will be from 7:30 to 9 p.m.tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Admission is free. In addition to the feature presentation, Diamond will present a workshop on bioeetics from noon to 1:30 p.m. today at Alcove E in the Kansas Union. — Henry C. Jackson University establishes Billy Mills scholarship Running Strong for American Indian Youth has pledged $25,000 to the Kansas University Endowment Association to endow the Billy Mills Running Strong for American Indian Youth Scholarship Fund. The fund will provide scholarships for American Indians in the Multicultural Scholars in Education program in the University of Kansas School of Education. "Scholarships continue to be a major priority for KU Endowment," said John Scarffe, representative for KU Endowment Association. "It's especially gratifying to receive funds that will assist American Indian students." Billy Mills, a 1962 alumnus of the University, won the gold medal in the 10,000-meter run in the 1964 Olympics. He is the national representative for Running Strong for American Indian Youth, based in Lorton, Va. Nikki Overfelt STATE Former prisoner of war returns to Manhattan MANHATTAN — Turning down a chance for dinner at the White House, Army Pfc. Patrick Miller, a former prisoner of war in Iraq, received a hero's welcome Saturday from Kansas State University football fans. During a halftime ceremony at the team's annual spring scrimmage, Miller thanked "everybody for all the support they have given me." He also urged the more than 12,000 spectators not to forget the troops still in Iraq and "those who died for what we have." "This is why we live in the greatest country in the world," said Miller, 23, of Park City, in his first public appearance in Kansas since arriving home Thursday night. The ceremony, which was coach Bill Snyder's idea, was part of a tribute by the University to troops from nearby Fort Riley. NATION University of Missouri gains Bingham portrait COLUMBIA, Mo. — George Caleb Bingham is recognized as one of Missouri's most important 19th-century artists. He was also the first professor of art at the University of Missouri. it wasn't until the 21st century,however, that the university's Museum of Art and Archaeology could boast ownership of its first original work by Bingham. The museum already exhibits several prints of the artist's works and has one of his oil portraits on loan. On Friday, officials unveiled the museum's own Bingham painting: a portrait of Thomas Withers Nelson, who lived in Boonville, Mo., and died in 1879. "We brought it back to Missouri, where it belongs," said museum director Marlene Perchinske. The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30, 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00. KUJHTV News: Leslie Torrez and Heather Hopper Weather: Brandi Gunter Sports: Doug Danahoo KUJH-TV News On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 207 Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to Kelley Weiss/Kansan kansan.com and listen to KTalk. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Andrew Luxem, Topeka junior, sifts through mud from a Native American archaeological site in Tonganoxie. Luxem works with Brad Logan, assistant professor of anthropology, floating soil to separate the different samples, such as charcoal and seeds from pottery. Luxem said that people always thought they were panning for gold. kansan.com To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to the 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Camera on KU WRANDY LEAF Natasha Morse of the University of Wisconsin at Madison will give a Brown Bag Lecture on "The Ambassador and the Dictator: The Joseph E. Davies Collection of Russian/ Soviet Art" from noon to 1 p.m. today at Room 318 in Bailey Hall, Call 864-4236. Dr. Milton Diamond, authority on bioethics, will speak at the Graduate School Inaugural Alumni Day Brownbag Workshop from noon to 1:30 p.m. today at Alcove E in the Kansas Union. Call 864-4141. ment of physics and astronomy will lecture on "Solar Neutrino Experiments and Evidences for Neutrino Oscillations" at 4 p.m. today at Room 1089 in Malott Hall. Call 864-4626. The KU Ki Aikido Sports Club will practice from 5:30 to 7 tonight at room 207 in Robinson. Contact Andrew Wolff at 843-4732. The KU Karate Kobudo Club will practice from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight in St. Lawrence Catholic Center. Contact Hannah Reynolds at 812-3422. University Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Gread Ave. Contact Rick Clock at 841-3148. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com will meet at 7:30 tonight at the English Room in the Kansas Union. Contact Tiffany Lopez at 550-8312. Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor "Faith Forum: A Liberal Take on Christianity" from 8:30 to 9:30 tonight in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. Asian American Student Union Mohammed Alenezy of the depart- ON THE RECORD A 23-year-old KU student told Lawrence police that someone damaged a window of her apartment between 4:26 a.m. and 4:29 a.m.Saturday in the 3000 block of West 30th Court, according to reports. Damage was estimated at $100. A 23-year-old KU student told Et Cetera Lawrence police that someone damaged the rear triangle window of her car and stole her stereo between 6 p.m. Thursday and 5 p.m. Saturday in the 1300 block of Louisiana Street, according to reports. The loss was estimated at $350. Lawrence police that someone broke her car window and took the faceplate from her JVC stereo between 10 p.m. Friday and 3:15 p.m.Saturday in the 1300 block of Louisiana Street, according to reports.The loss was estimated at $425. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Staffer-Flint Hail, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS60445. The University Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form, A 20-year-old KU student told The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 60045 filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass 749,1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM (PS-13) 4:15 7:10 CITY OF GOD (p) 9:30 ONLY ADAPTATION. (p) NO SHOWS 2 admissions for the price of $1 an Tues Domestic &Foreign Complete Car Care LAWRENCE "We Stand Behind Our Work,and WE CARE!" AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. BUY ONE GET ONE FREE NEW LOWER PRICES Men's Suits Starting at just 2 for $299 EASTON'S LIMITED 839 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KS 66044 843-5755 BUY ONE GET ONE FREE Men's Suits EASTON'S EL 839 MASSACHUSETTS Sunrise Terrace Apartments Availabie Fall Available Fall Two Story, and Two baths - Two, Three, & Four Bedroom w/ Two Story, and Two baths - Studios & One Bedroom - On Site Laundry - Some with w/d's - Digital Cable Ready - Balcony / Decks w/ view The blue buildings on the hill (Past Tanglewood Apts) With path to Chi Omega Fountain No pets 951 Arkansas, Buildings H-P 841-5797 Call to view . TUESDAY,APRIL29,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 34 BSU chooses new leaders By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Two close votes led to two new leaders for the Black Student Union. In one of the closest elections in the organization's history, Trey Allen, Wichita freshman, was elected president last night by a margin of three votes over Renita Norman, Topeka sophomore, securing a one-year term as the head of BSU. "I'm already thinking about next year," Allen said. "I've got a big role and I'm going to try to make things better for the future." Because of the close vote margin, and Allen's friendship with Norman, who served as BSU's co-programs chair this year, Allen said his victory was a little bittersweet. "I hope she knows I'll do the best for this organization," Allen said. "We've got a great executive board, and we're all going to work together." Allen was elected at BSU's last meeting of the school year at the Burge Union. In addition to electing Allen president, members of BSU also elected eight other executive board positions for next year. In the night's other close election, C'Nea Hatches, Valparaiso, Ind., sophomore, defeated Alicia McDougal, Lenexa freshman, by exactly one vote for the vice president's position. Hatches served in the same role for BSU this year. Hatches said she wanted to improve the dedication level among BSU members. She said that attendance tended to wane at the end of the spring semester, and she wanted to improve on it. "There's a saying. 'If something isn't broke, don't fix it,'" Hatches said. "I'm not saying BSU is broke, but I see two major Hatches said fund raising and participation were at the top of her to do list for next year's BSU executive board. cracks." Candidates for executive board positions gave two-minute speeches, which were followed by limited question-and-answer sessions with the candidates. Jeff Dugas, Naperville, Ill., freshman, was elected as one of BSU's co-programs chairpersons. He said he wanted BSU to be more involved with the community and to focus on improving academic support. "We need to be there for each other." he said during his speech. "We need more programs to help our grades. We all came here to graduate." EIGHT TRAIN Trey Allen, Wichita freshman, laughs during last night's Black Student Union meeting. Allen was elected BSU's new president, replacing Mark Dupree, Kansas City, Kan., junior. "It feels great," Allen said. "I'm already thinking about next year." Mark Dupree, the outgoing president of BSU, said he looked forward to next year's board taking over. Andy Samuelson/Kansan "I'm confident," Dupree said "I believe they will push forward and surpass what we've done." Dupree, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said he would still be involved in BSU but would not take a role on the executive board. Dupree was recently elected to a junior/senior College of Liberal Arts and Sciences seat in Student Senate. Edited by Andrew Ward KUnited tries to erase coalition divisions within Senate Bv Cate Batchelder By Cate Batchelder cbatchelder@kansan.com Kansan staff writer By Saturday, the Student Senate executive staff were supposed to clear out of their offices. Desk candy, Senate party pics and an inspirational poster of Princess Diana posing with a small child were all gone. "It's sad." said Anna Clovis, former executive secretary, putting office supplies in a box Friday afternoon. Clovis' leave of absence won't last long. She'll have office hours to serve next year because she won a freshman/sophomore senator seat. Catherine Bell, former student executive chairwoman, will only have to move next door. As student body vice president, she'll have a new office. With the new offices come a new executive staff with new ideas. In his first report to the new senators at joint Senate on Wednesday, Student Body President Andy Knopp listed the projects they could expect to work on next year. This included a student online vote for new fees, a free on-campus bus route and volunteer escort service to walk students home after dark. Also included were an expanded sexual assault awareness program at the Emily Taylor Resource Center, a plan to lobby the city commission to repeal the city ordinance that allows searches in living spaces, an online book exchange keeping an eye on tuition enhancements and the creation of an executive staff position to address cultural sensitivity in Student Senate. The ideas came from the KUnited platform, Knopp and Bell's coalition; the Delta Force coalition and faculty and administrative suggestions. Knopp addressed the "divisions" between opposing coalitions that ran for Senate seats. He said it didn't matter whose ideas they were anymore. "I truly believe that the day we all stop worrying about who gets KU NITED the credit for what we do is the day Student Senate can reach its full potential," he said. Bell reiterated the hope of breaking down coalition division within Student Senate saying any differences were hype. "I don't see a lot of differences between coalitions and I think that reflects my experience in Student Senate," she said. Bell tried to get the senators excited for the next year's projects as well as the friendships they would make along the way. But it was Knopp who gave them something to work for by inviting them to stand up and say a pledge, New Appointed Executive Staff Student executive Student executive chairman: Kyle Johnson Treasurer: Lindsay Kokoruda Assistant treasurer: Bryan Young Executive Secretary: Manuell Jones Communications director: Jana Szatkowski Legislative director: Blake Shuart Community affairs director: Nick Sterner Center for Community Outreach co-directors: Kevin Hager and Kaelyn Fox which he wrote. Transportation director: Tim Akerman "I, state your name in full, pledge to work for the student of the University of Kansas for the next 365 days and beyond..I will proudly serve as an elected mem- Source: Andy Knopp, student body president ber of the Student Senate of the University of Kansas of the students, by the students and for the students." — Edited by Melissa Hermreck THIS WEEK at The New Granada WEDNESDAY SIN 25¢ DRAWS WEDNESDAY UNO de MAYO! $2 coronas $2 margaritas $2 ciclons chillers $2 mojitos DJ Nick Redell FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink SATURDAY The Schwag GRATEFUL DEAD TRIBUTE 18+ Doors open at 8 p.m. student owned and operated WWW.THEGRANADA.COM THIS WEEK at The New Granada WEDNESDAY SIN 25¢ DRAWS THURSDAY UNO de MAYO! $2 coronas $2 margaritas $2 ciclons chillers $2 mojitos DJ Nick Redell FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink SATURDAY The Schwag GRATEFUL DEAD TRIBUTE 18+ Doors open at 9 p.m.7 SAND CASTLE tournament cash prizes $100: 1st $50: 2nd $25: 3rd CA$H CA$HCA$HCA$H CA$HCA$HCA$HCA$H CA$HCA$HCA$HCA$H CA$HCA$HCA$HCA$H MORE OF IT. ALWAYS. SELL YOUR TEXTBOOKS Now Thru Finals. Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill www.jayhawkbookstore.com 843-3826 - 1420 Crescent Rd. SAND CASTLE tournament cash prizes $100: 1st $50: 2nd $25: 3rd Wed. April 30 11:00am-3:00pm Wescoe Beach FREE (IN JAHAWK) BLDG. Sun Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill www.jayhawkbookstore.com 843-3826 • 1420 Crescent Rd. LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS INC. 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. www.pipelineproductions.com TUESDAY APRIL29TH KOSS CANADIAN RAGNEED with the Daybirds www.pipelineproductions.com TUESDAY, APRIL 29TH CROSS CANADIAN RAGWEED with the Daybirds THURSDAY, MAY 1ST JASON BOLAND AND THE STRING GLUE GUYS SUPERMEN AND FORT INTENTION BEAUMONT SUNDAY, MAY 4TH KOTTONMOUTH KINGS WITH RIDDLIN' KIDS AND ZEBRAHEAD APPEARING AT THE Beaumont ALL AGES SATURDAY, MAY 17th BR549 COMING SOON TO THE BOTTLENECK 717 NEW HAMPSHIRE LAWRENCE, KS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30TH DOORS OPEN AT 10PM DJ P MAC LETHAL APPROACH AND ARCHETYPE FRIDAY, MAY 2ND SHANTI GROOVE WITH $2 SHOE REVIVAL STORY SATURDAY, MAY 3RD SHAKING TREE WITH KEY AND LEAVE SUNDAY, MAY 4TH 2 SKINNEE J's* WITH FULL FEATURE AND CORE PROJECT WE ONE SDAY, MAY 14TH ZUVUYA FEATURING MICHAEL TRAVIS OF STRING CHEESE INCIDENT WITH MARTUB THURSDAY, MAY 15TH THROW RAG* WITH WASTED STACEY WEDNESDAY, MAY 21ST SOCIAL BURN* WITH DOUBLE DRIVE AND SOFT ECHO TUESDAY APRIL 29, 2003 OPINION 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY,APRIL29,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goepfert and Justin Henning managing editors 864-4854 or jgoepfert@kansan.com and jhenning@kansan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-4810 or lshaffer@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson opinion editors 864-4924 or opinion@kansan.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsales@kansan.com Malcolm Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7668 or mfisher@kansan.com EDITORIAL BOARD Show city support for liquor sales on Sundays Earlier this month, the Lawrence City Commission tabled an ordinance that would have allowed liquor stores to remain open on Sundays. Liquor regulations in the state of Kansas can be traced back to "blue laws," which were originally enacted to regulate moral behavior. These have little relevance to the city of Lawrence in 2003. If a liquor store wishes to remain closed on Sunday, that should be the store's decision, not government mandate. As the law stands, people who want to enjoy a cold beer on a Sunday afternoon must buy it on Saturday or stockpile drinks for consumption on demand. The ordinance to allow Sunday liquor sales is being tabled until the city commission receives more feedback from liquor stores and the community. The University of Kansas student body—the majority of which presumably supports Sunday liquor sales—represents a significant portion of the Lawrence community. The commissioner's phone numbers and e-mail addresses are also available at http://www lawrenceks.org/commission.shtml. To get archaic laws changed, those voices must be heard. To make a case on the issue, contact the city commission by mail at City Hall; P.O.Box 708; Lawrence, KS 66044. Ben Ross for the editorial board SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at reader-step@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position(faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTER GUIDELINES 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Maximum Length; SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Staffer-Flint STINSON'S VIEW DAMASCUS! DAMASCUS, GEORGE W.! THEN TEHRAN, THEN PYONGYANG. THEN ... WOLFO WITZ THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS © 2003. BUSH OF ARABIA Take pride in University's culture PERSPECTIVE Cultural center — the place that cradles current trends. The University of Kansas could be the biggest culture center in society. During the last three weeks, its possibilities have shown themselves; therefore society expects our University to be that. Three weeks ago, KU students were excited because of the national basketball tournament. Kansas beat Duke, Arizona and Marquette. After each game, we got excited and were happy that we were KU students. The residents of Lawrence also fully supported the Jayhawks, even though not all of them could claim Kansas as their alma mater. COMMENTARY 图 Two weeks ago, everyone in Lawrence was surprised about two athletic heads' future careers. The chancellor fired Al Bohl, the KU athletics director. Former Kansas coach Roy Williams decided not to try for the national championship next season at Kansas. In Japanese colleges, rarely are school affairs like these even talked about. As long as you are not a financial donor or a sports fanatic, you do not think about school pride. Moreover, usually residents are separated from college. In my country, the university is just a place to complete a degree. In Japan, communities do not expect to have relationships with colleges except in financial affairs, such as taxation, housing and sales to student patrons. Kengo Terada opinion@hansan.com Above all, sports are the biggest motivators in connecting students and residents of Lawrence. We all love to watch and cheer basketball and football. Right now, students are talking about the fate of the KU basketball team like it's their health. Everyone's emotions depend on the basketball program's performance, fluctuating between hope and despair from week to week. The community supports KU athletics, especially after beating Marquette. Hundreds of people, including many children and their parents, headed for Wescoe Beach after the game. Go downtown; you can find signs in support of the jayhawks, not just the basketball team. Go to Wal-Mart; you can buy cheap KU T-shirts to show your pride. When I graduated from my university in Japan, my friends and I looked for something to commemorate my achievement but found only pencils and pens with the university's logo in the bookstore. While watching a volleyball game last semester, I noticed that a bunch of children had come to cheer on the Jayhawks. Most of them told me they were going to play volleyball at Kansas. As soon as they Many Lawrence residents came to the University during International Awareness Week and were impressed by the traditional and contemporary performances from around the world. They learned about the active Latino culture and its contrast to the grace of Asian culture. No one expected Middle Eastern countries to have powerful dance. Every event touched on a different culture to open awareness of cultural diversity. told me their dreams, they asked to get autographs from the basketball players. In my country, no one wants to get autographs from college athletes. Our former basketball coach Roy Williams decided on his next destination. North Carolina. Now that the University has announced former Illinois coach Bill Self as the new Kansas coach, Lawrence is fussing about basketball again. Not just with sports — the University is the cultural center of our society. As a result, all members of society will benefit from the University more than they used to. Students don't care about Lawrence affairs as much as Lawrence residents care about the University. Students are less aware of our University's value. However, we should be thankful for the favors it does us. Only students can make the University good, therefore students should take more pride in their University. Terada is a Kashiwa, Japan, sophomore in journalism. PERSPECTIVE Smokers: Show a little consideration DONNA BOWMAN COMMENTARY Smoking. No matter where you go, there it is. You can't escape it. You go on campus, and it's there. You go out to eat, and it's there. And you've heard all the excuses, too. Ranging from "It's my life" to "I don't want to be an old incontinent person in a nursing home, so I want to kill myself with lung cancer," smokers are quick with a comeback when I say smoking is disgusting. It always ends up being their right. Well, whatever happened to nonsmokers' rights? Nonsmokers have as many rights as smokers, and often the main concern is for protecting the smokers' rights. If smokers want nonsmokers' support, they should recognize that nonsmokers have rights, too. I want to be able to walk on campus and not have to dodge every smoker lest I get smoke in the face. I would like to go into a restaurant and be able to eat my food without a cloud of smoke hanging over my head. Even if I do ask to be seated in a nonsmoking section, it doesn't mean that smoke doesn't travel. Smoke doesn't know the boundaries inside a Chili's. It will go wherever it wants. Meagan Kelleher opinion@kansan.com Lawrence is considering going the route Salina took in imposing a smoking ban on restaurants, bar and grills and Zach Stinson for The University Daily Kansas Restaurants where smokers were once regulars are now becoming deserted because their loyal following needs to find somewhere else to light up. Businesses have had to change their formats from bars and billiards, to more family-friendly establishments now that they've lost their core business to the ban. Those opposed to the ban have a valid argument. It is their right to smoke, and in former institutions where it was allowed, they had free reign. other public domains earlier this year The ban in Salina, which was voter-approved, enraged many smokers, who claimed that it infringed on their rights. Whatever smokers choose to do with their lungs, their mouths and their lips is up to them. For some, it may even be They need to realize nonsmokers are willing to have to answer the question, "Smoking or non?" every time they enter a restaurant, as long as smokers can have enough respect to not smoke in packs in front of restaurant doors, or to stop smoking while walking on campus, trailing smoke and cancer behind. Simple actions such as throwing cigarette butts into ashtrays or chewing a piece of gum in a crowded classroom so nonsmokers don't have to smell the stench of smoke. These are simple requests. It's a give-and-take situation, and because smokers are steadily shortening their life spans, it is one they may want to act on quickly. addictive, and no matter what they know about the health risks, they cannot stop. So, yes, it is true that this ban affects the smokers' rights to slowly kill themselves. Yet smokers have no concern for non-smokers' rights. Millions have the right to not smoke, but that never seems to be their concern. If smokers want to have non-smokers' support against this ban, they need to take in other considerations too. Kolloher is an Omaka, Neb. sophomore in journalism and political science. Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com of geeks. Yes, I am desperate now, But oh, will you see, and how. It will be a grand old time, He will buy all the drinks of mine. We will quickly have a talk, So we can walk. Holding hands And making plans. Then the weeks will be over, And we will be sober, But maybe, just maybe, We'll stay together forever in love. I just saw a Right Guard deodorant commercial with Jim Breuer, Randy Johnson and Kyle from The Real World: Chicago. What is that about? Can you tell me, Tim? If loving sour cream is wrong, I don't want to be right. I just think that everything feels better naked. 回 Why do teachers feel that they can skip the letter "E"? You can get an A, B, C, D, or F, but no E. What's up with that? Is anybody else remotely disturbed by the angry gumball commercial? I know it's 2:18 in the morning, but if you cheer me up right now, I'll give you one of my 28 Cadbury eggs. Yeah, so I just heard the steam whistle for the first time, and I think it sounds like a vacuum cleaner. I'll tell you why sorority girls are obsessed with Phi Delt. It's because they have an awesome date party that goes to the Ozarks, and P.S. They're hot. 图 I need to find a boyfriend for two and a half weeks. I hope that he will not be from a group of geeks. 图 A Matt Gehrke is my favorite online gambler ever. 器 TUESDAY,APRIL 29,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Allergies accompany spring season By Nikki Overfelt overfelt@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Springtime means the blooming of flowers and trees, but for University of Kansas students who suffer from seasonal allergies that also means pollen. In the spring, pollen from buds and trees is the allergen that bother people with allergies the most, said Patricia Denning, staff physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Suffering from seasonal allergies doesn't stop Ann Foltz from enjoying springtime, however. "I hate winter so much that I'll take it," the Abilene senior said. Foltz's symptoms normally include runny nose, itchy eyes and sinus pressure, she said. She used to take Claritin for her symptoms, but now just takes Benadryl on the days she's especially suffering, she said. "Mine are so sporadic." Foltz said. "Some days they'll be really bad and some days not." The spring allergy season normally lasts for about six to eight weeks from late March to June, Denning said. In June grasses begin to bother those with allergies. In August through October ragweed is the problem allergen, she said. Typical allergy symptoms include itching of eyes, nose, ears and throat, Denning said. Sneezing and drippy eyes and nose are also good indicators of seasonal allergies. Students who suffer from allergies will not have fevers, unlike colds, she said. For relief from symptoms, Denning recommends students talk to a pharmacist about which over-the-counter medication would be best for their symptoms, she said. tion that often goes untapped," she said. "They're a wealth of informa- Some common over-the-counter medications are Claritin, Alavert, Benadryl and Chlortrimeton, Denning said. If the symptoms are not controlled by over-the-counter medications, Denning said, students should see a doctor who can prescribe a prescription antihistamine or nasal steroid spray. Watkins also has an allergy clinic where student can get prescribed allergy shots, Denning said. Watkins does not have its own allergist and does not test for allergies, she said. Although Denning said it's hard to predict the intensity of an allergy season, allergy indexes try to forecast pollen and grass counts for the day. Charles Barnes, director of allergy and immunology research at Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., sends allergen counts to the National Allergy Bureau, who then generates a forecast of a projected pollen count for the day. The forecast is probably less precise than the weather forecast, but is still fairly accurate. Barnes said. The forecast uses data that is collected from previous days and on that day from past several years, Barnes said. "It's used to make people aware of the pollen that's out there," he said. Because of the late start of spring, many of the tree seasons have overlapped causing those with allergies to suffer, Barnes said. "It's been a pretty bad season," he said. "We've had some pretty good peaks." Right now, mulberry and oak pollen are high in this area, Barnes said. With the recent rain, grass season will start soon, he said. MARKER Edited by Michelle Burhenn Laura Jennings, Leawood sophomore. (right) receives organ donation information from Public Relations Student Society of America member Payal Kapur, Overland Park junior. The association hosted Operation Awareness yesterday on Wescoe Beach as part of the National Organ Donation Awareness Competition. Association encourages organ donation Andy Samuelson/Kansan By Kevin Wiggs kwiggs@kansan.com Kansan staff writer More than 80,000 people are currently awaiting life-saving transplants, and an average of 17 people die every day waiting. The University of Kansas chapter of Public Relations Student Society of America tried to do its part to help when it hosted "Operation Awareness" yesterday on Wesco Beach. They had two Operation games and free information set up for passers-by. "We wanted to raise awareness for the need for donors," said Christa Lobaugh, Wichita senior and president of the association. "We want to get people talking about donating." April is National Donate Life Month, and the group is participating in the National Organ Donation Awareness Competition, sponsored by Rowan University. Rowan University invites all association chapters to participate. After its event, participating chapters must submit a package detailing their program. Competition staff and Rowan University's association faculty advisors select a first, second and third prize winner and one honorable mention. The chapter that produces the best plan receives $400. "I think we have a pretty good shot at winning, as good as anyone," Lobaugh said. "We've put a lot of hard work in all semester." Lobaugh said the event went well, considering participation was hurt by cold and rainy weather early in the morning. Organs and tissue that can be donated include: heart, bone, kidneys, liver, lungs, skin, tendons, and intestines. In 1992, Rowan University's association founder and advisor, Anthony J. Fulginii, received a life-saving kidney transplant from his sister. His students began Organ Donor Awareness Day the following spring. They created the national competition in 1996 to influence more than just those in their own backyard. "Rowan students wanted to do more than educate their community," said Melissa Juhas, president of Rowans University's association. "They wanted to educate communities across the country." Edited by Melissa Hermreck Court won't hear abortion files case The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court refused yesterday to consider whether states should have extensive power to catalog the medical records of women seeking abortions without a guarantee that their identities would remain private. The court turned away a challenge to a requirement that South Carolina abortion providers allow the medical records of abortion patients to be copied and removed from clinics. An abortion clinic and a doctor challenged the regulation as an unconstitutional violation of privacy, and argued it would put women in danger. "Confidentiality is vital to women seeking abortions because they may face harassment and violence from their partners or others for having decided to undergo an abortion," lawyers for the clinic wrote in a court filing. The requirement has been on hold while the clinic appealed. The high court's action, taken without comment, probably means the provision soon will take effect. South Carolina wants abortion clinics to open all files, including patient medical records, if state investigators ask to see them. The clinic claims there is no guarantee the information will remain confidential once it is in the state's hands, and no penalty to the state or its employees if the information is leaked. The clinic claims the regulation would allow public release of patient records, apparently including names and addresses, when a clinic or its staff is under investigation by state licensing authorities. "Those proceedings are open to the press and any other interested persons, including those who participate in activism against abortion patients and providers," lawyers for the clinic wrote. "If you put this information out there antichoice activists are going to get hold of that information and use it. It poses a very great danger to women." Lawyers for the state argued Bonnie Scott Jones Lawyer with the Center for Reproductive Rights the requirement is part of ordinary government record keeping and there is no reason for the high court to get involved. The case arose from the state legislature's move in 1995 to change the way abortion clinics are regulated. A Greenville, S.C., abortion clinic and a doctor challenged the additional medical and safety rules as unconstitutional and medically pointless. The changes were really intended to undermine abortion rights, the clinic claimed. South Carolina legislators said the new regulations would make abortion clinics safer and would protect patients' health. The Supreme Court declined to review an earlier appeal in the case, and most of the new regulations took effect in 2001. A federal appeals court panel rejected the clinic's objections to the medical information regulations last year. The full 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals first agreed to give the case a second look, but then declined to do so. The clinic appealed to the Supreme Court earlier this year. "If you put this information out there, antichoice activists are going to get hold of that information and use it," said Bonnie Scott Jones, a lawyer with the Center for Reproductive Rights, which is representing the clinic. "It poses a very great danger to women." the only address you need to know. WESCOE PUBLICATION CENTER (next door to the cafeteria) 1520 WESCOE let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. 1520 Wescoe let us assist you at our convenient on-campus location. services available: - copies - printing from disk or electronic file - full color printing - resume printing - uv lamination of large format prints - binding services - thesis and dissertation printing - binding services - transparencies - large format print - large selection of papers 864-3354 open 7am-10pm FORALLYOUR PRINTING AND BINDING NEEDS please stop by or call us for more information about our services Over 10 toppings to choose from!!! 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Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. Kansas Union, Room 475 (785) 864.1271 pick up your complimentary, premiere issue of BREAK magazine at your local STA Travel branch. www.statravel.com STA TRAVEL Serving KU UNIVERSIDAD UCA STA TRAVEL ONLINE >> ON THE PHONE >> ON CAMPUS >> ON THE STREET --- 6A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2003 --- Jared Soares/Kansan Mike Feld, Denver freshman, and Troy Hirsch, Hays freshman, run through a scene in the play. The Boys Next Door. Feld and Hirsch rehearsed yesterday for the play, which stars five freshmen and runs today and tomorrow at the Hashinger Hall Theatre. Freshmen perform Broadway play By Jessica Palimenio jpalimenio@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Get acquainted with The Boys Next Door. A group of freshmen Hashinger Hall residents will present a version of the Broadway play this week at the residence hall. The Boys Next Door gives a glimpse into the lives of four handicapped men and their caretaker, Jack. "It's about how they go through their existence and how it affects them a little bit but they really aren't that different," said Colin Elliott, Lawrence freshman, who plays Barry, a 28 year old schizophrenic who believes he is a golf pro. The four men live in an apartment where they all have to work together to make it through the day. Jack has been supervising the group home and helping the men through their problems for eight months and is beginning to get burned out. Monologues throughout the play give insight into thoughts and emotions of each of the main characters. Some of the cast had to play mentally handicapped characters, but they did not find it to be a challenge. After an open casting call in the beginning of March, the group held rehearsals several times a week. "I really just fell in love with the character," said Mike Feld, Denver freshman. "He's really fun." The play was originally scheduled to run after spring break, but they had a casting problem. The student originally cast as Jack, Brandon Anderson, was deployed to Iraq in March. "We lost about two weeks trying to figure out what we were going to do," said Will Russell, Chicago freshman and show director. Russell took over the role. "Will brings all the characters together like no one else could," said Danny Magariel, Overland Park freshman. The cast operated on a limited budget — about $150, Russell said. Hashinger Hall Arts Council supplied the funds. "We had to scrape together for posters and stuff," said Beth Chronister, Topeka freshman. The cast has also used their own clothes for costumes. "It's just part of our characters. They are just everyday people." Magariel said. The cast will perform the play at 7:30 p.m.today and tomorrow in the Hashinger Hall Theatre. The show is free and the doors will open at 7 p.m. Cast members Lucien P. Smith — Danny Magariel Arnold Wiggins — Troy Hirsch - Edited by Michelle Burhenn Norman Bulansky Mike Feld Barry Klemper — Colin Elliott Jack & director- Will Russell Sheila — Beth Chronister Mr. Klemper Brian Wacker Additional female characters Heather Brown Additional male characters — Chad Simmons Online shoppers should know risk By Nicole Roche nroche@kansan.com kansan staff writer Bv Nicole Roché Computer-savvy students have been buying and selling online for years, but some students are still unsure whether these purchases are worth the risk. Last week eBay.com reported a 119 percent increase in profit, according to USA Today. With earnings of $104 million, eBay is racing to become the first online Fortune 500 company. Despite its success, some students choose to avoid the site and its potential problems. Others emphasize that careful use can ensure users will have a positive experience. Nathan Rigney, Louisburg sophomore, said he bought audio equipment online to avoid the sales tax. But despite eBay's popularity, Rigney said he hadn't purchased anything on the site for security reasons. Recently his brother purchased several $300 subwoofers and never received them from the seller. "It's a big-name company, but you're dealing with people one-on-one." Rigney said. "It's tough to know who you're dealing with." Students should make sure they are only making purchases on secure sites, said Ann Brill, an associate professor of journalism who teaches online journalism. She said one key way to determine if a site was secure was to look for an "s" after the http in the Web address. The "s" stands for secure, she said. "If a site asks me for something personal, and they don't have that 's,' I wouldn't give it to them," Brill said. Unfortunately, Brill said, the Internet is not only a way for people to sell but also to steal. "It's like anyone else with a too-good-to-be-true policy." she said. "You have to ask yourself those same questions a consumer would ask." Brill said some of those questions included: Is this a reputable business? Is this a legitimate offer? Is this a secure site? Secure sites will display seals at the bottom of the screen from companies such as Verisign or Authorized Internet Retailer. These companies monitor and regulate monetary transactions online and ensure the authenticity of the business. It's easy to be taken advantage of if you don't know what you're doing online, said Mark Hadley, Prairie Village sophomore. Hadley has purchased hundreds of eBay items for his past two jobs. While working for Collector's Cache in Overland Park, he ordered collectible cards, ornaments and other memorabilia. Now, at Mass Street Comics, 938 Massachusetts St., Hadley buys comics from the site. Hadley said he hadn't had problems with eBay. He said students should carefully scrutinize sellers before deciding to buy. "You have to judge each one, but there are tell-tale signs that a seller is kind of shad." Hadley said. These signs include sellers who are overly persistent or have unusual requests for the transaction, he said. People should check the sellers' rating before buying. EBay.com offers a fraud protection program that can be accessed at its Web site. Jennifer Overstreet. Maize junior, said she had heard of people having problems with the popular site although she does not use it. She occasionally buys books, rare compact discs and concert tickets online — mostly anything she can't find locally. Although online merchants are popular,OverstreetsaidInternet purchases would never replace face-to-face customer interaction. "I like to sift through the CDs myself. I like to walk through a store and smell that bookstore smell," Overstreet said. "I just don't feel the same way about browsing online." —Edited by Michelle Burhenn Local protesters push message while war in Iraq dwindles By Kelley Weiss kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Although the war in Iraq is winding down, peace activists in Lawrence have not backed off. Students and residents gathered Saturday at the Douglas County Courthouse to demonstrate and said they would continue until the troops came home. Allan Hanson, coordinator of the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, said that before the war started, about 300 people came out to protest the war every Saturday. That number fell to about 100 people after the war began. WAGE PEACE WAT ERO BETWEEN THE HISTORIC BATTLES The message against the war — "Don't Attack Iraq" — used to be simple, Hanson said. Now it is harder to get people to demonstrate and to get the message across, he said. Hanson said there were two parts to the message now. First, the coalition does not want the United States to reconstruct Iraq unilaterally because that would tell the world that Americans are imperialists. The threatening language the United States is using against Iran and Syria has also concerned the local coalition. Sarah Sawyer, assistant professor of philosophy, held a sign that said "Stop the Crusades" Saturday at the courthouse. By continuing to demonstrate, Sawyer said it raised awareness. If people disagree, at least they will be considering the issues, she said. "The American public in general seems to be so apathetic about the Iraq issue and international politics," Sawyer said. Eric Haar stood alone across the street from the demonstrators holding a tattered "Bush 2004" sign. Haar, Lawrence resident, said he had been protesting the war protesters for nine weeks. He said that he believed in what president Bush was doing and that the approximately 100 people across the street demonstrating against Bush was a pointless gesture. Approximately 100 people demonstrate for peace Saturday at the Douglas County Courthouse, 111 E. 11th St. Although the war in Iraq is slowing, activists said they would keep demonstrating because they wanted to make sure the United States was not the only country involved in the reconstruction of Iraq and that other preemptive attacks don't happen. Even though Haar was by himself on Saturday he said he didn't mind being alone. "I like it because they see a number of people with shaved heads who are not in the mainstream and then they see me, a bright light of reason and common sense." Eric Haar Eric Haar Lawrence resident and protester of war protesters Kelley Weiss/Kansan Although the KU group Students for Peace was not at the rally Saturday, co-director Amanda Flott said the organization would still demonstrate for peace. The purpose of Students for Peace is not just protesting a war in Iraq, she said. The group "I like it because they see a number of people with shaved heads who are not in the mainstream and then they see me, a bright light of reason and common sense," he said. was formed to address conflicts throughout the world and advocate peaceful resolutions, she said. "My friends who went to war aren't home yet," Flott said. 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"You never make money off of people." "I got involved for one thing only money. Incredible money." Paul Kopecky Des Moines junior kopeckey said. "You make money helping people develop a business and then this Web site—this supplier to a franchise model—pays you." In a multilevel marketing operation like Quixtar, IBOs make money by convincing others to join the organization, Luymes said. Kopecky got involved with multilevel marketing when his sister introduced him to Quixtar. Despite a skeptical first reaction, Kopecky researched the business and decided the opportunity was too good to pass up. He then introduced Quixtar to Lawrence and the University of Kansas. In a year and a half, he has expanded his business chain to include approximately 250 people including University students. Kopecky has formed personal relationships with many of these students. These relationships are what Kopecky said he treasured most about Quixtar now. But that was not always the case. "I got involved for one thing only: money. Incredible money." Kopecky said. He wasn't disappointed. Kopecky said last month he earned $6,000 from his Quitstar franchise. Such commission checks are not uncommon for Kopecky, whose quick success has earned him notoriety throughout the Midwest, he said. Kopecky said other IBOs look to him as an example of someone who can handle the rigors of college on top of a successful business. That doesn't mean he hasn't questioned the validity of getting a college degree. Kopecky said it's hard to stay in school when he did not expect to use his business degree after college. Because of Quixtar, he expects to be financially independent in a couple of years. "I'll make a six-figure income before I graduate school here. I'll make more than any professor on campus, there's no doubt in my mind." Kopecky said. Kopecky's confidence in future wealth comes from his faith in the Quixtar business model. "It's the most perfect business model — ever," he said. Kopecky has found success through Quixtar's multilevel level business model, but statistics show that he is in the minority. Many IBOs, like Carlos Borda, have not made a cent. Four months ago, Borda, La Paz, Bolivia, sophomore, joined Quixart through one of Kopecky's downlines in a business class at the University. So far, Borda has spent more money than he has made. But he remains optimistic about his monetary future. "Some nights I start thinking about it and I really think it's unlimited — just completely unlimited," Borda said. "I was shooting for the millions, then I thought no, multi-millions. The more I think about it, you can really, really shoot for the billions." But the statistics are against him. Quixtar's numbers have slipped after a strong start in 1999. According to a business analysis Web site of the company ran by Scott Larsen, the number of visitors to Quixtar's Web site declined 60 percent, dropping from 1,679,000 visitors during September 1999 to 657,000 during May 2000. Larsen's Web site also shows that Quixtar has had trouble with its IBOs. During the 2002 business year, 81.6 percent of IBOs had not registered a single person. In addition, more than 67 percent of IBOs registered in 2001 did not renew their membership with Quixtar in 2002. This high dropout rate has raised eyebrows at the United States Federal Trade Commission and Better Business Bureau of Western Michigan, where Quixtar and Alticor, are registered. Melissa Caldwell consumer information specialist with the Better Business Bureau, said the Federal Trade Commission received repeated requests for Quixtar documents. So many, in fact, that the FTC added Quixtar to its Frequently Requested Records Reading Room. The online reading room offers 54 pages of complaints filed against Quixtar, ranging from false advertising to faulty products. Caldwell said that Quixtar "You don't have to defend this business It is so good. People can think what they want." Paul Kopecky Des Moines junior was a member of the Better Business Bureau and was listed in good standing. The bureau has processed 27 complaints nationally concerning Quixtar over the past three years. All but two of these complaints have been resolved. According to bureau documents, Quixtar made good faith efforts to resolve the remaining complaints. While Quixtar holds a satisfactory record with the bureau, the bureau's Web site on Quixtar does carry a caution urging consumers to investigate any business or franchise opportunity before investing money. The bureau warns consumers to investigate Quixtar, but the bureau defends Quixtar against skeptics who call it a pyramid scheme. "With Quixtar, there is an actual product being sold, be it radios, cleaning supplies, whatever," Caldwell said. "With a pyramid scheme there is no product. It's just like you coming up to me and saying 'Give me your money and you get somebody else's money and it will all trickle down.' With a multilevel marketing organization there is a product and a market." While Quixtar is legal, Kissan Joseph, associate professor o f should be encouraged to promote diversity in the market place. THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA K 56908998 A ONE K 56908998 A business at the University, said the business had many faults. "It has a very niche market," he said. "I don't see much promise for this." Still, he said that Quixtar Neil Mulka/Kansan rickrecht Sunday May 4, 2008 8:00 PM Yum Haazma'ut/ End of the Year BBQ and Concert Lawrence Jewish Community Center 9th and Jewish Presented by KU Hillel BBQ Dinner at 5:30 PM FREE for Students and Kids under 18, $5 for Community For more information call Carey at 749. 5397 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF PANAMA SENATE www.kuhillel.org Coca-Cola rickrecht Sunday May 4, 2003 8:30 PM Yom Haatzma'ut/ End of the Year BBQ and Concert Lawrence Jewish Community Center 57th and Iowa Presented by KU Hillel BB Dinner at 5:30 PM FREE for Students and Kids under 18, $5 for Community For more information call Corey at 749-5397 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE www.kuhillel.org LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooner Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooner No Cover with KU ID * must be 21 to enter LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID SCHOONERS. 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(913) 894-5533 (800)292-5533 O QUINTILES Join the Search for Better Health! 8A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2003 Cockfighting CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Aaron Showalter/Kansan skirted the law by merely raising roosters in the state and taking them elsewhere—to Oklahoma, for example, where cockfighting is still legal in some counties. A federal bill passed in May 2002 prohibits breeders from carrying roosters across state or international lines for the purposes of fighting, however, making it virtually impossible for breeders in Kansas to sell their prized birds. The law gave breeders one year to make arrangements for their fighting chickens, because on May 13, transporting, buying or selling fighting roosters will become punishable by up to $15,000 and a year in jail. Wayne Pacelle, senior vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based Humane Society of the United States, hopes this federal law will eliminate cockfighting altogether — but he's not convinced that will happen. Pacelle instigated the interstate legislation in 1999. Wayne Woody, Baldwin City resident, with one of two roosters that still occupy his chicken coop. Woody, who raised game roosters for 15 years, got rid of his 200 chickens last fall after a law passed that banned the interstate transport of roosters for the purpose of fighting. "Ilegal cockfighting is far more common than most people realize," Pacelle said. "There's a group of people who are devoted enthusiasts of this blood-sport, and you can find them by going into many counties in Kansas." Pacelle wants to see the sport gone he said it represented the very definition of animal cruelty. "These individuals place healthy birds in a pit to hack each other to death for mere human amusement," Pacelle said. "This is an activity that cannot be justified." Woody said most breeders didn't see cockfighting as inhumane. His roosters receive better treatment than those farmed for food. He points out that each rooster has its own separate pen and is hand fed and watered each "Our chickens are the healthiest in the world. I took better care of my roosters than my wife." Wayne Woody Baldwin City resident day. Whereas most farm chickens are slaughtered at eight weeks, successful fighting roosters can live for years. Mr. Lester "Our chickens are the healthiest in the world," Woody said. "I took better care of my roosters than my wife." Woody's father took him to his first cockfight at age 12 in a time when "they fought chickens everywhere in the state of Kansas," and he fell in love right away. In 1959, he started breeding his own roosters after receiving a family of chickens as a gift. Although he never profited from his hobby, other breeders and businesses that support the industry may feel ripples of financial hardship from the new legislation. Howard Knisley, who raises milo, wheat and roosters on his farm outside of Derby, says his income will take a hit this year. Knisley usually ships his roosters to the Philippines and Guam, two major markets for U.S. fighting roosters. The sale of chickens generates millions of dollars in Kansas and billions nationwide for breeders, Knisley said. Woody and Knisley have both cut back the amount of grain they purchase to feed the roosters significantly. Woody said a feed provider in Bonner Springs no longer had the business those who have quit the game fowl practice. While Knisley usually buys $10,000 worth of grain a year, this year he spent only $1,500. "I've been very hurt over this whole situation." Knisley said. "It'll hurt everybody 'cause the farmer can't sell his grain, and we can't sell our chickens." Pacelle disagreed, calling cockfighting an isolated industry with very little spill over into communities, and says he has no pity for "criminals" who may lose money from their now-worthless game fowl. "Drug dealers lose economic activity when they're not allowed to sell crack. Dog owners lose money when they're not allowed to sell fighting pit bulls," Pacelle said. "So be it." Nonetheless, breeders like Woody see it as an unconstitutional infringement on the rights of rural citizens. "It just seems like it's just another case of urban people with money messing with the business of us rural folks," he said. "I've always loved rooster fighting, and I still do." "I love the roosters. They're magnificent, they really are." on Saturday. Soon thereafter the suspects began making phone calls to students in professor Dan Rockhill's class using the house cell phone. One architecture student became suspicious after receiving a call from the phone at such a late hour and alerted Brian Garvey, another student, to the potential trouble. Burglarized CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A - Edited by Michelle Burhenn Garvey arrived at the house later but couldn't tell what might be missing because of the house's typically unkempt condition, said Lindsey Plant, a fifth-year senior working at the house. Piant said he called the studio phone and the kid answered. "Garvey asks him where he is and the kid tells him. So he goes there and finds the kid walking around with one of our coats on and the cell phone charger hanging out of his pocket." About that time Spainhour pulled up and to found Garvey waving him over to the side of the road. "I thought he had car trouble or something." Spainh said. Spainhour got out of the car and Garvey pointed to the guy standing across the street. As Spainhour and Garvey approached the suspect it became obvious he was under the influence of something, Spainhour said. After talking with the suspect for a few minutes, Spainhour said neighbors started coming outside with information. One returned items found in their back yard that belonged at the Studio 804 house. Another told the KU students the man they were interrogating had been outside on the cell phone since before 6 that morning. "That convinced Brian this was definitely the guy," Spainhoursaid. As the suspect began walking away Garvey told Spainhour to call the authorities while he followed. "The operator gets on the phone and I start explaining to her that we're walking and following this guy." Spainhour said. "The whole situation was really just bizarre and goofy." It ended shortly thereafter when Lawrence police officers caught up with the suspect and his pursurers on 15th street. After patting the man down and returning the students to the house, police handed over property that ranged from a Carhartt coat and a ratchet set, to. of course, a cell phone. "As far as I'm concerned we got our stuff back, and the kid obviously has other problems, so there's really no reason to press charges," Spainhour said. "It's definitely the most bizarre thing to happen on site so far." — Edited by Erin Chapman Contributed Photo A house being built under project Studio 804 was burglarized early Saturday morning. Upon breaking in, the suspect made several calls using the house cell phone, alerting students in the class and prompting them to contact the authorities. MASTERCRAFT APARTMENTS IT'S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. THE RESIDENCE Campus Place APARTMENTS 1145 Louisiana 841-1429 Open mon - fri 9AM - 5PM Apartments available for summer 2003 4 bedroom / 2 bath with loft 4 bedroom / 2 bath 2 bedroom/2 bath fully equipped kitchens furnished and unfurnished apts. available SUNDANCE gas, heat and water private balconies and patios off street parking 24 hour emergency maintenance On site manager 7th & Florida 7th & Florida 785.841.5255 mon-fri 9AM - 6PM sat. 10 AM-5 PM Now leasing for fall 2003 Studios 1BR, 2 BR, 3 BR w/2 baths & 4 BR w/2 baths Furnished Apt. Available on-site laundry facility Gas heat & water pool Fully equipped kitchens including on KU bus route microwaves On-site manager w/d in select Apts 24 hr. emergency Maintenance Private balconies & patios models open daily! EHO 网 1 --- "He was like, 'What are you doing here? Why aren't you going to KU? The girls down there are much hotter. You belong there.' Nicole Wenger, sophomore at Kansas State, relating a conversation with Iowa State basketball coach Larry Eustachy at a party after a K-State-Iowa State game Inside Sports 2B = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS COMMENTARY SPORTS COMMENTARY Joey Berlin jberlin@kansan.com Hail recruits for avoiding Roy-like bail TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2003 If you ever happen to meet any of the Kansas men's basketball team's four incoming recruits next year, stop them and thank them. Pucker up and give them Iowa State coach Larry Eustachy-style kisses on the cheek. They deserve it. After the events of two weeks ago, David Padgett, J.R. Giddens, Omar Wilkes and Jeremy Case didn't have any ethical obligation to come to Kansas. They were recruited under false pretenses. Last year, when each of the four signed their national letters of intent to play at Kansas, they were foolish enough to believe that Roy Williams would be their coach — because Williams had told them so. The four recruits he promised to coach are still coming to Kansas, much because they don't have the luxury of changing travel plans without losing playing time. Now, Williams is in North Carolina living out his dream of coaching the Tar Heels. He gets to start his new job immediately, without penalty. As William lives out his dream, Padgett, Giddens, Wilkes and Case will be denied their dream of playing for Williams. On ethical grounds, the letters of intent they signed have all the value of an Eric Chenowith rookie card. But in the hypocritical, screw-the-kids world of the NCAA, recruits have to be granted a full release from their letter of intent to switch immediately to another school, and a full release is almost never granted. If they're granted a partial release, they have to sit out for at least one year before beginning their college careers. Meanwhile, coaches such as Williams—and Bill Self—simply resign and take another job on a whim. No begging for a contract release, no sitting out a year. With Kirk Hinrich and Nick Collison leaving, the four recruits are just what the program needs. Padgett and Giddens were both selected as McDonald's All-Americans. And Wilkes has been ranked among the nation's top 100 seniors by several recruiting services. Case isn't a highly regarded all-around prospect, but Williams called him the best shooter he had ever signed. Despite losing the coach they dreamed of playing for, they're still coming — mostly because they have almost no choices. Don't take that for granted. Embrace them as much as you've embraced any group of Kansas players ever. Give them the treatment you thought Roy Williams deserved. Berlin is a Leawood senior in journalism Minority hiring lessens in sports The Associated Press Women and minorities are losing ground with jobs in professional and college sports, reversing a trend toward greater diversity, according to a study released yesterday. Every professional sport had lower averages for employing women compared with the last Racial and Gender Report Card two years ago, and minority hiring slipped in pro and college sports, the study found. "While we are creeping toward fair play, we still have a long road ahead," said sports sociologist Richard Lapchick, author of the report published by the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida. Only baseball, the NBA and NHL improved their grades for minority hiring. The 12th issue of the report card studied players, coaches and front office/athletics department employees of major league baseball, the NFL, NBA, NHL, WNBA, Major League Soccer and college sports. It found: Minorities (blacks, Asians, Latinos, Pacific Islanders and American Indians) lost ground in most of the top management positions in college and professional sports, including general managers, team vice presidents and college athletics directors. The percentage of African American men playing college and pro sports continued its decade-long decline in all sports except college and pro basketball and college baseball. The percentage of international Women held less than 45 percent of the head coaching positions for women's college teams in all NCAA divisions. players continued to grow in major league baseball, the NBA, NFL and soccer. "This is a disappointing reversal from the 2001 report, when historically best hiring records were noted both on the basis of race and gender," said Lapchick, who has been tracking gains and losses by women and minorities in sports for 14 years. The report covered the 2001-02 seasons in the NBA and NHL; 2001 in the NFL; 2002 in major league baseball, soccer, and the WNBA; and the 2000-01 academic year for colleges. Two of the most noteworthy highlights from the report, Lapchick said, were that: Black Entertainment Television founder and CEO Robert Johnson was awarded the right to purchase the NBA's new Charlotte franchise, which made him the first African American majority team owner in pro sports. There was an all-time high of 24 head coaches/managers who were minorities in the three biggest professional leagues. The best news for minority coaches was in the NBA, where African Americans held a record 14 head coaching jobs in the 2001-02 season, reaching 48 percent of the total, the highest in the history of any sport. "Traditionally, we've made an effort to hire the best people, period," NBA spokesman Brian McIntyre said. "That's worked well for us over the years, and it continues to work well for us." The report card issued grades in relation to overall patterns in society. For example, with minorities accounting for about 24 percent of the population, an A was achieved if 24 percent of the positions were held by minorities. The WNBA got the highest combined grade for race and gender at A-minus, the NBA got a B-plus, and the NCAA a B. Major league baseball, the NFL, NHL and Major League Soccer all received combined grades of C on the report card. On race, the NBA led with an A; the WNBA, baseball and soccer each got a Bplus; the NCAA got a B; the NFL a Bminus; and the NHL a C. On gender, the WNBA led with an A; followed by the NCAA with a B; the NBA and NHL with C's; baseball with a D; the NFL with a D-minus; and soccer with the first F ever issued in the history of the report. MLS spokesman Trey Fitz-Gerald questioned the grade because two of the league's eight vice presidents during the reporting period were women. "An F indicates that we would be doing nothing. That certainly isn't the case." Fitz-Gerald said. Baseball declined to comment on the report, but last week commissioner Bud Selig said the sport has done "very well" on minority hiring. The NFL, with two minority head coaches in the 2002 season, was at its lowest point since the 1991 season. A third minority coach was hired when Marvin Lewis joined the Cincinnati Bengals in January. Whites held all the coaching jobs in the NHL, which historically has had few minority players. NHL spokeswoman Bernadette Mansur noted that there were 16 black players in the league this season, up from 13 last year. Penn State player sits out for alleged role in fight By Patrick Abdalla By Patrick Abdalla Daily Collegian via U-wire Pennsylvania State University UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Penn State football coach Joe Paterno acknowledged one player who sat out Saturday's Blue-White game was held from the game partly because of his possible involvement in an April 13 altercation involving two members of the Penn State wrestling team. In a pre-game press conference, Paterno said senior fullback Paul Jefferson would not play because of his possible involvement in the altercation, which resulted in freshman wrestler A.J. Cummins receiving treatment at Centre Community Hospital and a State College Police Department investigation. Senior wrestler Ryan Cummins was also injured in the altercation. "He'll dress, but I probably won't play him," Paterno said. "But two things: First, he doesn't need it, and we're not going to play [tight end] Casey Williams, and I wouldn't want anyone to read into that at all. And I think there is some question right now about whether Paul was involved in something. I don't know what he was involved in yet." A police statement issued last week said several males assaulted the students, who were treated at the hospital. The statement also said the assailants remain unidentified and labeled the incident as alcohol-related. The statement said several members of the football team were present at the incident, which took place at 445 E. Foster Ave. However, it remains unclear what involvement any players had in the altercation. An Associated Press report said A.J. Cummins suffered a broken cheekbone and fractured orbital bone. Penn State assistant sports information director Brian Siegrist confirmed Thursday that Cummins had to miss the University Nationals and Fila Cadet Nationals. Paterno also discussed his decision to play defensive back Anwar Phillips in the Capital One Bowl Game Jan. 1 in Orlando, Fla., after the university put him on temporary expulsion — to begin with the spring semester — for his involvement in a sexual assault case. Phillips, who has pleaded not guilty to charges of sexual assault and aggravated indecent assault, is awaiting a jury selection for his upcoming trial. "I played him," Paterno said. "It is nobody's business but mine." ROWING Rowing wins at Cincinnati, claims second straight dual The University of Kansas rowing team won its second consecutive dual meet by defeating the Cincinnati Bearcats Saturday at Harsha Lake in Cincinnati. Like the dual win over Kansas State on April 19, the Jayhawks claimed victories in the 2nd Varsity 8, Varsity 4, Novice 8 and Novice 4 races over the Bearcats. This weekend improved the Jayhawks' dual record to 2-2. Cincinnati beat Kansas in the 1st Varsity 8 race 7 minutes 45 seconds to 7:51.12. Kansas took the 2nd Varsity 8 crown with a time of 8:01.5 compared to Cincinnati's 8:16.8. Kansas's Varsity 4 boat over took the Cincinnati crew by nearly 40 seconds at 9:12.5. The Jayhawk Novice 8 notched a victory in their race at 8:37.3 while the Bearcats came in at 9:13.7. In the Novice 4 race, the Jayhawks won with a finishing of 4:45 over the Bearcats' 4:59 finish. The Kansas rowers will conclude the spring season by hosting the Big 12 Championships on Saturday at Clinton Lake. The Jayhawks will compete against Texas and Kansas State. Jason Hwang POLI kansan.com What does the University of Kansas need in an Athletics Director? Afundraiser Someone who treats all sports fairly An AD who knows where the money is — Football and Basketball Log on to www.hansan.com to cast your vote. CORRECTION Most important is a person who has a good relationship with Mark Mangino and Bill Self Yesterday's The University Daily Kansan contained an error. On the page 1B photo cutline for the baseball story, Kansas catcher Sean Flinn and Baylor designated hitter Ross Bennett were misidentified. Kansas Athletics Calendar TODAY Men's golf at Big 12 Championships, all day, Southern Hills Country Club, Tulsa, Okla. Baseball vs. Wichita State, 7 p.m. Hooglund Ballpark THURSDAY Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City FRIDAY Baseball vs. Texas, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City SATURDAY Rowing, Big 12 Regatta, all day Track at Ward Haylett Invitational, all day, Manhattan, Kan. Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City Baseball vs. Texas, 2 p.m., Hoglund Ball-park SUNDAY Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City Baseball vs. Texas, 1 p.m., Hoglund Ballp l Free for All I'm sitting here blazing with my buddies and we just realized that Jeff Graves and Manny Ramirez were separated at birth. They are the same person. - I was up at Robinson with my friends playing basketball earlier, and I just want to know what kind of kid wears khaki shorts and a belt while playing basketball? KU Psychology Club Wednesday,April 9th Fraser 537 at 6PM Career Workshop: What can you do with a degree in Psychology,and how can you build your resumeto do it? X All are welcome! X Is a Job Search in your Future? Job Search? Use Optional Campus Fees through Enroll & Pay and check off Career Job Search - Select now, pay later - Start your job search in August UCES University career and employment services TUESDAY,APRIL29,2003 ENTERTAINMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 31 3B WLATHER TODAY TOMORROW THURSDAY 77 58 scattered thunderstorms 81 59 partly cloudy and windy 72 45 mostly cloudy TODAY 77 58 scattered thunderstorms TOMORROW 81 59 partly cloudy and windy THURSDAY 72 45 mostly cloudy —WWW.WEATHER.COM THE MASKED AVENGERS by Matt Sevcik and Max Kruetzer, for The University Daily Kansas Have a seat Hummydidn'twantto do it,but she needed the nectar. HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 29). You could be motivated by a secret passion this year, and that can be quite entertaining. It could also be quite profitable, so don't try to avoid your desires completely. Use them to propel you to greater heights. Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is an 8. You have a tendency to be impetuous. Curb that tendency where money is concerned. Where love is concerned, full speed ahead. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7. There are times when moving quickly is a good idea. That's why you stay so well prepared, right? Pounce on the good deal when you see it. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 7. Reveal your hopes and dreams to good friends. They'll encourage you, and that's worth a lot. They'll help you devalue your fears. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is a 7. You may not be able to collect for all the work you're doing now. Run a tab for a deserving soul who'll pay you when he can. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 7. A contact with somebody far away improves your confidence. You know you're loved even if it may be hard to achieve your goal. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 7. Don't start out on your adventure just yet. There are a few more things to resolve, and there's still a chance you could find a better deal. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 6. You hate to be the one who has to say "no." You'd rather buy your friends, kids and mate anything they want. However, you're not made of money, as you may have noticed. Point that out. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 7. Do your best to maintain a semblance of normalcy in spite of recent disruptions. A favorite meal tonight will help calm jangled nerves. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a 9. You still have an abundance of good vibes to spread around. This is good, because you'll encounter several people who could use a few. Share. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is a 7. The person who's most annoying now could actually do you a favor. He or she can tip you off to something you'll want to avoid. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 7. Go ahead and launch, even if you're not sure how you'll finish what you're starting. You're very smart and very motivated. You're sure to think of something. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20). Today is a 6. The reason you get paid the big bucks is because you're so darned creative. Continue to point out what others miss. They depend on you to do that. Crossword ACROSS ACROSS 1 Carry with effort 4 Flooded 9 Make embarrassed 14 First of a count 15 Bellini opera 16 Uncle Miltef 17 Mr. Ziegfeld 18 Apparent 19 __ Rouge, LA 20 Sloping position 22 Rural dwellings 24 Dunc's perch 26 Brown ermine 27 Grasp 29 Conclude 30 Tiny particle 34 Schuss 36 Spanish capital 38 Gomer of Mayberry 39 Eyelash cosmetic 41 Sticks together 43 "Do __ others as..." 44 Llama's cousin 46 Numbskull 47 Try out 48 ABA word 49 Michelle on ice 51 Extraterrestrial 53 Scorch 56 Wrestler's hold 61 Falsifier 62 Workers' group 63 Out of bed 65 Mongrel 66 Sharon or Oliver 67 Central city of Islam 68 Ripen 69 Pieces of useful advice 70 Pallid 71 Ran first DOWN 1 Propels skyward 2 Not kindled 3 Earth scientists 4 Very old: abbr. 5 Coyote's cousin 6 Regions 7 More clever 04/28/08 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | | 18 | | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | 21 | | 22 | | | 23 | | | | 24 | | | | 25 | | 26 | | | | | | [1] | [2] | [3] | [4] | [5] | [6] 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| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [18] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [19] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [20] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [21] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [22] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [23] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [24] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [25] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [26] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [27] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [28] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [29] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [30] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [31] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [32] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [33] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [34] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [35] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [36] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [37] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [38] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [39] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [40] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [41] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [42] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [43] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [44] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [45] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [46] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [47] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [48] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [49] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [50] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [51] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [52] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [53] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [54] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [55] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [56] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [57] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [58] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [59] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [60] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [61] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [62] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [63] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [64] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [65] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [66] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [67] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [68] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [69] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [70] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [71] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [72] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [73] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [74] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [75] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [76] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [77] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [78] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [79] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [80] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [81] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [82] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [83] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [84] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [85] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [86] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [87] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [88] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [89] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [90] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [91] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [92] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [93] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [94] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [95] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [96] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [97] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [98] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [99] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [100] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [101] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [102] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [103] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [104] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [105] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [106] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [107] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [108] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [109] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [110] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [111] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [112] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [113] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [114] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [115] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [116] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [117] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [118] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [119] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [120] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [121] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [122] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [123] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [124] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [125] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [126] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [127] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [128] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [129] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [130] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [131] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [132] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [133] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [134] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [135] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [136] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [137] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [138] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [139] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [140] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [141] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [142] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [143] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [144] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [145] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [146] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [147] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [148] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [149] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [150] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [151] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [152] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [153] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [154] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [155] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [156] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [157] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [158] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [159] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [160] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [161] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [162] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [163] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [164] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [165] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [166] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [167] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [168] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [169] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [170] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [171] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [172] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [173] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [174] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [175] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [176] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [177] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [178] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [179] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [180] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [181] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [182] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [183] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [184] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [185] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [186] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [187] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [188] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [189] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [190] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [191] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [192] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [193] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [194] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [195] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [196] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [197] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [198] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [199] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [200] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [201] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [202] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [203] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [204] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [205] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [206] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [207] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [208] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [209] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [210] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [211] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [212] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [213] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [214] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [215] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [216] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [217] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [218] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [219] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [220] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [221] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [222] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [223] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [224] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [225] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [226] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [227] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [228] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [229] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [230] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [231] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [232] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [233] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [234] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [235] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [236] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [237] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [238] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [239] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [240] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [241] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [242] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [243] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [244] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [245] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [246] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [247] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [248] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [249] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [250] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [251] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [252] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [253] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [254] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [255] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [256] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [257] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [258] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [259] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [260] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [261] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [262] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [263] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [264] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [265] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [266] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [267] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [268] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [269] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [270] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [271] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [272] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [273] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [274] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [275] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [276] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [277] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [278] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [279] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [280] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [281] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [282] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [283] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [284] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [285] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [286] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [287] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [288] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [289] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [290] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [291] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [292] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [293] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [294] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [295] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [296] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [297] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [298] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [299] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [300] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [301] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [302] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [303] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [304] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [305] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [306] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [307] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [308] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [309] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [310] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [311] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [312] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [313] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [314] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [315] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [316] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [317] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [318] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [319] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [320] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [321] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [322] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [323] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [324] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [325] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [326] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [327] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [328] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [329] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [330] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [331] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [332] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [333] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [334] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [335] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [336] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [337] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [338] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [339] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [340] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [341] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [342] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [343] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [344] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [345] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [346] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [347] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [348] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [349] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [350] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [351] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [352] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [353] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [354] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [355] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [356] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [357] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [358] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [359] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [360] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [361] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [362] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [363] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [364] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [365] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [366] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [367] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [368] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [369] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [370] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [371] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [372] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [373] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [374] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [375] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [376] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [377] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | [378] | | | 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| | [431] | | | | [432] | | | | [433] | | | | [434] | | | | [435] | | | | [436] | | | | [437] | | | | [438] | | | | [439] | | | | [440] | | | | [441] | | | | [44 © 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. 8 Dylan's instrument 9 Monastic superior 10 Bridges or Brummell 11 BA word 12 Gin flavor 13 Female lobsters 21 Rocky peak 23 Cod relative 25 Peruvian capital 28 Moral story 30 Mimic 31 Despotic 32 Cheers for toreadors 33 Military meal 34 Sooty matter 35 "Citizen " 37 Tibetan spiritual leader 40 Camp bed 42 Fumbles for words 45 Irons 50 Be unwell A R C H R A T E E P R O N E B O O M A R E A A I R E D S A M S P E S T S T A R E O R E M I N T S T A L O N R E D C E D A R P E G B R I A R U S E A B L E E M I N E N T D O M A I N O W N N O V A R C L L T D W E N T O V E R B O A R D L E E S A L E S U E D E E L K A L L E G R O S E R A T O A L L O Y D O T L O U S E C L A D M A D E B A R E S H O N E I S L E A M A S S E E T O N A H E M Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 51 Meara and Murray 52 V-shaped cut 54 Measuring instrument 55 Made a mistake 56 Be quiet! 57 In opposition 58 "The __ in Winter" 59 Baptismal basin 60 Pleasant 64 Participated in a 10k 1 Starla Benford THIS WEEKEND ONLY · TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 Starla Benford Erin Moran Amy J. Carle Erin Moran From TV's Nappy Days THE F. R. MAYER VAGINA MONOLOGUES EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets, www.ticketmaster.com. 816-931-3330, The Lied Center Box Office, or 785-864-ARTS Service Charge may apply. *Service Charge may apply* Sidewalk Sale 65 65 KANSAS 65 65 KAWSAS Once again, REGULAR HOURS: Fri.-Friday 8:30am-5pm Sat. 10am-4pm Sun. Noon-3pm the KU Bookstores are bringing you the best selection of merchandise (at the most amazing prices!) for their Annual Sidewalk Sale: Jaythewka.com Kansas State Burge Union 2nd Floor Campus 705-864-4640 705-864-1111 All profits are returned to students in the form of programs, services and facilities. - KU tees and hats from $5.00! -KU sweatshirts from $15.00! plus 50-90% off general books textbooks and supplies! KU BOOKSTORES KU's Official Bookstore. 9:00am - 4:00pm Kansas Union Plaza Wednesday, April 30th Thursday, May 1st *example art (rain date, May 2nd) --- 4B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 2003 Eustachy party pics surface The Associated Press DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowa State basketball coach Larry Eustachy said drinking was a factor in his behavior at a student party in Missouri, where he was photographed holding a beer can and kissing female students on the cheek. "I am certainly aware of the role drinking has played in my behavior. I am addressing this matter," Eustachy said in a statement issued yesterday by Des Moines lawyer Jerry Crawford. Crawford would not comment when asked whether that meant Eustachy would seek counseling. Eustachy was photographed at a party in a Columbia, Mo., apartment during the early morning hours of Jan. 22, after the Cyclones lost to Missouri 64-59. The photos show Eustachy embracing and kissing women on the cheek or being kissed on the cheek. The Des Moines Register ran the photos to accompany a copyright story that appeared yesterday. The Register also quoted Kansas State students describing Eustachy's actions at a fraternity party in Manhattan, after the Cyclones lost to K-State in January 2002. Iowa State administrators were looking at possible disciplinary action against Eustachy, who met with athletics director Bruce Van De Velde and university President Gregory Geoffroy after learning The Register had copies of the photos. Eustachy "The situation will be dealt with in an appropriate manner," Van De Velde said yesterday in an interview. "I think coach Eustachy knows he made some very poor decisions. I think he's used bad judgment." Van De Velde refused to say what kind of punishment was being considered. A member of the state Board of Regents, David Fisher of Des Moines, said he would not think it too extreme to fire Eustachy. Greene CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B The football team is coming off one of the program's most embarrassing seasons in history. It's odd to think that there can be so much optimism going into next season. Quarterback Bill Whittemore will be highly touted as one of the Big 12's top signal callers going into next year, and sophomore running back Clark Green's potential is not only untapped, but limitless. Add in a Kansas State-like schedule with easy non-conference opponents plus a dash of talented junior college transfers, and the recipe for five or six victories is in place. For the volleyball program, anything short of the NCAA tournament next year would be a disappointment. The team got screwed out of a deserved at-large bid last year and will be playing with a mean streak next year. Despite losing four key seniors, young players like Josie Lima, Andi Rozum and Ashley Michaels could make Kansas a feared Big 12 opponent in 2003. Plus, the Horeisi Family Athletics Center is by far the school's most underrated game-time atmosphere. The team has a loyal following and packed the place a few times a year. With a few more key Big 12 victories, the Jayhawks may even see a national ranking next season. The women's basketball team's biggest problem right now is attendance. However, the simple fact is that people in Kansas love basketball. If the team is winning, no matter whether it's a men's or women's basketball team, the fans will come. Coach Marian Washington heads into her 31st season at Kansas with a roster filled with promise. The team's two returning point guards, junior Leila Menguc and freshman Erica Hallman, will both be returning from off-season knee surgeries, but a wealth of young talent, plus prized recruits Lauren Ervin and Sharita Smith will make Kansas not only deep, but lethal. Freshman forward Tamara Ransburg and sophomore guard Aquanita Burras both have star potential, and by winning more of the winnable games on the schedule, the sky is the limit. Whoever gets the job of head cheese in the Athletics Department does not have nearly as much work cut out for them as Al Bohi did. By following a game plan such as this, he will hopefully be able to avoid a bad dove analogy just two years into their tenure. Good luck. Greene is a Vernon Hills, IL., junior in journalism Kansan Classified T 100s Announcements 105 Personals 110 Business Personals 115 On Campus 120 Announcements L25 Travel L30 Entertainment L40 Lost and Found 男 女 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted Y 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 310 Computers 315 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 440 Sublease 400s Real Estate 500s Services The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality 500s Services 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services Classified Policy KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: 864-4358 or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair I 100s Announcements itation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, facial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limi- 120- Announcements F Do you speak English as a second language? Learn the secrets of getting a job in the United States! Attend a 90 minute seminar on April 26 or April 29. Topics: Applications, resumes, interviews Cost: $20.00 105 page handbook included. Call 844-0701 to register. 205 - Help Wanted 205 - Help Wanted Greatest selection of vitamins and 200s Employment 7TH & IOWA OPEN 7AM-10PM supplements in town. $$$$$$$$$$ 男 女 $$$$$$$$$$ THE MERC! NATURAL FOOD CROCERY STATE 6 JOWA. OPEN 7AM-10PM Dance lessons; balletroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass, 313-2277 Marks JEWELERS Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 marksmc@swbell.net 205 - Help Wanted 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan. www.creatcampJobs.com I 130- Entertainment --- Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! surveydollars.com Are you looking for a summer job? Earn up to $4,000 this summer while working in a fun/casual workplace. Heart of America Photography has immediate openings in its Customer Service Department. Qualified applicants must be quick learners and have an outgoing, positive attitude. Basic computer skills are a must, and previous customer service experience is preferred. For more info call 841-7100, or stop by our office at 2449 S. Iowa, Suite L to fill out an application. WAL-MART PART-TIME JOBS Wages start at $11.80. Desk Managers 2003-2004 Apply in-person at: WAL-MART DISTRIBUTION. 3300 HWY K-68 OTTAWA, KS SUMMER IN CHICAGO! Heart of America Photography is seeking 12-14 full/part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season - April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment! Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7100 or drop by 2449 Iowa. Ste J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGee's EOE. 205 - Help Wanted Childcare and light housekeeping for suburban Chicago families. Responsible, loving, non-smoker. Call Northfield Nannies. (847) 510-5354. Wanted for top rated local cover dance band, all styles. Call 785-749-3649. Desk Managers hold academic year, part-time, live-in positions with KU Student Housing responsible for front desk and building security operations under the supervision of the Complex Director. Required: Desk/security staff experience; full-time KU student with at least 6 hours of on-campus enrollment each semester; Compensation; Single room or equivalent; meals; $2,530 total pay. Application materials available from Complex Directors or at Student Housing, Corin Hall. Applications accepted until positions filled. EOA/AA. BASS PLAYER EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER --- Do you want a full time job for the summer? Do you like kids? Wanted: responsible, dependable, caring student to play with & entertain 3 yrs 10 m old. M-F: 7:30-5:30. Need own transportation. 841-3551, leave a message or call after 5:30. Exotic dancers. Immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-221-5900. Free Chocolate Does Your Summer Job Suck? Does Your Summer Job Buck? I will take 5 more students to help run a business, make $700 a week this summer. Call: 832-1833 Assist people with head injuries to become independent. Flexible schedule. Great 'hands on' summer job for students in Social and Human Services/OT. SLP PT field. Flexible schedule. Lawrence & KC area. Call toll free 1-866-429-6757 x 104. BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $50 per shift. Flexible hours, great call. 1G-800-806-002 ext 1422. Great summer income. Abestos Abatement Workers needed. 32 hrs of free training is required. Must attend class 5/5-9 8:40 p.m. $10.40 per hr plus benefits. Work will start 5/27. Contact Laberfers' Local 1290, 16 E 13th St, Lawrence, (785) 843-448 between 6:30-9 a.m. or leave a message. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, ewarnings. Immediate openings for swim instructors. Indoor heated pools in Lenexa. Looking for experience teaching basics and competitive strokes, turns and starts. Excellent hourly rates. Call Leah at 913-469-5554. Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 9-5 Mon-Sat, 811 New Hampshire. Internship position for fast-growing insurance and financial services. FT Summer changing to PT in Fall. Duties: clerical and customer services. Send resume to Laura @douglascounties.com. Kansan Ads Work For You 205 - Help Wanted 们我们我们我们 Kansas Public Radio Corporate Development Director. This is a full-time unclassified professional staff position. Required qualifications: bachelor's degree or equivalent combination of education and experience, excellent written and oral communication skills, demonstrated organizational skills and ability to follow through on projects and responsibilities. Attention to detail a must. Ability to deal effectively with underwriting businesses and contributors. Contact Janet Campbell, Director, Kansas Public Radio, 1120 W, 11th, Lawrence, KS 66044. Phone (785) 864-4603 or jcampbell@ku.edu. Forward a letter of interest, resume and list of 3 references to the above address. Priority given to applications received by May 9, 2003. EO/AA Employer. Nanny for 3 girls ages 8 & 12 for summer: Monday, Tuesday, & 8-th day approx. 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Send resume to Brent Crank, 1010 Mass. Lawrence 66044 Naturalist City of Lawrence PT Naturalist position is avib in the Parks & Recreation dept to support our beautiful Prairie Park Nature Center. Flexible 20 hr schedule with Center hrs of Tuesday, Sat., Sun, 1-5 makes a great student opportunity. Requires 2 yrs exp; undergated work in biology, botany, zoology, natural resources mngmt or related field & driv $7.50/hr. Apply by 05/08/03. City Hall, Personnel 6 E 6th, Lawrence KS 60544 (785) 832-3203 personnel@cllawrence.ks.us www.LawrenceCitiesJobs.org EOE M/F/D Resident Assistants 2003-2004 Resident Assistants hold academic year, live-in positions with KU Student Housing performing administrative, programming, and paraprofessional advising/facilitating for 40-50 residents and for the complex in general, directly supervised by an Assistant Complex Director. Required: At least 1 year of residential group living experience; 30 or more credit hours; full-time KU student with at least 6 hours of on-campus enrollment each semester. Compensation: Single room; meals; $40.00 paid biweekly. Application materials available from Complex Directors or at Student Housing, Corbin Hall. Applications accepted until positions filled. EO/AA. SPECIAL PROJECT Are you in need of summer employment? We have a job for your Applications are currently being accepted for 50 people performing light assembly. Work M-F-40 hours a week with possible overtime. Daytime hours available. Call MANPOWER at 785-749-2080 to inquire about this opportunity to keep busy all summer, EOE. --hundreds of painter positions available No experience necessary, students well- comed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277- 9787. www.collegepro.com 205 - Help Wanted Sate Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. Spring Break was awesome! STS America #1 *Student Tour Operator* is now hiring on campus for rep 2003-4. 1-800-648-4849 www.stsrail.com YMCA Camp Shady Brook. Colorado fun and adventure! Serve God by serving kids this summer, $180-$240/wk & room/board. Tobacco-free, no large/ofensive tattoos or body piercing, background check req. Apply at www.campshadybrook.com or call (303) 647-2313. MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 - 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277 ex. 1020 Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531. SUMMER INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. Apply online at www.piqlimage.com/intern.htm LIVE AND WORK IN COLORADO! Be a CAMP COUNSELOR at Girl Scout overnight camp in the mountains SW of Denver. General/Unit counselors and program specialists (western horseback riding, hiking, outdoor course, crafts, nature, sports, challenge course, dance and drama.) Early June - mid August. MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Competitive salary, room, meals, health insurance, travel allowance, end of season bonus. Call 303-778-0109 *281 or email rhondam@gsmchk.com* SUMMER WORK $500-600/hrk to start STUDENTS WELCOME Act/vMktg co. seeks entry level, mid & upper level migr candidates Int'l firm, sports and charitable organizations tuition bonuses and paid training avail. Call Denise (913) 396-0056 X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale S MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance. $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 101 Haskell. 340 - Auto Sales - 1991 Ford Probe LX, V-6, 3 liter, 5 speed manual; good condition; $1,100/offer. Call 550-0028, leave message. 1988 Toyota Camry, only 100,000 miles Runs great, new CD player and stereo $1200. Call Lella at 749-1256. 1990 Range Rover Clean interior, good cook. Runs great, roof rack, sunroof, grill guard. 1896, $4200, Darev B16-21-6982. Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Hondas, Chevys and more! For listings build 809-319-3232 ed. 4565. 360 - Miscellaneous Take General Psychology, Social Psychology, or Contemporary Social Problems online through www.bartonline.org. Summer courses begin June 9. 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent Bradford Square Reasonably priced 2 & 3 BR units at 501 DOW, DW, CA, micro, laundry on site. 2 BR 1 bath units $525, 3 BR 2 bath units from $645. One cat may be allowed. George Waters Management 841-5533 www apartmentslawrence.net kansan.com --- TUESDAY,APRIL29,2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 bedroom apartments near KU. Possible rent reduction for various duties. Available August 1st. 841-6254 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510-580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1 BR apt, FP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. D/W hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. 2001 University Drive. Call 785-748-9807. 1 BR at Tuckaway, WD, fitness room, TV, fireplace, hot tub, alarm system, windows pool. Ask about apartment 7. Available June to April. Call 838-3377. 1,2,3, & 4 BR aps avail. for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus rte, laundry facility, Call 843-001-31. 1712 OHIO Avail, Aug. 1, Large newer 4 BR apt, DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site. 4BR 2 BA $1040, Ask for leasing specials. N PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, inc. 841-5533 www.apartmentsinlawrence.net 1 & 3 BR apts, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, paid utilities. $410-650,841-3633. 3 BR apts, 1 1/2 BA, PF, skylights, 1 car, garage, all appliances, WD hook up. Vice nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 Attention seniors & Grad students. Real nice, quiet. 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Attractive studio apt, near KU at 945 Mo- avail. June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study. $400, gas & water paid. no pets, call. Smal9-749-1616. Avail. Aug. Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR, 15 BW, DWA/D, CA balcony, 9th & Emery. No smoking/pets. $590 + utilities Cable Call 550-111 or 841-3192. Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private deck, off street park, dishwasher, new A/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. $355/month Call 841-1074 Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Brastone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. Washer/dryer hookups. No pets. 749-7748 or 760-4788 3 & 4 BR townhouses @ 1125 Tennessee. W/D, CA, DW, off street parking. $875 & $1150 / month. Call 913-441-4169 or masonproperties@aol.com. Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 24th between Natsmith & Ousdahl 841-5533 Excellent location, 1341 Ohio/1104 Tennesse. 2. Br in 4PL. c/A, D/W, DW hook-ups. $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1. Nope; Patents 842-4242. Great location, 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex. Hardwood floors, CA, no pets, pcs16.moalva Aug1. 842-4242 Great west location. Spacious 1 & 2 bedrooms. $450/570. All appliances, ample parking, on-site laundry. Call 843-4090. Shin Mei Management Firm Apartment K-7 Coffee Shop 405 - Apartments for Rent 2 BR apartments, CA, off street parking, 1737 & 41 Tennessee. $500/month. 913-441-4169. masonproperties@eol.com Canyon Court 700 Cornell Lane Save Your Money! - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $505-$650 Now signing iY, YR leases starting May/ June/July/Aug. No smoking extras. Extran- cell, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet, all appli- ances, low utilities, A/C, bus route & appl- 4$05/mm, Spanish Credit Apts. 814-6868 Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apis Summer True West Homes Brand New Luxury Apartments Summer Tree West Town Homes Town Town Homes - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675,905 Now Leasing for Spring 2003 1. 2. 3. Bldg - Swimming Pool & Hot Tub *Basketball Court* *Garages Available* *Fitness Center *Basketball Court - high Speed Internet Connections * security Systems Available * small Pint Welcome PARKWAY COMMONS 842-3280 Luxury Apr.Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1.2.2 Bedroom * Pool * Washer/Dryer * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Security Systems * Garages Available Need a place to live nextyear? Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firsttransmissione.com *Washer & Dryar *Fully Equipped Kitchen *Serving Bar LeannaMar Townhomes - 4 bedroom/3 bath - approx. 1600 sq feet - car ports Williams Pointe Townhomes - full size washer/dryer - 3bedroom/2.5bqth Call 800.3487 for an appointment! $675-$695 A Washon & Drum Oak Bay Management, Inc. Luxury on an Affordable Price 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 - paid cable (ext. basic) - 1421 sq feet - full size washer/ dryer Early Bird Special Going on Now! For More Info Call 312-7942 405 - Apartments for Rent 405 - Apartments for Rent --- A CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled. 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870. 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-4090. COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Nabismith 842-5111 1301 W. 28th & Nailsmith 842-512-1 colormap@akss.com www.okisswoads.com 特惠价 超值 超低 -1&2Bedrooms - Indoor/Outdoor Pool -OnKU Bus Route VILLAGE SQUARE A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall - ExerciseRoom - On KU BusRoute village@websrf.net Lorimar & Courtside Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790 "savings on select units with new 12 month lease. M-F10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 Larimar Townhomes 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes W/D,allappliances Some with fireplaces and Garages 1,2,3 Bedrooms ExerciseRoom M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 Now Leasing! Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 OPENHOUSE www.lawremoapartments.com 405 - Apartments for Rent --- - **Window-Driver** - **Interfaces** - **Microcontrollers** - **Patches** - **Kimpiases** - **Cooling Pads** - No pets please NOW LEASING FOR JUNE AND AUGUST For More Info: 785-841-7849 ahm alhawi sunny day peach pie - Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes 3803 Clinton Parkway #F1 - Weather Drayer* * Dust Extender* * Microwaves* * Patent* * Fireplace Panels* * Leaking Floor 4100 Clinton Parkway 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 WEST HILLS APARTMENTS - Digital cable & internet - Reasonable rates MON-FRI1:00-5:00 NO APPOINTMENTS NEEDED OPEN HOUSE - Great location near campus 105 - Apartments for Rent Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450; 2 BR - $355, Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets, Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday, Call 841-3800. Regency, Place. 2, BR available, now. Walking distance to campus, 1301 Louisiana. Water paid, no pets. $590/mo. 841-8468. 1,2,&3 Bedroom Apartments *Spacious, Luxury Apts *All appls. + W/D *Water paid *Service provided ormo, leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Migmt. 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thexurun.com FOX RUN HOLIDAY APARTMENTS & 1.000 € 600 2 BDR $495 2 RDR $750 2 BDR $750 3 BDR $600 NICE, QUET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSETS PARIO/BALCONY ON SITE MANAGEMENT 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $810 785. 843.0011/785-423-4005 ON-SITE MANAGEMENT LOCATED JUST BEHIND THE HOLIDOME MASTERCRAFT WALKTO CAMPUS Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 HanoverPlace 14th & Mass*841-1212 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasolo749-4226 Regents Court 19th & Mass·749-0445 Sundance 7th & Florida-841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas-749-2415 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon- Tues-Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity THE LEGENDS L NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2003 NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3, 4 & 4 BROOMS ALL BACKROOM PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ALL INCLUDE UTILITY-PACKAGE NO 400-695 NO DEPOSITS NO MISSLE MESSES AND LETTER IN EVENT IN BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKET BALL & EGA ARMS PULLED ENERGY REINNER CENTER GARDEN & HARVEY, FOR MACHINE OR DESK, HOME SAME ROOM, COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM, UNDER OVERLOAD HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 405 - Apartments for Rent CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA townhouses, $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/palettes, and security 900 II. Arkansas.843-4090. 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS Luxury Bring... no campus! 10th & Missouri HAWKER APARTMENTS curry Bring... on camp bathroom. Mirrors Tuckaway at Briarwood 4241 Briarwood Dr Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Fireplace (atTuckaway/Harper) Builtin TV (at Tuckaway) Tuckaway has two pools, not tubs,basketball court fitness center and gated entrance Briarwood pool, fitness call 838-3377 www.tuckawaymgmt.com NOW LEASING - Fitness Center - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome Ask About Our Specials! 843-8220 CHASE COURT 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom • Washer/Dryer • Flameplace • Swimming Pool • Fitness Center • Basketball Court • Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa www.firstmanagementinc.com 410 - Condos For Rent 3 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom townhomes 922Tennessee 423-1223 Very nice condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. $259 a person. Call Eli B41-4470 415 - Homes For Rent Nice 2 BR 1 BA. Small house, remodeled in 1996. High ceilings, wood fi. in living rm. Hook ups For Aug 1st 860. 841-3633. ------- 2 and 3 bedroom houses for rent. Have CA. Available August 1. No pets. No smoking.$725-825/month. 913-341-0952 4 Bedroom 2 Bathroom W/D Included, basement, off street parking 1735 Kentucky 1080 814-4935 4 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom, 1 car garage W/D included, to KU. 1638 Indiana, $1200, 841-4935. 415 - Homes For Rent ------- big 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$1100 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit. 749-7207 766-6662 from 6:30 to p.m. 420 - Real Estate For Sale *Moving to KC?* KC own a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs. Awesome 1 BR/BA 24/hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbeatable at 105k. Call 913-523-5360. Realty Exec. 4th Roommate wanted. Huge House near campus. Starting Aug. 1st, Rent $330 + 1/4 utilities. Call 842-0529 Female roommate need to sublease 3 BR town home at Hawthorne Place. Available June 1, $275/month + use 842-7064. Avail. June 1, lovely house 3 blks from. Kuad. Need 2 female roommates, approx. 300/mo. each. No Pets. No Smoking. Call 841-3736. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Very nice 2 BR 2 BA. Rent $390 plus half utilities. Call 844-5540. Grad student seeks female roommate. Own BR & BA in new home. Walk-in closet, W/D and garage. No smoking.pets. $300 +1/2 avail. Augl A84-4540 Male roommate for 2 BR townhome Clean, quilt, close to campus. $300/mo. + half utilities. 841-1160. Mature, non-smoking female student to live in 3 BR, 2.5 BA townhouse. W/D. $285 +1/3 ull permo. Avail. Aug 1, 841-9953. Roommate wanted for nice 4 BR house. Fully Furnished, washer, and dryer. $320 +1/3 utilities. Call 760-1998. 435 Rooms for Rent 440 - Sublease Room for rent for male. Nice furnished home. $350 includes utilities, W/D, private bath. No smoking. 749-1187. Key House $500 Signing皂, 2BD-2BA at Parkway Commons, avid mid-May Thru 31st of July 4. Pet friendly. Call Jessi or Craig at 312-9710 or 760-0266. 1 bedroom at 527 California. Washer/dryer. Nice neighborhood Call 841-5533 for information. 1 master bedroom and private bathroom of large townhouse. Possibility to take on year lease at end of summer $300/month negotiable. Available now. Call 393-0511. 2 BR, 1 BA on 14th and Kentucky. Avail. June + July, W/D, A/C, DW, front porch. $605/month. Call 749-9616. 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus. Garage. W/D, CA. avail. mid-May $700/mo. Adam 830-8076. Avail. June 1, 4 BR, 2 BA, W/D, dishwasher. Newly carpeted & tiled. $240/mo per person + usel Call 842-1118. Avail, June 1: 2 BR. 1 BA. WD. DW. 6th & Florida. $540/mo. Water & trash paid. Rent/move in charge call. Nqal 834-0946. Female roommate wanting to share a nice 3 bedroom town home in west Lawrence. Available Mid May/June 1 - Aug 1. $275 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Julie at 393-2606. 510 - Child Care Part time nanny needed. Care/transport 6/yr/4yr to school and other activities. $100/913-782-2171 913-845-4422 (cell) kansan.com 6E - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS TUESDAY,APRIL29,2003 Baseball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B next day about a book not yet read. In the back of the bus, no matter how hard Travis Metcalf, Matt Trible and Ryan Jakubov tried to get some homework done, it was hard to keep from watching The Shawhank Redemption. Movies are one of the favorite parts of the trip. Junior pitcher Ryan Knippschild typically serves as the team's movie guru on the bus, but the team favorite, Kingpin, didn't make an appearance this trip. Another staple of the bus trips is the cell phone. Players spend a good portion of their trips on the phone. Whether it's calling their girlfriends, friends from home, or parents, the phone is a good way to kill time during the travel through "exciting" central Kansas. The Hotel If you've watched your fair share of baseball movies, you're probably under the impression that the guys go out every night on the road and start brawls in local pubs. After a game, a popular choice for most players is just lounging in the room and watching television or playing video games. If you ask returning players such as Ryan Baty, Casey Spanish or Tribble, they will tell you that on the road, the team focuses on the next day's game much more with coach Ritch Price at the helm. If players do go out at night, it's just a walk to the convenience store for a snack. Of course, don't think that there are no exciting road stories from this season. Most players cite a trip to a cow field next to the team hotel during a weekend tournament in Tennessee. We can just leave that at that. The success of a road trip off the playing field is based on whom you room with in the hotel. Everyone gets along with everyone, but there is always the person with whom you would never want to share a room. For some of the pitchers, it's coach Steve Abney, whom they consider the drill sergeant of the coaching staff. One would expect a group of college ballplayers to want to go out on a road trip, but surprisingly the team stays pretty reserved and calm at nighttime. At the Ballpark Even though you may not think a baseball game is physically taxing, you have to realize that these guys spend seven or eight hours at the park on game day. The team typically arrives around three hours before the game. Batting and fielding practice is a given for position players, but pitchers don't get off that easy. For the pitcher who started the game the day before, there is the dreaded recovery run, which involves a 20-minute jog followed by sprints. Pitchers also serve as gophers for the coaches by shagging fly balls during batting practice sessions. Of course, when you're talking about baseball, you have to mention superstitions and rituals. Most players simply avoid stepping on the base path chalk, but for the most part, rituals stay the same. Many players make it a habit to put on their uniforms in the same order as they did the last Junior pitcher Josh Duran will take the mound for the Jawhows as they face rival Wichita State at Hoglund Ballpark at 7 tonight. Kansas (32-18, 7-11 Big 12) looks to improve on lst13-35 all-time series record against the Shockers. time they had a good game. Whether it's Price having the same routine of preparation each time he steps up to the plate or Knippschild wearing the same underwear for every start, each player has his own ritual. Once the game starts, pitches once again have to do the dirty work. The previous day's starter has to sit in the stands behind home plate with a radar gun and pitching charts to keep a log of pitching tendencies. After the game, some team members meet with family outside who have traveled for the game, while others do not hesitate to get on the bus and head to dinner. After the Game Ryan Greene/Kansan When the team shows up to a restaurant, you can see the eyes of the hostess bug out, knowing that they have to find a way to seat 40 people at once. While waiting, players occasionally are confronted with autograph requests and interested onlookers. Most players say they are usually mistaken for the basketball team, or even once, the non-existent Kansas surf team. The most entertaining portion of the trip was the restaurant trips after games. A team favorite is Outback Steakhouse, which was Saturday's postgame trip. Senior Sean Flynn (left) and junior Jake Kauzlarich share some of the year's stories from the road in their hotel room after Saturday's 10-8 loss to the Sooners. Autograph requests are not a problem because they are flattered to get them. Along with time at the hotels, this is when you overhear the dirt on guys. The girls they talk about, the pranks they pull on other players and even the postgame trash talk on the other team. If members of the Kansas baseball team have to name their biggest strain from road trips, it's being out Players always appreciate the postgame meals, for which the school fronts the bill. This is yet another area where players appreciate the addition of coach Price, who they say feeds them well, win or lose. Getting Personal Getting Personal of their Kansas social loops. The older guys on the team are quick to point out that they have met their best friends in college through the team, but it's obvious that they tend to miss Lawrence. In each hotel room you walk into that the players occupy, there's a good chance that someone in that room will be on the phone with his girlfriend. Even though some of them may complain about talking daily to their significant other, you can tell that the opportunity is truly cherished. No matter how much time they spend away from Lawrence, each player said that he wouldn't have it any other way. For these young men, baseball is essentially life. They are living out the American dream. Improvements this year from coach Price's presence are seen and talked about when you get to know these guys. They're winning, they're getting national respect and they're creating the foundation for a promising future. Some players say they enjoy playing on the road more than at home just because of the chances to bond with teammates. On a road trip with the guys, not only do you get a once-in-a-lifetime experience, but you learn the true definition of what it means to be a team. - Edited by Erin Chapman Serving KU Automotive DON'S Auto Center, Inc. since 1974 A.S.E.MASTER TECHNICIANS - Diagnostic Service - Maintenance & Repair - Machine Shop Service - ASE Master Technicians VISA MasterCard 920 E. 11th. 11th & Haskell 841-4833 Mon—Fri. 8 am-5:30 pm VISA MasterCard 920 E. 11th, 11th & Haskell 841-4833 Mon—Fri. 8 am-5:30 pm Contacts Dr. Kevin Lenahan, O.D., P.A. Optometrist & Associates -Competitive Prices -Evening Hours -Great Location Eyewear Hillcrest 935 Business Park, 935 Iowa (785)838-3200 www.lenahneyedoc.com - Competitive Prices - OPENING EVENINGS The Spectacle 66 - Fashion Eye Wear Let us make a Optometrists Let us make a spectacle out of you! 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STREET DELI DAILY SPECIALS 5 PM TO CLOSE TUESDAY-FIZZZA & FITCHER NIGHT - 14" gourmet pizza with 3 toppings and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 THURSDAY-"WING IT NIGHT Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce and a pitcher of domestic beer for $10.00 INC FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT -Platter of 25 large wings with hot sauce or Combo Appetizer platter (wings, sticks & rings-25 in all) for $5.00 -$3.00 Cosmos & Martinis -$2.00 Wells DELI INC. VILLA DEL PALOMBRE - 1/3 lb. burgers with fries for $3.95 - Fat Tire pints for $2.00 Fat T 941 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-6565 MADAME CÉLINE 4 Wednesday April 30, 2003 Vol. 113, Issue No. 145 Today's weather 80° Tonight: 60° Tell us your news Contact Kristi Henderson, Jenna Goepfert or Justin Henning at 864.4810 or editorHenning at 2 NSAN THE UNIVERSITY TALY 42 Josh Duran Wichita State pitching leads Shockers past Jayhawks p.1B Senator attacks Dailey on show duk John Nowak/Kansan Katie Wolff, Shawnee, junior, and Jen Wein, Lawrence senior, balk at a comment made by Bill O'Reilly on The O'Reilly Factor. The Fox television show featured commentary by Sen. Susan Wagle concerning her discontent with Dennis Dailey's, Human Sexuality in Everyday Life class. By Cate Batchelder and Kelley Weiss cbatchelder@kansan.com and kweiss@kansan.com Kansan staff writers Herman Leon described Sen. Susan Wagles's mission to eliminate funding to the School of Social Welfare as "the theater of the absurd." Leon, professor emeritus of the School of Social Welfare, and about 30 students gathered on the third floor in the Kansas Union last night to watch Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor on a big-screen television. Last night's show included a segment about Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, titled "Perv or Prof?" The segment featured Wagle and her intern, Jessica Zahn, Linwood senior, via satellite from Wichita, The O'Reilly Factor program director invited Dailey to the show, but he declined the offer. Wagle proposed an amendment earlier this year, which Gov. Kathleen Sebelius line-item vetoed, to cut $3.1 million, the School of 1985 Wagle Social Welfare because of Dailey's Human Sexuality in Everyday Life class. Wagle and Zahn, a former student in Dailey's class, said the class contained sexual obscenity and that Dailey had harassed his students. Dailey declined to comment about the allegations or the show. "We, like many other states, are in a financial crisis right now, and I look at this as very frivolous, unnecessary spending," Wagle said on the show. "I don't see the academics that are going on in the classroom." Jen Hein, Lawrence senior, organized the viewing in the Union. She is a Dailey advocate and a student in his disputed class. She said before the show, that a lot of damage could be done in the five-minute segment. "I would hope most people could recognize a witch hunt when they see one," Hein said. But she also joked, saying Wagle and the "sex police" would later accuse the students watching the show of having a sexual orgy "and that the gathering would have something lewd going on." When watching, students laughed at the comments they heard. SEE SENATOR ON PAGE 10A Union renovations officially finished By Lauren Bristow lbristow@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The first cornerstone of the Kansas Memorial Union was laid 77 years ago. This afternoon the University of Kansas and Memorial Unions Corporation will dedicate a new addition and renovation. The renovation will come to an end at 1 p.m. today in the Hawks Nest, a new student lounge and performance area. "The process took approximately seven years from first conception to completion," said David Mucci, director of the Memorial Unions. "Everyone that comes to the dedication will get a pair of scissors to help cut the construction tape ribbon." After its conception, construction on the $6.3 million renovation project started in the September 2001. New features include approximately a 45 percent increase in the capacity of the Student Organization and Leadership Development Center, a covered walkway connecting the adjacent parking garage, a new area for Oread Books and an Academic Computer Service area, said Pat Beard, director of building services for the Kansas and Burge Union. The most prominent feature of the renovation is the relocated main stairwell called the "traditions tower," Mucci said. Embedded in the base of the tower is a piece of limestone called the Rock Chalk Stone. The stone was originally part of an old building at KU. "I'd like to think the stone is from The University of Kansas and Memorial Unions Corporation will dedicate the new addition and renovation of the Kansas Union this afternoon. The renovation will end at 1 p.m. today in the Hawks Nest. Old Fraser, but we're not sure which building it actually came from," Mucci said. "There are several other pieces in the stairwell that reflect traditions here at KU such as the old whistle and a series of plaques and awards." Other features of the stairwell include a blue ceiling in reference to "towering toward the blue"in the alma mater and steel wheat incorporated into the hand rails. The Kansas Union has undergone two previous major renovations between 1987 to 1989 and 1992 to 1993. The recent renovation was the third and final phase of the plans. Gould Evans Architects designed the plan for this renovation. "The architects took the heartfelt and imaginative ideas from students and staff that were conceived during the planning discussions and turned those into architectural elements," Mucci said. "The renovation was an attempt to make the Union less linear driven and open it up for movement of sound and light. I think we've accomplished that." Chancellor Robert Hemenway and other University officials will speak at the dedication. A reception will follow. GTAC delivers petition to protest termination — Edited by Leah Shaffer By Lauren Airey lairey@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Members of the Graduate Teaching Assistants Coalition delivered a petition with about 100 graduate student signatures to the Office of the Provost yesterday to protest the termination of one of its members. GTAC members say Abdel-Rahman Al-Gibaly was unfairly terminated from his teaching assistant position last semester, said Dan Carey, president of GTAC. Al-Gibaly taught Arabic as a graduate teaching assistant in the department of African and African-American Studies during the Fall 2002 semester. "We want to create an environment conducive to teaching and education," Carey said. "To fire a graduate teaching assistant in the middle of a semester after one evaluation is bad practice." They love this stuff Photos by Kelley Weiss, photo illustration by Eric Braem/Kansan KU filmmakers chase dream of reaching silver screen By Cal Creek ccreek@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Film — a collaborative art both in staff and content. All other arts, visual, music, theater and writing meld to form the celluloid stories projected onto the screen at 24 frames a second. Here are the stories of three KU filmmakers, who sacrifice their social and academic lives to perpetuate their careers. They don't mind. They love this stuff. The Graduate As Patrick Rea darts around the set of the Channel 6 news stage, it is evident he doesn't like to relax. He tests microphones, white balances and focuses the three massive cameras and explains shot sequences to his camera men. Rea graduated from the University of Kansas in December. Since then, he has continued to make films in Lawrence, including a project in postproduction with KU Filmworks, a film society and production unit. The film, Cellular, is about a man who talks on a cell phone so much it attaches to his head. "I'm afraid to slow down, in the sense that I'm afraid to get lazy," he said. "He picks up a camera and goes out and makes his movie," said Matt Jacobson, assistant professor of theatre and film. "He's the closest thing I've seen, so far, to a natural filmmaker." Rea recently made a documentary for his hometown of Schuyler, Neb., about a high school's effort to reopen the local theater, which had been closed since the 40s. He works part time as a camera man and floor director for Channel 6 News. "I'm afraid to slow down, in the sense that I'm afraid to get lazy." Patrick Rea University of Kansas graduate Ever since Rea was a child he has wanted to be involved in making movies. It started when he saw Raiders of the Lost Ark at the age of 4. Before coming to the University, Rea attended Central Community College, Platte Campus, in Columbus, Neb. During his two and a half years at the University, Rea created a number of short films in classes and independently with another KU graduate, Ryan Jones. The two formed a production studio in Spring 2002 called SenoReality. Most of their films are available online at www.senoreality.com. Rea wrote and directed a majority of the movies. Rea draws inspiration from other films,good and bad. Rea breaks down each movie he watches to understand what went right and what went wrong with the picture. This approach has won Rea several awards. In the past year, his film The Walls won $500 at the Scarefest Film Festival in Hollywood, and Multi-task won second place and $600 at the Movie "I think its important to see as many bad movies as good movies," Rea said. SEE FILM ON PAGE 9A Thanks to the recent tuition increases, the University of Kansas department of theatre and film received better editing equipment and writing programs. As a result, film students have produced more quality projects this year. Opportunities abound for film at KU Programs like the monthly Out of Focus movie screenings at Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St., and the movie dialogue and video show, Kallide, at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. have introduced the Lawrence community to some of the filmmakers who inhabit Oldfather Studios. Jeremy Osbern, Lawrence junior, is one of these filmmakers. Osbern showed his film, The Passion, in April at the Palm Beach International Film Festival. But Osbern isn't alone. "We have great students here talented filmmakers who are committed to producing work that will engage and enrich both the University, and the surrounding community," said Matt Jacobson, assistant professor of theatre and film. Tune into KUJH News tonight to meet some of these aspiring new filmmakers and see what's making the theatre and film department so popular. Curtis Dixon X 评 - THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Inside Front WEDNESDAY, APRIL30, 2003 News briefs STATI Third suspected SARS case found in northwest Kansas TOPEKA—A northwest Kansas man is believed to be the third person in the state to contract the SARS virus, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said. The man, whose identity was not released, developed symptoms of the SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, after traveling to Asia. He has recovered and is no longer considered infectious, according to a KDHE news release. "We don't see a concern for the general public in that part of the state," Watson said yesterday. "We have contacted everyone who had close contact with him and the health care workers who treated him, and none of them had symptoms of SARS." Specimens from the man have been sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for analysis. The state health department is also awaiting results of specimens sent to the CDC for a northeast Kansas woman who recently traveled to Asia. She was never hospitalized and has apparently recovered. Additional tests have been done on a south central Kansas man who had the first suspected case of SARS in Kansas. He was hospitalized but has also recovered. The disease has sickened more than 5,300 people, mostly in Asia, and has killed at least 355 people. NATION Osbourne boy enters rehab after drug, alcohol problem PASADENA, Calif. — Jack Osbourne, the 17-year-old son of heavy metal star Ozzy Osbourne, has checked into a drug and alcohol rehabilitation clinic, People magazine reported. The teenager entered Las Encinas Hospital in Pasadena on April 23, according to the issue appearing on newsstands Friday. "I got caught up in my new lifestyle and got carried away with drugs and alcohol," Osbourne told the magazine. "Once I realized this, I voluntarily checked myself into a detox facility for my own health and well-being." The magazine said Osbourne acknowledged to his mother, Sharon, in January that he was overindulging in marijuana and alcohol. Jack Osbourne is the youngest of Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne's three children. He and his 18-year-old sister, Kelly, became international stars with the success of MTV's reality show The Osbournes. Their older sister, Aimee, didn't take part. "It takes a lot of courage and strength to admit you need help, and both Sharon and I are proud Jack is facing his problems head-on," Ozzy Osbourne said. Ozzy Osbourne has been candid, both on and off the show, about his decades of battles with substance abuse. The second season began in November on a somber note, with the 54-year-old rock star boozing heavily to cope with Sharon's diagnosis of colon cancer. Ozzy since has said that his wife is cancer-free after months of treatment Santorum to remain senator despite anti-gay remark WASHINGTON—Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania will stay on as the Senate's No. 3 Republican despite his remarks about homosexuals, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist said yesterday. "Absolutely he will remain in the leadership," Frist said after the weekly GOP conference meeting. "He has the full 100 percent confidence of Senate Republicans." He has been under scrutiny since an April 7 interview with The Associated Press. During the interview, Santorum brought up a pending Supreme Court case over a Texas sodomy law and said, "If the Supreme Court says that you have the right to consensual sex within your home, then you have the right to bigamy, you have the right to polygamy, you have the right to incest, you have the right to adultery. You have the right to anything." Santorum, a conservative, has said his remarks were in the context of a past Supreme Court ruling on privacy and were not meant as "a statement on individual lifestyles." The Associated Press NEWS AFFILIATES KUJH TV Tune into KUJH for the news tonight at 5:30,7:00,9:00,and 11:00 KUJH-TV News News: Curtis Dixon and Joy Larson Weather: Tim Bush Sports: Brian Bruce On KJHK, 90.7 FM, listen to the news at 7,8 and 9. Then again at 6 p.m. 07 kansan.com Don't have time to read today's paper? Head to Don't have time to read today's paper. I need to kansan.com and listen to KTalks. Hear convergence manager Meredith Carr read summaries of today's top stories. Camera on KU To submit photos to Camera on KU, bring your photo to 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Place it in the On Campus mailbox and fill out a photo information sheet to identify your picture. Kelley Weiss/Kansan Melanie Weiser, Dallas junior, hands a Star of David to Karli Tracey, Deerfield, Ill., sophomore. Students from the Hillel House handed out various badges yesterday. The badges, such as the Star of David, represented those that Jewish people in concentration camps were forced to wear. Students also handed out fliers with listings of this week's activities that will honor victims of the Holocaust. ON CAMPUS — For more events, go to kucalendar.com Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a University Forum at noon in the ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. Contact Thad Holcombe at 843-4933. KU Memorial Unions will host a rededication ceremony at 1 p.m. at the Kansas Union. Call 864-2445. Cai Hong of the American studies department will lecture on "American Studies in China" from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. at room 202 in Bailey Hall. Call 864-3845 versity will lecture on "Always Looking Forward to Freedom: The Wartime Destruction of Slavery and the Transformation of Community Life in Northern Mississippi" from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Hall Center for the Humanities. Call 864-4798. Jay Gubrium of the University of Missouri will lecture on "Life Narratives in Ethnographic Perspective" at 3:30 p.m.at room 706 in Fraser Hall. Call 864-4111. Bruce Mactavish of Washburn Uni. Psi Chi, the KU Psychology Club will hold an ice cream social at 6 p.m. at room 547 in Fraser Hall. Contact Sarah at 766-6205. NATION The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will practice from 7 p.m.to 8:30 p.m. at room 207 in Robinson Center. Contact Tim Forthman at 865-3913. Boy found in Chicago hospital could be missing N.C. child Eli Quick was actually Tristen. CHICAGO — Almost three months after a dirty, bedraggled boy showed up at a suburban hospital, authorities said he may be a child who disappeared in North Carolina more than two years ago. "I think it's him," Tristen's mother, Raven Myers, told WTVD-TV in Durham, N.C. "They say he's got a lisp, I've got a lisp. It's just weird." Relatives of Tristen "Buddy" Myers are optimistic that authorities have found the boy, who was 4 when they last saw him in October 2000. The Department of Music and Dance will present the Elizabeth Sherbon Dance Theatre at 7:30 p.m. at room 240 in Robinson Center. Call 864-4264. It is expected to take four to six weeks for DNA tests to confirm whether a boy who said his name was For Illinois authorities, the case began as one of a disappearing father. A man who identified himself as Ricky Quick brought the boy into an Evanston hospital Feb. 3, said Jill Manuel, representative for the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. The hospital notified the child welfare agency because the boy was filthy and had not changed clothes in days, Manuel said. Hospital officials called Chicago police representative Pat Camden said the man was taken into custody but later released. police when the man tried to leave with the boy, and the man was arrested on a warrant for a theft charge, said Evanston Police Cmdr. Michael Perry. Quick never showed up to get the boy, which left DCFS worker Sharon Moriarity with the job of tracking down the boy's family, Cook County Public Guardian Patrick Murphy said. Moriarity determined that the woman the boy said was his mother, Sharon Smith, was killed in May 2002, Murphy said. The Associated Press Et Cetera Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd, Lawrence, KS 60045 The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4967) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Biweekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.33 are paid through the student activity fee. 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 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University, Daily Kansan prints campus events that are free and open to the public. When information is submitted, the event's sponsor, name and phone number must be on the form. which is available in the On Campus mailbox in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the desired publication date. Forms can also be filled out online at www.kansan.com — these requests will appear online as well as the Kansan. On Campus is printed on a space available basis. LIBERTY HALL 644 Mass. 7:49, 1912 BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM (pg-13) 4:16 7:10 CITY OF GOD (pg) 8:30 ONLY ADAPTATION. (pg) NO SHOWS $1 Free State Draw on wednesdays EVERYTHING BUT ICE FREE: BROWN BAG CLASSICS 12:30 - 1:00PM MOST WEDNESDAYS KANSAS UNION Make your lunch a classic. Please do so. BEDS • DESKS • BOOK CASES CHEST OF DRAWERS 936 Mass. FREE N BAG CLASSICS PM MOST WEDNESDAYS KANSAS UNION School of Fine Arts TODAY'S PERFORMER: ELECTRONIC MUSIC ENSEMBLE (ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, 4TH FLOOR) kansan.com Now. NewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNewsNews BUY ONE GET ONE FREE NEW LOWER PRICES Men's Suits Starting at just 2 for $299 EASTON'S FL LIMITED 839 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KS 66044 843-5755 BUY ONE GET ONE FREE Men's Suits EASTON'S FI 839 MASSACHUSETTS, LA V WEDNESDAY,APRIL30,2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3A AASU elects leaders, focuses on improvements By Henry C. Jackson cjackson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer The Asian American Student Union's newest president didn't face stiff competition in taking office, but that's not to say she wasn't prepared for it. Anna Kowalewski, Overland Park sophomore, was the only candidate for AASU's presidency. But Kowalewski was prepared to argue her case, opponent or no opponent. "I had a speech all prepared, so I'm kind of let down," she said. "But I'm relieved. This is what I wanted and I want to continue to get the word out about AASU." Kowalewski said she would use her new position to increase communication among minority groups at the University of Kansas. She also said she wanted to develop more programs emphasizing academic success. Along with a new president, AASU elected 10 other executive board positions at the group's last general meeting of the spring semester, which was held last night at the English Room in the Kansas Union. Members of the group gave brief speeches summarizing what changes they would make to the organization and where they would like to see the organization go. Most of the candidates and newly elected officers said they wanted to see more cooperation with other Asian groups and minority groups in general. "I haven't seen a lot of interaction," said John Tran, who was elected external vice-president. "It's a deficiency on our campus." Tran, Overland Park junior, said AASU's efforts to work with other organizations had improved this year but that they could improve with more effort. Tran also said he wanted to increase AASU's membership base. "There's plenty of Asian students that we haven't even reached," he said. By being elected social chair last night, Pauline Sung, Overland Park freshman, followed in her sister Sarah's footsteps. Sarah Sung, Overland Park senior, was the co-public relations chair last year for AASU. She will be graduating in the fall, but said she was glad her sister would continue to play an active role in AASU. Pauline joked that she was reluctant to run because of her sister's legacy. "My sister being in AASU and me living with her almost made me not want to do it," she said. Tiffany Lopez, AASU's outgoing president, said next year's executive board would continue the progress this year's had made. 1980 "I definitely feel like I'm leaving the group in good hands," the Minneapolis senior said. Pilar Pena/Kansan Lopez will be returning to the University next semester and plans to continue to be an active member of AASU. Because last night's meeting was the last of the year, board members gave brief speeches thanking members for their hard work, particularly on Asian Week and Taste of Asia, two of AASU's biggest activities this year. In the evening's shortest Anna Kowalewski, Overland Park sophomore and new president of the Asian American Student Union, participates in the group's final meeting for the semester with Tiffany Lopez, Minneapolis, Kan., senior. Lopez was this year's AASU president. speech, outgoing social chair Takuya Jay Inoue summed up the evening. "Thanks, congratulations and good night," Inoue, Countryside junior, said. 1234567890 - Edited by Leah Shaffer Panel of experts discusses role of academic research in law By Jessica Hood jhood@kansan.com Kansan staff writer A court case involving a transsexual and her husband became one example of the importance of academic research last night at a panel discussion at the Kansas Union. A panel of experts discussed the use of academic research by judges in preparing legal opinions last night. About 30 people attended the discussion and were able to ask questions at the end. The discussion centered on the case of J'Noel Gardiner, a transsexual, who had a sex change and then was married in the state of Kansas. Her husband died without a will, and under Kansas law, the spouse gets half the estate and the heirs get half. Her husband's son challenged the legality of the marriage because Gardener was born a man. The case went to the Kansas Supreme Court, which ruted in favor of the son. Pilar Pana/Kansan Kansas Supreme Court Justice Robert L. Gernon, a presenter, said a unique relationship existed between academics and the court system. Kansas Supreme Court Justice Robert L. Gernon and professor Milton Diamond from the University of Hawaii, speak about the role of academic research in legal decisions at a panel discussion yesterday. During the discussion, Diamond said it took a certain type of research to have an impact on court decisions. He told audience members who did academic research what they were doing was terribly important. Milton Diamond, professor of anatomy and reproductive biology at the University of and Society, also spoke. Diamond, who has been a cited Hawaii at Manoa and director of the Pacific Center for Sex source and expert witness in cases relating to gender and bioethics research, was contacted by Gernon who wrote the opinion on the Gardiner case at the Court of Appeals level in Kansas. Diamond said it took a certain type of research to have an impact. The decision in the case by the Supreme Court of Kansas was partially based on politics because Kansas is a conservative state, he said. "It is an issue that is very much alive," Diamond said. Gernon said judges needed to become aware of the results, research methods and validity of the research they are looking at. "We want good research," Gerson said. "We have to educate ourselves on what that is." Diana Carlin, dean of the Graduate School and International Programs, said the new program would allow students to see what people with graduate degrees from the University are doing with their lives. "Incredibly distinguished people are Jayhawks," Carlin said. The lecture was sponsored by the Graduate School as part of the inaugural Graduate School Alumni Days activities. Charlene Muehlenhard, professor of psychology and women's studies at the University of Kansas, also spoke. - Edited by Leah Shaffer LAST CALL LAST CALL Presents HAWK ROCK Wednesdays “LAWRENCE’S NEWEST & HOTTEST” DANCE CLUB/BAR THIS WEEK FEATURES: Huge Dart Board Tournament Cash prize for 1st and 2nd place teams Tournament $5 entry fee DJ Patrick Brown Lawrence’s Best Mainstream Hip Hop & Top 40 DJ 1st 25 people to enter recieve free complimentary drink pass Drink Specials: $3.00 Cover - $3.00 Doubles - $1.50 Anything Doors open at 8:00 p.m. 729 New Hampshire (785)838-4623 LAST CALL Presents HAWK ROCK Wednesdays “LAWRENCE’S NEWEST & HOTTEST” DANCE CLUB/BAR THIS WEEK FEATURES: Huge Dart Board Tournament Cash prize for 1st and 2nd place teams Tournament $5 entry fee DJ Patrick Brown Lawrence’s Best Mainstream Hip Hop & Top 40 DJ 1st 25 people to enter recieve free complimentary drink pass Drink Specials: $3.00 Cover - $3.00 Doubles - $1.50 Anything Doors open at 8:00 p.m. 729 New Hampshire (785)838-4623 FREE! YOU CAN EXPERIENCE THE EXCITEMENT OF BECOMING AN NCAA CHAMPION! Run back, back, back... and experience the thrill of snagging a homerun to win the NCAA Men's or Women's College World Series® at the Cingular Saves of the Game! Run onto the field in “full” uniform as a quarterback and score a game-winning touchdown with only seconds left on the clock at the Coca-Cola Gridiron Challenge! Step into hoops history and attempt to make some of the most memorable shots in men's and women's NCAA Basketball® history at the Pontiac Performance Plays! Show signs of teamwork by stepping into a skull to row against NCAA Championship times! Suit up in full gear and experience the pressure of receiving a pass and shooting on goal in the final seconds of the Lacrosse Championship! Bring home a CD-RDM of you & a friend calling the shots from your favorite championships at the CBS Sports Play-by-Play Booth! UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ALLEN FIELDHOUSE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 11:00 AM - 8:00 PM THURSDAY, MAY 1, 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM Presented by Blue Moon PRODUCTIONS Art and Design by ChillFactor Advertising & Design Sponsored by PIZZA MPL JUNKS Presented by Blue Moon PRODUCTIONS Sponsored by PIZZA PAPA JOHN'S ting FREE! YOU CAN EXPERIENCE THE EXCITEMENT OF BECOMING AN NCAA CHAMPION! Run back, back, back... and experience the thrill of snagging a homerun to win the NCAA Men's or Women's College World Series® at the Cingular Saves of the Game! Run onto the field in "full" uniform as a quarterback and score a game-winning touchdown with only seconds left on the clock at the Coca-Cola Gridiron Challenge! Step into hoops history and attempt to make some of the most memorable shots in men's and women's NCAA Basketball®history at the Pontiac Performance Plays! Show signs of teamwork by stepping into a skull to row against NCAA Championship times! Suit up in full gear and experience the pressure of receiving a pass and shooting on goal in the final seconds of the Lacrosse Championship! Bring home a CD-ROM of you & a friend calling the shots from your favorite championships at the CBS Sports Play-by-Play Booth! NCAA BEYOND THE GAME PRESENTED BY CBS SPORTS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ALLEN FIELDHOUSE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 11:00 AM - 8:00 PM THURSDAY, MAY 1, 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM TACO BELL CITY 10.2 解析题 (1) 根据材料,下列说法正确的是 ( )。 --- 4A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OPINION WEDNESDAY,APRIL30,2003 TALKTOUS Kristi Henderson editor 864-4854 or khenderson@kansan.com Jenna Goeppfert and Justin Heningn managing editors 864-4854 or iggeoepfertkanan.com and jungping@kagan.com Leah Shaffer readers' representative 864-410 or ishafter@kansan.com Amanda Sears and Lindsay Hanson 684-4924 on e-mail at amanda.com www.amanda.com Eric Kelting business manager 864-4388 or adsales.kansan.com Malcolm Gibson Sarah Jantz retail sales manager 864-4358 or adsaes.kansan.com Matt Fisher Malcimol Gibson general manager and news adviser 864-7667 or mgibson@kansan.com Matt Fisher sales and marketing adviser 864-7666 or mfisher@kansan.com State ducks away from education chagrin After receiving encouragement from educators, students and the Lawrence City Commission, Gov. Kathleen Sebelius vetoed the Legislature's resolution that threatened funding to the University's "Human Sexuality in Everyday Life" class. In a similar case several years ago, the state of Kansas became the laughingstock of the academic world when its school board decided to remove evolution from its state tests. Once again, the state has received national attention for attempting to limit academic freedom. By squelching the resolution, Sebelius has spared Kansans from further embarrassment and the subsequent academic shortcomings that would have followed had the resolution taken effect. The term "university" comes from a Latin word, meaning "whole." The goal of a university is to provide a comprehensive academic program which provides students with as many educational opportunities as possible. Students learn a wide variety of subjects and then decide what information to embrace and what information to discard. When an external filter is added to this process, students are denied the opportunity to make decisions for themselves, thus limiting their academic freedom and ultimately diminishing the quality of their education. Fortunately, Sebelius understands and respects academic freedom. She recognizes the potential national embarrassment and loss of educational opportunity that such a resolution would have incurred. Our gratitude and respect go out to Sebelius for respecting academic freedom and open-mindedness in the state of Kansas. Ben Ross for the editorial board SUBMITTING LETTERS AND GUEST COLUMNS The Kansan welcomes letters to the editors and guest columns submitted by students, faculty and alumni. The Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to length, or reject all submissions. For any questions, call Amanda Sears or Lindsay Hanson at 864-4924 or e-mail at opinion@kansan.com. If you have general questions or comments, e-mail the readers' representative at readersrep@kansan.com. GUEST COLUMN GUIDELINES Maximum Length: 650 word limit Include: Author's name Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) Also: The Kansan will not print guest columns that attack another columnist. LETTERGUIDELINES Maximum Length: 200 word limit Include: Author's name Author's telephone number Class, hometown (student) Position (faculty member) SUBMITTO E-mail: opinion@kansan.com E-mail: Hard copy: Kansan newsroom 111 Stauffer-Flint REALITY CHECK BIGGEST THREAT THIS SPRING: VIRUSES SARS OXYGEN AUGHHH!!! NOW THAT SARS IS HERE NO ONE REMEMBERS ME WEST NILE ERROR VMADES DON'T THINK THAT I'M AFRAID TO ERASE YOUR FINAL PAPERS... CAUSE I'M NOT SARS OXYGEN NO ONE REMEMBERS ME WEST NILE ERROR VMAGES Gory photos a consequence of abortion PERSPECTIVE It would have been pretty hard to miss justice for All. In case you did, it is an anti-abortion group that brought a graphic abortion protest to the University of Kansas in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. Walking around campus those few days, anyone with ears could hear round condemnations of the exhibit as "inappropriate," or "disgusting." Equally common was the statement "I shouldn't have to look at that." I would suggest that you do have to look at it. POLICE GUEST COMMENTARY The issues raised by Justice for All have ramifications far beyond the abortion debate. The central question here is our responsibility to understand consequences of our beliefs and actions. We as Americans hold tools of legislative power, and therefore our stances on tough issues are not ethereal; they have actual effects in the real world. Suppose that I were to say that I was 100 percent supportive of the war in Iraq in all its preemptive glory. Allow me to draw an analogy from our current political and military situation. Matt Pirotte opinion@hansan.com Suppose I were to say that, to me, it didn't matter whether Saddam Hussein had the infamous weapons of mass destruction. Instead, I support the war because I want to keep prices down when I go to fill up my Chevy. Any rational human being would be appalled at this callousness, and how might they respond? Many might say something like this to me, "What about all the American troops and innocent Iraqis that will surely die in this war? You realize that children will be killed by our bombs in this war you so ardently support, don't you?" Now what if I were to respond to them; "That is disgusting; those are inappropriate scare tactics!" What if I were to say they were unreasonable for wanting me to look at pictures in the paper of wounded Iraqis? What if I were to say, "I shouldn't have to look at those?" If I were to act in that manner, it would be quite correct to charge me with the most heinous form of irresponsibility. My point, if it is not already apparent, is that the same argument can be applied to the abortion debate. "Pro-choice" is not just a buzzword. it is not only about women's rights and it is not only about rape and incest. The results of "pro-choice" are in the pictures displayed by Justice for All. Supporting any side of an issue means coming to terms with the realities of that stance. What justice for All brought were not paintings, they were not representations. They were actual pictures of actual abortions. To say that those pictures were disgusting and shocking is exactly true, and that is reality. Pirotte is a Joplin, Mo., junior in history. PERSPECTIVE Justice for All out-of-touch, hypocritical Now that the Super Bowl-sized display of disturbing abortion photographs has passed to the next campus, we wonder. When people resort to shock tactics to get their points across, is it reasonable to suspect that they lack substantive rational information? The answer: You bet your bloody nickels. GUEST COMMENTARY On the opening cover of the Justice for All handout, we spot our first and blatant lie: "We regret the need for the disturbing nature of many of the photos," they say. Hogwash. I didn't see any regret. They asked us, "If the death penalty is wrong, can abortion be right?" First of all, I don't see the parallel between a murderer and a fetus. I distinctly recall the death penalty being sanctioned by God in the Old Testament of the Bible. So my friends, you tell me: If the two are equivalent and one is sanctioned by God, what's the problem? Either admit the two are profoundly different circumstances or admit to hypocrisy. "If you've helped to conceive a baby, you are already a parent," they say in the pamphlet to women who fear they're not ready. Just because you are a parent doesn't mean you're ready for it. This argument seemingly applies only to women who "helped conceive a baby" (Read: to those women who are at fault). Proverbs 7, which warns a boy about the possible temptation of a seductress, and other Luke Middleton opinion@kansan.com Should we go after those others? That would involve blaming men. Instead, let's assert that abortions occur only because of the selfishness of the pregnant woman. Can anybody help me with this one? Maybe it's because they alienate the very people they try to reach with spiteful language (Hey potential mom, try this one on for size — "Murderer!"), or maybe they just reflect the pessimistic attitudes inherent with their guilt theology, but either way they're out of touch with real-life women. You'll never find one who enjoyed passages in the Bible blame women for sex. I take a different view. There are plenty of others, besides the woman, who are at fault for an unwanted pregnancy. There are so many, in fact, that it's hard to know where to start. What about the religious authorities who preach birth control isn't something that decent women would consider using? Or the rich, white, male politicians (i.e. George W. Bush) who try to restrict her access to it example? I'll let you think of the others. her abortion. And I suspect the reason is related to this; "What about the baby?" Finally, a valid question. If it has to be asked, it's a bit late. How do you value the considerations of one life against those of another? Frankly, I don't know. By the time a potential mother has an unwanted pregnancy, no matter what choice is made, someone is going to lose. That's a horrible decision no one should ever have to make. What angers me isn't the path women choose but that they're called selfish for being in a situation that requires them to choose. In a society that places tremendous expectations on women to be nurturing mothers, an accusation of selfishness is perhaps the most painful criticism they could hear, but it's thrown about with impunity and ignorance. Selfish? Selfish people are those who can't share. Those who can't share intellectual space with an ideology other than their own. Those who promote misinformation and restrict access to birth control. Both, by the way, perpetuate abortion. The Justice for All pamphlet said it best. "Science has a very simple conception of man; as soon as he has been conceived, a man is a man." I'll say that's pretty simple. Don't bother wasting any room for women in your so-called science. Middleton is a Lawrence graduate student in English. Jennifer Wade for The University Daily Kansan Free for All Call 864-0500 Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit comments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be printed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded. For more comments, go to www.kansan.com 图 Hi, my friend lost her camera between Abe & Jake's and Borders last weekend on Friday night, and there are some really important pictures on there. It's a silver Canon, so if anybody found it, please call the Free For All. 目 What's up with all these Jayhawks that are covered with flowers and little beads and all these stupid purply colors? The Jayhawk is crimson and blue and yellow. It's not supposed to be covered in dandelions. 题 I wish that Kappa Sigma would pick a color for their letters and stick with it. --- I was downtown today, and Jayhawks are not supposed to look like cows. We're not the Kansas Cowhawks, we're the Kansas Jayhawks. Also, they are not supposed to be pink or have hearts on them. Thank you very much. For the person who found the April 23 cartoon repulsive, I find it hard to believe that you had a problem with a sketch when there were 20-foot photos of dismembered, bloody human fetuses being forced on everyone the day before. 脑 You know the world is coming to an end when the best rapper is a white guy, the best golfer is a black guy, the tallest player in the NBA is Chinese, the Swiss hold America's Cup, France is accusing the U.S. of arrogance, Germany doesn't want to go to war, and the three most powerful men in America are named Bush,迪克, and Colin. Need I say more? To all the singles out there who go to KU, a word of advice. It's not game-playing when you're the only one playing. --- Remember Angela from Who's the Boss? If I ever met her, I would say, "Damn, I wish you the lover." - For the guy who loves Best Buy so much, they said that about Borders. You'll never shut off the alternative, so devote your energy to something more important. What's the point of living in the student ghetto if your neighbors won't get you stoned? --- --- 1 WEDNESDAY,APRIL30.2003 NEWS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5A Executive women offer career tips By Eddie Yang eyang@kansan.com Kansan staff writer A panel of women executives provided some valuable insight for soon-to-be graduates last night at the Kansas Union. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and University Career and Employment Services hosted a panel discussion with top women executives from around the area. The discussion was a part of the "From Backpacks to Briefcases" series which aims at smoothing the transition from college life to the corporate world. But before the panel began, Steve Mercurio, manager at Saffees, 922 Massachusetts St., enceased a fashion show of corporate apparel. Mercurio said picking the right wardrobe was essential for women in the corporate world. "See what your assets are, and you show it," Mercurio said. "You want to stick to colors that will bring out your natural tones." Topics discussed in addition to wardrobe options included balancing career and life and maintaining a set of values. "You want to choose a job that is aligned with your personal values," said Joy Wheeler, president of HealthGuard. "You will be much happier and successful because of it." Cathy Curless, division senior vice president and chief information officer for Payless Shoesource, also stressed the importance of having a set of values. "Don't compromise your values no matter what," Curless. "It makes life easier to have a set of values to base every decision on." "Don't compromise your values no matter what. It makes life easier to have a set of values to base every decision on." Cathy Curless division senior vice president of Payless Shoeresource Laura Gregory, 1975 KU graduate and chairwoman of the board at KC Masterpiece Barbecue and Grill Restaurants, has been maintaining her personal values since she graduated. that I wanted to live in Lawrence and not work in journalism, the degree that I just graduated with." Gregory said. "You can add, change, or expand your credo, but 90 to 95 percent will be the same." "I got out of school and knew Lynley Goodman, Leawood senior, said the discussion was helpful. "The biggest deal I ever made was on a golf course," Wheeler said. Besides maintaining a set of values, Wheeler said women should also learn the game of golf. "It was interesting to see how these women got to where they are," Goodman said. "They shared a lot of useful tips that I could use." — Edited by Erin Chapman Products help detect date rape drugs Bv Erin Ohm By Erin Ohn eohm@kansan.com Kansan staff writer A new technology is available to help detect the presence of date-rape drugs in drinks, but students won't find it in Lawrence. Drink Safe Technology has created two products, a coaster and test strips, that test drinks for the presence of the major daterape drugs Ketamine and gamma hydroxybutyrate, commonly called GHB. The technology allows anyone to perform an easy test to find out whether the drugs were put in a drink the user thinks might be contaminated. No pharmacies in Lawrence carry the products, and the KU Bookstore does not have them, but students at Kansas State University can get them from the Union Bookstore and Varney's Bookstore, a local bookstore. A card containing two test strips costs $1.99 at the student bookstore. Steve Levin, manager at the Union Bookstore and whose family also owns Varney's bookstore, said he found out about the products at a convention showing new products for college stores. "I immediately thought it would be a new product that would be useful to students," Levin said. "Especially on a university campus situation, you have a lot of opportunity to mingle with people you don't know. A young person could just keep this in their wallet or purse and if they have suspicion, could test it and just know." Ashley Heintzelman, Overland Park senior, said she thought the test strips were a great idea. "I would buy it for a precaution," she said. "I think with the threat of that kind of stuff happening, every girl should have some." Heintzelman said she would buy the strips if they were available, especially at such a reasonable price. According to the products' Web site, www.drinksafetech.com, the test is effective on all soft drinks, beers and hard liquors. The test strips come on a card the size of a credit card and the user simply uses a straw or finger to put some of the drink on the strip. If the strip changes colors, the drink is contaminated, and if it doesn't, the drink is safe. Melissa McCormick, a pharmacist at Dillons, Sixth and Wakarusa streets, had not heard about the new products. She said the store pharmacy did not carry the test strips or coasters in stock but would probably be able to get them for a customer by the next day. Co-op, 901 Iowa St., said he was interested in making such products available in his store if the cost wasn't too great. Hal Sears, wellness manager for the Community Mercantile "It seems like something that Lawrence ought to have available." Sears said. The products are something businesses should consider making available to customers, said Christal Lloyd, McPherson freshman. "It's a good idea for dance clubs," Lloyd said. "If you go out dancing and leave your cup down, it would be a good idea. But it's not any substitute for awareness." The Web site for the product recommended the test not be used on acidic drinks, such as fruit juice, any milk products, some wines and drinks with tonic water. Edited by Leah Shaffer Brotherly love drives student to leave home By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Lorena Sanchez hasn't seen her parents in a year. Praveen Kumar The Asunción, Paraguay, junior moved to Lawrence from Paraguay last year to attend the University of Kansas. Sanchez's father is a retired military general, and she moved around to other countries as a child. Dan Nelson/Kansan Because her parents divide their time between a city home in Paraguay and a farm in the small town of Tapirakuain, she doesn't get to speak to them as often as she would like to. "I can't call them when they're at the farm because there's no electricity or running water there," Sanchez said. "They have a generator but I can't call." She moved to Lawrence last year to be closer to her brother, who works in Kansas City. Both her older brother and sister attended Kansas State University because Paraguay students have special arrangements at Kansas State which includes in-state tuition. Sanchez has been studying English since she was 12 years old. Although she's fluent now, she sometimes reverts to speaking Spanish when she gets frustrated. Sanchez's boyfriend, Jason Haith, said he got a kick out of the language barrier. "She knows what the correct words are, but she sometimes just can't get them out," Haith, Overland Park senior said. "She'll get out of the shower and ask me to warm up her feet. It's so damn cute." Asucon Paraguay, junior Lorena Sanchez is working toward studying at the University of Kansas School of engineering. Sanchez is waiting to see how many credits will transfer from her University in Paraguay. Haith and Sanchez have been dating for more than a year, and Haith has yet to meet her parents. They have spoken on the phone, but conversations are limited because Sanchez's mom doesn't speak English. Although her parents accept the international relationship, some cultural differences worry her parents. "In Paraguay, you don't leave your house until you get married," Sanchez said. "It's weird because you don't get to be independent until you leave the house. I think my mom is still a little sad." Sanchez apparently is soaking up her new environment. She plans to stay in the Kansas City area after she graduates with a degree in civil engineering. "My whole life changed when I came here," she said. "I guess my parents will just have to deal with it." Edited by Jason Elliott IS GOD CALLING YOU? THE SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH OF WICHTTA do you feel a longing for more in your life? do you radiate joy? do you long to follow in the footsteps of Jesus? IS GOD CALLING YOU? THE SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH OF WICHITA do you long to follow in the footsteps of Jesus? Here’s one way to help you find out. Perhaps you’re one of the rare women being called by God to follow in the footsteps of Jesus. But you’re wondering, “how can I truly know if I’ve been called?” This free CD-ROM from the Sisters of St. Joseph may help you find out. To request yours, visit www.csjwichita.org or call our Vocation Director, Sr. Ann Letourneau, at 316-689-4030. You’ll be eternally grateful you did. store love your out of your smile? SAVE $25 when you reserve your store space by May 2nd Store Anything: Furniture, Futons, Bikes, Computers, etc. Basic Package is $135 for the entire summer! WE CAN PACK AND SHIP ANYTHING RIGHT FROM YOUR DORM OR RESIDENCE AT UPS COUNTER RATES! The UPS Store 865-0004 Formerly Mail Boxes Etc. HELP SAVE LIVES and EARN $25* TODAY! Donate your blood plasma. Help burn, trauma and shock victims, surgery patients & more. Call or stop by: ZLB Plasma Services 816 West 24th Street Lawrence, KS 66046 785-749-5750 www.zlb.com Fees and donation time may vary. *(for approx. 2 hours. New donors only.) SUMMER STORAGE ups --- --- 1 6A • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 everybody's doing it KU Psychology Club Wednesday, April 30th Fraser 547 at 6pm Ice Cream Social and Officer Elections!! ALL ARE WELCOME!! Fric Breem/Kansan Ξ STUDIO 71 Ryan Keller, St. Charles, Mo., junior, works on his voice with Gonaro Mendez, assistant professor of music and dance, during a weekly private lesson. Keller is president of the Men's Glee Club and is performing in Kansas City, Mo., next weekend. Student intune with his goals By Megan Hickerson mhickerson@kansan.com Kansan staff writer Ryan Keller was unaware of his natural singing talent until he enrolled in choir during high school. Keller is now president of the University of Kansas Men's Glee Club and is performing next weekend at the Lyric Opera in Kansas City, Mo. "I just enrolled in a chair class for fun," the St. Charles, Mo., junior said. "I had no idea that I was any good until I was selected to be in the All-State choir my junior year of high school. It was obviously natural talent." Perhaps Keller's natural talent is genetic — his dad was in high school choir and Keller's mom was involved in band. The Men's Glee Club practices twice a week in Murphy Hall. It has performed classical music and pieces from musicals such as South Pacific and West Side "It's amazing how many guys want to be involved in an all- men's choir." Hugo Vera KU Men's Glee Club director Story. Although Keller is majoring in vocal performance, 80 percent of the club members are not music majors. "All of these guys really want to be here," Vera said. "It's amazing how many guys want to be involved in an all-men's choir." Hugo Vera, director of the club, enjoys working with the members because of their passion for music. Aside from classroom training, Keller also has private voice lessons weekly. Keller is dividing his time between his music classes and performing in the Lyric Opera's Rigoletto this weekend. Keller has an opportunity to learn from professional singers while earning $90 per performance. "It's a bit intimidating working with the pros," Keller said. "I'm learning so much working with these huge voices." Although Keller often performs classic music, he has a wide range of musical interests. "It's not like I drive around and listen to classical music all the time," he said. "I listen to lots of pop rock in my free time." After Keller graduates, he plans on becoming a professional opera singer. Vera, the club's director, has confidence that Keller will achieve his goals. "He'll go as far as he wants to because of his talent and determination," Vera said. "He has a real passion for performance, and that's what you need to do well in this business." Edited by Anne Mantey THIS WEEK at The New Granada WEDNESDAY SIN (service industry night) 25¢ DRAWS DJ Bring your 25¢ drink or provide a FREE cancero. THURSDAY UNO de MAYO! ($2 almost everything Mexican!) FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink SATURDAY The Schwag GRATEFUL DEAD TRIBUTE 18+ Doors open at 8 p.m.! student owned and operated WWW.THEGRANADA.COM THIS WEEK at The New Granada WEDNESDAY SIN Service Monday, May 21 25¢ DRAWS DJ Band your favorite songs and free jazz. THURSDAY UNO de MAYO! ($2 almost everything Mexican!) FRIDAY DJ BRANDON MORGAN $3 Red Bull & Vodkas 18+ to enter, 21+ to drink SATURDAY The Schwag GRATEFUL DEAD TRIBUTE 18+ Doors open at 8 p.m.! THIS WEEKEND ONLY · TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 Starla Benford Erin Moran From TV's Happy Days THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets. www.ticketmaster.com 816-931-3330 *The Lied Center Box Office, or 785-864-ARTS* Service Charge may apply. SATURDAY PRESENTED BY THIS WEEKEND ONLY • TICKETS AS LOW AS $20 Starla Benford Erin Moran From TV's Happy Days Amy J. Carle THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES BY EVE ENSLER SPREAD THE WORD LAWRENCE PREMIERE of the NATIONAL TOUR Saturday May 3rd & Sunday May 4th THE LIED CENTER Located on the campus of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Tickets available through all Ticketmaster outlets. www.ticketmaster.com 816-931-3300; The Lied Center Box Office, or 785-864-ARTS *Service Charge may apply. 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If a federal agent came knocking at Watson Library, University of Kansas officials would have to hand over records of who checked out what book even if the federal agents had no probable cause for the search. A provision in the USA PATRIOT Act is causing threats to public libraries, according to librarians. The provision, passed in 2001, authorizes the FBI to obtain business records based on warrants from secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act courts. These courts do not require that the government show probable cause after changes instituted by the act. As a result, public libraries in Illinois and Vermont have posted warning signs that the government could demand access to reading records, and the library wouldn't be able to refuse. Other libraries are deleting patrons' borrowing records as soon as books are returned. When a book is returned to a library at the University, the record essentially disappears, said Stella Bentley, dean of libraries. She said the act gave the government the ability to come and ask for records without allowing the library to inform the individual whose records are asked for. "I don't think most people believe the government has any business finding out what books people are checking out." Dennis Moore U.S. Representative "By not having any information around, we don't have anything to give them if they ask for it." Bentley said. "We have done everything we can to protect patron records." But if a federal agency were to ask for a student's record, while the book was checked out, library administrators would have to give them the information. The policy of the University libraries is to refer any federal requests for library records to the University Council and let it deal with agents, then abide by what that office recommends. Brace Flanders; director of the Lawrence Public Library, said the most onerous part of the act was the lack of a process for librarians to talk to anyone about potential visits from law enforcement. "Librarians are prohibited from talking about it," Flanders said. "That is not a good way for the government to work." Although Flanders is supportive of the government's efforts to curb possible terrorism, he said this law was a threat to libraries because people who had a concern about government intrusion would be hesitant to use public libraries. "If someone from a law enforcement agency came in, we would ask them to produce a valid court order," Flanders said. "But we don't keep much in the way of records, either, intentionally." Flanders said he was so concerned about the act that he contacted U.S. Rep. Dennis Moore (D-Kansas) to co-sponsor legislation exempting bookstore owners and libraries from the provision in the act. Moore agreed and is one of 75 co-sponsors of the bill. A bill was introduced in the U. S. House of Representatives last month to exempt libraries and booksellers from the provisions of Section 215 of the act. Under the bill, called the Freedom to Read Protection Act, law enforcement agents could still ask for bookstore and library records but only with evidence of probable cause. "I was concerned about this bill, the PATRIOT Act, that had been passed before and some of the implications it had on individual civil liberties and freedoms." Moore said. "I don't think most people believe the government has any business finding out what books people are checking out." College dean releases second rap CD The Associated Press UNIVERSITY CITY, Mo.—At Blueberry Hill, photos of famous musicians line the walls; Paul McCartney, Aretha Franklin, Steven Tvler. — Edited by Julie Jantzer On a recent night there was another draw at Blueberry Hill. In a concert venue downstairs, tables were crammed and the bar had steady business during the first headlining performance of rapper Henry Biggs, also known as "Headmess." Dressed from head to toe in black, Biggs and a supporting band of eight, ran through his set. Was this the same white guy teetering on the edge of 40 who was sitting in his office on the nearby Washington University campus the next day? It was. Biggs is a dean by day and a rapper at night, and he has just released his second CD. Biggs said he first became interested in rap when he was in a Greek class in college and a professor spoke about how the performances of ancient hards spinning myths weren't that different from rap music. Henry Biggs is a dean by day and a rapper at night and has just released his second CD. Biggs set out to write songs with social commentary and more diverse ideas than what he was hearing in other hip-hop music. And he wrote many of his songs as word puzzles. "I think when you go to a certain vehicle," he said, "it's part of your obligation to respect the language in a certain sense." Biggs said even his decision to use street language was thought out. HENRY BIGGS' LYRICS "Check Me Out" "Got an eye for you mama come on you know you wanna Let me get you hotter than a sauna Me, me, me so dope, so groovy, so fly for a pale guy My love's hotter than the Fourth of July Here's what's really going on: The song is a lipogram, a form in which one or more letters are left "Don't mean to brag, don't mean to boast. But coast to coast they want my butter on that breakfast toast" out of a written work. Biggs purposely doesn't use the letter "I" in any of the words in the song. Biggs said the song could be considered something like "the construction worker's lament." He said the more a stereotypical construction worker yelled offensive things at a woman, the more he was usually ignored. He said the more someone asked to be checked out, the more he (the "I," or ego) disappeared. "By extension, sexually offensive rappers,the song would hold,have the same experience," Biggs explained. student union activities The University of Kansas 785-964-GSHOW www.suaevents.com UPCOMING EVENTS WEDNESDAY 5:11 pm sandcastle contest 1:00am - 3:00pm Wescoe Beach sneak preview The Italian job 7:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 FREE! vouchers available the day of the show at the SUA box office THURSDAY 4:15 pm feature film Catch Me If You Can 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 FRIDAY 7:15 pm feature film Catch Me If You Can 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level 5 tunes ❤️ NOON Podstar 12:00 pm Union Plaza kansas union, level 4 WEDNESDAY OPEN MIC NIGHT 7:00 pm Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 ALL TICKETS FOR movies are $2.00 off. THE HAWK SHOP, LEVEL 4 kansas union or THRU WITH AN SUA movie CARO. questions about these or other sua events? check suaevents.com or call the SUA office at 864-5900 海南海口市文昌区 feature film Catch Me, If You Can 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium kansas union, level s PARKS الصورة التالية تتمثل في ساعة الأجرية الساعة الأجرية تتمثل في ساعة الأجرية FRIDAY FEATURE FILM Catch Me If You Can 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodhill Auditorium kansas union, level 6 TUNES ☺ NOON Podstar 12:00 pm Union Plaza kansas union, level 4 WEDNESDAY OPEN MIC NIGHT 7:00 pm Hawks Nest kansas union, level 1 ALL TICKETS FOR MOVIES ARE $2.00 AT THE HAWK SHOP, LEVEL 4 KANSAS UNION OR BY WITH AN SUA MOVIE CARD. QUESTIONS ABOUT THESE OF OTHER SUA EVENTS? CHECK SUAEVENTS.COM OR CALL THE SUA OFFICE AT 864-5000 FEATURE FILM Catch Me If You Can 7:00 & 10:00 pm Woodnuff Auditorium kansas union, Level 5 TUNES NOON Podstar 12:00 pm Union Plaza kansas union, Level 4 diamond Serving KU Listing Useful Services DELMONTE FRUITS 69¢ EA. 1.5 OZ. PEACHES, PEARS OR FRUIT, COCKTAIL PRICES GOOD APRIL 30 THRU MAY 6, 2003 FRIDAY SPECIAL BANANAS 19¢ LB. FRIDAY SPECIAL JALAPENOS 78¢ LB. BONeless Beef TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Economy Park 2'28 LB. BONeless Portion Loin CHOPS OR ROAST Economy Park 1'88 LB. Hamburger Bacon Economy Park 2'25 LB. BONeless Beef FRYER BREASTS Economy Park 1'68 LB. BONeless Beef RUMP ROAST Economy Park 1'48 LB. THE ADACADOS 68¢ LB. T-BONE STEAK Economy Park 4'98 LB. Honey Sweet Corn Economy Park 4'71 LB. Dole Cole Slaw or SALAD Mix 1 LB. 77¢ EA. Red Seedless GRAPES 98¢ LB. Honey Potatoes Economy Park 2'28 LB. Fresh Chips BROCCOLI Large bunch 78¢ EA. Seedless Watermelon 29¢ LB. Orange Juice Economy Park 1'88 LB. JENO'S PIZZA 69¢ EA. Patio Dinners 77¢ EA. Double 186 PRINTS at 6.99 FOR 1.2 GALLON OF ICE CREAM 2'88 EA. Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES Open 24 Hours Everyday! kansan.com News Now Hair Experts Design Team 2100 - B West 25th Street • 841.6886 • 800.246.6886 g this ad in before 5/31/03 to receive $5 off any $20 service (coupon #8) CA$H CA$HCA$HCA$H CA$H CA$H CA$HCA$H CA$HCA$H CA$HCA$H CA$HCA$HCA$H CA$H MORE OF IT. ALWAYS. SELL YOUR TEXTBOOKS Now Thru Finals. IBS Jayhawk Bookstore ...at the top of Naismith Hill www.jayhawkbookstore.com 843-3826 • 1420 Crescent Rd. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 STUDENT FILMMAKERS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 9A NEWS Film CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Kelley Weiss/Kansan Patrick Rea, Lawrence resident and University of Kansas graduate, records a newscast for Channel 6 News. Rea, a part-time camera operator and floor director for Channel 6 Productions, recorded the 6 p.m. broadcast Friday. He said he worked at the news station because it gave him valuable experience for making films. Contributed art Chris Blunk, Omaha, Neb., junior, shoots his walls in Patrick Rea's film, The Walls. Contributed art Gallery Student Film Competition at Auburn University. Rea isn't rushing his Hollywood career. "It would be a big mistake to run out to L.A. right out of college." Rea said. While in Lawrence, Rea is trying to learn from his mistakes as a filmmaker. He said he also liked benefiting from the community aspects of filmmaking in Lawrence. He once wanted to use the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall for a shoot. What normally would take weeks of preparation time, and hundreds, even thousands of dollars in Los Angeles was just one free phone call away from Rea. 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789 "I'm about ready to start tackling some longer, bigger projects." Rea said. Until this summer, the longest film Rea created was 15 minutes long. His next project, will be an 80-minute feature called The Empty Acre. It is a supernatural story set on a farm in the Midwest. Rea said the project was similar to the film A Cry in the Dark. "I want to see him move past mere technical proficiency and really tackle something on a more serious level," Jacobson said. He said he thought Rea's project this summer would accomplish that. Rea will spend most of the summer writing The Empty Acre. To improve the film's quality, Rea said he might seek funding from outside sources to pay for the film. "That may take us a whole year, but we're patient," Rea said. Shooting will tentatively begin in late summer or fall and postproduction could last until spring. The amount of time it takes for Rea to complete the project doesn't matter. He's willing to make any sacrifice to become a professional filmmaker. Almost Famous Wichita junior Dara Barton faces a computer screen in a Baldwin City farmhouse, staring at the Final Cut Pro computer program. She carefully edits the video for one reason: to get to Hollywood. She slowly manipulates the video stream and audio clips, splicing together footage for a commercial produced by Isoar Productions. Barton can't wait to get there. If she had her way she wouldn't be pursuing a degree in film studies, she would have already packed her bags and left for California. "I would like to get a job with a fairly well-known production company. I'd like to just get my name out and meet the right people," Barton said. "If an opportunity to act presents itself, great. If not, I am happy to continue to work in film." In five years, Barton said, she wanted to work at a studio and act as well. Charlie Parker, 18, of Olathe, plays a lovable role in Dan Ryckert's film, The Aviator. She also likes video editing, the process of taking hours of footage and turning it into a cohesive vision. Barton's passion for film began when she was young, watching her mother watch movies. She remembers having an especially good time when her mother took her to the theater to see *Bird on a Wire*. Though Barton doesn't consider the movie a work of genius, she never forgets the fun she had with her mother that day. "I love how a movie can affect people," she said. "There have been a couple of times where I've worked on projects, occasions where I am not taken seriously." Barton said. As one of the few women majoring in film at the University, Barton sees herself as a minority. One class project especially frustrated Barton. "They didn't believe I was capable. They were really shy handing me the camera," Barton said. A few days into shooting, the crew was short-handed, and Barton found herself behind the camera. She said she more than proved herself, and the crew respected her work from then on. In classes, Barton said, professors don't give her or other female students special treatment. John Tibbetts, associate professor of theatre and film, agreed. "I think the whole film studies area transcends conventional gender roles," Tibbetts said. Barton has taken classes outside of the film-studies curriculum, such as Acting I and II, because her ambitions go beyond production. Tibbetts taught Barton's Film Theory class and he spoke highly of her writing. "I don't think the film department is given enough credit. The classes are more difficult than I thought it would be,"Barton said. "I'd love to see her get involved Contributed art Blake Jones, Olathe freshman, plays a former president in The Monroe Factor. in a production company or in some aspect of the entertainment business." Tibbetts said. The film student estimated that she spent one-half to three-quarters of her day working on or thinking about movies. Barton said she learned many lessons from her film classes. She notices camera angles, the use of color and mise-en-scène, which is the total visual concept of a scene. She also learned to appreciate art-house films. This summer Barton will work in a production seminar class with Jacobson, the film professor. Although she could graduate in December, Barton plans on staying in school so she can take an internship in Los Angeles in Spring 2004. At Isoar Productions Barton edited video for a commercial for La Familia, a Mexican restaurant, she appeared in a commercial for the Custard Cup and she helped edit and shoot All in Good Flavor, a local cooking show. If she's not helping Isoar Productions she's either at the movies or one of her two film classes. Barton will wait as long as necessary to get the dream internship The Freshman Eight Hashinger Hall residents pack themselves into an eighthfloor room. Four sit on the floor, two on the bed and a two others stand against the back wall. They all gather to see Olathe Freshman Dan Ryckert's latest comedy, Harold. "I write, direct, edit. I pretty much do everything," Ryckert said. When the 20-minute film ends the students straggle into the eighth-floor lobby shouting exclamations of praise to Ryckert. Ryckert smiles, nods and waves. He has created, with little assistance, 30 to 35 films since he was 17 years old. Most of these films can be seen on www.studentfilms.com. He's a child of television. "I Since I was really young I would get overly into certain shows." Ryckert said. His favorite shows are The Late Show with David Letterman, Late Night with Conan O'Brien and The Simpsons. Ryckert said the ridiculous humor of these shows could be seen in his films. "Its just a huge conglomeration of those influences mixed in with my own way of doing things," Ryckert said. "I write these really absurd circumstances." In one of his most recent films, The Monroe Factor, former President James Monroe travels into the future to the University campus. He arrives in Hashinger Hall and he hangs out with students leading up to an intentionally comedic, cheesy ending, in which Monroe kicks his heroin habit to save Hashinger Hall from a fictitious preppie dorm. Ryckert pays for his films with the money he earns from his video production studio, Nothing Official Productions. He makes wedding, graduation and home videos for his clientele. Four films in Ryckert's growing portfolio are about 20 minutes long, the rest are shorter than five minutes. A 15-minute movie took about a month to a month and a half to create, he said. Ryckert said it took him a long time to make a movie because he was so meticulous. "When you make a movie you have to watch it, like, 900 times, while you're editing it," Ryckert said. Ryckert has already developed an audience. The students who pack into his room for Harold have seen all of Ryckert's films. When Ryckert completes a film he usually spends all day screening it with friends and fellow Hashinger Hall residents. He's also caught the attention of a few teachers at the University. "I saw a tape of projects he did in high school. I thought they were pretty outstanding, especially for high school," said Rodney Hill, an instructor and doctoral student in film studies. "Dan has a very good visual sense." Hill taught Ryckert last semester in the Intro to Film Medium course and said Ryckert stuck out among the 250 students in the class. "I think his enthusiasm is what has struck me the most," Hill said. Ryckert has begun to spread this enthusiasm to others. His younger sister Kayla, who has appeared in several of Ryckert's films along with her twin Katie, has already taken an interest in filmmaking. The 10-year-old has even given Ryckert advice on how a scene should be shot. Ryckert is happy to pass his passion for film to his sister. He loves this stuff. — Edited by Andrew Ward STUDENT TRAVEL web Fares and NOT just online London...$314 Paris...$441 Amsterdam...$495 Rio de Janeiro.$611 Fare is roundtrip from Kansas City. Subject to change and availability. Tax not included. Restrictions and blackouts apply. Kansas Union, Room 475 (785) 864.1271 www.statravel.com STA TRAVEL ISIC MASS. STREET DELI INC. 941 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 11 AM - 9 PM SUNDAY - WEDNESDAY 11 AM - 9 PM THURSDAY - SATURDAY All 1/3 lb. charbroiled burger platters only $3.95 values to $6.00 5 p.m. to Close-Every Evening values to $6.00 kansan.com News Now It's BROTHERS Est. 1967 BAR & GRILL Lawrence, KS 1105 Mass Lawrence, KS M.WINGS! TORIGHT! Just 'an while They're HOT. "ORIGINAL" or Red Hot 'Ass Burners! $2 RED MILLI & $1 IN. $2.00 Dos Equis Bottles JUMBO MADAGARITAS "Always the 'Best' Specials, Always the 'Most' Fun!" 》 10A = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 Petition contiueur FROM PAGE 1A NEWS SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dan Nelson/Kanzan Dan Carey, Graduate Teaching Assistant Coition president, hands a petition to Carol Prentice, assistant to the provost, in Strong Hall. Yesterday GTAC tried to reverse the firing of Abdel-Rahmen Al-Gibaly, a graduate teaching assistant in the department of African and African-American Studies. The petition came after GTAC delivered a letter to Provost David Shulenburger in February that requested a review of Al-Gibaly's termination. That letter asked the University of Kansas to pay Al-Gibaly for the spring semester, reimburse tuition, for the spring semester, provide health care and erase any record his termination from his personnel file, said Brian Lindaman, grievance chairman for GTAC. "Our goal is to bring it to the attention of the appropriate parties," Lindaman said. "We believe the provost can do something about this. We're just asking for a thorough review of this matter, not anything beyond that. There are lots of documents and student evaluations that AI is an excellent teacher." The provost will respond to Carey before the end of the school year, said Jeannette Johnson, assistant to the provost. "Any matters related to graduate teaching assistant discipline are taken in accordance with memorandum of agreement between the University, the Regents and the Kansas Association of Public Employees," Johnson said. "Any action that the University takes in regard to any graduate teaching assistant has to be taken in a manner that is consistent with that agreement. It is a legally binding document." Johnson said, "Any action that the University takes in regard to any graduate teaching Al-Gibaly quietly watched the delivery of the petition, holding a blue three-ring binder where he keeps all the letters and documents pertinent to his case. Al-Gibaly has taught at the University of Kansas, the University of Missouri-Kansas City and Middlebury College in Vermont. His binder is full of letters of recommendations from these universities. Al-Gibaly was teaching Arabic 210 last semester under Naima Omar, assistant professor of African and African-American Studies, when he was dismissed. Omar gave Al-Gibaly his negative evaluation. "What was striking was there was nothing positive." Al-Gibaly said. "Absolutely nothing. Basically she said I was unfit to teach. I have been teaching for 15 years, and all of the sudden she says I'm unfit." Since his termination last November, Al-Gibaly has continued his pursuit of a doctorate degree while caring for his two children. This termination compromises his chances of being hired by another department at the University and teaching is his only means of income, he said. "I'm hoping the provost will show leadership and part of being a leader is making tough choices," Al-Gibaly said. "He needs to address this injustice. The evaluation was false. It's just crazy. What am I going to do with two small children?" "It's been a big challenge." Al-Gibaly said. "I am borrowing money, but I don't have a lot of sources left. I have no family in the U.S., no support system. Without a job, my children and I will basically starve." Al-Gibaly is in the United States on a scholar exchange visa and the visa prohibits Al-Gibaly said he wanted the University to consider his case so he wouldn't have to resort to legal channels. him from working outside the University setting, he said. He said he considered applying for a government job but it would require full citizenship, and he was still waiting for that. GTAC will wait for a response from Shu-lenburger and hope he decides to review the case. Lindaman said. "We don't think this is fair to graduate teaching assistants," Lindaman said. "It doesn't help us become better teachers. We'd just like to see due process here." — Edited by Brandon Gay Senator CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Zahn, for the first time, publicly explained her experience in the class, saying Dailey made inappropriate comments and gestures in the class as well as showing female genitalia of 5-to-10-year-old girls and pornographic videos. Zhan said she had been sexually harassed by Dailey. "We have the right to be educated without being personally violated," she said at a press conference yesterday afternoon. "We have the right to sit through a class without being the subject of sexual innuendos." Host Bill O'Reilly asked Zahn why she didn't leave the class. She said she wouldn't get her money back if she dropped out, and she wanted to give a voice to others who were offended by the class content. O'Reilly interrupted her asking, "So you're basically helping the senator out in her quest here?" The show lasted approximately five minutes and ended with Wagle stressing that taxpayers should not fund Dailey's class. "I assumed that if I didn't stay in the class this would continue because I didn't know if there would be anyone else to come forward," Zahn said. After watching the interview, Leon, the professor emeritus, told students coverage would be given to those who made the biggest public splash. And, with that, coverage of minority opinions could go a long way. "We have the right to be educated without being personally violated." Jessica Zhan Linwood senior "It means that books like this and their voices can overwhelm thousands of students" voices who know by direct experience that all of this is a tissue of lies," he said. He encouraged students to organize, meet with Chancellor Robert Hemenway, Provost David Shullenberger, school deans and to hold press conferences. "Those of you who are interested in the concept of resistance," he said, "now is the time." The University is investigating Dalley's class as a result of Wagle's allegations. Wagle said she was confident the University would confirm her allegations against Dalley and his class. The House and Senate would overrule Sebelius's veto of her bill, she said. "My challenges will be verified," she said. The Legislature will reconvene today, and Wagle wants the Senate and House to override the veto soon. Three to four students from the Student Legislative Awareness Board will greet legislatures with pamphlets to lobby for academic freedom outside of the chambers. Edited by Jason Elliott Student Recreation Fitness Center basketball Courts will be named after basketball years 1920, 1923, 1929, 1941. KU RECREATION SERVICES Outdoor Pursuits area to rent equipment and make bike repairs. STUDENT SENATE Name: Phone #: E-mail: Answer: First Management Living Communities. Something for everyone. Junior Josh Duran winds up for a pitch at the Jayhawks in World Series runs in three and one-third innings. Keith Fishery f fishery.com Student website in charge of retention only over course time and the approval of professionals. All rights Highpointe There are shorts. 25 NCA apparel. Room championships, and we the student apiad ball court. Fun basketball. Fraternity bell. Student gymnasium. row baseball field. Chase Court. The NCAA Beyond the Name This presented by CBS Sports allows students to compete in five NCAA sports. All events are free, as well be given from 11am to 5pm at Center Parkway Commons Rand Koch representative for the tour, said it was a promotional campaign for students to be at 8468 historical Hir and how include Pomus bizarre tian the end Reyn Brand New Community On Street Canyon Court AN Canyon Court Brand New Community TITLE The foundation drill is the prime must do Wichita and Kansas based foundation drill service department in Killen 843-8220 Mia's golf finishes eighth. NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL CLASSIC MOVE. Need a Job? MARK & JACK BOSTON BARTENDERS SCHOOL of AMERICA - Hands on training/niteclub setting - Special student discount - National Alcohol Awareness Certification BE A BARTENDER! - Super job placement assistance - Super job placement assistance - Conveniently located in downtown Kansas City CALL TODAY! 1-816-221-8555 www.bostonbartender.com PAGE 10 Graduation 2003 Jayhawk Bookstore It's Not Too Late Featuring: - Custom Embossed Announcements from 99¢ · choose paper, typeface, print color, and special messages · 24-48 hr turnaround, Low minimum order - Complete Regalia from $19.95 - Masters Regalia w/hood $42.90, Doctoral Regalia w/hood $49.90 - Diploma Frames from $99.95 - Free '03 graduation tshirt (with $50.00 order) Congratulations on your Achievement and thanks for shopping with us over the years! Online ordering @ www.jayhawkbookstore.com www.jayhawkbookstores.com·1420 Crescent Pd·843-3826 1 Tell us your news: Contact Jessica Tims,jtims@kansan.com, or Matt Gehrke,mgehrke@kansan.com, or call 864-4858. SPORTS WWW.KANSAN.COM/SPORTS 1B THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 'Hawks fall to Shocks 42 Dan Nelson/Kansan Junior Josh Duran winds up for a pitch at the Jayhawks vs. Wichita State game last night.Duran allowed six hits and 4 runs in three and one-third innings. Strong pitching helps WSU win By Daniel Berk dberk@kansan.com Kansan sportswriter In the first of two meetings this season, the Wichita State Shockers downed the Kansas baseball team 7-2. With the loss, Kansas dropped to 32-19 on the season and has lost three of its last four games. After dropping two of three games to conference rival Baylor, the Jayhawks could not bounce back and managed only three hits in the game. Junior Josh Duran started for Kansas and pitched 3 and one-third KANSAS 2 - WICHITA STATE 7 **Team** Wichita State 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 2 - 7 13 1 Kansas 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 2 3 1 **Pitcher:** Kansas-Josh Duran (3 1), Don Cryz (5 2/3) Wichita State-Stave Uhlmansiak (6), Mike Dennison (3) Win-Uhlmansiak (6-1) Save-Dennison (10) Loss-Dennison (3-3) innings, allowing 4 runs and striking out two batters. He was relieved by freshman Don Czyz who fared a little better pitching five and two-thirds innings with three runs and three strikeouts. "I think his performance is one positive we can take from this game," Kansas coach Ritch Price said. "He gave us a chance to cut the lead. He keeps taking a step forward then a step backwards. Tonight, he took a step forward, and now we just have to continue to get those performances for the rest of the season." Wichita State starter Steve Uhlmansiek was "special," according to Price, as he pitched six innings allowing only three hits and 1 earned run. He also struck out five batters. Mike Dennison came on in relief and also had a strong performance pitching three innings, not allowing any hits and striking out three batters. Kansas scored the first run of the game in the second inning, as senior left fielder Casey Spanish walked and then advanced on a ground out. Spanish continued toward third base. When the Shockers attempted to throw him out at third base, the throw was wild, and Spanish scored. The Shockers responded by scoring 1 run in the third and then 4 more runs in the fourth inning. "Pitching is the strength of their team," Price said. "They play four game sets on the weekend, and then they have this guy come in and pitch during the week, and he is 6-1. They have seven quality pitchers, and that guy was very,very good tonight." Junior first baseman Ryan Baty, who hails from Wichita, had a little extra incentive playing against his hometown team. Baty reached base every time he batted. He hit a double, walked twice and was hit by a pitch once. "I would be lying to you if I said this game was just another ball game," Baty said. "Growing up in Wichita, this game means a lot to me. I want to come out on top every time I play those guys, and tonight we didn't." Kansas will return to the field this weekend as the Jayhawks host defending national champion Texas for a three-game series beginning Friday night. Edited by Erin Chapman NCAA event lets students compete in sports By Kevin Flaherty kflaherty@kansan.com Kansas staff writer Students wanting to snag a fly ball before it sails over an outfield fence will get the opportunity today and tomorrow in front of Allen Fieldhouse. The NCAA Beyond the Game Tour presented by CBS Sports allows students to compete in five NCAA sports. All events are free. It will be open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Rod Koch, representative for the tour, said it wes a promotional campaign for student athletes. "There are 360,000 student athletes in 23 NCAA sports," Koch said. "There are 88 championships, and we want to celebrate the student athlete — we want to show people what it takes to be a champion." In basketball, students attempt four historical shots in 30 seconds. The shots include famous buzzer beaters by Christian Laetner and Bryce Drew. The football drill is more complex. Participants must deal with a blitzing defender and throw a football in stride to a moving wide receiver in between two defenders. The blitzer and wide receiver Students can attempt feats in basketball, baseball, football, lacrosse and rowing. move on a track, and there is a net between the receiver's hands to make the catch. In baseball, students try to rob home runs flying over a wall. In rowing, participants must work together. The area is designed to simulate actual water currents, and the team is racing against the championship time. Nobody has come close. Koch said. "Everyone has to work together and row together or they won't go anywhere," Koch said. "One rowing event is like playing two basketball games back-to-back." event they wish to call, and a CD-ROM is made of the play-by-play to take home. There is also a giant Coca Cola prize bottle in which people walk in and try to grab tickets that are shot all about. Then they decide which prize they would like. Prizes include CDs, hats, T-shirts, visors, coolers, mini-footballs and gift certificates to local sporting goods stores. Students not wishing for physical activities can try the play-by-play booth. Participants can choose which historic Jamie Pickett, Stockton junior, said she was looking forward to today's festivities. "I really like sports, and I like to be involved with sports," Pickett said. "I can't wait for the stuff to open up." Men's golf finishes eighth at Big 12 Championships — Edited by Erin Chapman GOLF Shooting a final round score of 309 yesterday, the Kansas men's golf team finished eighth at the Big 12 Championships at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. The team finished two strokes out of a tie for sixth place with Kansas State and Colorado. Texas won the conference tournament for the second straight year, beating Oklahoma State by four strokes and Oklahoma by five. Oklahoma State stand-out Hunter Mahan won the tournament by 13 strokes. The bright spot for Kansas was the play of senior Chris Marshall, who was playing in his final conference championship. Marshall opened with a six-over-par 76, but rebounded with rounds of 73 and 74 to place him in a tie in a tie for 27th place. Freshman Ryan Rainer shot 80 in both of his first two rounds and closed with a 76 to finish in 31st place. Sophomore Andrew Price went 84, 75 and 80 in his three rounds to finish in 41st place. Junior Tyler Hall shot a disappointing final round 88 to finish in 58th place. The team will now play a waiting game until May 5 to see whether it makes NCAA Regionals in Manhattan. "It was really long, the greens were extremely fast, and the wind was blowing. You just had to accept the fact that you are going to make bogeys and realize par is a good score," said Marshall. for third. Marshall said that Southern Hills provided him his hardest test in college golf. Freshman Pete Kranich also played well for the team, shooting three rounds in the 70s for a 223 total put him Paul Kramer SPORTS COMMENTARY Kansas fans might have thought they had coaching problems. Eustachy's actions hurt others more than himself Jesse Newell jnewell@kansan.com What a shame. But not for Larry Eustachy. A. B. He seems least affected by his own actions. It seems the difficulties at Iowa State might go much deeper. Photographs surfaced this week of Cyclones' coach Larry Eustachy attending a student party at Missouri. The pictures show Eustachy kissing and hugging college-aged women in a student apartment. The coach also reportedly attended a party at Kansas State, where he told students that his team sucked. Eustachy may be hurt by his actions, but everyone else will be hurt worse. But everyone else loses, too. You see, Eustachy probably won't get fired. The Iowa State athletics department will more than likely slap him on the wrist and say, "You silly man drinking with teenagers. Don't do that again." They will force him to travel with the team, something he should do anyway, and probably suggest counseling for alcoholism. Eustachy is a model of Iowa State University, like it or not. Anything and everything he does is automatically linked to the Cyclones. Again, what a shame His family will lose for one. The man has a wife of 16 years and two children. What do the kids think of daddy kissing girls nine years older than them while mommy cares for them at home? Not a thought when kicking back in Columbia, Mo..with a Natural Light. How about his players? How can they feel, knowing their coach, who recruited them out of high school and junior college, is telling complete strangers that they suck? That's certainly not a confidence booster. Iowa State and its fans deserve better. What about future recruits? How could he possibly sit down with an 18-year-old's parents and say with a straight face that he would be a good influence on the athlete? It's pretty tough to portray authority when you're posing as one of the frat guys. In a time when fans at Kansas and Illinois begged their respective coaches to stay, Cyclone fans should do the opposite. Eustachy has not earned the right to be the coach at Iowa State next year. When signing a contract with Iowa State, Eustachy agreed to be a "positive representation of the university and the university's athletic programs in private and public." He has failed. And then there's Iowa State and its fans. How are they looking now? The most recognizable figure at the institution likes to attend fraternity parties and flirt with girls less than half his age. Turns out he is also photogenic when he is drunk, not a quality that you would necessarily want a representative of the university to have. Eustachy is the highest-paid public employee in the state of Iowa. Number one. Should fans be able to expect better behavior than this from such a well-paid individual? The simple answer is yes. He has disgraced the university. He has disgraced the fans. He has disgraced himself. But, more than likely, he will ask for another opportunity. And, more than likely, Iowa State will give it to him. What a shame. Stick to caffeine-free soda, Larry. This may be the last opportunity you get. Newell is an Emporia freshman in journalism. --- "We're a much better team when we're angry." Philadelphia Flyers coach Ken Hitchcock 2B • THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Inside Sports Fighting Illini name successor for Bill Self Southern Illinois coach returns to Big Ten roots The Associated Press CARBONDALE, III. — Bruce Weber, who led Southern Illinois to NCAA Tournament appearances the last two seasons, confirmed last night he will be the next basketball coach at Illinois. "Yes," Weber responded when asked by a reporter if he was taking the Illinois job. He declined to say anything more as he closed the door to his rural Carbondale home. Weber, 46, told the Southern Illinois players of his decision last night. TOMB ROBINSON staying at his office past 10 p.m. "Coach Weber's a good coach," SIU redshirt freshman Ryan Walker said. "He's moving on to bigger and better things. You can't turn down an offer from U of L. It gives credit to our program too." Illinois sports information director Kent Brown would neither confirm nor deny the hiring and said last night that no news conference had been scheduled. Weber will replace Bill Self, who left 10 days ago to become head coach at Kansas. Self, who had a 78-24 record and three NCAA tournament appearances in as many seasons at Illinois, was given a five-year contract extension in December worth $900,000 per year. When Self left to succeed Roy Williams at Kansas, Marquette's Tom Crean was considered a front-runner for the Illinois job. Crean, who led the Golden Eagles to their first Final Four appearance in 26 years this season, instead agreed to an extension with Marquette. Weber was 103-54 in five seasons at Southern Illinois and took the Salukis to the NCAA Tournament round of 16 in 2002. The Salukis were 24-7 last season and won the regular season Missouri Valley Conference championship before losing to Missouri in the first round of the NCAA Tournev. Weber has Big Ten roots. He spent 18 seasons as an assistant under Gene Keady at Purdue before going to Southern Illinois in 1998. Cyclones players show support for Eustachy The Associated Press DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowa State's basketball players went to the university's president and athletic director yesterday, urging them to keep embattled coach Larry Eustachy. They also said Eustachy apologized by telephone for any embarrassment he had caused them from the publication of photographs that show him partying with college students in Missouri and kissing young women. The photographs, printed in the Des Moines Register on Monday, have touched off a national buzz and prompted calls for Eustachy's dismissal or resignation. "I'm behind coach Eustachy 100 per cent, as I know he would be for each and every one of us," forward Jackson Vroman said. Iowa State officials are considering dis Eustachy's behavior was a hot topic on radio talk shows, both local and national. The Register said in an editorial that Eustachy "has to go."The father of Iowa State player Jake Sullivan agreed, but an ISU booster said Eustachy has indicated a willingness to change his behavior and should be given that chance. IOWA STATE CYCLONES cipilinary action against Eustachy, who is under contract through the 2010-11 season and is paid more than $1 million a year, but nothing has been decided. "Bruce Van De Velde told us he would do what is best for the university and the basketball program," said Vroman, who will be a senior next season. "We want them to do what's best for the basketball team and that's to keep coach Eustachy." Vroman said the players told university President Gregory Geoffroy and athletic director Bruce Van De Velde that they supported Eustachy and wanted him to be their coach. Vroman and center Jared Homan, who will be a junior, said they would seriously consider leaving if Eustachy was not the coach. "Basically, he's treated me like a son," said Homan, who was charged with public intoxication last month. "He always looked out for me and has been there when I needed him. I feel this time I need to be there for him." Vroman said he thought the photos Eustachy, 47, is holding a can of beer in the photos, taken at an apartment party in Columbia, Mo., in the morning hours of Jan. 22, after Iowa State lost to Missouri 64-59. In some photos, Eustachy is kissing young women on the cheek or is being kissed on the cheek. made Eustachy "look bad," but added, "I don't think it portrayed him as who he is at all." "A lot of them look like they were staged," Homan said. "He's drinking, but he's 47 and has that right. As far as being kissed on the cheek, I don't know if you've seen The Price is Right with Bob Barker, but he has that happen all the time." Bill Sullivan, whose son Jake was the Cyclones' leading scorer last season, said Eustachy should resign. "Coach has always purported himself to be an honorable person," Sullivan said. "If in fact he violated a conduct clause in his contract, an honorable person would step down and save the university from any embarrassment." Jake Sullivan, who will be a senior, said the photos were a "terrible" blow to the school's image. But Sullivan said he would support Eustachy if the coach changed his drinking habits. "My dad has his opinions and he says WEDNESDAY,APRIL30,2003 what he wants to say," Jake Sullivan said. "My thing is I'm willing to forgive as long as the person is willing to change and dedicate himself to what we're trying to do. "I give every ounce I have to this community and this university and want the same in return from my coach." Eustachy, who is married and has two children, said Monday that alcohol was a factor in his behavior and he would deal with that. "I hope to be measured by my future conduct," he said. ISU booster Bob Gitchell said he can't justify what Eustachy did but said it did not warrant his dismissal. "Unless it's really, really bad, I don't think a life should be destroyed because of what one percent of your behavior may be," Gitchell said. "I think this is a time when maybe Larry needs saving. "I've watched him save a lot of kids from the streets, from the gutter. I know personally several kids that would have no chance to be where they are today if it wasn't for his influence. I think that part of him still exists." Gitchell said. Vroman said he was not sure if Eustachy would be able to keep his job. "I don't think all of the administration here wants him around as badly as I do and most of the team does," Vroman said. Couples wins Houston Open after losing streak The Associated Press Fred Couples rediscovered his place in golf. "He's never done that in his life," Harmon said. The search started almost three months ago on the practice range at Pebble Beach, when he beat balls for six hours with Butch Harmon at his side. It ended late Sunday afternoon at the Houston Open when Couples was flawless over the final five holes and wound up with a four-stroke victory, his first on the PGA Tour in five years and 87 tournaments. He raised his putter in triumph. He smiled to an adoring legion of fans. He slapped hands with Mark Calcavecchia as if they had just won the Shark Shootout. What followed made it clear there was nothing silly about this victory. The happy-go-lucky Couples was so overwhelmed that he broke down on national television; tugged the visor over his eyes and walked away. "I haven't won in five years. I haven't played really well in five years." Couples said. Players in his age bracket (43) with far less ability have been winning their share of tournaments the last five years. Couples was looking for the easy way out last year when he got behind a failed proposal to start a Major Champions Tour — eight events on classic courses for players between the ages of 37 and 55 who had won a major. "I have been practicing," Couples said. "I never really thought I'd win this quickly, but I thought I could win again if I practiced and played." "If I play like I did last year and keep deteriorating, and the PGA Tour is tough," Couples said at the time, "there's nowhere for me to play golf." The solution wasn't a gimmick tour with guaranteed money. "He hadn't worked hard," Harmon said. "He had been fooling himself." A desperate Couples hooked up with Harmon during the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Couples told him how terrible he had been swinging, and Harmon didn't believe it until they got to the practice range the next day. Couples hit a few 9-irons. Harmon's time already is cut thin. He still works occasionally with Woods, and his clientele includes Calcavecchia, Darren Clarke, Adam Scott, Justin Leonard, Stewart Cink, Jose Maria Olazabal and Ben Crane. "It's worse than you said," Harmon told him. onship — even though he wasn't playing—and worked with Harmon at the TaylorMade test center. His deal with Couples: You put in the time. I'll make the time. "That's when I knew he was serious," Harmon said. "He's worked his tail off ever since." Not only did they spend six hours on the range, Couples went to Carlsbad, Calif., during the Match Play Champi- They essentially shortened his swing, taking undue pressure off Couples' already sensitive back. "What I had him visualize was to feel like he was coming over the top to hit a pull hook," Harmon said. "He had to get his arms in front of his body coming down." His victory in Houston moved him to No. 29 in the world ranking, which assures him of returning to the U.S. Open and likely will get him into the World Golf Championships for the first time in three years. "A lot of people think Freddie doesn't care," Harmon said. "I think he showed how much it meant to him. Very seldom do you see him that emotional." need in an Athletic Director? POLL kansan.com What does the University of Kansas Afundraiser. - Someone who treats all sports fairly. money is football and basketball. An AD who knows where the Most important is a person who has a good relationship with Mark Mangino and Bill Self. Log on to www.kansan.com to cast your vote. Kansas Athletics Calendar TOMORROW FRIDAY Softball at Big 12 Tournament Oklahoma City Baseball vs. Texas, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City SATURDAY Rowing, Big 12 Regatta, all day Track at Ward Haylett Invitational, all day, Manhattan Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City Baseball vs. Texas, 2 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark SUNDAY Softball at Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma City Baseball vs. Texas, 1 p.m., Hoglund Ball park Free forAll - --- Sweet, even Larry Eustachy thinks that KU has hotter girls than K-State. Does Ryan Greene write about sports or about himself? That's my question. If Larry Eustachy wants to come party with you next year, just say no. - At least Roy didn't pull a Larry Eustachy. - Larry Eustachy are: KU girls are way hotter than K-State girls. I want to party with Larry Eustachy. 图 Nick Collison made my day when he smiled at me. You're a badass man, thanks. If gamecocks can't be taken across state lines, what's South Carolina gonna do when it has to go play North Carolina or Georgia, or any other team outside the state? SHELL IN hobbs. FROG BANAL rick recht Sunday May 4, 2003 6:30 PM Yom Haatzma'u/ End of the Year BBQ and Concert Lawrence Jewish Community Center 9th and lower Presented by KU Hillel BBQ Dinner at 5:30 PM FREE for Students and Kids under 18. $5 for Community For more information call Corey at 749.5397 STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE www.kuhillel.org LOUISE'S DOWN TOWN fab five Sunday $1.50 wells Monday $3.00 Premiums Tuesday $3.00 Blvd. Schooners Wednesday $1.50 wells Thursday $1.50 Schooners No Cover with KU ID SCHOONERS • COCKTAILS • FOGARS • POOL 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE must be 21 to enter --- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 SPORTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 3B Knight statement explains firings By Adam Aasen By Adam Aisen Indiana Daily Student via U-wire Indiana University BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Depositions by former Indiana men's basketball coach Bob Knight obtained in a court victory by Indianapolis news station WTHR (and published later by its news partner the Indianapolis Star) have shed light on the personalities of both the former coach and his son, Pat. In the depositions, taken Aug. 27, 2002, in Lubbock, Texas, Knight and his son touch on the firing and bumping by Knight of IU assistant coach Ron Felling, the alleged choking of former IU player Neil Reed, Knight's departure from IU and his cameo role in the Adam Sandler movie Anger Management. Felling's lawyer William C. Potter II questioned both Knight and his son individually, with attorney Russell Yates present at both I am very proud to be a member of the Board of Trustees. questionings. Both Knights were under oath on the videotape. Knight Knight said he had fired Felling after overhearing Felling and On Dec. 1, 1999, Knight said he had been watching a game tape when he accidentally bumped his telephone and overheard Dakich and Felling talking about him. former IU assistant basketball coach Dan Dakich make "hurtful" comments in a telephone conversation, indystar.com reported. "And the first thing I heard was Dakich saying, 'Are you doing anything different in practice?' Knight said during the deposition. "And Fellingsaid, 'No, we're doing the same old shit, four corners and all that shit, that doesn't do any good at all. But (Knight) won't listen to anybody. And those guys that are with him don't know a thing about coaching. "And then, 'You should have seen the fat f--ker come into the locker room with no shirt on and try to show somebody post defense." After listening for a while, Knightjumped into the conversation. "I said, 'Dakich, don't bother calling me again about help.'" Knight said. "And I said, 'And Felling, it would be a good idea for you to start looking for another job." Knight said he approached Felling later that day, telling him, "I'd like to know how you can take money from a guy and then bad mouth the hell out of him just like you've been bad mouthing me, not just here, but for sometime now? How the hell can you do that?" Knight said he wasn't so much angry at the situation, as he was hurt. "You know, I was really hurt that here's a guy that no one but me ever offered a job to, for a variety of reasons, and yet here we are at a point where I think I have really taken care of this guy. ... I felt sorry for Felling that he doesn't understand that somebody's been pretty good to him here for a long period of time," Knight said. Knight admitted he bumped into Felling but said it had not been with much force. Potter asked Knight whether he had any sort of anger problem, which Knight denied. Potter then asked Knight why he appeared in the recent Adam Sandler film, Anger Management, if he had no anger problem. "I thought it was a great parody of everything that has been done relative to my temperament over the year, and I thought the — I think the movie will be pretty funny," he said. NBA poses threat for college recruiters By Dallas Scrip The Lantern via U-wire Ohio State University COLUMBUS, Ohio — The growing number of underclassmen leaving early for the NBA has put college basketball recruiting behind the eight ball. College basketball recruiting is a long process. Recruiters sometimes begin looking at high-school players from the time they are freshman in high school. "If you are not into a kid by his sophomore year in high school, you're on the outside," said OSU assistant coach Monte Mathis. sional ranks, recruiters go into attack-mode trying to find a player to fill-out the roster. When an underclassman leaves college early for the profes- Some major college basketball teams will no longer go after the top talent for the fear that the player might leave early. "They help you when you have them one or two years, but it devastates your program when you lose them." Mathis said. "You want them for four years." Ten players from schools around the country have entered the NBA draft early this year. In past years, it has also become difficult to recruit top high school athletes, as many of them are skipping college entirely. More than five high schoolers are expected to declare for June's NBA draft. The major reason underclassmen leave early is the prospect of money from an NBA contract. People outside the basketball program are telling players to take the money while they can get it. According to recent NCAA figures, no sport has lower graduation rates than men's basketball. Coaches say players think they can do without education or go back and pay for school later. Many of these players are from lower-income backgrounds and see the NBA as a chance to provide a better life for their families. "This is a very touchy subject," Mathis said. "They are not allowed to work during season, and have no other means for money. I want a stipend to get them through — not a lot of money — just enough for them to buy things that they need, like toothpaste." The NCAA views graduation rates for college basketball as a major problem and has a possible solution. It is trying to implement a policy in which a team must graduate 50 percent of its athletes. If the minimum requirement is not met, the NCAA would ban the university from the postseason. If this policy was in effect last season, the national champion Syracuse Orangemen would not have been eligible to play in the tournament. Students: ISU coach belligerent, creepy By Zach Ewing The Maneater via U-wire University of Missouri By Zach Ewing COLUMBIA, Mo. Accepting oral sex, especially when it's not offered, doesn't seem like a good way to represent a university, but that is exactly what junior Blake Overly said Iowa State men's basketball coach Larry Eustachy did at a late January party in Overly's apartment. "A girl asked if he wanted a beer, and he said, 'Yeah, I'll take a blowjob.'" Overly said. The party was held after bars closed in downtown Columbia, Mo., on the night of Jan. 21, after Iowa State had lost 64-59 to Missouri in the Hearnes Center. Witnesses say Eustachy, 47, was intoxicated when he showed up at the party at the same time as MU basketball player Josh Kroenke and acted inappropriately throughout the early morning hours. "Larry came up here and started partying, and at first it was cool," junior Sean Devereaux said. "But you can only handle it for so long. A belligerent old guy gets annoying." Devereaux, who lives in the apartment and took pictures of Eustachy drinking and kissing women, said the coach arrived at about 2 a.m. and didn't leave until a taxi was called for him at about 5 a.m. He said Kroenke stayed for only about 10 minutes. Eustachy also nearly got in a fight with another man, Devereaux said, who was upset because Eustachy was holding his girlfriend's waist. your wedding-ring hand off my girlfriend's ass,' and Larry got in his face and started pointing at him and said he wanted to take him outside," Devereaux said. ] Iowa State Athletics Director Bruce Van de Velde said in statement he was disappointed with Eustachy's behavior and Eustachy 'errors in judgment.' "We made sure he understands his accountability and obligations as men's basketball coach and as a representative of Iowa State University," Vande Velde said. Eustachy also expressed remorse in a statement. "It is important to represent ISU in a manner that sheds a positive light on the university and the Cyclone men's basketball program," Eustachy said. The night of the party, after the Iowa State loss, Eustachy said he was disappointed with the loss and the team's play. Eustachy criticized his team at the party. "I told him, 'You guys played a good game tonight,'" Overly said. "He said that, 'No, we played like shit.'" Overly said Eustachy was so drunk he had to be walked to a taxi outside the apartment. Devereaux mentioned several other specifics about Eustachy's behavior, including whispering to and trying to lick women and asking women if he could go home with them. "He was being a real big creep," Devereaux said. Eiffel Tower The Eiffel Tower No matter how far you fly, you'll find Jayhawks everywhere! Congratulations Class of 2003! 1 Our graduation gift to you...a free Alumni Association membership! You'll receive a six-month complimentary membership in the Kansas Alumni Association from June to November 2003, which includes: E-mail forwarding. Go to our Web site for all the details. Your @ku.edu address can become @kualumni.org address, messages will be forwarded to any e-mail address you specify. - Three issues of Kansas Alumni magazine. Stay up to date with what's happening on campus and what your classmates are doing. - Invitations to alumni chapter events, professional society events with your school, and access to chapters across the country and worldwide. - invitations to alumni chapter events, professional * Color calendar. Our 2004 calendar with wonderful campus scenes will keep Mount Oread as close as your home or office wall. - Guide to Jayhawk Basketball. Our hoops guide will ensure you'll never miss a KU game, watch party, or place to hang out with other Jayhawks wherever you are! Crimson and Blue send-off parties for Class of 2003 Grad Grill Wednesday, May 7, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m Join us for your first official alumni event at the Adams Alumni Center sponsored by the Student Alumni Association. Don't miss out on all the great door prizes, free food and drinks. (Catered by the Hereford House. Vegetarian option available.) This is your chance to pick up lots of information about alumni activities and services. The Athletics Department and many other campus offices will be on hand to share information about their Adams Alumni Center services to you...a proud KU graduate! Get a free KU gift when you complete an application for the INTRUST Jayhawk bankcard. Please RSVP to saa@ku.edu by May 2. K VICTORIA 512.879.1234 VISA Kansas Alumni Association 800-584-2957 www.kualumni.org Commencement Lunch Sunday, May 18, 10:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. The Outlook, Chancellor's Residence Graduates and their guests can celebrate before their big walk down the Hill at the Chancellor's residence. Chancellor Robert and Leah Hemenway will provide free box lunches for all graduates and their guests. The Kansas Alumni Association will welcome you into alumni status and the Senior Class officers will announce the class gift and banner. Pick up your requested tickets at the Alumni Association's headquarters on the third floor of the Adams Alumni Center between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., weekdays, May 1-15. A reservation card is in your Commencement packet; go to the Registrar's office if you did not receive this mailing. Questions! Call your Alumni Association at 864-4760, e-mail kualumni@kualumni.org or go to www.kualumni.org for a Countdown to Commencement Guide. = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL30, 2003 Okla. State discovers mysterious transfer By Mary Henderson Daily O'Collegian via U-wire Oklahoma State University STILLWATER, Okla. — A transfer of $2.5 million into an athletic account was unknown by the Oklahoma State Faculty Council budget committee until it was discovered in early April after the transfer was made. Edward Lawry, Faculty Council chairman, was at the meeting. He said the situation was resolved. Scott Gelfand, assistant professor of philosophy and budget committee chairman for Faculty Council, discovered the transfer and, along with other faculty members, met with David Bosserman, interim vice president for business and finance, and Joe Weaver, assistant vice president for planning, budget and institutional research. "The administration told us that the money would be transferred out of the account," Lawry said. Bosserman said because of the faculty concerns, the money had been reversed out of the account. The money was originally transferred out of an Institutional Plant Fund account, which is a reserve account for the university. Bosserman said he also planned to meet with the budget committee of the Faculty Council and go over the charges to explain more of why the fund transfer occurred. Chuck Edgley, head of the sociology department, was also at the meeting. He said the transfer showed the Faculty Council that athletics had not been running in the black as they previously had understood. "The cost of running athletic programs are always going to be more expensive than athletics brings into the systems," Edgley said. There is an annual allocation of $968,000 from the university to athletic funds. This payment is for general university use of athletic facilities that are not athlete-related. These events include commencement or Spring Sing in Gallagher-Iba Arena. Carol Moder, Faculty Council vice chairwoman and head of the English department, said the allocation also paid for community use of the facilities. "The amount of $968,000 is from a formula of usage of the facilities." Moder said. "It has been a yearly allocation." Edgley said whenever criticisms of expenses in athletics arose, the response that usually came was that athletics raised the money itself and it was private money, making it none of anyone's business what it did with the money. "Then when we find out that the university is actually supporting athletics expenses in all sorts of ways, including ways that delete their deficits, it is especially troubling," Edgley said. Tech stadium to be ready for opener By Matthew Muench University Daily via U-wire Texas Tech University LUBBOCK, Texas — On schedule are two words not usually uttered by Texas Tech officials when speaking about the renovation of Jones SBC Stadium. That is not the case anymore, said Cindy Rugeley, vice chancellor for News and Publications. "Everything is on schedule, and it should be done by the first home game," she said. "The only thing that will be left is some brickwork and cleanup. But unless something terrible goes wrong, everything should be done by the first home game." Tech opens the season Aug. 30 at home against Southern Methodist. Robert Cameron, project manager, said the stadium should be operational by the opening kickoff. "It will be operational," he said. "It is gorgeous. The view is fantastic. Everyone that goes up there is incredibly impressed." The iron and steel work of the 175,000-square-foot building was finished last summer; remodeling is the only remaining task. Viewers will notice windows and bricks are being put in place, and the 175,000 square feet at the top of the stadium that includes a working press box,47 luxury seats and 1.1 12 club-level seats. It reaches a height of about 150 feet. He said there was a lot of brickwork, but he did not know a number. "I couldn't tell you," he said. "Thousands and thousands of square feet." Cameron also said the field lights were almost all in place. The construction of the new football training facility on the practice fields east of the stadium is part of the final phase. That construction is under way and close to completion, he said. The 57,500-square-foot facility will include a hall of fame, lounges, locker rooms, weight rooms and offices for the coaching staff. "It is coming along very nicely," he said. "It will be operational for the first game unless something falls apart or blows up on us," he said. "They will move into the building by late July, early August." Cameron said the stadium would be unique from all others across the globe because no other stadium had the renaissance-Spanish style that Jones SBC Stadium adorns. "There will not be a stadium like it in the world," he said. "In that retrospect, it would one of a kind." Tech athletics director Gerald Myers returned phone calls but was unable to be reached again for comment. Demise of Big East could aid Big Ten By Wade Malcolm By Wade Malcolm Daily Collegian via U-wire Pennsylvania State University UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. Integrating a 12 into the Big Ten logo ought to be more difficult than the current 11 spliced into the conference symbol. But if rumors of the Big East's demise hold any weight, it should cause some reshuffling in college football's hierarchy and aid the Big Ten in adding a 12th school to the conference. Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese thinks the Atlantic Coast Conference has approached four Big East teams — Miami, Boston College, Syracuse and Virginia Tech — about joining their conference, and he's not happy about it. April 19 New York Daily News article. "They're a bunch of hypocrites. They operate in the dark. They'll never acknowledge this, but I'm aware the ACC for the last couple of years, without ever picking up the phone or calling me, has basically gone out and tried to convince our teams to enter their league." "I have no use for the ACC right now," Tranhese said in an The ACC, much like the Big Ten, covets expansion because having 12 football teams would allow the league to have two divisions and a lucrative post-season conference championship game. These games are also helpful to teams looking to improve in Bowl Championship Series standings by providing them with an added opportunity to move up in the polls, face a quality opponent, and improve their strength of schedule, all of which are factored into the current BCS formula. The Big Ten has looked for new members that would enhance the conference's reputation, rather than getting any 12th school only for the sake a championship game. "I want the impact on the Big Ten to be at least as much as when Penn State came into the league," Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany said at conference media day last fall. Penn State football coach Joe Paterno mentioned that he would like to see a school added to the Big Ten. "I would like to see us have another team in the Big Ten, period," he said last season. "I would like to see us have 12 teams. If they would want to come East and get Syracuse, Rutgers or Pitt, I wouldn't have any problem with that." The schools, which the Big East has accused the ACC of courting, say they are content to be members of the Big East at the moment, but if Miami were to leave the conference, that stance could change. The Miami Herald has reported Miami has essentially reciprocated and would have interest in the ACC if Boston College were to leave the Big East—a departure that would significantly weaken the conference. ACC commissioner John Swofford said that his league had always talked about expansion, and in response to the comments made by Tranghese, Swofford said they were "unfortunate." Tranghese said he had no plans to change the conference, only to promote unity within. Like it Cheap & Easy? Spending $100 at Retail gets you... Grand Theft Auto: Vice City (PS2) $49.99 Caddyshack DVD $19.95 King of Torts by John Grisham $27.95 Spending $100 at Half.com gets you MORE! 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Grand Theft Auto: Vice City (PS2) $24.99 Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon (Xbox) $29.99 Prey by Michael Crichton $1.89 Jackass DVD $12.58 Pearl Jam: Ten $2.20 Caddyshack DVD $10.88 The Jester by James Patterson $7.85 Coldplay: A Rush of Blood... $8.29 $5 off $20 purchase* Enter promo code "JAYHAWKS1" in your shopping cart Coupon Expires 5/25/03 half.com™ by ebay WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 ENTERTAINMENT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 5B TODAY TOMORROW FRIDAY 80 60 scattered thunderstorms partly cloudy 67 44 mostly sunny and wind WEATHER TODAY 80 60 scattered thunderstorms and wind TOMORROW 74 45 partly cloudy FRIDAY 67 44 mostly sunny — WWW.WEATHER.COM HOUSE by Brian Godinez. for The University Daily Kansa WHAT'RE YOU DOIN INNAM LIQUOR STORE? WHAT THE HELL IS THAT? PATHETIC DRUNK IS DRUNK BUT... CARDBOARD DISPLAYS? DON'T BE SO SHY, BABY! DRINK BEER WHAT'RE YOU DOIN INNAM LIQUOR STORE? WHAT THE HELL IS THAT? PATHETIC DRUNK IS DRUNK BUT... CARDBOARD DISPLAYS? DON'T BE SO SHY, BABY... DRINK BEER The pressure you've been under should soon begin to ease. You'll find that your experience has grown. Something that used to be upsetting has become routine and has actually made you stronger. Start taking on new challenges. HOROSCOPES Today's Birthday (April 30). Aries (March 21-April 19). Today is a 7. You'd rather do innovative financial planning than spend all day counting beans. Unfortunately, the latter is required first. Count those beans now. Taurus (April 20-May 20). Today is a 7 Finish the tasks you've been worried about. Get them out of the way, and do a good job on them. There's a test coming tomorrow. Gemini (May 21-June 21). Today is a 6. Review your travel plans again. The more potential problems you can negotiate now, the more fun you'll have this weekend. Once you have your routine down, the job gets a lot easier. Establish your basic structure now, with input from wise friends. Cancer (June 22-July 22). Today is an E. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22). Today is a 6. Next week it starts getting easier for you to be in control. Meanwhile, renew old alliances, and don't argue with the boss. virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Today is a 7. Don't squander your money, even if you feel flush. The more you save now, the more you'll have to spend this weekend on fun and games. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22). Today is a 5. If you can stand to be burglar just a little while longer, you'll be glad you did. If you must buy a treat for yourself or a loved one, take time to find the best deal. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21). Today is a 7. You may have to rely on a partner to get your meaning across. By now, you and this other person should be on the same wavelength. If not, make adjustments. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Today is a7. Play by the rules and get the job done. Offer encouragement to those who are stuck. Be patient. Victory may not come until next week. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Today is an 8. Did you know that Capricorn is the sign of going from rags to riches? Hardships make you stronger, and you eventually succeed. So take heart, no matter where you are within the process. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Today is a 6. You've made your move, you've taken your stand, and now you can settle down. Work out the kinks in your new routine. Make yourself comfortable. Pisces(Feb.19-March20).Today is a 7. You're pretty good at "putting up with," but fixing the problem is better. It's time to hit the books again. And this time, be more patient. Crossword ACROSS 1 '60s do 5 Talon 9 Lean lover of rhyme 14 Signaled 15 Uncommon 16 "Common Sense" writer 17 Attendance 19 Saturn feature 20 Shade tree 21 Decoy 22 Dusk 23 Destiny 24 Wild talkers 25 1994 animated Disney film 29 Alabama school 30 Night before 31 Places of refuge 35 Planet 36 Tad's dad 37 Censor 38 Without: Fr. 39 Part of UF 40 French part of South America 41 19th-century industrial exploiter 43 Baseball equipment specialists 47 CSA soldiers 48 Agamemnon's father 49 Fossil fuel 50 Pugilist's punch 53 Tilts 54 "The Miracle Worker" Oscar winner 56 __ Hawkir,s Da 57 Seed cover 58 Toe tip 59 Grace enders 60 Risque 61 Singer Moffo DOWN 1 Pine 2 Tank up 3 Twenty quires 4 Peculiar 5 Piece of crisp bread 6 Actress Bacal 04/30/03 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 | | | | 15 | | | | 16 | | | | | 17 | | | | 18 | | | | 19 | | | | 20 | | | | 21 | | | | 22 | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| 25 | 26 | 27 | | | | 28 | | | | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 29 | | | | | | 30 | | | | 37 | | | | 35 | | | | | 36 | | | | 40 | | | | 38 | | | | 39 | | | | | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 41 | | 42 | | | | | | | 48 | | | | | 47 | | | | | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | | | | | 49 | | | | 55 | | | | 56 | | | | 57 | | | | 58 | | | | 59 | | | | 60 | | | | 61 | | | | | $ \textcircled{c} $ 2003 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 7 "Rule Britannia" composer 8 Drench 9 Type of poetic rhythm 10 Fence coating 11 Remove lather 12 Enrage 13 Tries out 18 Eau ___, WI 22 Rational 23 Errors 24 Split 25 Some putouts 26 Island undulation 27 Black, in poetry 28 Skewered entree 31 Aka 32 Raise 33 Vegas gambling game 34 Bridge 36 Celebrant robes 37 Champers 39 "The Seven Little " 40 Tremendously L U G A W A S H A B A S H O N E N O R M A B E R L E F L O C L E A R B A T O N T I L T F A R M H O U S E S S T O O L S T O A T G R I P E N D A T O M S K I M A D R I D P Y L E M A S C A R A C O H E R E S U N T O A L P A C A A S S T E S T B A R K W A N A L I E N S I N G E H A L F N E L S O N L I A R U N I O N A S T I R C U R S T O N E M E C C A A G E H I N T S A S H E N L E D Solutions to yesterday's puzzle. 41 Wakes 42 Amatory 43 Light wood 44 Mr. T's outfit 45 Business 46 Bight of 49 Singer Irene 50 San Capistrano 51 Related 52 Actor Lugosi 54 Golf score 55 Recombinant letters NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews NewsNewsNewsNews Now. Roommates stuck to the couch? Kansan Classifieds - Find them a job.· Find a new roommates.· Sell the couch. Try the Iced Snow Tiger! La Prima Taza "Double strong, double rich." Serving Lawrence since 1990 Experience Counts! 638 Massachusetts 832-CAFE kansan.com Farm Taco $50 New Applicant Bonus* Summer Employment Johnson Country Office Staffing File Clerk Word processor Data Entry Receptionist Bank Tellers Admin Assistant Course conflicts? Conflicts? Need one last course? Enroll anytime! Call Ann or Jennifer 913.491.0944 11025 Metcalf Overland Park annduwe@bosshlx.com $50 offers more than 160 online and print courses KU INDEPENDENT STUDY ENROLL ONLINE www.kuce.org/isc Rossler Hix KU Call 864-KUCE (5823) Or visit the Continuing Education Building 1515 St. Andrews Drive DrinCo De Mayo here the WHOLE month of Mayol $2 00 Dos Equis Bottles Graduate and undergraduate courses are available. OVER 80 DIFFERENT BOTTLES OF BEER! THURSDAYS $150 U - CALL - ITS! Taps, Wells, Bottles... 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Brandon High School star Kenneth Griffith was quoted in yesterday's edition of The Clarion-Ledger newspaper of Jackson as saying he was interviewed at his home by an NCAA investigator on March 24. Griffith said he had told NCAA investigator Rich Johanningmeier that Mississippi State assistant coach Glenn Davis had given him $800 to pay for two classes at a private school in Jackson last summer. Griffith, a linebacker, verbally committed to Mississippi State last year, but eventually signed with Southern Mississippi. He could not be reached for comment yesterday. Templeton told The Associated Press yesterday that attorneys representing the school were present during PETER M. HENRY Davis the interview, but Mississippi State, which has been working with the NCAA in an investigation of the football program for Giving money or other gifts to prospects is forbidden in nearly all cases by NCAA rules. months, has not been allowed by the NCAA to question anybody at Brandon High School. The NCAA, which does not comment on ongoing investigation. "I think it's important to remember that this is an allegation. Until all the facts are gathered we need to be very careful in assuming anything," Templeton said yesterday. tions, did not return telephone calls. Mississippi State coach Jackie Sherrill did not immediately return a message left at his office yesterday. A secretary in Mississippi State's football office said Davis was on the road. Templeton declined to say whether he had spoken to Sherri or Davis about the allegations. "We take all allegations seriously, but until I have the facts I don't think I can respond," Templeton said. Kansan Classified The letter said investigators were looking into various allegations of rules violations by the football program, including "offers and inducements to prospective student-athletes .. by current and former members of the football coaching staff." 1 100s Announcements 1.05 Personals 11.0 Business Personals 11.5 On Campus 12.0 Announcements 125 Travel 130 Entertainment 140 Lost and Found Mississippi State received a preliminary letter of inquiry from the NCAA in March. 205 Help Wanted Y 200s Employment 300s Merchandise 305 For Sale 310 Computers 312 Home Furnishings 320 Sporting Goods 325 Stereo Equipment 330 Tickets 340 Auto Sales 345 Motorcycles for Sale 360 Miscellaneous 370 Wanted to Buy 380 Health & Fitness 400s Real Estate 405 Apartments for Rent 410 Condos for Sale 415 Homes for Rent 420 Real Estate for Sale 430 Roommate Wanted 435 Rooms for Rent 440 Sublease 500s Services 100 The Kansas will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality 505 Professional Services 510 Child Care Services 520 Typing Services Classified Policy KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS: or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation of law. All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair 864-4358 Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference,limitation." itation or discrimination." Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. I 100s Announcements 120 - Announcements F1 WANTED: Caucasian female, 21-34 years old for oocyte (egg) donation through a Wichita donation site. Must have redauburn hair; brown, green or hazel eyes; and some college experience, Financial compensation provided. Write to RUCE, c/o PMB #119, 13505 S. Mur-Len, Suite 105, Olathe, KS 65206-1600. Quality Jewelers Since 1880 Marks EWELERS Fast, quality jewelry repair custom manufacturing watch & clock repair 817 Mass 843-4266 markshw@swell.net life SUPPORT 785/841-2345 www.hqcc.lawrence.ks.us HEADQUARTERS Counseling Center 125 - Travel A Study Abroad in Madrid, Spain. Request a Free Catalog. (800) 266-4441. Or Visit wwwGoWithCEA.com 130-Entertainment Dance lessons; ballroom, latin, and swing. Sunday nights 7-8 p.m. followed by public dance 9-12 p.m. Also facilities available for parties, meetings, receptions etc. Dance Academy, 1117 Mass. 311-227 --- Find it, sell it, buy it in the Kansan Classified 男厕 女厕所 or just read them for the fun of it 200s Employment 205 - Help Wanted Help Wanted 1,000 summer camp counselor positions available in the northeast and Michigan www.greatcampjobs.com. Free Chocolate Free Chocolate Assist people with head injuries to become independent. Flexible schedule. Great "hands on" summer job for students in Social and Human Services/OT. SLP PT field. Flexible schedule. Lawrence & KC area. Call toll free 1-866-429-6757 X 104. Are you looking for a summer job? Earn up to $4,000 this summer while working in a fun/casual workplace. Heart of America Photography has immediate openings in its Customer Service Department. Qualified applicants must be quick learners and have an outgoing, positive attitude. Basic computer skills are a must, and previous customer service experience is preferred. For more info call 841-7100, or stop by our office at 2449 S. Iowa, Suite 70 fill out an application. Awesome new sports bar/restaurant in downtown Lawrence. Now accepting applications for wait bar and kitchen. Apply in person 9-5 Mon.-Sat. 811 New Hamphire. BARTENDER POSITION BARTENDER POSITION Make up to $300 per shift, Flexible hours, great pay. Call 1-600-806-0082 ext 1422 Bartender Trainees needed. $250 per day potential. Local positions. Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 531. BASS PLAYER Wanted for top rated local cover dance band. All styles. Call 785-749-3649. Chemistry Instructor. This full-time position to be located in Wamcgo, Kansas, begins Fall, 2003. Classes also available on an adjunct basis Summer, 2003. Will be responsible for both lecture and lab. Masters Degree required. Request application packet: Highland Community College Human Resources, 606 W. Main, Highland, KS 60535. 785/442-6010 egn匠erger@highlandcd.edu EOE. Do you want to have a full time job for the summer? Do you like kids? Wanted: responsible, dependable, caring student to play with & entertain 3 yr & 10 yr old. M-F: 7:30-5:30. Need own transportation. 841-3533, leave a message or call after 5:30. Does'Your Summer Job Suck? I will take 5 more students to help run a business, make $700 a week this summer. Call: 832-1833 Heart of America Photography is seeking 12-14 full-part-time hardworking, energetic individuals who enjoy photography to help us in the office during our busy graduation season - April 24 through June 11. Work in a casual and enjoyable environment Computer skills a plus, but not necessary. Please call 841-7100 or drop by 2449 Iowa, Ste J to fill out an application. We are located in the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center, across from Molly McGeese's EOE. EARN UP TO $2000 BEFORE SUMMER 205 - Help Wanted HAPPY HOLIDAYS Exotic dancers, immediate hire. Great tips. World-class gentlemen's club. 785-766- 7600 or 1-785-251-5900. Two part-time carpenter's helpers needed. 20-35 hours per week. $7 per hour. Call 838-3063, leave message. SUMMER INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE. We have internships available in graphic design, advertising, website development and a e-commerce. Build experience for your resume in a great environment. Apply online at www.pilgrimage.com/intern.htm Great summer Income. Asbestos Abatement Workers needed. 32 hrs of free training is required. Must attend class 5/5-9/8-4:30 p.m. $10.40 per hr plus benefits. Work will start 5/22. Contact Laborers' Local 1290, 16 E 13th St, Lawrence, (785) 843-4480 between 6:30-9 a.m. or leave a message. Help wanted for custom harvesting. Combine operators & truck drivers. Guaranteed pay, good summer wages. Call 970-483-7490, evenings. Hundreds of painter positions available. No experience necessary, students welcomed and encouraged. Work close to home and with friends. Call 1-888-277-9787. www.collegeregg.com internship position for fast-growing insurance and financial services. FT Summer changing to PT in Fall: Duties: clerical and customer services. Send resume to Laura @ douglascountyins.com. Desk Managers 2003-2004 Desk Managers hold academic year, part-time, live-in positions with KU Student Housing responsible for front desk and building security operations under the supervision of the Complex Director. Required: Desk/security staff experience; full-time KU student with at least 6 hours of on-campus enrollment each semester; Compensation; Single room or equivalent; meals; $2,530 total pay. Application materials available from Complex Directors or at Student Housing, Corin Hall. Applications accepted until positions filled. EO/AA. MOVIE EXTRAS / MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $150 / 450/day! No Experience Necessary Call Now 1-800-814-0277. 1020 SUMMER WORK Adv/Mktg co. seeks entry level, mid & upper level mgmt candidates. Int'l firm, sports and charitable organizations, tuition bonuses and paid training avail. $500-800/wk to start STUDENTS WELCOME Call Denise (913) 396-0056 205 - Help Wanted Nanny for 3 girls ages 8-12 for summer. Monday, Tuesday, & Thursday approx. 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM. Send resume to Brent Cronad, 1019 Mass. Lawrence 66044 Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $15-$125 and more per survey! www.surveydelators.com Naturalist City of Lawrence PT Naturalist position is vb in the Parks & Recreation dept to support our beautiful Prairie Park Nature Center. Flexible 20 wire schedule with Center hrs of Tues.-Sat. 9-5, Sun 1-5 makes this a great student opportunity. Requires 2 yrs expr; undergrad work in biology, botany, zoology, natural resources mngmt or related field & driv $7.50/hr. Apply by 05/06/03. City Hall, Personnel 6 E 6th, Lawrence, KS 65044 (785) 832-3232 personelle@ci.lawrence.ks.us www.LawrenceCITYJobs.org EOE M E F Full and part time positions starting immediately for local construction job. Call Hi-Tech Interiors at 785-539-7266. Resident Assistants 2003-2004 Resident Assistants hold academic year, live-in positions with KU Student Housing performing administrative, programming, and paraprofessional advising/facilitating for 40-50 residents and for the complex in general, directly supervised by an Assistant Complex Director. Required: At least 1 year of residential group living experience, 30 or more credit hours, full-time KU student with at least 6 hours of on-campus enrollment each semester. Compensation: Single room; meals; $40.00 paid biweekly. Application materials available from Complex Directors or at Student Housing, Corbin Hall. Applications accepted until positions filled. EO/AA. SPECIAL PROJECT Safe Ride is now hiring drivers. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record. For details call 842-0544. Are you in need of summer employment? We have a job for you! Applications are currently being accepted for 50 people performing light assembly. Work M-F-40 hours a week with no waiting time. Daytime hours available. Call MANPOWER at 785-749-2600 to inquire about this opportunity to keep busy all summer. EOF summer. EOE The Halcyon House Bed & Breakfast, 10th and Ohio. Immediate and summer help needed for cleaning, serving and reservations. Both AM & PM shifts available. Fun atmosphere, wonderful guests, call Constance 841-0314. TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE! PLAY & COACH SPORTS + HAVE FUN MAKE $ $ Openings in: ALL TEAM & IN: DIVIDUAL SPORTS, ALL WATER SPORTS, PLUS: Camp/Hike, Ropes/Rock- Climbing, Ice/Roller Hockey, Office/Secretaries, Top Satelites, Excellent Facilities, FREE ROOM/BOARD/LAUDRY, Travel allowance ONLINE APPLICATION www.campcobbossee.com or call:(800)473-6104 205 - Help Wanted --- WAL-MART PART-TIME JOBS Wages start at $11.80. Apply in person at: WAL-MART DISTRI- BUTION. 3300 HWY K-68 OTTAWA, KS Part-time starting mid-May. Mon - Fri, 11- or 13 or 12-4. General office work plus show- ing apartments. Apply at 600 Lawrence Ave., Suite 2D, or call 841-5797. **YMCA Camp Shady Brook.** Colorado fun and adventure Serve God by serving kids this summer. $180-$240/wk & room/board. Tobacco-free, no larger/intensive tattoos or body piercing, background check_req. Apply at www.campshadybrook.com or call (303) 647-2313. Kansas Public Radio Corporate Development Director. This is a full-time unclassified professional staff position. Required qualifications: bachelor's degree or equivalent combination of education and experience, excellent written and oral communication skills, demonstrated organizational skills and ability to follow through on projects and responsibilities. Attention to detail a must. Ability to deal effectively with underwriting businesses and contributors. Contact Janet Campbell, Director, Kansas Public Radio, 1120 W. 11th, Lawrence, KS 66044 Phone (785) 864-4603 or icampbell@ku.edu Foward a letter of interest, resume and list of 3 references to the above address. Priority given to applications received by May 9, 2013. EOIA Employer. X 300s Merchandise 305 - For Sale --- S $ MIRACLE VIDEO ADULT TAPES on clearance $12.98 and up. Call 841-7504 or stop by 191 Haskell. 330 - Tickets for Sale ADMIT ONE ADMIT ONE ADMIT ONE 340 - Auto Sales 1988 Toyota Camry, only 100,000 miles Runs great, new CD player and stereo. $1200. Call Lisa at 749-1256. 1990 Range Rover Clean interior; good ex- tr. Runa great, roof rack, sunroof, grill guard 180, $4200, Dane B16-212-6982. CAR REPAIR 340 - Auto Sales --- Cars from $500. Police Impounds! Honda, Chevys and more! For listings call 800-319-3323 ext.4565 1991 Ford Probe LX, V-6, 3 liter, 5 speed manual, good condition. $1,100/offer. Call 500-9082, leave message. $ $ $ $ $ 360 - Miscellaneous Take General Psychology, Social Psychology, or Contemporary Social Problems online through www.bartonline.org. Summer courses begin June 9. A house 400s Real Estate 405 - Apartments for Rent 3 & 8 ABRs, in nice houses. Close to KU. Off street parking. Some with wood floors, paid utilities. 8410-650. 841-3633. 1,2,3. & 4 BR apts avail, for summer and fall. Quiet setting, swimming pool, KU bus rte, laundry facility, Call843-0011. 3 BR apa, 1 1/2 BA, BP, skylights, 1 car garage, all appliances. W/D hook up. Very nice. No smoking. No pets. $840/month. Call 785-748-9807 3 BR, 2 BA, WD, close to campus; bus route. no pets; $750/mo. Call 856-1156 or 816-299-3502. Attractive studio apt, near KU at 945 Mo. avail June 1. Lots of windows, nice kitchen cabinets & off-street parking. Good place to study $400, gas & water no pets or smoking Call 749-9166. Avail. Aug. Very nice, spacious remodeled 2 BR. 1.5 AW. BD.W. D/A. CA. balthy, 9th & Emery. No smoking/pets. $590 + utilities. Call 550-811-841 or 581-3192. Available August. Tiny studio apartment. In renovated older house. Private jeek, off street parking, dishwasher, new I/C. 17th and Vermont. No pets. @335/month.Call 841-1074 Available June 1, one bedroom apartment at Briarstone. Great neighborhood near campus at 1000 Emery Rd. $490 per month. Washer/dryer hookups. No pets. Washers/7744 or 760-4788. 1712 OHIO Avail, Aug. 1, Large newer 4 BR apt, DW, CA, micro, laundry, on site. 4BR 2 BA $1040, Ask about leasing specials. NO PETS, PLEASE! George Waters Mgmt, inc. 841-5533 www.apartmentsinlawrence.net WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 CLASSIFIED THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN = 7 12. 405 - Apartments for Rent 1 bedroom apartments near KU. Possible rent reduction for various duties. Available August 1st. 841-6254 1 bedroom duplex or townhouse, $510- 580, 2 bedroom townhouse, $510-670, walk to campus, fireplace, garage with opener, no pets, available August. Call Bo @ 843-4000. 1 BR at Tuckaway, WD, fitness room, TV, fireplace, hot tub, alarm system, overlocks pool. Ask about apartment 7. Available June 1 or before. Call 838-3377. Attention seniors & Grad students Real nice, quiet 1 & 2 bedrooms near KU. Hardwood floors, lots of windows, no pets, no smoking. Call 749-2919. Bradford Squire Reasonably priced 2 & 3 BR units at 501 Colorado. DW, CA, micro, laundry on site. 2 BR 1 bath units $525, 3 BR 2 bath units from $645. One cat may be allowed. George Waters Management 841-5533 www.appartmentsinlawrence.net 2 BR apartments, CA, off street parking, 1737 & 81 Tennessee. $500 month. 913-441-4168. masonproperties@aol.com 3 & 4 BR townhouses @ 1125 Tennessee. W/D, CA, DW, off street parking. $875 & $1150 / month. Call 913-441-4169 or masonproperties@aol.com Great west location. Spacious & 1 2 bedrooms. $460/570. All appliances, ample appliance, on-site laundry. Call 843-4909. Great location. 1801 Mississippi. 3 BR apt, in duplex. Hardwood floors. CA, no pets. $610/mo Avg. August 1-824-4242 OPEN HOUSE Saturday, May 3rd 12:00 pm to 3:00 pm - 1,2,3 Bedroom - Luxury Apartments Ungraded Carpet - Upgraded Carpet - & Ceramic Tile Swimming Pool - Fitness Center Canyon Court 700 Comet Lane 842-3280 MASTERCRAFT WALKTO CAMPUS Campus Place 1145 Louisiana*841-1429 Completely Furnished and Unfurnished Apartment Homes designed with you in mind. Hanover Place 14th & Mass841-1212 ★ + 405 - Apartments for Rent Regents Court 19th & Mass*749-0445 Orchard Corners 15th & Kasold*749-4226 Sundance 7th & Florida*841-5255 Tanglewood 10th & Arkansas*749-241 MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 Mon - Fri 9am-5pm Equal Housing Opportunity COLONY WOODS 1301 W. 24th & Nelsmith 842-6111 colony@lks.com colony.colwpwoods.com CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Newly remodeled, 3 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. $870, 900 Block Michigan. Call 843-409-3801 A Spacious 1 and 2 BR apartments available June 1 at West Hills Apts. Great location at 1012 Emery Road. 1 BR - $450. 2 BR - $355. Water paid. High-speed Internet available. No pets, Open house 1-5 PM, Monday-Friday, Call 841-3800. Now Leasing! 1&2Bedrooms VILLAGE SQUARE apartments - OnKU Bus Route - OnRo Bus Route - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - Now Leasing for Summer & Fall - Exercise Room Now Leasing! close to campus spacious 2 bedroom swimming pool on bus route A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere. 9th & Avalon 842-3040 village@webserf.net 3HotTubs THE LEGENDS M-F 10-6 SAT 10-4 SUN 12-4 NOW LEASING May 2003 FULLY FURNISHED 2, 3 & 4 BEDROOMS ALL BATHROOMS PRIVATE STUDENT ONLY ALL INCLUSIVE UTILITIES PACKAGE (NO HOOK-UPS, NO DEPOSITS, NO HASSLES) WASHER AND DRYER IN UNEIT BEACH ENTRY POOL WITH NOT TUB OUTDOOR BASKETBALL & BBQ AREA FULLY EQUIPIDED FITNESS CENTER GARAGES & CARPETS *CAR MASH & DAILY BAT* HUGE GAME ROOM / COMPUTER & CRAFT ROOM SUNFLOWER BROADBAND HIGH SPEED INTERNET (785) 856-5800 LEGENDARY STUDENT LIVING 405 - Apartments for Rent 405 - Apartments for Rent Regency Place, 2. BR, available now. Walking distance to campus: 1301 Louisiana. Water paid; no pets. $590/mo. 414:8486 On North side of 24th between Naismith & Ousdahl 811 532 Eddingham Apartments New Owners Cable Paid Large 2 Bedroom Apartments Available June 1 and August 1 Many have extensive remodeling. Features Include: Pool Fireplaces Newer AC and Heat Microwaves Laundry on site W/D Available Exercise Room Basic Cable Paid ($35/month savings) One small pet may be OK $550 & $560 On North side of 4th between Naismith & Ouadhia PARKWAY COMMONS Luxury Apt. Homes Now leasing for fall 2003! - 1,2,3 Bedroom * Pool - 1, 2, 3 bus Pool Washer/Dryer Fiture Grate - Fitness Center - Basketball Court - Basketball Court Security Systems - Security Systems - Garages Available Models Open Daily 842-3280 3601 Clinton Parkway www.firstmanagementinc.com JEFFERSON COMMONS HOLIDAY APARTMENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL 1 RD $400 1 BDR $460 2 BDR $495 Individual Leases Cable plus HBO Resort-style Pool Plaza 24 hour Fitness Facility On KU bus route 2 BDR $750 ROLL, QUIET SETTING ON KU BUS ROUTE SWIMMING POOL LAUNDRY FACILITY WALK-IN CLOSSETS PATIO/BALCONY ON-SITE MANAGEMENT 3 BDR $690 4 BDR $840 785-843-0011/785-423-4005 MON-TRU 9:00 LOCATED JUST BEhind THE HOLIDOME 405 - Apartments for Rent BARN Stop by and find out for yourself! EQUIP. MOTION ACQUISITION You've heard the name. You've heard it's the place to live... Washer/Dryer in each unit Internet access in each room Tanning Bed Computer Center 842-0032 www.jeffersoncommons.com Located just behind SuperTarget L Lorimar & Courtside early sign up special Townhomes can about just be duplicates! Lorimar Townhomes 1,2,&3 Bedroom Townhomes - Washer/Dryers * Dishwashers * Microwaves * Patios * Gas Fireplaces * Ceiling Fans *Fraser Drivers* *Dishwashers* *Microwave* *Panus* *Cooling Fans* *Cilium Parkade#* Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you. Courtside Townhomes 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes 8801 Clinton Parkway #F1 - Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments For More Info: 785-841-7849 NOW LEASING FOR JUNE AND AUGUST WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 4100 Clinton Parkway MON-FRI1:00-5:00 NO APPOINTMENTS NEEDED - No pets please - Great location near campus - Washer/Dryers 1012 Emery Rd. 841-3800 - Reasonable rates - Digital cable & internet OPEN HOUSE 405 - Apartments for Rent Now signing YR! LEASE starting May! June/July/Aug. No smoking gifts. Extra nice, well-kept 2 BR apts. Quiet. all appli- ances, low utilities. A/C; bus route & more $405/mo. Spanish Craft Apts. 814-6888. Save Your Money! Excellent location, 1341 Ohio/1104 Tennessee. 2 BR in 4-plex. C/A, D/W, W/D hook-ups. $490/mo and $470/mo. Aug. 1. No pets.Call 842-4242. Bedroom Apartments 1,2,&3 - Spacious, Luxury Apts - All apps. + W/D - Water paid - 6 mo. leases avail. Friendly-ONSITE-Mgmt. FOX RUN 4500 Overland Dr. 843.4040 www.thefoxrun.com SUNRISE - Garages; wd hookups * * Microwave Ovens * * Some with Fireplaces * * On K11 Bus Route * - Luxurious 2, 3, & + Bedroom Townhomes - Garages; w/d Hookups VILLAGE 660 Gateway Ct. (Behind Sonic on 6th St.) vious 2, 3 & 4 - Swimming Pool - Tennis Courts OPEN: MON - FRI 10-12 & 1-5 841-8400 or 841-1287 Now Leasing For Fall 2003 Tuckaway 2600 w 6th Street Harper Square Apartments 2201 Harper Street HAWKER APARTMENTS v or Irving... on campus HAWKER APARTMENTS luxury living... on campus! 10th & Missouri Tuckaway at Briarwood Fireplace (at Tuckaway/Harper) Built in TV (at Tuckaway) Washer/Dryer Alarm System Fully Equipped Kitchen Tuckaway has two pools, hot tubs, basketball court, fitness center and gated Briarwood pool, fitness entrance www.tuckawaymgmt.com Aberdeen Apartments and Townhomes call 838-3377 1,2,3 Bedrooms Ask about money savings special or free gift. Up to $790,⁰⁰ savings on select units with new 12 month lease. W/D. all appliances Some with fireplaces and Garages OPEN HOUSE M-F 1-5 Sat. 11-3 2300 Wakarusa Dr. 749-12889 www.lawrenceapartments.com 405 - Apartments for Rent THE HOME CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 3 BR, 3 BA town houses. $1170. Private BA & walk-in closets, phone, cable in each BR, complete kitchen w/ microwave, porches/patios, and security 900 ILB, Arkansas 843-4090. River Meadow Management Facility Affordable on Cost Term Now Leasing for Fall Country Club Apis Summer Tree West Town Homes Troun Town Homes - 2 BR/1 Bath-Townhomes $595-$690 - 2 BR/2 Bath-Apartments $675-$695 ♦ Washer & Dryer ♦ Fully Equipped Kitchen ♦ Serving Bar Blue Mew Management, Inc. Towering at an Affordable Price 5200 W. 15th, Suite 101 Call 840.9467 for an appointment LeannaMar Townhomes - car ports - 4 bedroom/3 bath - full size washer/dryer - approx. 1600 sq feet 4410 Clinton Parkway Building G 785 - 312 - 7942 +1,2,3,Bedroom HIGHPOINTE Now Leasing for Fall 2003 - 1, 2, 3, Bedroom * Washer/Dryer * Fireplace * Swimming Pool * Fitness Center * Basketball Court * Small Pet Welcome 841-8468 6th & Iowa NOW LEASING - Brand New 1 & 2 Bdrm - Washer/Dryer - Washer/Dryer - Swimming Pool - Swimming Pool - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - Fitness Center - On KU Bus Route - On KU Bus Route - Small Pet Welcome - Small Pet Welcome - Small Pet Welcome - Model Open Daily Ask About Our Specials! CHASE COURT 843-8220 1942 STEWART AVE. www.firstmanagementinc.com 410 - Condos For Rent ٢٠١٨ 3 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom townhomes 922Tennessee 423-1223 Very nice condo. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer and Dryer. Walking distance. Only $259 a person. Call Ehl at 841-4740. 415 - Homes For Rent 4 Bedroom 2 Bathroom, W/D included, basement, off street parking 1735 Kentucky 10508 1493-4935 Houses 415 - Homes For Rent 4 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom, 1 car garage W/D included, close to KU. 1638 India $1200. 841-4935. House for rent. 4 bedroom. 1.5 bath. CA. W/D included. Off street parking. No pets. 1704 Kauzency $1100/mo Call 218-4113. Large 2 bedroom apt. on first floor of quiet home near campus, CA, W/D, upgraded heating/cooling, wiring, plumbing. Wood floors, covered front porch, backyard, off-street parking. No smoking. Aval. summer and fall.Call 841-8198. --- 2 and 3 bedroom houses for rent. Have CA. Available August 1 No pets. No smoking $725-825/month 913-341-0952. Nice 2 BR 1 BA. Small house, remodeled in 1996. High ceilings, wood fl., in living rm. Hook ups. For Aug 1st $60,841-3633. BIG 5 BR HOUSE AND CHARMING 3 BR HOUSE for rent August 1st. Both near campus, between $850-$110 plus utili- ties. Application & Deposit: 749-7207 or 766-6622 between 6:30 to 10 p.m. 420- Real Estate For Sale Houses on a Farm moving to Ko? Owen a condo for what you'll pay in rent. No money down progs Awesome 1 BR/BA 24/hr security. Convenient plaza location. Unbeatable at 105k Call 913-522-5360, Realty Exec. 4th Roommate wanted. Huge House near campus. Starting Aug. 1st. Rent $330 + 1/4 utilities. Call 842-0529 430 - Roommate Wanted Female roommate needed to sublease 3* BR town at Hawthorne Place. Available June 1 $275/month + ull 842-7064 Avail. June 1, lovely house 3 bks from. KuNe. Need 2 female roommates, approx. 300/mo. each. No Pets. No Smoking. Call 841-3736. Female, non-smoker, prefer graduate student. Very nice 2 BR 2 BA. Rent $390 plus half utilities B43-545-340 Grad students seek third for 4 BR/3 BA house. W/D, high speed internet, garage, debaklobby $250 uuil. Call 423-5383. Male roommate for 2 BR townhome Clean, quiet, close to campus. $300 mo. + half utilities. 841-1160. 435 Rooms for Rent Roommate wanted for nice - 4B house Fully Furnished, washer, and dryer. $320 plus 1/3 utilities Call 760-1998. Mature, non-smoking female student to live in 3 BR, 2.5 BA townhouse, WID. $285 +1/3 tuli per mo. Avail Aug 1, 841-9953 440 - Sublease Room for rent for male. Nice furnished home. $350 includes utilities, W/D, private bath. No smoking. 749-1187. Property Key $500 Signing Bonus: 2BD 2BA at Parkway Commons, avail mid-May Thru July 31st of 04 Pet friendly. Call Jessl or Craig at 312-9710 or 780-0266. 1 master bedroom and private bathroom of large townhouse. Possibility to take on year lease at end of summer. $300/month negotiable. Available now. Call 993-0511. 2 BR, 1 BA on 14th and Kentucky. Avail. June + July W/D, A/C, DW, front porch. $605/month. Call 749-9616. 3 BR Townhouse, BIG, NICE, CLEAN. Close to campus, Garage, W/D, CA, avail. mid-May. 870/mo. Adam 830-8076. Avail, June 1, 4 BR, 2 BA, W/D, dishwasher. Newly carpeted & tiled. $240/mo per person + ull Call 842-1118. Avail, June 1. 2 BR, 1 BA, W/D, DW, 6th & Florida. $540/mo. Water & trash paid. Rent/move in date: Gall. N43-8946. Female roommate wanting to share a nice 3 bedroom town home in west Lawrence. Available Mid May/June 1 - Aug. 1 8275 u/3 usulties /Call us 393-1606 Studio apartment at 1201 Oread Ave. No pets, summer sublease, water and gas paid for, Call 393-3321. 500s Services 510 - Child Care MARINE SERVICE Part time nanny needed. Care/transport 6yr/4yr to school and other activities: $10/hr913-782-1217 913-485-4422 (cell) BB = THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2003 Serving KU Over 10 Toppings to choose from!!! .357 Special Wednesday carry out only $3 small 1 topping $5 medium 1 topping $7 large 1 topping Open 7 days a week Dine-in or Carey-Out only 749-0055 704 Mass. --on the OSU team in doubles (14) and third in total hits (59). His 7 home runs have also made him the conference leader in the category — each four-bagger came during league games. Earn $5000-$8000 this Summer Fry-Wagner Moving Storage offers excellent wages potential overtime, and long term job security for college students looking for summer employment. Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew Call Rocio ext. 331 1-800-394-0049 or 913-905-1035 to reserve your spot on the summer crew FRY WAGNER MOVING & STORAGE Fry-Wagner is proud to be an Equal-Employment-Opportunity Employer $ $ Thompson Crawley FURNITURE LEASEMENTS Since 1971 - LEASING/MONTH TO MONTH RENTAL YOUR CHOICE LEASING • LEASE PURCHASE OPTIONS AVAILABLE LIVING ROOM SUITES - TWO DAY DELIVERY BEDROOM GROUPS • CORPORATE LEASING AVAILABLE DINETTE GROUPS • ONE PIECE OR COMPLETE HOME - WIDE SELECTION 841-7111 Showroom hours: M & F 8:30 - 5:30 T - Th12:00 - 5:30 Closed Weekends 601 KASOLD LAWRENCE, KS 66049-3236 Hard-core catcher shows soft side By Brandi Ball Daily O'Collegiate Oklahoma State University STILLWATER, Okla. — He has a swagger, a potent bat and an arm that resembles a loaded military rifle looking for its enemy. Oklahoma State catcher Jason Jaramillo lives, breathes and dreams the game. You try to steal second, he'll hunt you down with no warning. You throw him an inside fastball, he'll rip it down the line. He's fierce on the field, but his infectious personality shines through in victory and defeat. One thing he isn't afraid of is for the competition, or his teammates, to see how much his family means to him. And he might — just maybe — be a mommy's boy. "No, we can't put that in a newspaper!" Jaramillo's mother, Nora, said Sunday after the Bedlam game, laughing. "He wouldn't want me to say that. Let me just say, he is still my baby even though he is all grown up." But to his mother's surprise, Jason doesn't mind the moniker. He smiles when his family is mentioned, and the role his family plays in his life is apparent. "I call her every night," Jason said. "Absolutely, I can say that. I have no reservations, nothing to hide. I miss my mom." Then, standing on the field at Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, surrounded by autograph-seeking youngsters and college peers, Jason speaks louder for others to hear. His macho image doesn't waiver. "I miss my mom." And even louder, turning to face the crowd, and speaking affectionately: "I love my mom." Hitting .391 on the season, Jason, who is coming off a 7-of-12 performance in the Bedlam 8 ALABAMA STATE Series, h a s blasted 7 h o m e runs, is second Tabbed a Johnny Bench Award candidate, Jason isn't going unnoticed by the powers-that-be in college baseball. "I've got the best catcher in this conference, maybe the best one in the country," Cowboy coach Tom Holliday said earlier this season. "Jason is a player that is young, but you wouldn't know it. He's competitive, he's a perfectionist, works hard, and I don't know a coach that wouldn't take the kid in a second." According to the Franksville, Wis., native, he learned from the best. Not his high school coach. Not Holliday. Not those he watched on television as he was growing up. But his brothers. "It definitely helped me out, getting the knowledge that they already have." Jason said of older brothers Francisco Jaramillo Jr. and Lee Jaramillo. "They are seven and eight years older than I am, so I was always tagging along whether they liked it or not. Everything just rubbed off on me — it is really because of them that I'm where I am at right now." Francisco Jr. and Lee both played baseball professionally, and Francisco just retired after finishing his career in the Milwaukee organization. TheARAMillo family — minus youngest brother Alexis, 18 — traveled to Oklahoma last weekend to watch the Bedlam Series. Unfortunately for the OSU team, it lost 2-of-3 to the unranked Sooners. "(Jason) knows the game. You lose one day, maybe you don't hit well or you have an error, and you bounce back. That's Jason," Francisco Jr. said. "He is motivated by that, because that is what good players do. They bounce back and play lights out the next time." Playing lights out is something Jason is not a stranger to. Holiday has said that he wished he had "twenty more just like him." The young catchers' ambition and hard-working attitude is something his coach can't help but like. "He is one of those guys that makes a ballclub better, he can really make a name for himself in this game in the future," Holliday said after an OSU victory over Baylor. "I'd really like to see him in the big ones day." To Jason, his work ethic is something that comes easily. "I had such a great example in my father (Francisco Sr.)," Jason said. "He has such a tremendous work ethic. From where he has come to what he does now, he takes care of us, I admire him so much. He just came here and started working to make a better life for himself, and he's done it. He made a better life for all of us." Francisco Sr. came to the United States in 1968, met Nora, and started a family. "It it was something that I needed to do, and I met my beautiful wife." Jason's father said. Upon first sight, Jason's father, with a serious and focused look, seems as though he may yell at you rather than talk fondly of his family. And that is all it takes, a mention of his sons, and Francisco Sr. lights up. "I am very proud of all my kids," Jason's father said. "It is great he has the chance to play Division I, it makes me very proud to be here and see him play so well. But he is getting his degree at the end, that is the most important thing." Spectators of Cowboy baseball would be able to pick No. 15's father out the crowd easily. The same focused look, as if the national championship were on the line, and the same endearing smile. "He does look a little scary," Jason said about his father. "Don't tell anybody, but he is a teddy bear." It is clear, after meeting the head of the Jaramillo family, just what it is that keeps them all smiling, especially Jason. "Ever since I was young, my brothers and my parents taught me it is because of a greater power that I have been given this ability to play baseball," the power-hitter said. "I just take time, say a little prayer to keep me sale, so that he will watch out for me. And he is, he always does." On the field, Jason takes his job seriously, he is focused, and he is prepared to do whatever it takes to propel his team to victory. "Obviously, with my position behind the plate. I feel like I am the quarterback of the team." Jason said. "I have to be there in whatever way I can be there, it is my responsibility to keep the team in check, keep things flowing on the field." OSU aee Scott Baker knows the importance of having a student of the game like Jason as his catcher. Baker also doesn't mind it when the Cowboy five-hole blasts 3 home runs in a game like he did against Texas. "Having Jason behind the plate helps any pitcher," Bakers said. "He is great back there, and having him at the plate with his hitting ability, gives a pitcher assurance. "He is one of our biggest assets." IT'S YOUR APARTMENT. YOU CHOOSE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE IN IT. Tanglewood 951 Arkansas Now leasing for August 2003! Completely furnished and unfurnished studios 1 and 2 bdrm apartment homes. Hanover Place 14th and Mass. Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 2003! Orchard Corners 15th & Kaspkts Enjoy the comfort of a small community. Now Leasing! Models open daily. Hanover Place Orchard Corners