--- - 4. 判断下列句子正误(对的打“√”,错误的打“×”)。 7. 请在下列选项中选择正确的答案。 CONTACT CATCH OF THE WEEK // MALLORY WIEGERS > Our weekly peek at a fish in the KU sea. INTERESTS & HOBBIES: Any band with a banjo or a fiddle — I'm obsessed. I like writing letters. I like to explore cities. In Kansas City, I enjoy going to First Fridays. Photography is something I do for fun. I love having conversations. TURN-ONS: Style is huge. I like a kind of J. Crew-meets-mountain-man type of style. A man of faith is really important. Also someone who will keep his word. I'm 5 feet 10 inches, so a taller man is preferred. A beard doesn't hurt either. TURN-OFFS: Boastful and inconsiderate people. I don't want someone who is going to sit on the same side of the booth with me at restaurants. Also, Ed Hardy is just not OK. AWKWARD DATING MOMENT: My very first kiss with a boyfriend was at a Sadie Hawkins dance during the song, "One Wish." We stopped kissing when "Hey Ya!" started playing and realized that everyone had not only given us 20 feet of room, but was gawking as well. YOU CAN SPOT ME: I am always in Signs of Life. The artwork in the gallery changes often, and the iced honey Americano is delicious. I love Free State Brewery, and I have a cot set up in the Art and Design Building. I'M KNOWN FOR BEING: Talkative — sometimes I talk too quickly. Also, relatable, creative, "hipster" and loving the Lord. WHY I'M A CATCH: I like bacon. // CAROLINE KRAFT HOW WE MET // ANGIE BURNS & JEREMY STEVENSON > All great relationships had to start somewhere. Rehearsing, performing and traveling by bus for three months leaves little time for romance, but Jeremy Stevenson and Angie Burns found a love to last a lifetime. The two met in Los Angeles in 2003 at a rehearsal camp for their Christian performance group, Continental Singers. Burns was the director of Stevenson's tour group. The long road trips gave Stevenson and Burns time to get to know each other. Stevenson, Olathe senior and ROTC cadet, says he was drawn to Burns' cheerful personality. "She was really enthusiastic about everything all the time," he says. "I am not a bubbly person, so I appreciate it more in other people because I could never be that way." Their feelings for each other blossomed, but there was one problem: the ministry discouraged romantic relationships on tour. If a relationship did start on tour, the director was responsible for keeping the romance under control. The fact that Burns was the director made the situation sticky, so the Contributed photo Love songs: Burns and Stevenson met on tour when she was the director of his singing group. couple decided to keep their romance under wraps. "We kept it hush-hush that we liked each other for half the tour," Stevenson says. They avoided displays of affection and kept flirting to a minimum, but Stevenson says he stole kisses "when nobody was looking." After the tour, Burns and Stevenson maintained a long-distance relationship and married in 2006. They live in Olathe, where Burns is an assistant to the executive pastor at their church. The couple is expecting their first child in the fall. // CAROLINE KRAFT 04 14 11 President-elect Gabe Bliss graphic flashed on screen that the room erupted in raucous applause and yelling. "Our success is undeniable," Johnson said in a speech after the results. "We had a great, great turnout." The KUnited coalition, for the second year in a row, dominated student senate elections winning 41 out of 64 possible seats. Renew KU picked up 21 senate seats. Three of the election winners were listed as independent. KUJH Check out KUJH for more coverage of this week's elections and the reactions of the coalition members. vows e with ns ses ARRISON kansan.com really about Renew KU hard, but that KUnited getting the presidential of the vote g seats as it ist 17 years of about porters was knowing it aid dental can summed up others later, dog can be rt SEE KUNITED ON PAGE 6A ybe couldn't that it was I think I'm in Gilmore, who was in College enities seat "I ran because I believe in this coalition." "We did what we wanted to do," Briner said. "We started conversations that wouldn't have happened had we not run." Briner and vice-presidential candidate Josh Dean said they were proud of their coalition and also of the 20.9 percent voter turnout, almost 10 percent greater than last year. As the night continued, Renew KU members kept up their resolve. SEE RENEW KU ON PAGE 6A CRIME Students vandalize Learned Hall cause damage to safety supplies Edited by Samantha Collins Several students reported a theft of a fire extinguisher and an erroneous discharge of a safety shower in a lab inside Learned Hall, at BY ALEX GARRISON agarrison@kansan.com 15th and Naismith streets, early Saturday morning. The Public Safety Office report from the incident states that two 20-year-old men from Overland Park were arrested at the scene. Learned, Eaton and Spahr Halls are unlocked at almost all times said Jill Hummels, director of public relations for the School of Engineering. CRIME Public Safety assessed the damage at $45. "Peeping Tom" shocks showerers BY ROSHNI OOMMEN roommen@kansan.com At 7:20 p.m. on Monday, the man walked into a women's restroom in Hashinger Hall and watched women Three times this week, a man walked into a women's residence hall restroom, opened a shower curtain and watched a woman shower. Now the police are searching for that man, according to a press release by the KU Public Safety Office. showing. At 7:30 a.m. Wednesday he went into a women's restroom in McCollum Hall and did the same thing. Shortly afterward, at 7:40 a.m., another instance of voyeurism to the same man was reported. The police report said that the man entered the dorses by "tailgating," which could either mean that he followed on students' heels into the building or waited around until someone unlocked the door. Captain Schuyler Bailey said the KU Police are looking at video footage from the residence halls to see if they can find footage of the suspect. "If we do get video of him, it will be released to the public." Bailey said. The KU Public Safety Office is asking for any information available in finding the man. Its phone number is 785-864-5900. Edited by Sarah Gregory