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Noon-6 520 West 23rd ○ 041-5085 EXP: ENVIRONS Environmental Protection & Social Justice MONW EARTHWEEK'96 EVENTS Saturday, April 20 : Lawrence Earth Day Celebration Monday 22: Dave Foreman Lecture, Co-Founder Earthfirstl 8:00 pm, Ballroom, Kansas Union Tuesday 23 : Lance Burr, Attorney General, Kickapoo Nation 7:00 pm, Southwest Lobby, Burge Union Conversation with Noble Laurates on Ozone Depletion 1:00-3:00 pm, Frontier Room, Burge Union, American Chemical Society, KU Section Wednesday 24 : Kansas & Burge Unions, Open House Earth Awareness, 10:00 am-2:00 pm Sunday 28 : Baker Wetlands Field Day, 2:00-4:00 pm 35th and Haskell, East Gates Bill Craven, Sierra Club Lobbyist 7:00 pm, Big B Room, Kansas Union STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES GSP Corbin Contains at least 50% recycled fiber. Oklahoma City remembers bombing The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY — Diana McDonnell was standing next to a friend's desk in the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building when a bomb explosion ripped through her eighth-floor office one year ago. That memory still is too fresh for McDonnell to return to the site today for ceremonies marking the anniversary of the bombing, which killed 168 people, including 35 of her co-workers in the Department of Housing and Urban Development. "I was there last year at 9:02, and I don't want to be there this year." McDonnell said yesterday. "I'm staying home tomorrow. I could not go to work yesterday. And I could not go today." For McDonnell and other survivors of the bombing, the emotions are too strong to allow them to return today to where the building once stood. The suspects Preliminary hearings are under way in the case against Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, charged with conspiracy to destroy federal property, among other offenses Oklahoma City: One year later On April 19, 1985, the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City was bombed. An update: "Many are leaving the city; some are leaving the state," said Troy Grigsby, special assistant to the state coordinator for HUD. "Nobody's been allowed to forget. There have been constant, constant reminders." Grigsby is one of a few HUD administrators who will answer telephones in the Oklahoma City office while the rest of the staff takes the day off. A federal judge moved the trial to Denver No trial date has been set Building: Gutted shell was raced May 23, 1995; site now surrounded by chain-link fence on which city residents have hung memortos SOURCES: Justice Department, Oklahoma City Mayor's Office; research by PAT CARR Memorial: A city-wide task force is planning a permanent memorial Knight-Ridder Tribune Fear and anxiety about the bombing's anniversary are common responses among survivors. "I, like everybody else, have to keep going," Grigsby said. "You have to remember, but you have to keep going." "We know the first year is always the most difficult," said Karen A. Sitterle, a Dallas psychologist who worked with families of bombing victims. "For a lot of people, it doesn't feel like it's over. It feels like it's unresolved." At the bombing site, mourners will remember the dead by observing 168 seconds of silence and then reading their names in alphabetical order. Bagpippers will lead a procession of survivors and families about five blocks to the Myriad Convention Center, where another ceremony will include speeches by Mayor Ron Norick, Gov. Frank Keating and Vice President Al Gore as well as a videotaped statement from President Bill Clinton. Congress passes bill to combat terrorism The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Congress passed long-awaited legislation yesterday that would give federal law officers new powers to use against domestic terrorism, sending the bill to President Clinton on the eve of the first anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing. The bill, which also would limit federal appeals by death-row inmates, was passed by the House 293-133. It had been approved by the Senate a day earlier. 91-8. Clinton was expected to sign the measure next week, after he returns from overseas, even though it lacks numerous other law enforcement powers he had sought. "Today, Congress took an important step in making our country more safe and secure from the violent cowards who would tear at the fabric of civilized order," House Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry Hyde said after the vote. Attorney General Janet Reno said the legislation — a compromise between separate Senate and House bills — contained very effective tools that the government can use in its efforts to combat terrorism. that would allow deportation of alien terrorists without disclosing classified evidence against them, prevent fund raising in the United States for terrorists and require taggants, or chemical labels, in plastic explosives so they can be traced. To Republican supporters, the bill's key provision is its limit on habeas corpus appeals by prisoners. It is expected to end execution delays. Specifically, she cited provisions "There is no clearer link, no stronger link, between effective antiterrorism legislation and deterring criminal acts of violence in this country than habeas and death-penalty reform," said Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga. Barr said the bill would tell those considering performing a terrorist act that they no longer can come into the United States and kill its citizens, destroy government institutions and know that they will be able to spend the next 25 years laughing at Americans. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., noted that the only people eligible for such appeals already are incarcerated. "We're not talking about anybody walking around," Frank said. "We're talking about people who are locked up and who are a danger, presumably, only to other prisoners, but certainly not to general society." The 45th Annual Spring KU Blood Drive Monday, April 15 - Thursday, April 18th at the Kansas Union Ballroom Friday. April 19th at the Bursa Union Free to Every Donor: • 1 order of Papa John's breadsticks • 1 week membership to Lawrence Athletic Center Walk-Ins are Welcome!! PowerBar CAPTURED BY THE TECHNICIAN STUDENT SENATE Introducing Big Border Taco. (Or as much as we could fit on the page, anyway.) The new Big Border taco from Taco Belt is just like our original taco, only it's topped with pepperjack cheese. And it's bigger. Much bigger. With more beef, more cheese, and more crunch, for all just 99%. Hung? Open wide! NOTHING ORDINARY ABOUT IT. "Sweet 16" One KU tradition celebrates making it to Sweet 16 on a regular basis. But this KU tradition will celebrate Sweet 16 just once. Don't miss KU's 16th annual A celebration of museums' contributions to the community and their role in preserving our natural and cultural heritage. At the Spencer Museum of Art, Natural History Museum, Museum of Anthropology, and Wilcox Classical Museum. Museum Day At the Natural History Museum, meet scientists and get your hands on scientific specimens. Play games and win prizes. NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM We study the life of the planet. The University of Kansas Natural History Museum • Dyche Hall • (913) 864-4450 ---