6A Wednesday, April 10, 1996 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE Are you prepared? We are. - Limit of 15 Students per Class * Free Extra Help * The Best Instructors * Satisfaction Guaranteed THE PRINCETON REVIEW Call today! Classes are forming now. (800)865-7737 STUDENT TRAVEL Paris...640 Madrid ... 763 Frankfurt...721 Copenhagen ...827 Rome ... 861 Athens 984 All fares are roundtrip from Kansas City Tax not included. Some restrictions apply FBI links suspect to bomb victims The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Investigators who long had theorized that the Unabomber chose his targets from books, the media or radical environmental publications have discovered possible direct links between suspect Theodore Kaczynski and at least four victims. Four targets had frequented universities and areas where Kaczynski studied or worked, federal law enforcement sources said yesterday. At least two bombs carried written references to people who also may have crossed his path. Pat Fisher, professor of computer science at Vanderbilt University, was the target of a 1982 mail bomb. Fisher said he attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and took a class at Harvard when Kaczynski was at Harvard. Both schools are in Cambridge, Mass. "We could have been in the same class," Fisher said. "I think he knew who I was." The connection continued: Kaczynski went to graduate school in mathematics at the University of Michigan, where Fisher frequently visited because his father worked in the same department. James McConnell, injured in a 1985 Unabomber attack, was a psychology professor at the University of Michigan when Kaczynski attended in the mid-1960s. The Unabomber's first fatality was Hugh Schreutton, a Sacramento computer store owner. Scrutton took math classes at the University of California at Berkeley during the summer of 1967, the year Kaczynski began teaching there. He didn't teach Scrutton's course. Theodore Kaczynski - Percy Wood, the airline executive who was the target of a 1980 mail bomb, lived in the Oakland-Piedmont area when Kaczynski taught in neighboring Berkeley. Wood served on the San Francisco Bay Area Air Pollution Control District's advisory council from 1967 to 1969, when Kaczynski taught at Berkeley. Wood told The Oakland (Caui.) Tribune that he didn't remember Kaczynski or environmental controversies that might have attracted attention. Kaczynski knew people referred to in at least two other bombings. In 1982, when the Unabomber left an explosive device at a computer science and engineering building at Berkeley, he left a note saying, "Wu It works! I told you it would. R.V." When Kaczynski taught at Berkeley, a fellow math professor was Hung-Hsi Wu. Wut told the FBI that he didn't remember anything about Kaczynski. The Unabomber used the return address of Buckley Crist, an engineering professor at Northwestern University in the Chicago area, where Kaczynski lived. Crist attended a conference at Berkeley in 1968 when Kaczynski taught there but doesn't remember Kaczynski's attending. The Unabomber used the name "H.C. Wickel" and San Francisco State University in the return address of a 1994 bomb that killed a New Jersey advertising executive. Investigators discovered a former San Francisco State student named Wickel who had lived in Salt Lake City in the 1970s, when Kaczynski lived there after leaving Berkeley. The University Daily Kansan is opening its doors tonight. Here's your opportunity to talk with people who currently work for the advertising department of The Kansan. Open House Tonight at 5:00p.m. 121 Stauffer-Flint Hall We are now currently hiring for the Summer and Fall1996 Semesters. Applications available at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Submission Deadline: April 15, 5:00pm KANSAN Resume Builder. New Friendships. Great Business Experience. And much more! Grey Montgomery president Jamie Johnson vice president WHY VOTE VISION? confused by this student senate stuff? Here's some helpful information to make your election day choice a little easier. Experience Counts! (and Vision has the most of it) - The most returning senators (15) - 2 of 7 undergraduate SENEX representatives - 6 (of 12) university council representatives - 2 student senate committee chairs - 9 other senate and university governance chairs and vice chairs - As well as leaders from all over campus Issues Important to you - Parking - Enrollment - Faculty Evaluations - Technology REMEMBER VOTE VISION TODAY