6B Wednesday, April 26, 1995 24 ATTENTION: PRE-MED STUDENTS Interested in Summer Volunteer Opportunities? MEETING: Thursday, April 27 7:00 p.m. Watkins Health Center First Floor Conference Room *Speakers from Health Care Access, Lawrence Memorial Hospital and Trinity Respite Care will discussing volunteer positions available this summer Shipping Out For the Summer????! We Pick Up, Package, and Ship All for one LOW price UPS Shipping to: We Ship: - All Points in US/Canada • Asia • Europe • Mars **Stereos** **Computers** **Furniture** **Cars** STORAGE!!-We will pick up, store for the summer, and deliver your belongings back in the fall(as low as $25 per month) PACK-N-DISPATCH SHIPPING SERVICE, INC. 1-800 PACK-456 1-800 722-5456 (816) 525-3773 The University of Kansas Hilliard Foundation and Ecumenical Christian Ministries present Yom HaShoah: In Rememberance Of The Holocaust With special guest speakers Eva Edmands & Lou Frydman "For those we've lost" Many people would like to forget that the Holocaust of World War II ever happened. Many already have. Please join us on Wednesday, April 26th at 7:00 p.m. At the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive, for this special commemoration so that we never forget. All are welcome to attend. Call 643-9494 for directions. Admission is free. Donations will be accepted Wednesday-Friday April 26-28, outside of the Kansas Union and in the Kansan business office 119 Stauffer-Flint. The University Daily Kansan will be accepting donations for the Oklahoma City Relief Fund. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Show the people of Oklahoma City that the KU community supports them in their time of need. NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Oklahoma City bomb conspiracy alleged The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY — Two brothers were linked in conspiracy charges yesterday with Oklahoma bombing suspect Terry McVeigh, and a motel manager in Kansas said he recognized the man in a new FBI sketch of "John Doe 2" as a nervous guest with a foreign accent. The developments in two states came as rescuers raked through the rubble for bodies, and Oklahoma City continued to bury its dead. The death toll rose to 88. In Michigan, federal prosecutors filed conspiracy charges against James Nichols, a 41-year-old farmer, and his brother, Terry, 40, who is being held in Kansas. They were accused of conspiring with McVeigh, a 27-year-old Army veteran charged in the explosion that destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah federal building. A court affidavit said James Nichols told FBI agents Friday that McVeigh had the knowledge to manufacture a bomb and that the three men made "bottle bombs" in 1992. Last year, the Nichols brothers made small explosive devices, the court document said. McVeigh was not accused in the Michigan case, and the charges were not related to the Oklahoma bombing, authorities said. In addition to linking the Nichols brothers to McVeigh, the charges allowed the government to continue holding the men, who previously were in custody as material witnesses. It showed a man wearing a baseball cap and was otherwise similar to the original picture of "John Doe 2": a man with dark, heavy eyebrows, thick lips, short neck, slightly flared nosils and square jaw. The FBI released an enhanced sketch of the most wanted man in America, a square-jawed individual linked to the nation's deadliest domestic terrorist attack on April 19. In Junction City, the manager of the Great Western Inn was watching television with two reporters when the new sketch flashed on the screen. He said he recognized him as the man who stayed in Room 107 on April 17 — two days before the bombing. not 100 percent American," said the manager, who is East Indian and himself speaks with an accent. The manager, who requested anonymity for fear of retaliation, said the man gave a foreign name and was driving a Ryder rental truck. "He spoke broken English. He was The government document also quoted Daniel Stomber, a neighbor of James Nichols, as saying that the Nichols brothers frequently made derogatory comments about the incident at Waco, Texas, and the federal government. "He was scared. He didn't want to talk to me too much," the manager told The Associated Press. He couldn't give the name the man registered under because FBI agents took away his log book. According to Stomber, "James also made comments stating that judges and President Clinton should be killed and that he blamed the FBI and ATF for killing the Branch Davidians in Waco." The motel is one exit down Interstate 70 from the Dreamland Motel, where McVeigh staved April 14-18. The sketch was based on new interviews with witnesses who saw two men in Junction City rent the truck allegedly used in the bombing on April 17, according to sources in Washington who spoke on condition of anonymity. were at his farm. Federal agents have said McVeigh was enraged by the government's attack on the Branch Davidian compound exactly two years before the Oklahoma City bombing. The manager also said a man identified James Nichols registered at his motel April 7. In the Michigan case, the affidavit said Terry Nichols had "survival books" with information about making ammonium nitrate bombs, the kind used at the federal building. It also said materials that could be used in an "improvised bomb," including 28 50-pound bags of fertilizer containing ammonium nitrate. A hearing is scheduled Thursday at Tinker Air Force Base on a charge of venue request made on McVeigh's behalf. His mother and one of his sisters distanced themselves from the bomb suspect, saying they had little contact with him in the last decade. "Ijust want to say I feel deep sympathy for the victims and families involved in the Oklahoma City bombing," Mildred Frazer, McVeigh's mother, said in a note handed through her door Monday to a St. Lucie County, Fla., sheriff's deputy. EARNCASH $15 Today $30 This Week By donating your blood plasma. WALK-INS WELCOME 816 W. 24th Behind Laird Noll Ford 749-5750 Hours: M-F 9-6 Sat 10-3 Native American Student Association NATIVE AMERICAN SCHOLARSHIP!! Read On: NASA Scholarship Available $450 to 4 Full-time Grad. Students $400 to 10 Undergraduate students (Renewed in Spring'96 semester) Criteria for Eligibility: - Will be enrolled in coming semester as full time undergraduate/graduate at KU - Minimum 2.00GPA - Proof of Native American descent (CDIB card) - Demonstrate educational commitment - Demonstrate financial need DEADLINE: MAY 5, 1995 Mail completed applications to: University of Kansas Office of Minority Affairs NASA Scholarship Committee 145 Strong Hall Lawrence, Ks. 66045 We Are One Community Office of Minority Affairs the lied series presents 8:00 P.M. FRIDAY APRIL 28TH,1995 Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864 ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982) and Ticketman (819-324-5455) or (816-913-3300) all are reserved; public $20 and $19, KU, KB, K-12 students $10 and $7.50, senior citizens and other students $19 and $14; phone codes can be made using MasterCard or VISA. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Kief's Audio/Video; Laird Noller Dealerships; Payless ShoeSource and W.T. Kemp Foundation, Commerce Bank Trust. K STUDENT SENATE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS WINNER WINNER WINNER CASH CASH CASH CASH CASH We've Extended Our Cash Giveaway One More Week! Absolutely Your Last Chance to Claim Cash Prizes Last Day Saturday April 29 JOIN OUR WINNERS! Cora Ann Carter $500 Winner Odis Carter $100 Winner Alberta E. Mayuex $1000 Winner Jinyang Wong $100 Winner Bring the wallet with your name, first and last name. When you send the wallet to the store, ALCOHOL CARE will receive it, and when you send the wallet back to the store, ALCOHOL CARE will return it. When you check the word "wallet" in a list of 10 or more items, click on "ADD TO WALLET."