2B Friday, April 21, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass.841-0100 Domestic & Foreign Complete Car Care LAWRENCE AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS DICKINSON THEATRE 414 800-7600 Dickinson 6 2239 Sailor Boulevard "We stand behind our Work and WE CARE!" 842-8665 2858 Four Wheel Dr. $3.50 Adults Before Meeting 8:00 P.M. Imagined Travel Tommy Boy $^{PG 13-4}$ 7:15, 9:30 Jury Duly $^{PG 4}$ 1:20, 9:40 Circle of Friends $^{PG 13-4}$ 2:00, 9:30 Don Juan DeMarc $^{PG 13-4}$ 7:10, 9:50 Kiss of Death $^R$ 4:15, 7:10, 9:50 Rob Roy $^R$ 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 SHALLOW GRAVE FRI 5:31, 7:30 SAT/SUN 9:30, 5:30, 7:30 HELP FRI 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 NO SHOWING SAT. Sun/Sun 8:45, 7:45 INCLUDING 8:45 PULP FICTION 9:30 DAILY NO YOU HYDROLOGY 101 (The Basics & A Refresher) Boo Radley ASSociation Santa Cruz (cousin of Claus) Avalon, Planet Ocean 415/854-0778 CLEAN WATER DAY AUGUST 19,1995 REMEMBER YOU NEED WATER! WE'LL BELIEVE IN EARTH DAY WHEN YOU CAN EAT EARTH Evers' win marks second day of Relays Jerel Harris/KANSAN By Tom Erickson Kansan sportswriter Kansas sophomore Michael Evers began the day in fourth place in the Kansas Relays men's decathlon. But the slow start didn't bother the multi-event specialist at all. Evers ended yesterday's competition at Memorial Stadium as decathlon champion. First-place finishes in the discus throw and 110-meter hurdles and a third-time time in the 1,500-meter run helped Evers clinch the title with a total of 6,986 points. "I have a stronger second day than most people," Evers said. "A lot of people have a strong first day and not a second, so I capitalized on that." Evers admitted that he wasn't too confident about moving up before yesterday's events. "I started with a decent hurdle race," he said. "But I wondered if I would get higher or not. I still really didn't have a good day." With a seemingly comfortable lead on the final turn of the 1,500, Evers almost lost the lead to North Dakota State's Ryan McGlynn but held on to finish first. Placing second in the decathlon "I didn't even see him." Evers said. "I had a lot left, though." Kansas freshman distance runner Josh Weber crosses the finish line after competing in the men's 5,000-meter race. Weber placed seventh and was one of three Javahaws who competed in the event. behind Evers was McGlynn with 6,955 points. Ryan Santi of Northern Iowa was third with 6,748. Yesterday also was the second and final day for the women's heptathlon, won by Barton County Community College's Lisa Wright with 5,012 points. Like Evers, Wright said she was surprised to finish first. "I really wasn't ready for it this year, but am glad I came away with the win," she said. "I really enjoy competing in the Kansas Relays." Jennifer Gillespie of Wichita State was second with 4,732 points, followed by Kansas junior Sandy Wilder with 4,465. Relays Schedule The 70th annual Kansas Relays begin in earnest today at 8:00 a.m. in Memorial Stadium. Weekend schedule Friday: 1:00 p.m. Track Finite Saturday: 8:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m.Track and Field events 8:00 a.m. Field events 8:30 a.m. Track events 12:30 p.m. Welcome Wilder, who finishé third in the 800-meter run yesterday, said the sunny skies provided .1ft. "I was excited about winning, and I'm glad I was able to" out on a good weather day," she said. Six additional events were held yesterday, including the women's 10,000-meter run, in *duck Kansas* junior Sarah Heeb plaid (*third*. The Jayhawks also competed in the women's and men's 7,000-meter events. Competition resumes at 8 this morning with the high school girls' long jump and two-10 run. The Relays will conclude tomorrow. Softball team prepares for two doubleheaders By Jenni Carlson Kansan sportswriter For the Kansas softball team, the word doubleheader is one of the English language's driest words. The Jayhawks continue to struggle through doubleheaders. They have won the first game and dropped the second six times this season. Their latest split came Wednesday night against Southwest Missouri State. Kansas' record sits at 17-17 overall and 3-9 in the Big Eight Conference. Despite their unwanted experience with splitting doubleheaders, the Jayhawks still don't know how to remedy their problem. That difference comes from the Jayhawks' mental approach. Kansas softball coach Kalum Haack said that the team suffered a let-down in the second game and just went through the motions. There's a lot of rumors going around that we don't care about winning. "If I knew the answer to that, we wouldn't be splitting them," Kansas sophomore Jacque Wenger said. "We're so intense in the first game, we kick butt. The second game, it's just so different." "That's just not true. We really don't know the answer." But Wenger said the letdown wasn't because Kansas became overconfident after winning the first game. Opposing teams have simply come through with better clutch hitting than the Jayhawks, Kansas junior Katie Morgan said. It's also been difficult to be motivated to play the same team two consecutive games. "What gets really boring is playing the same team four times in two days." Morgan added. But that is the Jayhawks' task this weekend. Oklahoma State, which is second in the Big Eight, will travel to Lawrence for doubleheaders tomorrow and Sunday. Tomorrow, the two teams will play at 1 and 3 p.m. and then at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Sunday. All games will be played at Javahawk Field. "Obviously, we want to beat OSU," Wenger said. "That would be a great highlight of the year." As the Kansas seni er play their final home games this weekend, the team should get extra motivation to break its doubleheader slump, Wenger said. For Morgan, though Ier thoughts may be elsewhere. "We're so frustrated right now, that's not even an issue," Morgan said. "We're just trying to come through and win two games back-to-back." ISLAND MUSIC · REGGAE · SALSA SKA Saturday, April 22nd 18 and Over GRANADA The Ultimate IBM.Compatible 1020 MASS. ST. DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE (913) 842-1390 IBM. 48D6X/26MHz Multimedia Computer = 540 MB Hard Drive = BB Memory = Lacu Bar SVA Video = 14.4 Internet FoxModem - Voice recognition * 30-watt Speakers * 4 Drive Bays * 2 Serial Ports 1 • M8 Video Memory 2 • Writable Sound Card 3 • Double-sided CD-ROM drive 4 • 14" VGA Color Monitor (Solid separately) INCLUDES OVER $800 WORTH OF SOFTWARE! Includes: Windows, PFS, WindowWorks, FasWorks, Quicken SE, Prodigy, America Online, Compton's Encyclopedia, and Undersea Adventure 1420 Crescent Rd.-Lawrence, Ks. 60544 "Top of the Hill" 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艾弗勒中心官网 (913) 234-4945 and (816) 931-3330; all bearers欢迎; public $20 and $19, KU, Haskell and k-12 students $10 and $7.50, senior citizens and other students $19 and $14; phone geders can be made using Mastercard or VISA. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners; Kief's Audio/Video, Lair Noller Dealerships; Paley ShoreSource and W.T. Krem Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee. NEW YORK CITY KETCHUP NATIONAL ENGINEERING FOR THE ARTS STUDENT SENATE The 70th Annual Kansas Relays... TODAY-SATURDAY! Memorial Stadium 95 Pan-Am Gold Medalist Pat Manson... Pole Vault Invitational! American Record Holder Scott Huffman Fuel for Optimum Performance* CELLULARONE Top Collegiate & High School Athletes! The Nations Largest Cellular Communications Concerns KU Students: Sports Combo Ticket or $3 Jayhawks vs. Nike Central 4x100m Relay Team! Including Maurice Greene, Owner of 1995's fastest 100m time in the world Sponsored By: 2nd Annual Dog Frisbee Talent Contest Bring your dog to the Saturday, April 22 Can your dog catch a frisbee? Is it talented? 2:30 pm at South Park (Northwest side) Wingreatprizes!! KU Environs STUDENT SENATE