University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 5 2. Gretchen Pippenger/KANSAN Frost bitten Charles Glover, left, and Juan Ramos, facilities operations workers, cut down hedges in front of Watson Library. The hedges, which died in a late frost this spring, were being trimmed yesterday to encourage new growth. Body Continued from p. 1 "case." Lawrence Police Chief Ron Oln said. "Any time there is an unattended death it is treated as a homicide." At a press conference yesterday, Olin said a forensic patholist had been brought in from Atlanta to assist in the autopsy today. Kris Sperry, a forensic pathologist who also aided with the autopsy of Christopher Bread, will help gather forensic evidence, which Olin said would be crucial to the case. Olin said the body could not be identified with dental records because the teeth had no major work done on them. Instead, officials will try to obtain fingerprints from one band for identification purposes. could be available this afternoon, he said. Olin said 18 officers from the Lawrence Police Department, KU Police, Douglas County Sheriffs Department, Santa Fe Railway police and the Ottawa Department of Public Safety were involved in the investigation. Information from the autopsy Hostage them in captivity. However, Reed referred to we while describing the conditions of his captivity. "We had adequate fresh food, and the opportunity to bath and shower, and given clean clothes," he said. Continued from p. 1 Asked earlier on TV what captivity was like, he replied, "It was lonely. It was boring . . . I'm very happy to be free . . . and I hope my fellow hostages will be freed very soon." taken. The bottom line was, I was an American." "No one ever said why I was He told the briefing that although he was fed well and had warm clothing, "I was not very happy, of course." Reed spoke haltingly at times, his eyes downcast. "I haven't talked much" as a hostage, he explained. "We don't know what basic orms I have in my body." He said he did not hold the Lebanese people responsible for his ordeal, and that "I want, to thank the Syrian government for all their efforts in helping me become a free man." He said he was blindfolded 24 hours a day during much of his captivity. He had an opportunity to bathe, Reed reported, and was offered the chance to watch TV occu- pations for newscasts — but he refused. Family Continued from p. 1 "I feel odd that my blindfold is not here," he said, touching his face. "I haven't been able to cry for four years," Sprague said. "Now I can be sorry and say, 'Thank God.'" Langston said, "I can't believe it's finally over. It's been a long hall. We'vehellied." Said Edward Reed, Reed's brother, "It's a great day, I feel wonderful." Peggy Say, whose brother, Terry Anderson of The Associated Press, is the longest-held hostage, left a message on the answering machine at her home in Cadiz, Ky., saying she was praying "that Frank Reed comes out and that the rest of the hostages follow shortly." A picture and an unsigned statement were delivered Sunday to a newspaper in Lebanon saying Reed would be freed within 48 hours. The same statement and another picture also were sent to a Western news agency. Dean Continued from p. 1 started working for Pizza Shuttle in early March to earn money. Better wages drew her to Yello Sub shortly after the incident at SAE, and she now delivers sandwiches out of her 1962 Volkswagen Rabbit. Delivery work brings tips and commission, she said. "I just go to school and work," Dean said. She still does, but during the past few weeks Dean has faced added responsibilities. She has met with police, the Douglas County district attorney, a U.S. district court judge and attorneys and the media. It has been a trying month. Gannon said, “It’s been tough on anm. She’s just one person. We’ve been trying to calm her down and keep her head on straight so she doesn’t lose what she has been working for. so she doesn't forget where she is.” Throughout the entire ordeal, Dean has stood her ground. She said she still intended, as she had from the beginning, to pursue a case against Willenborg with the county and with the University. "I saw the look in her eyes. She wasn't just upset about some guy who was a jerk to her. Obviously, it was something that was really bad," said Ruth, who was the SAE member. "I've never really doubted her story." John Ruth ran downstairs from the third floor of the SAE house early in the morning on March 30 and saw his friend Dean Dean rush out of the fraternity's back door. "I haven't changed my mind," Dean said. "I haven't changed my mind about this since it happened at 2 a.m. that night." Sympathy Abounds Ruth, who met Dean last year, said four or five members of the fraternity had backed Dean from the beginning. Others were sympathetic to her cause. At first, a lot or people felt defensive because the whole house was being blamed for an individual's action," he said. "But as time goes by, people are starting to feel sorry for her." Dean said she did not blame the SAE house. She just wants Willemborr to be unhumbled. But through it all, Dean has no regrets. She said it was a shame that it took the incident at SAE to raise awareness about KU's racial problems. She was wrong in her statement's steps to improve the campus racial climate. "Obviously, things like this have been happening here. It's caused a lot of tension," she said. "Now there's another incident, and people are sick of it and are speaking out. This has been waiting to boil over." Life is starting to return to normal for Dean. The phone is not ringing as often. Her final will be past in two weeks, and she is looking forward to a quiet summer in Lawrence, going to school and working. "He completely humiliated my person and treated me like I wasn't even a human being," she said. "He insulted and embarrassed me. The fact that he called me a racist name just added to it." Dean's feelings do not surprise Gannon. wollen person who lights for what is right, and that's really shining through now," she said. Ruth察须 the public and said that outside pressure from the public and the press had not influenced her decisions. "It's been Ann the whole time," he said. Dean just happened to be in the fraternity hallway where the boiling point was reached. How're you going to do it? Even in an untidy room, you can turn out some neat work on an IBM Personal System/2.² With its preloaded software, IBM Mouse and color displays, it easy to learn and fun to use. TURN it on and it's ready to go. of unfinished reports, papers and other assignments in short order. 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