4B --- Wednesday, February 28, 1996 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN REFOUND SOUND 1-913-842-2555 BUY-SELL TRADE 823 MASS. LAWRENCE, KS SHOWOFFS Body Piercing Studio Leather • Jewelry • Lingerie 12 E. 8th 12-8 p.m. 838-3366 Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 "Unhurried since 1993 Fine Line Tattoo Inc. *Fraternity & Sorority Letters *Body Piercing *Bring your own design or choose from our extensive selection *Reasonably priced *Hospital sterilization Mon-Sat 29th & Mass. St 12-8pm Topeka Tues. till 6pm 233-8288 SCHOLARSHIP REFERRELS MONEY FOR COLLEGE R.T. Enterprises 18 & Over P. O. Box 527 Lawrence, Ks. 66044 voice mail 843-0043 #835 Choose Spring Break Travel Plans Carefully. Legal Services for Students 148 Burge 864-5665 Jo Hardesty, Director STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF LANSING SENATE NOW OPEN CLUB Orpheum 1105 Mass. in Lawrence (Enter thru Tin Pan Alley) Dream Vacation or Nightmare? Drinking & Dancing Fridays & Saturdays Don't forget... WEDNESDAYS ARE STUDENT NIGHTS $2 admission with your student ID Open Teens-Churs. 7:30pm-1:00am Fri d Sat until 2:00am Juicers Showgirls 913 n. Second Interested in a unique living arrangement? the HILLEL HOUSE may be right for you! Located at 940 Mississippi, the Hillel House is close to campus, affordable and a great opportunity for Jewish living. Call 864-3948 or stop by the Hillel Office in the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union for an application. The deadline to apply is MARCH 8, so act quickly! ... Saturday at 3:00 THE BOTTLENECK FEBRUARY 29,1996 7 P.M. FIVE BUCKS THE BUBBLE BOYS FROG POND FREE VERSE SHALLOW BENEFIT FOR CHILDREN WITH AIDS SUPPORTS THE KU MED CENTER SPONSORED BY ALPHA XI DELTA Villanova player suspended Kerry Kittles admits to running up $3,100 telephone bill in 1994 The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — Villanova basketball star Kerry Kittles, suspended last week for misusing a university phone card, ran up $3,100 in unauthorized calls since 1994, school officials reported. Villanova revealed for the first time the details of the incident that forced its All-American guard and almost-record scorer to the bench for the last three games of his senior According to the report submitted to the NCAA, Kittles was given the card so he could call a reporter for an interview while the team was in Anchorage for the Great Alaska Shootout tournament in 1994. Kittles returned the card but kept a copy of the number and used it for personal calls while the team was on the road, said athletic director Gene DeFilippo. season. The school's business office discovered the unauthorized use last week. By correlating the calls to the team's travel schedule, the office was able to attribute more than $3,000 in charges to Kittles. immediately admitted he had been using the number. With help from his family, he has repaid the money, DeFiillo said. When asked about the calls, Kitties But the NCAA, which forbids special privileges to student athletes, hit Kittles with a three-game suspension, which wiped out his chance to break the Villanova scoring record and help boost his team's seeding for the Big East Tournament. The NCAA found no wrongdoing by Villanova and has closed its investigation. Without its top three-point marksman, Villanova lost to powerhouse Connecticut on Monday and dropped to 23-4 overall, 13-3 in the league. Irregular heartbeat killed athlete DAYTON, Ohio — University of Dayton center Chris Daniels died of an irregular heartbeat, a coroner ruled yesterday. Authorities have not determined what caused the problem. The Associated Press Daniels was stricken at his offcampus home early Feb. 8. The 6-foot-10,238-pound senior was taken to Miami Valley Hospital, where he died. "It is a very uncommon occurrence among young individuals, but it does happen," said Ken Betz, director of the coroner's office. "It is a tragedy." The irregularity, or cardiac arrhythmia, caused Daniels' heart to quiver and fail to pump enough blood, Montgomery County Coroner James Davis said. Daniels, 22, was second in the nation in field-goal percentage, hitting 67.9 percent of his shots. He averaged 12.9 points per game and six rebounds for the Flyers, who are 14-12. "We did not find any evidence of steroids,no evidence of drugs or abuse." James Davis Montgomery County Coroner Davis said he did not know what caused the irregular heartbeat. Daniels was stricken while he slept. "We don't have a trigger," Davis said. The coroner said Daniels had a slightly enlarged heart which is common in athletes his size. But the autopsy revealed no other obvious abnormalities that could have contributed to his death. Davis said Daniels' system contained a small amount of an anti-inflammatory drug that had been prescribed to him for sore muscles. But he said it played no role in the basketball player's death. "We did not find any evidence of steroids, no evidence of drugs or abuse," Davis said. Heart problems have been blamed in the deaths of several other basketball players in recent years. An autopsy showed that Gathers, who was on medication for an irregular heartbeat, had cardiomyopathy, a scarring and inflammation of the heart. Hank Gathers, who led the nation in scoring and rebounding in 1988-89, died March 4, 1990, after collapsing during a game at Loyola Marymount in Los Angeles. Boston Celtics star Reggie Lewis died July 27, 1993, while shooting baskets with friends. 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