6A 11 Wednesday, January 31, 1996 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts OUTOR TRAPITIC TICKET? moral Civil and Criminal Ticket +R^2-50 - Drug and Alcohol Offenses • Landlord/Tenant 1-800-890-9128 Johnson, Thornbrugh, Hulleran & Davidson, LLC Licensed in Missouri & Kansas Jon Thornbrugh Brady Johnson Free Initial Phone Consultation Refracted Tees for Students STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEETING ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER 7 P.M. THURSDAY BRING A FRIEND AND YOUR CALENDAR! SIGN UP FOR HONORS PROGRAM! Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS Now Leasing Spring & Fall Newly Redecorated Units Gas Heat & Air Cond. Low Utilities Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route Studios 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom) Call Pat today for the Summer Spec 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave When you pick up The Kansan .. please pick up all of it.. Rock Chalk time is near Ticket sales start tomorrow; groups rehearse nightly Pam Dishman / KANSAN By Scott MacWilliams Kansan staff writer If it's frozen, gray, and the end of January on Mount Oread, it must be about time for the annual Rock Chalk Revue. The 45th annual campus variety show is scheduled for Feb. 22, 23 and 24 at the Lied Center. Tickets for this year's show, "Behind Closed Doors," go on sale tomorrow at SUA offices and Dillons stores. Ticket prices range from $10 to $15. Members of the Delta Delta Delta sorority and the Sigma Chi fraternity practice their skit for Rock Chalk 1996. The two houses practice every weeknight from 5 to 10pm, and on weekends. "Our goal every Our goal every year is top last year's totals in both money raised and in volunteer hours given." Sandra Archer executive producer for Rock Chalk Delta Delta Delta and Sigma Chi, Delta Gamma and Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta and Sigma Nu, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi Delta Theta, and Gamma Phi Beta and Sigma Phi Epsilon will perform 20-minute shows. In addition, other groups will perform between the acts. Last year Rock Chalk donated $16,000 to the Douglas County United Way and volunteered 19,000 hours of community service, said Melodi Wolf, Junction City senior and Rock Chalk promotions director. Sandra Archer, Lawrence senior and executive producer for Rock Chalk, said she hoped this year's campaign would do even better. "Our goal every year is to top last year's totals in both money raised and in volunteer hours given," Archer said. Larry Bussinger, manager of Dillons, 1015 W. 23rd St., said he expected good ticket sales. "We have sold Rock Chalk tickets before," Bussinger said. "It is a very special thing, and a number of our employees have been in the shows in the past." Rehearsals are underway nightly at either the Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St., or Burge Union, depending upon the availability of the Eagles Lodge. "They started their practices here on January 17th," said Dick Randolph, general manager of the Eagles Lodge. "Each living group has a practice schedule, but I have not really watched any of their rehearsals because we don't go in there while they are practicing." Wolf said the different living groups also competed in a Most Charitable awards competition. The winning group is the one judged to have given the most time to various service projects. "We help with Head Start, put coupons on cereal in the grocery stores and lots of other projects," Wolf said. "There are also bronze, silver and gold medals for each group averaging eight, nine, or 10 hours of community service per person donated to the community." Wolf also said that Kwik Shop stores would have 32-ounce cups with the Rock Chalk logo on them. "It is just a way to make people aware," she said. Student wins $10,000 in lottery Sophomore second student to receive reward within week By Adam Ward Kansan staff writer Sally Eaton had just finished watching the movie Eye for an Eye Saturday night when she got a craving for a Dr. Pepper. Eaton, Wichita sophomore, and her friend Amie Devore, Knoxville, Iowa, sophomore, drove to Kwik店, 845 Mississippi St. Back in the car, Eaton scratched off the first play area on the ticket, which revealed $5,000. Eaton bought a bottle of Dr. Pepper and a package of sunflower seeds. Then, on a whim, she bought a Double Doubler lottery ticket. Then she scratched the second, and it read $5,000. When she Sally Eaton scratched the third, it also read $5,000. But Eaton, who had never played the Double Doubler before, wasn't sure whether she had won. "I went inside to ask the guy at the counter whether I had won, and he said, 'Yeah, you just won $10,000,'" she said. "It seemed like the guy at the counter was more excited than I was," she said. Eaton said she was overwhelmed with a feeling of disbelief. Eaton said all the people in the store came over to examine the ticket. After Eaton and Devore returned to the Alpha Chi Omega sorority where they live, they decided to go out and celebrate Eaton's good fortune with their sorority sisters. Eaton said that she called her parents that night to tell them the good news and that the first thing her mom asked her was whether she was drunk. "Then my mom was so excited she had to give the phone to my dad," she said. "Talking to them really got me excited." Eaton said that she did not sleep that night and that she did not go to her classes Monday. Instead, she traveled to Topeka to have lunch with her dad and her sister and fill out the claims report. Eaton said she planned to use part of her winships to go to Jamaica for spring break and to visit a friend in South Bend, Ind. She plans to give the rest of the money to her parents to invest for her while she is in college. However, if Kansas makes it to the Final Four, Eaton said, she probably would go. One week before Eaton won the $10,000, another KU student, Heather Yager, Kansas City, Mo., junior, won $100,000 playing Powerball in the Kansas Lottery. The Experience of a Lifetime 7 Tony Awards including Best Play 1993 & Best Play 1994 The only play Broadway's highest honor Broadway's highest honor two years in a row. 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