2005-04-04

Published on May 2016 | Categories: Documents | Downloads: 36 | Comments: 0 | Views: 307
of 12
Download PDF   Embed   Report

Comments

Content


VOL. 115 ISSUE 124 WWW.KANSAN.COM
MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2005
THE STUDENT VOICE SINCE 1904.
Student Senate
KUnited was fined for
door to door campaign-
ing in residence halls.
Campaign policy signs
were posted in Templin
and Lewis hall lobbies
to prevent more cam-
paigning in the halls.
PAGE 5A
Tough loss
Even though the Kansas
softball team played
hard, it continued its
downward spiral losing
two games to Texas A&M
on Saturday. The players
aim to turn things around
at 3 p.m. tomorrow
against UMKC. PAGE 1B
Today’s weather
All contents, unless stated otherwise,
© 2005 The University Daily Kansan
Same-sex marriage ban
Tomorrow’s ballots will include a ban on same-sex
marriages. The state already has a statute defining
marriage as between a man and a woman. PAGE 3A
Galindo may transfer
Kansas coach Bill Self announced Friday that
freshman forward Alex Galindo may transfer to a
school closer to home. Galindo will make his deci-
sion when Self returns from the Final Four. PAGE 1B
75 45
Tomorrow
Chance of storms
Wednesday
Rainy
8055
Warm and windy
—Alex Perkins, KUJH-TV
56 40
▼ RELIGION
Nick Weiser,
Dighton
freshman,
bows his head
in prayer for
Pope John Paul
II during a spe-
cial service
held Friday
night at the St.
Lawrence
Catholic
Campus
Center, 1631
Crescent Road.
A group of stu-
dents from the
center, includ-
ing Weiser,
traveled to
Rome during
spring break
when they saw
the Pope as he
waved to the
crowd.
Bar owners feel sting of loss
The second game of the Final Four between
North Carolina and Michigan State rallied only
enough people to fill two-thirds of JB Stout’s
Sports Bar and Grill, 721 Wakarusa Drive,
Saturday night.
Nearly every section had empty tables.
Dustin Holiday, former KU student, said he
expected more people to come out to watch the
Final Four.
“After about 15 minutes the place cleared out,”
he said. “I was really surprised.”
Bucknell thwarted tournament hopes for fans,
as well as for bar owners and managers who
anticipated tournament revenue, with its stunning
BY ADAM LAND
[email protected]
KANSAN STAFF WRITER
Catholics mourn
Nick Weiser knelt down in
the front pew of the chapel at
the St. Lawrence Catholic
Center Friday night.
The Dighton freshman hung
his head low as he draped his
rosary over the side of the pew
in the front row.
His prayers were for Pope
John Paul II, who died Saturday
in his Vatican apartment, ending
a long public struggle against
debilitating illness. He was 84.
Kasonia Kisangani, December
2004 graduate from Manhattan,
said more students could have
shown up to the center’s vigil,
1631 Crescent Road, had they
known about it, but he was
happy with the turnout.
“It was necessary to pray for
the pope because it’s an oppor-
tunity for everyone to come
together in prayer,” he said.
More than 50 students joined
Weiser Friday night for a prayer
vigil for Pope John Paul II.
The vigil was a time for peo-
ple to mourn, but it was also a
time to celebrate the pope’s life,
the Rev. James Sanchez said.
“We’re here to recognize the
great legacy our Holy Father is
leaving us,” Sanchez said in a
sermon. “His legacy is that he
embodied, he witnessed and he
inspired hope.” Sanchez said the
pope did that when he lived and
he would continue doing that in
death.
The Rev. Vince Krische was
impressed by the general con-
cern of the Catholic leader.
Krische said people had
stopped him in Lawrence Friday
to ask him about the pope’s con-
dition.
“I just think it’s really inter-
esting. It’s the big word on the
street and everyone — not just
Catholics — is talking about it,”
he said.
Weiser and others at the gath-
ering said they felt a personal
connection to the Holy Father.
Weiser heard the pope speak
when he attended a spring
break pilgrimage to Rome less
than two weeks ago.
“It feels like a connection hav-
ing been at one of his last cele-
brations he appeared,” he said.
The pope’s final public appear-
ance was Wednesday when, look-
ing gaunt and unable to speak, he
briefly appeared at his window.
His health sharply deteriorat-
ed the next day after he suffered
a urinary tract infection.
In John Paul’s 26-year reign
he helped topple communism in
Europe and left a deeply conser-
vative stamp on the church.
He reaffirmed the church’s
ban on artificial birth control
and denounced in vitrofertiliza
STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS
Lawrence residents hold vigil in memory of pope
▼ PHI KAPPA THETA ▼ BUSINESS
Rachel Seymour/KANSAN
Marriage ban on
ballot tomorrow
Kansas will be the first of four states in 2005 to
decide whether to amend its state constitution to
prohibit same-sex marriage. The proposed
amendment will be on ballots across the state
tomorrow.
South Dakota, Tennessee and Alabama will fol-
low Kansas and vote on state constitutional
amendments later this year.
While 17 states already have constitutional
amendments prohibiting same-sex marriage, 23
others have pending amendments, according to
the Human Rights Campaign, a national organi-
zation working for equal rights for lesbians, gays,
bisexuals and transgendered persons.
Kansas, like many other states, already has a
state statute that prohibits same-sex marriage and
defines marriage as a contract between two peo-
ple of the opposite sex. The proposed amendment
would take this statute a step further.
The first part of the amendment defines mar-
riage as a civil contract between one man and one
woman. By this definition, all other marriages
would be declared void.
The second part says the state will not recog-
nize any relationship, other than marriage, as hav-
ing the rights or incidents of marriage.
This would deny some tax breaks and benefits
to people in civil unions who are not married,
Aaron Paden, Lawrence senior, said. And that
takes things too far, Paden said. He has helped
organize a rally against the amendment at 12:20
today at Wescoe Beach.
“Our constitution should be there to protect
citizens,” Paden said. “For the constitution to be
used to take away rights from people is bad. It
seems almost evil.”
Daniel Rea, St. Louis freshman and activism
chairman for Queers and Allies, said the amend-
ment was too specific.
“It’s not just defining marriage,” Rea said. “It’s
denying rights to any partners or couples outside
of marriage.”
Student Senate voted last month to oppose the
amendment. The amendment conflicts with the
University of Kansas Code of Student Rights and
Responsibilities, which protects students from
harassment based on sexual orientation.
While denying the recognition of other civil
unions is a bold step, it is necessary to ensure that
the amendment is more than just theory, Lee
Bickerstaff, Emporia senior, said.
“If there are no real world effects, then you’re
just arguing semantics,” Bickerstaff said.
If the amendment does not pass, the legislature
could still amend the state’s statute prohibiting
same-sex marriage, which would function similar-
ly to the constitutional amendment.
But that is unlikely, Allan Cigler, professor of
political science, said. Governor Kathleen
Sebelius can veto any new statutes.
“My guess would be that she doesn’t support
the amendment,” Cigler said. “I think it’s the
amendment or nothing.”
Cigler said he doubted the house and the sen-
ate could get the two-third vote required to over-
ride a governor’s veto.
Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Registered voters can contact The Douglas County
Clerk’s office for voting locations at 832-5267. A
majority vote is needed for the amendment to pass.
— Edited by Nikola Rowe
BY JASON SHAAD
[email protected]
KANSAN STAFF WRITER
▼ STATE POLITICS
National group
revokes charter
Phi Kappa Theta’s national
fraternity will not recognize the
KU chapter as a fraternity after
it had an unregistered party on
Feb. 19, fraternity members said
yesterday.
The national fraternity in
Carmel, Ind., revoked Phi
Kappa Theta’s charter Saturday,
said Michael Pilshaw, Lawrence
junior and member of Phi
Kappa Theta. This happened
two days after the executive
board of the
Interfraternity
Council upheld
the decision to
expel the chap-
ter from the
University of
Kansas. As a
result, Phi Kappa Theta will no
longer be recognized locally or
nationally as a fraternity, he
said.
Matt Moreno, president of
the fraternity and Wichita soph-
omore, said the fraternity was
BY ERIC SORRENTINO
[email protected]
KANSAN STAFF WRITER
What it says:
Marriage (a) The marriage contract is to be
considered in law as a civil contract.
Marriage shall be constituted by one man
and one woman only. All other marriages
are declared to be contrary to the public
policy of this state and are void.
(b) No relationship, other than a marriage,
shall be recognized by the state as enti-
tling the parties to the rights or incidents
of marriage.
There are three open seats on the board.
Three candidates are running:
✦ Craig Grant
✦ John Mitchell
✦ Linda Robinson
Bond issue 1:
This item involves a
$54 million bond to
demolish and
rebuild South Junior
High school, as well
as making other
improvements to
the existing junior
high and high
school.
Bond issue 2:
This item involves
an $8.9 million bond
to buy new and
upgraded computer
equipment for the
Douglas County
school district.
Source: Douglas County Clerk’s office
Rock the Kansas vote
Other issues: The following are items that will appear on tomorrow’s ballot:
There are three open seats on the commis-
sion. Five candidates are running:
✦ Sue Hack
✦ Tom Bracciano
✦ Mike Amyx
✦ David Schauner
✦ Jim Carpenter
For more information about the candidates go to:
http://www.kansan.com
School board
elections
School bond
issues
City
Commission
elections
Marriage
amendment
SEE MOURN ON PAGE 2A
SEE CHARTER ON PAGE 3A
Empty seats
line the bar at
Jefferson’s
Restaurant,
743
Massachusetts
St., yesterday
afternoon.
These seats,
along with
many others,
likely would
have been filled
during the
March Madness
games if the
Jayhawks gone
more than one
game in the
tournament.
Rachel Seymour/KANSAN SEE STING ON PAGE 3A
Lawrence residents gathered Friday night at
the St. Lawrence Catholic Center to pray for
the pope. He died in his Vatican apartment
Saturday. PAGE 1A
news 2a the university daily kansan monday, april 4, 2005
▼ insidenews
Pope John Paul II dies at 84
Same-sex marriage ban on ballots
▼ insideOpinion
▼ insidesports
▼ ELECTIONS
Tomorrow the Kansas ban on same-sex marriages will be up for a vote along with city
commission elections, school board elections and other issues. The Student Senate
opposes the ban on the grounds that it threatens students’ rights. PAGE 1A
Phi Kappa Theta’s charter revoked
The national fraternity for Phi Kappa Theta announced it will no longer recognize the KU
chapter of the fraternity. PAGE 1A
KU loss turns bars bottoms up during games
Kansas’ early exit from the NCAA Tournament has negatively affected the business at
local bars. If Kansas had made it to the national championship, some bars could have
made $10,000 more in revenue. PAGE 1A
KUnited fined for door-to-door campaign
Two members of the coalition went door to door handing out campaign material in the
residence halls. The Elections Commission ruled Thursday that this was illegal and issued
KUnited a $25 fine. PAGE 2A
Student housing running out of room
Not all returning students will be treated the same as they have in the past by the KU
Department of Student Housing. An increase of the freshman population and the loss of
Hashinger Hall for renovation has left first choices as only suggestions. PAGE 3A
Softball continues losing streak
Despite a strong effort, the Jayhawks lost twice to the Aggies on Saturday. The team
hopes to end this trend when it plays UMKC tomorrow. PAGE 1B
Face-off: Steroids creating nasty split in competition of sports
Athletes have been doing everything they can to gain an advantage in sports. It start-
ed with relatively harmless practices like the spitball pitch in baseball. Finnish distance
runner Lasse Viren then started blood-doping and won several Olympic gold medals.
Now it’s moved into full-fledged steroid use, most notably in baseball where Congress
has threatened to intervene. Guest columnists Paige Higgins and Matt Hoge explore
the yin and the yang of steroid use in sports. PAGE 5A
The Kansas rowing seniors received recogni-
tion from coaches at their final home meet
this weekend. Because several away races
remain seniors say they aren’t feeling senti-
mental just yet. The team races again
Saturday in Manhattan. PAGE 1B
Varsity rowers claim four victories at final home meet
ET CETERA The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the stu-
dent activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 25 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045. The University Daily Kansan (ISSN 0746-4962) is published daily during the
school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams. Weekly during the summer session excluding holidays.
Periodical postage is paid in Lawrence, KS 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $120. Student subscriptions of $2.11 are paid through
the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 1435 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045
TODAY
Pipe Dreams — mid-
night to 2 a.m.; Jazz
in the Morning — 6
a.m. to 9 a.m.;
Breakfast for
Beatlovers — 9 a.m.
to noon; News — 7
a.m., 8 a.m., 9 a.m., 6 p.m.; Sports
Talk — 6:15 p.m. to 7 p.m.;
Punditocracy — 9 p.m. to 10 p.m.
For more
news, turn
to KUJH-TV
on
Sunflower
Cablevision
Channel 31
in Lawrence. The student-produced
news airs at 5:30 p.m., 7:30 p.m.,
9:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. every
Monday through Friday.
Tell us your news
Contact Andrew Vaupel,
Donovan Atkinson, Misty
Huber, Amanda Kim Stairrett
or Marissa Stephenson at
864-4810 or
[email protected].
Kansan newsroom
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
1435 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence, KS 66045
(785) 864-4810
▼ MEDIA PARTNERS
Got bones?
KUnited campaign fined
Student Senate candidates have
been campaigning on Wescoe Beach
for the last two weeks, and have now
taken it one step further and started
campaigning door to door in some of
the residence halls.
Two members of the coalition went
door to door handing out KUnited
campaign materials to people in the
residence halls. The Elections
Commission ruled Thursday that this
type of campaigning was illegal and
required a $25 fine.
Jack Connor, member of the
Student Voice coalition, filed the
complaint against the KUnited mem-
bers and thought the punishment the
coalition received should have been
stricter.
“This has been a problem in the
past, but when the coalition gets off
like they did, they will continue to do
it all day,” Connor said. “I think the
commission should have sent more of
a message.”
Shelly Roben-Lojka, the complex
director for Lewis and Templin halls,
said that the policies on campaigning
in the residence halls had not changed
from past years.
Roben-Lojka said that signs were
hung in the lobby of Lewis and
Templin halls every year to help rein-
force their policy. Roben-Lojka said
people who do not live in the resi-
dence halls should always be accom-
panied by someone who does live in
the residence halls.
“In the four years I have been
working here, I have seen no change
in the way people campaign,” Roben-
Lojka said. “We put signs up and that
is the best we can do.”
Roben-Lojka said it was not up to
the residence halls directors to decid-
ed what the punishment should be for
people campaigning in the residence
halls and said it should be left up to
the elections commission.
The complaint that Connor filed
was against a specific member of
KUnited, Lance Mall, Clay Center
freshman. The commission ruled Mall
was not guilty for his campaigning,
however, it found KUnited as a whole
guilty for supporting Mall in some-
thing they knew was against the rules.
Mall and Nick Sterner, presidential
candidate for KUnited, had no com-
ment on the commission’s decision
and said the coalition had not decid-
ed whether they would appeal the
commission’s decision.
— Edited by Lori Bettes
BY DANIEL BERK
[email protected]
KANSAN STAFF WRITER
Nicoletta Niosi/KANSAN
A visiting school group exits the Natural History Museum in Dyche Hall last week. A mosasaur skeleton is displayed above
the door and the museum continues construction on an evolution exhibit to open this fall.
tion, abortion, euthanasia, divorce,
sex outside marriage, homosexual
relations and same-sex unions.
He demanded celibacy of Roman
Catholic priests and said yet again that
the priesthood was not open to
women. He did give in to the demands
of liberal Catholics to allow altar girls.
A man who had lived under both
the Nazis and the Soviets, he loathed
totalitarianism, which he called “sub-
stitute religion.” As pope, he helped
foster Poland’s Solidarity movement
and bring down Communism. Once it
was vanquished, he decried capitalist
callousness.
During World War II, he appeared
on a Nazi blacklist in 1944 for his activ-
ities in a Christian democratic under-
ground in Poland. B’nai B’rith and
other organizations testified that he
helped Jews find refuge from the Nazis.
While the pope championed better
relations with Jews — Christianity’s “older
brothers,” as he put it — the Vatican for-
mally recognized Israel in 1993. John
Paul was intent on improving relations
with Muslims. On a trip to Damascus,
Syria, in May 2001, he became the first
pope to step into a mosque.
As John Paul’s death neared, mem-
bers of the College of Cardinals were
already headed toward the Vatican to
prepare for the secret duty of locking
themselves in the Sistine Chapel to
elect the next pope. Tradition calls for
the process to begin within 20 days of
death.
Among possible successors are
German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger —
one of the pope’s closest aides and the
Vatican’s doctrinal watchdog. Others
mentioned include Brazilian Cardinal
Claudio Hummes, Cardinal Oscar
Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga of
Honduras, Cardinal Francis Arinze, a
Vatican-based Nigerian, Cardinal
Christoph Schoenborn of Austria and
Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi of Italy.
— Kansan staff writer Nate Karlin
and The Associated Press contributed
to this article. Edited by Austin Caster
Mourn
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Column: Don’t go, Alex Galindo!
Freshman forward Alex Galindo has a big decision to make: to leave Kansas basketball
or to stay. Ryan Colaianni gives the player more than one reason to stay in a letter of
endearment. PAGE 1B
Crew and rowing teams compete together
The Kansas rowing team came together with the crew team for the spring opening
regatta on the Kansas River. PAGE 2B
Women's tennis defeated by Baylor
The Jayhawks fell in all three doubles matches and earned one point from freshman
Elizaveta Avdeeva in singles. Avdeeva joined the team in January and has won six matches.
PAGE 2B
Baseball drops series after first game victory
Kansas dropped to 22-12 overall and 2-4 in Big 12 after finishing 1-2 in the three-game
series against Texas A&M this weekend. The Jayhawks play Wichita State Wednesday at
Hoglund Ballpark. PAGE 6B
taking responsibility for its
actions.
“We held ourselves accounta-
ble and faced the consequences
for our actions,” he said. “We
need to move on and hopefully
all of us will learn our lessons
and mistakes.”
Chapter fraternities at the
University that have parties
must fill out a party notification
form and send it to the
Interfraternity Council for regis-
tration. The unregistered party
had 16 kegs of beer, $517 in
cash and signs that advertised
the party.
Moreno went to Indiana this
weekend with the fraternity’s
vice president and the presi-
dent of the alumni board.
Moreno was scheduled to meet
with the national fraternity’s
board of trustees this weekend,
Moreno said in a previous
interview.
Pilshaw said the atmosphere
of the house upon Moreno’s
arrival was self-explanatory.
“We were obviously really
down,” Pilshaw said. “There’s
nothing positive that came out
of this weekend.”
Pilshaw said he expected the
national charter to be revoked
since the University sent the
national fraternity a letter recom-
mending the course of action.
Members of Phi Kappa Theta,
1111 W. 11th St., are not allowed
to pledge another fraternity or
remain in the greek community.
Pilshaw said he would not be
interested in pledging another
fraternity anyway.
Pilshaw said several people in
the 35-member fraternity
thought about moving to
Highpointe Apartments, 2001
W. Sixth St., next year to pre-
serve the community feeling.
For now, Pilshaw will be the
only member of Phi Kappa Theta
to remain in the greek community
next year. He is a member of the
IFC executive board and his term
lasts until November. He said he
would like to see issues handled
differently in his remaining time
with the IFC. Incidents like Phi
Kappa Theta’s happen all the time
and do not get noticed, he said.
“I’d like to see equality
toward all the houses,” Pilshaw
said. “There seems to be a bias
toward the bigger houses.”
Even though the fraternity
could appeal to the IFC General
Assembly a second time, Moreno
said it would not because of the
decision made this weekend.
He said he wanted other fra-
ternities to look at Phi Kappa
Theta’s situation as an example.
“We hope this shows to a lot
of fraternities that maybe it’s
time to re-evaluate how their
chapter is ran,” he said. “This
should definitely be a wake-up
call to fraternities to take risk
management seriously.”
— Edited by Jennifer Voldness
news monday, april 4, 2005 the university daily kansan 3A
Student Housing fights growing pains
The number of first-time
freshmen living in residence
halls increased 12 percent in the
past two academic years to
2,983 students. With a high
number of freshmen, increasing
numbers of upperclassmen and
Hashinger Hall closing, the KU
Department of Student Housing
is cutting some of the perks for
returning residents.
The department issued housing
contracts March 14 for students
who intended to return to the res-
idence halls. Contracts were due
on March 30, and first choices
were not granted to everyone,
Diana Robertson, associate direc-
tor of student housing, said.
“Everyone who requested a
contract got one, but their assign-
ment wasn’t necessarily what
their first choice was,” she said.
Freshman enrollment increased
this year, and the number of fresh-
men living in residence halls is
growing at a steady pace. The
number of freshmen in residence
halls has gone up from 2,701 in
the last academic year to 2,983 in
this academic year, according to
student housing. The increase of
282 students this year is more than
the total population currently liv-
ing in Lewis Hall and Templin
Hall — 275 students.
Hashinger is closing this May
for renovation, taking away 460
student living spaces. When
Hashinger reopens in Fall 2006,
it will have 375 student spaces.
Robertson said student hous-
ing will compensate for the
increasing freshman class and
loss of space by not allowing any
upperclassmen to live in a two-
person room alone, as it had in
the past. All of the two-person
rooms will have two people in the
residence halls next year, she said.
The “squatter rule,” another
returning-resident perk, will be
eliminated for next year. The
rule allowed residents to keep
the same room for the following
year if they turned in their
Intent-to-Return forms by the
deadline, which was February 2.
Robertson said the department
also issued 250 fewer ITR forms
this year because of the Hashinger
renovation. In the past, student
housing has issued about 600 ITR
forms. They issued 350 this year.
“We’re still offering the same
number of freshmen spaces, just
issuing fewer returning con-
tracts,” Robertson said.
Student housing issued ITR
forms in January on a first-
come, first-serve basis, which
caused a rush of returning stu-
dents to housing headquarters,
adjacent to GSP-Corbin Hall.
Laura Evers, Ellsworth resi-
dent and Olathe sophomore, said
it was nerve-racking trying to
keep a spot in the residence halls
for next year. Evers got the stu-
dent housing office before 8 a.m.
on the first possible day, Jan. 24,
to turn in her ITR form. She said
with the first-come, first-serve
system, she may not have had
anywhere to live had she forgot-
ten to complete the ITR form.
Heather Wood, Jayhawker
Towers resident and Wichita
senior, said she requested a two-
person bedroom in the Towers
for next year. She received the
two-person bedroom but with
three other people. Two people
will share a room together.
Wood said if she had known
that Hashinger was closing, she
would have turned in her ITR
form on the first day possible.
“I think changes need to be
made,” Wood said. “I’ve been
in student housing for four
years, and that should have
some effect in choosing where I
want to live with my money.”
— Edited by Nikola Rowe and
Azita Tafreshi
BY ERIC SORRENTINO
[email protected]
KANSAN STAFF WRITER
Freshmen in residence halls:
2002-2003*: 2,653
2003-2004: 2,701
2004-2005: 2,983
Sophomores:
2002-2003*: 397
2003-2004: 609
2004-2005: 424
Juniors:
2002-2003*: 109
2003-2004: 113
2004-2005: 129
Seniors:
2002-2003*: 56
2003-2004: 60
2004-2005: 63
Graduate:
2002-2003*: 8
2003-2004: 8
2004-2005: 3
* year Ellsworth Hall was
renovated.
Source: Department of Student
Housing
upset of Kansas on March 18.
“I would say we are down 30
percent,” said Fee Menshizadeh,
manager of JB Stout’s. “We real-
ly lose money on the days KU
would have played.”
Owners and managers around
the city would have liked the
heightened occupancy and the
money that comes with it.
On average, Jefferson’s
Restaurant, 743 Massachusetts
St., loses approximately $2,000
dollars a day when Kansas
would have played, said Matt
Schram, manager of Jefferson’s
Restaurant.
Bars around the city are feel-
ing the loss of revenue normally
expected in late March,
Menshizadeh said. JB Stout’s is
losing approximately the same
amount of money, per game, as
Jefferson’s Restaurant.
If Kansas had made it to the
final game, Jefferson’s and
Stout’s would be looking at
$10,000 more in revenue.
Although the potential tour-
nament revenue that the bars
may have counted on is not
technically a loss of revenue,
establishments in the city have
come to expect more than a
first-round loss.
“We didn’t expect KU to lose
to Bucknell,” Schram said.
“Although we don’t have the
same business, we are not
doing anything to try to bring it
back.”
Patrons that do go to the
bars for a taste of March
Madness often do not have to
wait for a table, but then again
there are not as many people as
usual.
“The bar cleared out while the
games were still going on,”
Holiday said. “It’s really a
somber time to be in Lawrence,
very depressing.”
— Edited by Azita Tafreshi
Charter
ON THE RECORD
✦ The KU Public Safety Office
arrested an 18-year-old
Naperville, Ill., resident for
urinating in public and
unlawful use of a driver’s
license at 1:11 a.m. April 1 at
14th and Ohio streets.
✦ The KU Public Safety Office
arrested a 19-year-old KU stu-
dent for operating under the
influence at 2:47 a.m. April 1
at 11th and Louisiana streets.
✦ An 18-year-old KU student
reported his cell phone miss-
ing to the KU Public Safety
Office between 8 and 9 p.m.
March 30 from the Student
Recreation Fitness Center.
The phone is valued at $300.
✦ A 19-year-old KU student
reported her bus pass miss-
ing to the KU Public Safety
Office sometime between
2:30 and 3:30 p.m. on March
30 in Wescoe Hall. The pass
is valued at $100.
residence hall population
▼ RESIDENCE HALLS
ON CAMPUS
✦ The Center for East Asian
Studies will sponsor a
screening of the film “The
Colonel Comes to Japan,” to
be followed by a panel dis-
cussion, at 2:30 today at the
Parlors Room in the Kansas
Union. Call 864-3849 for
more information.
✦ The Russian and East
European Studies department
presents a lecture,“Jazz, East
and West: Influences and
Borrowings,” by Norman Saul
of St. Petersburg State
University and Liuba Ginzberg
of the Russian and East
European Studies department
noon tomorrow at room 318
Bailey Hall. Call 864-4236 for
more information.
CLARIFICATION
✦ An article in Friday’s
University Daily Kansan
needs clarification. The article,
“Rumors are wrong; ‘Jocasta’
clothes stay on,” stated the
play was a one-man show. It
is a one-woman show.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Sting
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Make Posters for the Pride March
April 5th at 7:30 pm
International room of the KS Union
A
Event
The Pride March is on April 23rd at 11am on Mass street
Markers and supplies will be provided
Bring some cool CDs!!
The Pride March is on April 23rd at 11am on Mass street
Markers and supplies will be provided
Bring some cool CDs!!
Pre-Nursing Club
Meeting April 5th, 2005 5:30 pm
Watkins 1st floor Conference Room
Heartland Medical Clinic Speaker
news 4a the university daily kansan monday, april 4, 2005
FBI finds bombing materials
WASHINGTON — Tipped
they may have missed evidence
a decade ago, FBI agents
searched the former home of
convicted Oklahoma City
bombing conspirator Terry
Nichols and found blasting caps
and other explosive materials
apparently related to the 1995
attack, officials said Friday.
FBI officials said the material
was found buried in a crawl
space of the house in
Herington, which wasn’t
checked by agents during the
numerous searches of the prop-
erty during the original investi-
gation of Nichols and Timothy
McVeigh.
“The information so far indi-
cates the items have been there
since prior to the Oklahoma
City bombing,” Agent Gary
Johnson said in a telephone
interview from Oklahoma City.
FBI spokesman Jeff Lanza
said in Kansas the materials
were found in boxes, much of
them wrapped in plastic, and
were being sent to the FBI lab
for analysis. The FBI is operat-
ing on the assumption the evi-
dence was from the original
Oklahoma plot, he said.
In coming days, agents will be
looking for any fingerprints and
other clues on the evidence that
might show where the explo-
sives originated and who may
have possessed them before
they got into Nichols’ home.
The extraordinary discovery,
just three weeks from the 10th
anniversary of the bombing of
the federal building in
Oklahoma City, which killed
168 people, is likely to prove a
new embarrassment to an FBI
already burned by missteps in
this case and the pre-Sept. 11
period.
Nichols, who is serving multi-
ple life prison sentences on fed-
eral and state charges, hasn’t
lived at the property in years,
and FBI officials said the infor-
mation that led to the discovery
indicated Nichols had buried
the evidence before the attack
on April 19, 1995.
One of Nichols’ attorneys
said Friday the discovery was
either a hoax or a major failure
by the FBI to find all evidence
after searching the home
numerous times.
“They were there often,” said
attorney Brian Hermanson,
who represented Nichols in last
year’s Oklahoma state murder
trial that ended with Nichols’
conviction. “It’s surprising. I
would think they would have
done their job and found every-
thing that was there.”
“But I’m still suspicious that
it could be something planted
there,” Hermanson said. “The
house was empty for several
years and if somebody wanted
to put something there to
incriminate Terry they had plen-
ty of time to have done it.”
Dan Defenbaugh, the retired
FBI agent who ran the
Oklahoma City investigation,
said he was dismayed that his
agency may have missed the evi-
dence. “When you do a search
warrant of that importance, you
have to make sure it’s thor-
ough,” he said.
FBI agents went to the prop-
erty Thursday night and then
summoned a bomb squad after
finding the potentially danger-
ous materials, Lanza said. The
search ended late Friday after-
noon and the evidence was
being shipped to the FBI lab
outside Washington.
Lanza said the material was
buried in the crawl space under
about a foot of rock, dirt and
gravel, an area that had not
been searched during the origi-
nal investigation.
“Depending on the situation,
that’s something that may not
necessarily be searched, espe-
cially given the fact that there
was no information there was
anything in there, and even if
you searched the crawl space at
that time and dug through the
rock and rubble you wouldn’t
find anything until you went at
least a foot down,” he said.
Lanza said the information
that spurred the search indicat-
ed that “Nichols was responsi-
ble for hiding these devices” and
“we are operating under the
assumption that Terry Nichols
put them there.”
Nichols and McVeigh, who
was put to death for his role in
the Oklahoma City bombing,
had used blasting caps, fertilizer
and fuel to make the bomb used
to destroy the Alfred P. Murrah
Federal Building.
McVeigh’s trial lawyer
Stephen Jones said Friday he
has known some materials gath-
ered for the attack were never
located by the FBI and this dis-
covery could answer some of
those questions.
BY JOHN SOLOMON
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Abby Young/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FBI spokesman Jeff Lanza answers questions for the media Friday in
Herington. Tipped they may have missed evidence a decade ago, FBI
agents searched the former home of convicted Oklahoma City bomb-
ing conspirator Terry Nichols and found blasting caps and other explo-
sive materials apparently related to the 1995 attack, officials said
Friday.
Explosives found in home of Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Nichols
▼ CRIME
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
NewsNewsNewsNews
kansan.com
Now.
Free for All callers have 20 seconds to speak about any topic
they wish. Kansan editors reserve the right to omit com-
ments. Slanderous and obscene statements will not be print-
ed. Phone numbers of all incoming calls are recorded.
For more comments, go to www.kansan.com.
Great, North Carolina and Illinois are both in the Final
Four. Why do I feel cheated?

Have you drugged your child today?

Congratulations, Coach Weber, you’ve led Bill Self’s team
to the championship game. Must have been hard.

Terri Schiavo’s husband must have taken out the Pope’s
feeding tube.
God bless the Pope.

I just got punk’d by The University Daily Kansan.

It’s the body-massage machine, go.

I am sick and tired of Digger Phelps’ matching tie and
highlighter combinations.

You’re telling me I’m not the only 34D on campus?

Does anybody else think that “The stories on this page
offer only inaccurate information from fake sources.
Welcome to the world of make-believe” should be on
every single issue?

For all the girls on campus who like to wear short skirts,
no matter how tan you are, if you have thunder thighs
and walk like a duck, you shouldn’t be wearing them.

I just saw Ann Coulter in the newspaper today, and I
hate to say this, but she’s kind of a fox.
▼ FACE OFF
▼ TALK TO US
Andrew Vaupel, editor
864-4810 or [email protected]
Donovan Atkinson, Misty Huber, Amanda
Kim Stairrett and Marissa Stephenson
managing editors
864-4810 or [email protected]
Steve Vockrodt
Laura Francoviglia
opinion editors
864-4924 or [email protected]
Ashleigh Dyck, business manager
864-4358 or [email protected]
Danielle Bose, retail sales manager
864-4358 or [email protected]
Malcolm Gibson, general manager
and news adviser
864-7667 or [email protected]
Jennifer Weaver, sales
and marketing adviser
864-7666 or [email protected]
Editorial Board Members
David Archer, Viva Bolova,
John Byerley, Chase Edgerton,
Wheaton Elkins, Ryan Good,
Paige Higgins, Matt Hoge, John Jordan,
Kyle Koch, Doug Lang, Kevin McKernan,
Mike Mostaffa, Erica Prather,
Erick Schmidt, Devin Sikes, Gaby Souza,
Sarah Stacy and Anne Weltmer.
▼ SUBMISSIONS
The Kansan welcomes letters to the
editors and guest columns submitted
by students, faculty and alumni. The
Kansan reserves the right to edit, cut to
length, or reject all submissions.
For any questions, call Steve Vockrodt
or Laura Francoviglia at 864-4924 or e-
mail opinion@ kansan.com. General
questions should be directed to the
editor at [email protected].
Letter Guidelines
Maximum Length: 200 word limit
Include: Author’s name and telephone
number; class, hometown (student);
position (faculty member); phone num-
ber (will not be published)
Guest Column Guidelines
Maximum Length: 650 word limit
Include: Author’s name; class, hometown
(student); position (faculty member);
phone number (will not be published)
Also: The Kansan will not print guest
columns that attack another columnist.
Submit to
Kansan newsroom
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
1435 Jayhawk Blvd.
Lawrence, KS 66045
(785) 864-4810
[email protected]
Free
forAll
Opinion
Opinion
WWW.KANSAN.COM PAGE 5A MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2005
Scott Drummond/KANSAN
Steroids killing competitive nature and honesty of sports
Drug-infested athletes in professional
baseball have broken legendary records
for years, and now Congress is finally
stepping in.
Major League Baseball is not only pro-
moting illegal use of drugs, but also influ-
encing youth that cheating and lying is
OK. The league finally has to answer
questions about its dark underbelly.
America’s pastime, which used to be a
celebration of sport, is now a scientific
experiment of chemical reactions. Men
look like the Incredible Hulk. While they
keep growing, the players hide behind
lies and cowardice, suggesting another
part of their anatomy is shrinking.
Not long ago, steroids were unheard-of
in high school athletics. Now one of
every 16 athletes takes performance-
enhancing drugs. Professional athletes
are role models, whether they want to be
or not. When kids start looking up to
druggies, it becomes a problem.
Donald Hooton
testified to Congress
about his high school
son, who after taking
steroids, committed
suicide in 2003.
“Players that are
guilty of taking
steroids are not only
cheaters, you are
cowards,” he said. “Show our kids that
you’re man enough to face authority, tell
the truth and face the consequences.
Instead, you hid behind the skirts of your
union, and with the help of management
and your lawyers you’ve made every
effort to resist facing the public today.”
Just because this problem is in sports,
people think Congress should not get
involved. Sports are not a necessity of
society. It’s pathetic that entertainers and
athletes are paid more than teachers and
doctors. The league, from a business point
of view, is a billion-
dollar corporation.
Players who cheat
and lie to increase
their salaries need to
be reprimanded.
Steroid policies in
the Olympics are
tough. If athletes test
positive for steroids,
they are banned from the games for two
years. Baseball players who test positive
four times might face one-year bans.
What if you found out that your fel-
low employees were cheating in order
to get ahead, and your boss wasn’t
doing a thing about it, maybe even
offhandedly encouraging it? You
might end up cheating right along
with them. But is that what we
are coming to? Are honesty,
hard work and integrity really
not priorities anymore? If not,
humanity has taken a giant leap backward.
✦Higgins is a Littleton, Colo., senior in
printmaking.
PAIGE HIGGINS
[email protected]
Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire and
other steroid users with phenomenal nat-
ural ability deserve to be put up on a pub-
lic platform and pelted with fastballs by
the pitchers they undermined for so many
years. For steroid users with mediocre
talent, it isn’t as easy to judge.
The decision of whether or not to cheat
is something an athlete deals with all the
time. In the case of a minor league base-
ball player or a professional bench
warmer, there is much incentive to use ille-
gal performance enhancing drugs.
The drugs could be a stepping-stone to
reach the next level. While teammates
are in the locker room “juicing” each
other, taking their game to the next level
and earning more money and playing
time, the mediocre player is faced with
the decision of whether or not to join his
colleagues in cheating. If he doesn’t, he
may never realize his dream of making it
in the big leagues.
What makes the decision even more
difficult is the fact that the people who are
there to ensure a level playing field turn a
blind eye to the cheating, or even encour-
age it. In his book, “Juiced:
Wild Times, Rampant
‘Roids, Smash Hits
and How
Baseball Got Big,”
Jose Canseco
claimed that while
George W. Bush was
part owner of the
Texas Rangers, he
knew about steroid
use among his play-
ers, including All-
stars Ivan Rodriguez,
Raphael Palmeiro, and Juan Gonzalez.
Canseco, a former major league base-
ball player and avid steroid user, believes
it would be impossible for anyone within
MLB not to know about the rampant use
of steroids. People associated with MLB
insist Canseco is lying, but there has yet
to be a defamation suit against him.
According to Canseco, 80 percent of
professional players use steroids; other
more conservative estimates range from 10
to 30 percent. With it being so easy to get
away with cheating, why shouldn’t players
take the chance of crippling their bodies in
order to accomplish their lifelong dream?
Steven Michalik, former Mr. U.S.A.,
Mr. America and steroid user, said that
steroids bring a per-
son’s per-
sonality traits to the
extremes.
“If you are a little
psycho, you become a
big psycho,” he said.
He also claimed
that steroids greatly
increased his libido
and corrupted his
morals and values.
Michalik blamed steroids for his liver and
heart disease, impotence, and even a stay
in a mental institution.
Then again, Jose Canseco and some
others with extensive knowledge on
steroids claim that the drugs can be per-
fectly safe if used under close medical
supervision.
The reasons not to use steroids are sim-
ple: They can be harmful to the body, they
are illegal and cheating shows a lack of
integrity and respect. On the other hand,
the incentives to take steroids are possibly
even more lucrative: It could help a ball
player accomplish a lifelong dream and
possibly even earn a multi-million dollar
contract.
Imagine that you had always dreamed
of becoming a doctor or a lawyer, but
when you went to
take the
entrance
exam, all of your peers were
cheating, inflating the score
necessary for you to pass. If
you didn’t join in on the
cheating, you could never
reach the pinnacle you had
always dreamed about.
Would it even be consid-
ered cheating if everyone
else were doing it? If you
knew you could get
away with it, would
you do it, too?
✦Hoge is an
Olathe senior in
economics.
MATT HOGE
[email protected]
Rewards of steroid use can outweigh risks
Steroids: Home run or strikeout?
news 6a the university daily kansan monday, april 4, 2005
Dean Christy,
University
Facility
Operations
employee,wor
ks on the
installation of
the Korean War
Memorial
Friday morning
on Memorial
Drive. Jon
Havener
designed the
memorial after
the crane, a
symbol of
peace. There
are a total four
cranes for each
entity of the
conflict, and
five legs, one
for each entity,
as well as a leg
shared by all.
The project
had been in
the works off
and on for
approximately
thirty years
because of a
lack of funding
in the begin-
ning. Jack
Weinberg,
assistant to the
chancellor, esti-
mated that
about 99 per-
cent of the
funds for the
project came
from Korean
Americans and
Koreans, some
of which were
not KU alumni.
Family feud
survives death
TAMPA, Fla. — Terri
Schiavo’s body was cremated
Saturday as disagreements con-
tinued between her husband
and her parents, who were
unable to have their own inde-
pendent expert observe her
autopsy.
The cremation was carried
out according to a court order
issued Tuesday establishing
that Michael Schiavo had the
right to make such decisions,
said his lawyer, George Felos.
He said plans for burying her
ashes in Pennsylvania, where
she grew up, had not yet been
completed.
Terri Schiavo’s parents, Bob
and Mary Schindler, had want-
ed to bury their daughter in
Pinellas County so they could
visit her grave.
Terri Schiavo, 41, died
Thursday after the removal of
the feeding tube that had kept
her alive since 1990, when she
suffered brain damage that
court-appointed doctors deter-
mined had placed her in a per-
sistent vegetative state. Her
parents had fought in court to
keep her alive, disputing the
doctors’ opinions and saying
there was hope of improve-
ment.
Michael Schiavo has not spo-
ken publicly since his wife’s
death, but Felos said Saturday:
“He’s holding up. It’s very diffi-
cult for him.”
Michael Schiavo is required
to tell his wife’s parents of any
memorial services he plans for
Terri Schiavo and where her
ashes are interred.
The Schindlers plan to have
their own memorial service
tomorrow at Holy Name of
Jesus Catholic Church in
Gulfport.
The Schindlers had sought to
have independent medical
experts observe their daughter’s
autopsy at the Pinellas County
Medical Examiner’s office, but
the agency refused their request,
family attorneys David Gibbs III
and Barbara Weller said
Saturday.
The autopsy was completed
Friday, the day after Terri
Schiavo died, and results are
not expected for several
weeks.
Representatives of the med-
ical examiner’s office did not
return a call seeking comment
Saturday.
The examiner’s office has said
it would conduct routine exami-
nations and look for any evi-
dence of what might have
caused her 1990 collapse.
The Schindlers have accused
Michael Schiavo of abusing his
wife, a charge he vehemently
denies.
Over the years, the couple
have sought independent
investigation of their daugh-
ter’s condition and what
caused it.
Abuse complaints to state
social workers were ruled
unfounded — although one
investigation remains open —
and the Pinellas state attorney’s
office did not turn up evidence
of abuse in one brief probe of
the case.
Gibbs said the medical
examiner’s videotape, pictures
and tissue samples from the
autopsy could be reviewed by
other experts if the family asks.
While the autopsy report will
be a public document, images
will not be made public under a
2001 law passed after the death
of race car driver Dale
Earnhardt.
BY VICKIE CHACHERE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Autopsy results expected in several weeks
▼ TERRI SCHIAVO
Rachel Seymour/KANSAN
STATE
Bill distances key
meth ingredient
TOPEKA — A key ingredient
for making methamphetamine
no longer will be within easy
reach of the public under legis-
lation sent Friday to Gov.
Kathleen Sebelius.
Directed at meth makers, the
bill was a compromise worked
out by House and Senate nego-
tiators. The Senate approved it
39-0. The House vote was 119-2.
Sebelius spokeswoman
Nicole Corcoran said, “She will
sign that bill without hesita-
tion.”
It will require certain cold
and allergy tablets containing
ephedrine or pseudoephedrine
to be sold only by pharmacies
from behind a counter.
Customers will have to show
identification and sign a log
book. It makes it illegal for
retailers to sell more than three
packages within a week to a
person.
— The Associated Press
WORLD
Canada plans to
dispel drug use
For our neighbors to the
north, heroin users may now
receive their daily dose on the
government’s tab in a new clin-
ical trial.
The Canadian Institutes of
Health Research is conducting
a clinical trial called the North
American Opiate Medication
Initiative in Canadian cities to
give free heroin to addicted
users in an effort to take them
off the streets, lower the crime
rate and prevent health haz-
ards, according to a press
release by the CIHR.
The $8.1 million study will
provide half of the volunteers
pharmaceutical-grade heroin
while the other half will receive
methadone, a treatment for
heroin addiction and cravings.
— Camille Breland
U-Wire, The Daily Mississippian
Cranes of conflict
Dear Alex,
Say it isn’t so. Tell me that you are not consid-
ering transferring from the premier basketball
school in the nation. Tell me that this is an April
Fools’ Day joke.
Where else would you want to go? Rutgers?
Pittsburgh? Georgetown? They’re all schools
that you visited when you re-opened your recruit-
ing last year.
The Big East may be the top conference in the
country next year, but
those schools will not
be able to match the
enthusiasm that is
given to basketball
players here in
Lawrence. Those
schools don’t have 1
percent of the tradi-
tion that Kansas’ bas-
ketball program has
to offer.
There is no other
place in the country
where basketball
players are more idol-
ized than here at the
University. You get recognized wherever you
walk. You get to play for the most knowledgeable
fans in the country. Fans recognized you when
you came to Lawrence on your recruiting visit last
year. Not too many schools can say that they have
fans that know what their recruits look like. You
are clearly a fan favorite.
If you leave, you are going to miss playing in
front of 16,300 fans every home game — the sell-
out exhibition games against Division II teams
because the fans want to see you play. You get a
standing ovation every time you walk out on the
court, more than an hour before tip-off.
You received the most playing time of any of
the five freshmen in your class. Where else in the
country would you be able make a three-point
shot on New Year’s Day against Georgia Tech or
make difficult shots at Rupp Arena against
Kentucky? You exuberate the kind of confidence
that fans in Lawrence love, and your passion for
the game is great. This team needs your shooting
skill. You were one of the few players who were
able to knock down that difficult shot when it
mattered most.
Your coach knows he put you in a difficult
position at times. Most of the time you played this
year you did so in a foreign position, guarding a
post player. Time after time you were put in this
tough spot, yet you were still able to be successful.
Next season with the development of some of
your freshmen teammates you will be able to
PAGE 1B WWW.KANSAN.COM
Aggies too much
for Jayhawks
The Kansas softball team extended its losing
skid to six after two losses to No. 6 Texas A&M
this weekend. The Jayhawks lost 13-1 on
Saturday and fell 7-1 yesterday.
On Saturday, Kansas started strong during the
first five innings, but the A&M squad was able to
score nine times during the final two innings. In
the top of the seventh, Scarborough nailed a three-
run home run off the scoreboard that broke the
game open. Elle Pottorf, freshman catcher, made
two throw-outs for the Jayhawks on Saturday.
Christina Ross, freshman pitcher, started the
game for Kansas and pitched for the first two
innings, striking out the side in the first before
Serena Settlemier, junior pitcher and co-captain,
finished the game. After a rough sixth inning,
Settlemier came back strong in the seventh.
Settlemier said the players had been stuck in a
rut, but he was confident they could get back in
their groove and move on.
She said she has struggled with her location
this season.
“I focused on hitting my spots and keeping the
ball in the zone today,” she said.
The Jayhawks pulled within two in the fifth off
a RBI single from Jessica Moppin, junior second
baseman. But the Aggies pulled away late in the
game, eventually winning by six.
BY DREW DAVISON
[email protected]
KANSAN SPORTSWRITER
Texas A&M outscores Kansas 20-2 in series
Sports Sports
Seniors win final home meet
The last home regatta on
Saturday left the Kansas rowing
team’s seniors with some good
memories. All four varsity
Jayhawk boats took first place.
The warm, sunny day brought
families and friends to a seg-
ment of the Kansas River near
Second and Indiana streets to
honor the six seniors.
“I’m really proud of the
team,” Kansas coach Rob
Catloth said. “Since it was our
only home event, it was nice to
have a big crowd here. It was a
good show for our fans.”
Senior rower Rachel
Chapman was on the first varsi-
ty eight boat and said she was
pleased with the team’s results.
“We didn’t let any outside fac-
tors affect us,” she said.
Both varsity eight boats —
boats manned by eight rowers
— were ahead basically the
whole way. The first varsity
eight boat time for the Jayhawks
was 6:27.6, and Tulsa finished
with a time of 6:44.0. Kansas
broke off at 250 meters and
picked up for the sprint part of
the race. Drake started to make
a move on Tulsa, but came in
third with a 6:51.2 finish.
“We had good rhythm the
whole way,” Chapman said. “We
were able to pick up even more at
the end. So it felt really good.”
The second varsity eight boat
finished with a time of 6:45.9,
with Tulsa finishing at 7:06.4 and
Drake at 7:17.8. Other victories
included the second varsity four
boat at 7:33.1 and the first varsity
four boat at 7:20.3. Senior rower
Ashlea Kramer was on the first
varsity four boat, along with the
second varsity eight boat.
“We raced really well and
stayed pretty calm throughout
the race,” she said. “We zoned it
and rowed right past them.”
Catloth said he was pleased
with the team making the transi-
tion from practice to race day
on the Kansas River.
“They executed well today,”
he said. “The goal is always to
use the improvements you make
BY KRISTEN JARBOE
[email protected]
KANSAN SPORTSWRITER
Coaches honor
seniors after
varsity victories
▼ ROWING
TEAM TIME
First varsity four
Kansas 7:20.3
Drake 7:23.0
Tulsa 7:44.4
Second varsity four
Kansas 7:33.1
Tulsa 7:45.4
Drake 7:51.4
First varsity eight
Kansas 6:27.6
Drake 6:44.0
Tulsa 6:51.2
Second varsity eight
Kansas 6:45.9
Tulsa 7:06.4
Drake 7:17.8
TEAM TIME
Novice four - first flight
Tulsa 7:54.6
Kansas 8:32.5
Novice four - second flight
Drake 8:03.4
Kansas 8:10.4
Novice eight
Tulsa 6:51.2
Kansas 6:54.4
Drake 7:04.9
✦ RED: name of race
Source: Kansas Athletics
Department
Simien to be
recognized as
a top senior
Wayne Simien was announced as a winner of
the fourth annual Celebrating Loyalty and
Achievement for Staying in School Award. The
award is given to the nation’s top men’s and
women’s college basketball seniors.
The winners were announced Saturday in St.
Louis. The awards ceremony
will be April 30 at the Westin
Crown Center hotel in Kansas
City, Mo.
The other four honorees on the
Senior CLASS first team were
Vermont’s Taylor Coppenrath,
Marquette’s Travis Deiner,
Oklahoma State’s Joey Graham
and Hakim Warrick of Syracuse.
Voting was conducted nation-
wide by coaches, media and fans.
“This means a lot,” Simien said. “I know it’s an
award that hasn’t been around for a long time, but
just looking at the past winners, you see what
kind of award this is.”
Kansas coach Bill Self, who is at the Final Four
in St. Louis with Simien, said the Leavenworth
native deserved all his postseason accolades.
“He had the best season of any player I’ve ever
coached,” Self said.
Simien was a finalist for the Naismith award,
given to college basketball’s top player, but it was
awarded to Utah center Andrew Bogut last night.
Kansas State forward Kendra Wecker won the
women’s Senior CLASS Award. She will join Simien
as a guest of honor at the April 30 ceremony.
— Miranda Lenning
Galindo
contemplates
transfer
Kansas coach Bill Self confirmed rumors Friday
that freshman forward Alex Galindo could transfer
to a school closer to his home in Newark, N.J.
“I was notified this morning by a radio station
that there was a rumor concern-
ing Alex Galindo, and they
asked me if there was any truth
to the rumor,” Self said. “There
is certainly a possibility that he
could transfer and there is also a
possibility that he could stay. He
has been very open.”
Self said he would meet with
Galindo and make an
announcement early this week.
Galindo averaged almost four
points and nine minutes a game for the Jayhawks
this season. He proved to be a legitimate three–point
threat, averaging 44 percent from behind the arc.
The freshman forward hit critical three-pointers in
victories against Georgia Tech and Texas A&M.
Galindo said there was a possibility that he
could transfer, but didn’t say it was definite.
“Coach and I have met a couple of times since
the season ended,” Galindo said. “There is still a
lot of stuff to think about and talk about when he
gets from St. Louis.”
— Miranda Lenning
▼ MEN’S BASKETBALL ▼ SOFTBALL
▼ THE RANT
Simien
Galindo
RYAN COLAIANNI
[email protected]
Last resort:
Pleading for
a player to
stay longer
SEE TOO MUCH ON PAGE 6B
SEE SENIORS ON PAGE 3B
SEE COLAIANNI ON PAGE 2B
The Kansas varsity rowing team defeated Drake and Tulsa in all four races
Saturday on the Kansas River. Both eight boats finished more than 15 sec-
onds ahead of the closest competitor.
The Novice team finished second in each of its three events.
rowing results
There is no
other place in the
country where
basketball players
are more idolized
than here at the
University.
Rylan Howe/KANSAN
Sophomore first baseman Nicole Washburn walks back to first base frustrated during the top of the sixth
inning yesterday. Kansas had stayed close until then, but Texas A&M scored four runs and took a 7-1 lead
that it never relinquished. Kansas dropped to 15-15 overall and 0-4 in the Big 12 Conference.
Rylan Howe/KANSAN
Alexis Boston, junior rower, and Rachel Chapman, senior rower,
help carry their boat after the final varsity race.
MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2005
move back to your natural position at small for-
ward. If you stay for next season, you are going to
be a key part of a team that will be so unbeliev-
ably young. If you are worried about playing
time, you shouldn’t be. While some of the incom-
ing freshmen may be able to play the same posi-
tion as you, you have the experience. You proved
last season that you shine in the face of adversity.
This team is going to need leadership next season
and you could be one of the players to give it. It
is difficult to replace four seniors, but you and the
other players would be able to be just as good of
leaders as this year’s graduating class.
I hear that you want to move closer to home.
Why would you leave when you have a town of
100,000 that has embraced you and will embrace
any player that plays basketball at this institu-
tion? The whole city is your family.
Alex, I really hope that you look at what being
a basketball player at Kansas has to offer.
There is no place like it, and this team needs
you to stay.
Sincerely,
Ryan Colaianni
✦Colaianni is a McLean, Va., sophomore in
journalism and political science.
The Kansas crew team joined the
varsity rowing team on the Kansas
River this weekend.
The coed team competed against
Kansas State, Wichita State and the
Kansas City Rowing Club. The team
competed again yesterday in
Omaha, Neb., against two Creighton
teams, Wichita State, Iowa State,
Nebraska, St. Thomas, K-State, St.
Cloud and St. Louis.
The weekend marked the begin-
ning of the spring season. John
Devins, novice rower and Fairway
junior, was pleased with the results.
“We did how we were expected to
do,” Devins, University Daily
Kansan sportswriter, said. “We did a
solid job and won our share.”
Saturday gave the team a good
feeling about the rest of the season.
“Our first race showed us a lot of
progress that we have made from
last season,” novice rower Quentin
Odes, Chicago senior, said. “Things
are looking good.”
First place finishes for Saturday
included the women’s varsity four,
men’s varsity four and women’s
lightweight four. Other races such as
the women’s and men’s varsity eight
finished in second place.
“We didn’t win all our races, but
we know what we need to do
improve,” varsity rower Anna
Foerster, Topeka sophomore, said.
Omaha brought a quick turn-
around for the team. But the rowers
didn’t seem to mind.
“It kind of warms you up,” novice
rower Tricia Blackburn, Overland
Park freshman, said. “Since we just
had a race at KU, you would think it
would be stressful, but it’s not. It sort
of gets painful, race after race, but it
just makes you want to leave noth-
ing behind.”
The team usually makes a quick
recovery when it competes two days
in a row, Odes said.
Yesterday’s victories included
first-place finishes in the men’s varsi-
ty eight, women’s varsity four and
both heats of the men’s varsity four.
“Sunday was a much better day
than Saturday,” Devins said. “We
improved in every boat and had
great success in our efforts as a
team.”
The team won the men’s varsity
eight for the first time in five years.
Coach Jeremy Struemph said the
program was moving up.
“It was an overall great day,” he
said. “I’m really proud of the way
they rowed. It was an excellent per-
formance.”
The team will travel to
Indianapolis in two weeks for its
next competition.
— Edited by Jennifer Voldness
Varsity and crew teams promising
with first and second place finishes
Thursday
Softball
✦Men
Phi Slamma Jamma def. TBA 21-3
Lorne Parks def. Rex-Kwon Doe 11-5
Low Plains Drifter def. Matt Christenson 19-12
Sigma Chi 1 def. Theta Chi 2 21-4
Phi Delt 1 def. Theta Chi 1 8-4
Reds def. Battenfeld 15-1
Dumptrucks def. Mountain Dewds 15-4
AE Pi 1 def. Hootenanies 9-6
✦COREC
Last Call def. Beers 3-1
Angry Beavers def. Jayhawks 15-5
Master Batters def. Spartacus 16-7
3-on-3 Soccer
✦ Men
Cotton Balls def. Hoover’s Deaux 7-5
Raw Deal def. AE PI 1 6-2
✦Women
SCS def. AD Pi 2 6-1
9th Floor Ellsworth def Sigma Delta Tau 12-1
sports 2B the university daily kansan monday, April 4, 2005
Tell us your news
Contact Bill Cross or Jonathan Kealing at
864-4858 or [email protected].
intramural scores
tomorrow
✦ Softball vs. UMKC, 3 p.m., Arrocha Ballpark
✦ Swimming at world championship trials, all day,
Indianapolis
Wednesday
✦ Baseball vs. Wichita State, 7 p.m., Hoglund Ballpark
✦ Swimming at world championship trials, all day,
Indianapolis
✦ Tennis vs. Tulsa, 11 a.m., Robinson Gymnasium
✦ Track at Texas, all day, Austin, Texas
Thursday
✦ Track at Texas, all day, Austin, Texas
Friday
✦ Baseball at Oklahoma, 7 p.m., Norman, Okla.
✦ Men’s golf vs. North Carolina and North Carolina
State, all day, Holly Springs, N.C.
✦ Track at Texas, all day, Austin, Texas
Athletics Calendar
Teams join up at season opener
BY KRISTEN JARBOE
[email protected]
KANSAN SPORTSWRITER
Kansas loses to Baylor;
swept in doubles matches
After posting two straight
road victories for the first time
this season, the Kansas women’s
tennis team (4-11, 3-4 Big 12)
fell to 12th-ranked Baylor, 6-1,
in Waco, Texas, on Saturday.
“It was a good win for us,”
Baylor coach Joey Scrivano
said.
Baylor, which reached its
highest-ever ranking at No. 12
last week, has won four
straight matches and 14 of its
last 15.
The Bears were without two
of their top players, freshman
Zuzana Zemenova and sopho-
more Klara Zrustrova. Both
players did not play as a result of
their involvement in tournament
matches last fall, Scrivano said.
The Jayhawks failed to regis-
ter a victory in the doubles com-
petition, falling in all three
matches.
In singles, Kansas managed
to earn a point, courtesy of
freshman Elizaveta Avdeeva.
The native of Obninsk,
Russia, defeated Baylor’s
Carolin Walter in straight sets,
6-2, 6-2.
“She is going to be a heck of
a college player,” Scrivano said
of Avdeeva. “I was impressed
with her poise on the court. I
give her a lot of credit.”
The Jayhawks fell 4-3 to
Texas Tech Sunday in Lubbock,
Texas.
Avdeeva got past Cigdem
Duru in three sets, 7-5, 0-6, 7-6.
Avdeeva has won six matches
since joining the team in early
January.
Junior Christine Skoda fin-
ished off Janet Durham in
straight sets, 6-3, 6-0. The for-
mer Big 12 Player of the Week
is (5-2) in the Big 12
Conference.
Freshman Stephanie Smith,
who saw her two-match win
streak snapped versus Baylor,
redeemed herself with a victory
against Katja Kovacic, 6-1, 1-6,
10-6.
The Jayhawks lost the dou-
bles point for the second
straight match, failing to win a
single match.
The Jayhawks will return
home this week and take a
break from conference action,
as Kansas will host Tulsa on
Wednesday.
— Edited by Lori Bettes
BY RAHUL SHARMA
[email protected]
KANSAN SPORTSWRITER
▼ TENNIS
Colaianni
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B
▼ CREW
We are seeking students who are enthusiastic about food and drug store retail management.
If you have a strong academic record and are career minded, our 10 week internship program
is designed for you! Incorporating a unique combination of classroom workshops and
hands-on experience, students will experience the operational areas of: merchandising,
customer service, cash handling, loss prevention, expense control, opening/closing procedures
and much more. For consideration,
E-mail: [email protected]
or ph: 1-800-964-1434, or fax: 1-888-541-5793
Candidates may also apply online at: www.oscodrug.com
H i r i n g N O W
SUMMER BUSINESS
INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
with OSCO DRUG
Kansas City area
We are strongly committed to a diverse workplace and a
drug-free environment for all of our associates.
{we’ve got a few ideas.}
{at prices even a new graduate can afford}
816.331.3968
Grandview, MO
913.422.8295
Shawnee, KS
www.LindseyManagement.com
EAGLE RIDGE
APARTMENTS
530 Eldridge Street
STONECREST
TOWNHOMES
1000 Monterey Way
· 1 & 2 BR Apartments
· Rents from $410
· SmaII Pets WeIcome
· Grocery/Restaurants/
Post Office Adjacent
· Furnished/Short-Term AvaiIabIe
· Microwaves/Dishwashers
· 2 & 3 BR Apts. & Twnhm.
· Rents from $550
· Washer/Dryer Hookups
· FirepIaces
· Adjacent to Perry Park
· KU Parking Pass (1 per apt)
· SmaII Pets WeIcome
Office: 530 EIdridge St., Suite L 1
Phone: 785-749-1102
E-maiI: [email protected]
644 Mass
749-1912
www. l i ber t y hal l . net
BLACK CLOUD (PG-13)
4:30 7:05 9:40
MERCHANT OF VENICE (R)
4:20 6:55 9:30
in practice and put them into the race, and that’s
what they did.”
The novice team struggled but walked away
with second-place finishes in its three races: First
Novice Eight, First Novice Four and Second
Novice Four. Assistant coach Jennifer Myers,
who heads the novice team, expressed some dis-
appointment.
“We have the ability, but mentally we need to
get tougher,” she said.
This week the novice women will practice
some longer race pieces so the shorter races
won’t seem as hard, she said.
The races were followed by senior recognition
and a barbeque.
Individually the seniors came up for recogni-
tion with their families.
As a senior, Kramer said she was upset about
this regatta being the last one in Lawrence, but
also realized most of her season was ahead of her.
“It’s sad that it’s the last one here, but it will be
different at the end,” she said. “Being a senior
won’t really hit me until the last race of the sea-
son.”
Chapman said she shared Kramer’s feeling.
“We still have so much of our season left,” she
said. “This is only our third regatta. I’m sure it’ll
get more sad at the end though.”
The coaches have been proud of the seniors
and are excited to continue the rest of the season,
Myers said.
“They have provided a lot of leadership for our
program,” she said. “They’re really showing our
younger rowers and coxswains what it takes to be
a class act.”
The Jayhawks will race again this Saturday in
Manhattan for the Kansas Cup.
— Edited by Austin Caster
sports monday, april 4, 2005 the university daily kansan 3b
State of chaos
FOOTBALL
Mangino holds scrimmage
to prepare Jayhawks for season
Coach Mark Mangino held a scrimmage at
Memorial Stadium on Saturday.
Quarterbacks Adam Barmann and Jason
Swanson were efficient in the two-hour scrim-
mage. Barmann, junior, was 12-20 for 98 yards,
including two touchdowns and a rushing touch-
down. Swanson, senior, was 21-36 for 169 yards
and two touchdowns.
Redshirt freshman Marcus Herford did not see
any time at quarterback but did catch four pass-
es for 41 yards.
Sophomore Charles Gordon caught eight
passes for 70 yards.
Junior running back Clark Green led all rush-
ers, as he ran for 85 yards on 17 carries, includ-
ing a five-yard touchdown run. Gary Green had
12 carries for 50 yards.
— Ryan Colaianni
Kansas football team signs
junior college transfer
The Jayhawks landed another junior college
transfer for next season, according to rivals.com.
Clavens Charles committed late last week.
Charles is a three-star recruit, according to the
Web site, and played cornerback at El Camino
College in California.
Charles, who stands at 5-foot-9 and weighs
200 lbs., will enroll for summer classes in June
and then begin working out with the team.
Charles runs a 4.5-second 40-yard dash.
Charles was also considering Boise State,
Central Michigan and Middle Tennessee State.
— Ryan Colaianni
SOCCER
Jayhawks win spring opener
against Golden Gophers
The Kansas soccer team won its spring opener
on Saturday. The Jayhawks defeated the
Minnesota Golden Gophers, 2-0, at the Jayhawk
Soccer Complex.
Freshman defender Afton Sauer scored the
Jayhawks’ first goal when she received a deflec-
tion from junior forward Caroline Smith from the
far side of the goal and scored.
Junior forward Kimberly Karfonta scored in
the 84th minute off a loose ball.
The Jayhawks’ next spring game will be
against the Purdue Boilermakers on April 23 in
Indianapolis.
— Kansan staff report
NCAA TOURNAMENT
Championship game features
‘team’ versus ‘talent’ matchup
ST. LOUIS — The best team in the country all
season is an underdog today. By now, Illinois is
used to it.
Even though they’ve only lost once, have tied
the NCAA record for wins
and have been ranked
No. 1 in the country
since December, the
Illini (37-1) have had
trouble getting their
due much of the sea-
son.
Never has that been
more true than in the
buildup to tonight’s
championship game,
when Illinois faces
North Carolina (32-4) in
a matchup being billed
as Team vs. Talent.
Illinois is the
“Team.” North
Carolina has the
“Talent.”
The Illini say they don’t
take offense to the comparison.
Often during their interviews yesterday,
though, they found themselves defending the
way they’re perceived — as the unsung group of
guys who “play the game the right way,” com-
pared to Carolina’s group of stars.
“We have NBA people at our games every
time,” Illini coach Bruce Weber said. “We’re
going to have some guys drafted, whether it’s
this year or next year. But we don’t have quite
the names, I guess, and athletic guys that maybe
they have.”
The reason the Tar Heels get the edge starts
with Sean May, the 6-foot-9 center who aver-
ages 17.1 points and 10.9 rebounds this sea-
son.
North Carolina also has Rashad McCants,
Jawad Williams and Raymond Felton. They’ll all
go to the NBA soon, as will the sixth man, fresh-
man forward Marvin Williams.
“They’ll have a lottery pick coming off their
bench,” Illinois forward James Augustine said.
“They’re obviously more talented. But when it
comes down to the situation, it’s who’s the better
team.”
Nobody has won more than Illinois — ever.
With their 72-57 victory over Louisville in the
semifinals, the Illini matched Duke (1986, 1989)
and UNLV (1987) for the most wins in a single
season with 37.
— Eddie Pells/The Associated Press
Seniors
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B
Steve Perez/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A woman is taken into custody by riot police Saturday in East Lansing, Mich., after Michigan State lost
87-71 to North Carolina in the NCAA Tournament semifinals. Police in riot gear dispersed rowdy Michigan
State fans who poured into the streets following their team’s loss in the Final Four. They arrested more than
60 people.
Ho l d Ho l d o n t o o n t o t he Dr e am. t he Dr e am.
From the writers of
Les Misérables, comes the epic
story of two young lovers torn
apart by the fortunes of
destiny and held together by
the fate of a small child.
“Already a legend.”
— Newsweek
VIP Sponsor–April 5 VIP Sponsor–April 6
Friday, April 15*
7:30 p.m.
Featuring gospel, jazz, Broadway & Spanish-American songs
Jubilant Sykes
Don’t miss an evening of amazing vocal artistry with
“Sykes is a charismatic
baritone ... a powerful
and welcome presence
on the stage.”
— Los Angeles Times
Watch for our exciting 2005–06 season announcement April 15.
For Tickets Call: 785.864.2787
Buy On-line TDD: 785.864.2777 Upon Request
www.lied.ku.edu
The Lied Center
of Kansas
Universityof Kansas
785.864.2787

Half-Price Tickets for KU Students!
Available at Lied Center, University Theatre, and SUA Ticket Off ices.*
Tuesday &Wednesday,
April 5* & 6**, 7:30 p.m.
** Half-Price Tickets for KU Students at Lied Center Ticket Office only.
Redken
& Biolage
Products
3 for $22
Regular size only
Highlights
with coupon
long hair extra
Z
$20
$15
Hair color
with coupon
Cosmetology
Academy
2429 Iowa
785.749.1488
ENTERTAINMENT 4b the university daily kansan monday, april 4, 2005
✦ Today’s Birthday.
Others look to you for leadership this
year. Rely on your experience, and tac-
tics that worked before. Don’t lose
momentum when you make a mistake.
You don’t have time for that.
✦ Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8.
Conditions are good for meeting with
others to figure out what to do next.
You’ve got the idea, they know what to
do, and voila! You’re on your way.
✦ Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 5.
Take your time as you decide which
items to buy, and which to do without.
You have a talent for setting priorities,
especially where money's concerned.
✦ Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is a 9.
Romance and travel are both highly
favored. You’re also very good at soak-
ing up information and teaching it,
practically at the same time. This
ought to be fun.
✦ Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is a 4.
It’ll take a while to learn how to use
the latest technology, but that’s noth-
ing compared to the time you’ll save.
Get into it.
✦ Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 9.
True love is based more on substance
than on symbolism, you know. Choose
the person who makes you think to be
your permanent partner. The con-
frontation will keep you sharp.
✦ Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 4.
You’re pretty good with electronics
and other kinds of new technology,
after you get into it. Be patient with
yourself.
✦ Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8.
A meaningful conversation with an
exciting person can help you discover
the next step in your spiritual evolu-
tion. Study religion from a scientific
point of view, and vice versa.
✦ Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 5.
There’s lots of activity going on at your
place, and creativity is required. It's
good to have a plan, of course, but
don't get too attached to it.
✦ Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is
an 8. You’re a rather independent type,
but lately you may find you've been in
the mood to make a commitment. Go
ahead — the sooner, the better.
✦ Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a
5. Cleaning out your closets is a chore
you don't relish, but this time it could
be quite profitable. Keep sorting and
filing and putting things away, and
you'll be well rewarded.
✦ Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 9.
Your investigation goes very well now,
with one thing leading to another.
Continue to seek the truth and it shall
be revealed to you.
✦ Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 4.
The work you're doing behind the
scenes is making a good impression.
You’re not asking for fame or glory,
and that adds to your credibility.
▼ squirrel
▼ HOROSCOPES
Greg Griesenauer/KANSAN
▼ damaged circus
Seth Bundy/KANSAN
▼ Friend or faux?
Wes Benson and Tom Becker/KANSAN
Classifieds Policy:
The Kansan will not knowingly
accept any advertisement for
housing or employment that dis-
criminates against any person
or group of persons based on
race, sex, age, color, creed, reli-
gion, sexual orientation, nation-
ality or disability. Further, the
Kansan will not knowingly
accept advertising that is in vio-
lation of University of Kansas
regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the
Federal Fair Housing Act of
1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise “any preference, limi-
tation or discrimination based
on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status or
national origin, or an intention,
to make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.”
Our readers are hereby
informed that all jobs and hous-
ing advertised in this newspa-
per are available on an equal
opportunity basis.
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
PHONE 785.864.4358 FAX 785.864.5261 [email protected]
AUTO JOBS LOST & FOUND FOR RENT
ROOMMATE/
SUBLEASE
)DVWTXDOLW\MHZHOU\UHSDLU
FXVWRPPDQXIDFWXULQJ
ZDWFKFORFNUHSDLU
0DVV
[email protected]
For part-time package handlers at
FedEx Ground, it s like a paid work-
out. The work is demanding, but the
rewards are big. Come join our team,
get a weekly paycheck, tuition assis-
tance and break a sweat with the
nation s package-delivery leader.
Requirements include:
-18 years of age
-Work five consecutive days/week
-Ability to lift and carry 50-75 lbs.
-Load, unload and sort packages
-Work in hot and cold environments
Benefits Include:
-Scheduled raises every 90 days for the
first year
-Excellent advancement opportunities
-Tuition reimbursement
-No Weekends
-Equal Opportunity Employer
Come apply in person at:
8000 Cole Parkway
Shawnee, KS 66227
Call us at:
913-441-7569 or 913-441-7536
Shifts include:
DAY 2-6 p.m., TWI 6:30-10:30 p.m.,
NIT 11 p.m.-3a.m., SUN 3:30-7:30 a.m.
and Preload 1:30-7:30a.m.
Directions:
Take Hwy10 to Hwy 7 North. Follow
Hwy 7 to 83rd St and go west. Follow
83rd St. and make a right on Cole Pkwy.
Eye Exams Contact Lenses
Dr. Matt Lowenstein
and Associates
Therapeutic Optometrists Therapeutic Optometrists
841-2500 841-2500
Located Next to SUPER TARGET
Discount with Student Id
TRAFFIC-DUI’S-MIP’S
PERSONAL INJURY
Student legal matters/Residency issues
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-5116
Free Initial Consultation
Immediate opening for swim instructor. In-
door heated pool in Lenexa, KS. Looking
for experience in teaching children. Excel-
lent hourly rates. Spring and summer
hours. Call Terri at 913-469-5554.
SUMMER CAMP STAFF
www. coloradomountainranch.com
1-800-267-9573
Part time position at children’s museum in
Shawnee, KS. Weekday & weekend hrs
avail immediately. Call 913-268-4176.
GET PAID FOR YOUR OPINIONS!
Earn $15-$125 and more per survey!
www.moneyforsurveys.com
Make Money and Have Fun!
Athletic/creative counselors/coaches
needed; sports, water, art; apply online
www.summercampemployment.com;
[email protected]
1-800-443-6428
Experienced babysitter/parent’s helper.
We are looking for an energetic, fun, re-
sponsible person with lots of initiative to
help busy parents with two active girls,
ages 11 and 13. Work includes helping
parents with driving children to and from
school and other activities, meal prepara-
tion, laundry, and supervising play, home-
work, and chores. Occasional evenings
and weekends.Some extended overnight
stays and out of town family trips. Must be
able to cook, have own car, and be avail-
able weekday afternoons beginning at 3
pm, and during school vacations. Excel-
lent pay for qualified person.
Please call 865-2331.
Lawrence Country Club is now accepting
applications for lifeguards. Apply at 400
Country Club Terrace.
Prof. DJ wanted. Knows all music. Excel-
lent public speaker. Avail. most Sat.
nights.Call 913-461-1680. EncoreDJ.com
MIRACLE VIDEO
SPRING SALE
All adult movies
$12.98 & Up
1900 Haskell 785- 841-7504
Need a New PC or Laptop? Bad Credit?
No Credit? No Problem! All we need is
a valid checking account and a current util-
ity bill. Don’t Delay - Call Today
866-352-1735. FreshStartPCs.
Help wanted for custom harvesting. Com-
bine operators and truck drivers. Guaran-
teed pay, good summer wages. Call
970-483-7490 evenings.
TOP BOYS SPORTS CAMP IN MAINE!
PLAY & COACH SPORTS-HAVE FUN-
MAKE $$ Exciting, fun, summer working
with kids, on magnificent lake in central
Maine! Counselor positions still available:
Baseball, Basketball, Soccer, Lacrosse,
Hockey, Water-Ski, Wakeboard, Swim-
WSI, Sailing, Hiking, Overnight Camping,
Rock Climbing,Woodworking, Arts &
Crafts. TOP SALARIES, Free
Room/Board, Travel Allowance. Apply
online ASAP: www.campcobbossee.-
com or call 1-800-473-6104
Blue Sky Satellite, a sales and ser-
vice provider for DishNetwork is
needing P/T telemarketers to start
imd! Spanish speakers helpful, but
not necessary. $10/Hour, call Dave
Edwards at 331-3444 Ext. 115.
Shipping position open. $8.00 per
hour. 20 hours per week. Choose your
own hours. Must have own transportation.
Mileage reimbursed. Involves some heavy
lifting. Must be committed and depend-
able. Send letter and/or resume w/3 refer-
ences to: EEI, P.O. Box 1304, Lawrence,
KS 66044. EOE/AA.
$450 Group Fundraiser
Scheduling Bonus
4 hours of your group’s time PLUS our
free (yes, free) fundraising solutions
EQUALS $1,000-$2000 in earnings for
your group. Call TODAY for a $450 bonus
when you schedule your non-sales
fundraiser with CampusFundraiser. Con-
tact CampusFundraiser, (888) 923-3238,
or visit www.campusfundraiser.com
CAMP TAKAJO for Boys, Naples,
Maine. Picturesque lakefront location, ex-
ceptional facilities. Mid-June thru mid-Au-
gust. Over 100 counselor positions in ten-
nis, baseball, basketball, lacrosse, golf,
flag football, roller hockey, swimming, sail-
ing, water skiing, archery, ceramics, fine
arts, theatre arts, camp newspaper, mu-
sic, photography, videography, radio/elec-
tronics, nature study, weight training,
woodworking, rock climbing, ropes
course, secretarial, nanny. Salary,
room/board, travel included. Call
800-250-8252 or apply on-line at www.-
takajo.com.
Amateur Female Models 18-23
wanted for fashion and glamour photogra-
phy-No nudity required. Cash paid + in-
centives.
785-856-0780
Freelance Model Scouts wanted.
Send us models and get paid.
Camp Counselors - Gain valuable expe-
rience while having the summer of a life-
time! Counselors needed for all activities
apply online at www.pineforestcamp.com.
HIRING ALL POSITIONS. Ironhorse Golf-
club. South Johnson County.913-685-4653
ext 8. [email protected].
BAR TENDING!
$300/day potential. No experience nec.
Training Provided.800-965-6520 ext.108
College Pro is now hiring hard-working
students for leadership positions this sum-
mer. Work outside, earn great cash, and
gain skills in leadership, problem solving,
customer service and goal setting.
Bonus program & advancement op-
portunities available! 888-277-7962
www.iamcollegepro.com
Applications are being accepted for stu-
dents to provide support for research
project by preparing/entering data, video
tapping, as well as other duties. 16-20
hours per week. $8/hour. For more
information, please go to jobs.ku.edu
listed under CTR for Research on learn-
ing.
$10! TVs, computers, etc.!
Police Seized! From $10! For info
800-366-0307 xM769
Servers/Hosts/Cooks
For well established Irish Pub and Restau-
rant in the busy KC speedway area. Great
atmosphere. Call 913-788-7771. M-F
Need help getting A’s in class? Certi-
fied teacher available for various courses.
If interested call Alan at 785-843-8180.
Teachers assistant needed 12-6p.m. Mon-
Fri. Apply at Children’s Learning Center
205 N. Michigan (785) 841-2185. EOE
PLAY SPORTS! HAVE FUN! SAVE
MONEY! Sports camp in Maine.
Coaches needed: Tennis, Basketball,
Baseball, Water-sports, Ropes Course,
Golf, Archery, and more. Work Outdoors
and Have a Great Summer! Call Free:
(888) 844-8080 or Apply:
www. campcedar.com.
JOBS
STUFF
SERVICES
JOBS
JOBS
[email protected]
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
PHONE 785.864.4358 FAX 785.864.5261 CLASSIFIEDS@KANSAN. COM
AUTO STUFF JOBS LOST & FOUND FOR RENT
ROOMMATE/
SUBLEASE SERVICES CHILD CARE TICKETS TRAVEL
Leasing FALL 2005!
CHASE COURT
Luxury Apartments
NEWDVD Library &
Continental Breakfast
Short walk to campus
1942 Stewart Avenue
785-843-8220
[email protected]
Applecroft Apartments
Leasing Fall 05 - Studio, 1 & 2 BRMS
Most utilities paid, Swimming Pool,
New Continental Breakfast
1741 W. 19th St
843-8220 [email protected]
Now Leasing
for fall
Luxury apts
1, 2 & 3 BRs
DVD library & free
continental breakfast
2001 W. 6 St.
841-8468
West Hills Apartments
1 Bedroom $559
2 Bedroom $679
Close to Campus, Newly
Renovated
1012 Emery 841-3800
Now Accepting Short Term Leases
• Large 3&4 BR, 2 full bath
• Large fully applianced
• Dishwasher & microwave in kitchen
• Gas heat & hot water
• Central heat & air
• Off street parking
• Fully furnished @ no cost
• 24 hr. emergency maintenance
• Washer & Dryer
• Modern decor
Show Units Open daily
No appointments needed.
Office Hours Mon-Fri 9am-5pm
Regents
Court
19th & Mass
749-0445
[email protected]
Moving to Wichita?
If you are graduating or
working an
internship,
Quality
Apartments At
Affordable Prices.
Flexible lease terms
Studios and 1 brs.
Start at $270.00
Amidon Place Apts.
2727 Amidon
(316) 838-8302
• New Discounted
Rates
•30 Days Free Rent
• Cats Allowed
•Close to Walking Trails and
Shopping
•Quiet Community
•Flexible Lease Terms
ABERDEEN
2300 Wakarusa Dr. (785) 749-1288
April Showers Bring
May Specials...
1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes
3
b
d
r
m
s
p
e
c
ia
l!
2
b
d
r
m sp
e
c
ia
l!
Lorimar & Courtside
Townhomes
For More Info: 785-841-7849
Lorimar Townhomes
3801 Clinton Parkway #F1
• Washer/Dryers
• Dishwasher
• Microwaves
• Patios
• Fireplaces
• Ceiling Fans
Courtside Townhomes
2, & 3 Bedroom Townhomes
• Washer/Dryers
• Dishwasher
• Microwaves
• Patios
• Gas Fireplaces
• Ceiling Fans
4100 Clinton Parkway
Come enjoy a townhome community where no one lives above or below you.
A
sk about 4 bdrm D
uplexes
1-2-3 Bed
$99 Deposit
Call for Specials
843-4040
4500 Overland Dr.
thefoxrun.com
843-6446
STOP
$99 Deposit Special
OR 1 Month Free
Rents Starting at $485
Just West of
Iowa on 26th
Full floor to yourself includes BR full bath,
full kitc., parking $350/mo. + util. Move in
today 847-721-7907
Avail June. Large 2 BR Apt. in reno-
vated older circa 1900’s house on
the 1300 block of Vermont. Wood
floors, DW, an extra room to make a
study or office, brand new furnace,
private deck, double closets with
sliding mirror doors, bathroom is
tiny with stall shower, no dogs $725
call Jim and Lois at 841-1074
SUMMER SUBLEASE
1 BR for summer starting May 20. 4 BR, 2
BA. $320/mo. Contact 316-640-6784.
Quail Creek Apts.
Large Studios, 1, 2, & 3 BRs
Up to $100/ mo. OFF.
Call for specials
843-4300
Eddingham Place Apts.
24th & Naismith
Large 2 BR
Up to $100/ mo. OFF.
Call for specials
841-5444
Remodeled! Eastview Apts. 1025 Miss.
Studio, 1 &2 BRs. Avail. Aug. 1. Midwest
Property Mgmt. 841-4935
Avail Aug. Cozy 2 BR Apt in a reno-
vated older house, wood floor, DW,
W/D hookups, off street parking,
walk to downtown and KU, no dogs
$599 call Jim and Lois at 841-1074.
Female needed for Summer sublease
from June 1- July 31. 1009 Connecticut.
Attic room, private bathroom, W/D, full
kitchen. 4 female roommates. Call Lyda
785-331-5506
Town home 3 BR, Lg Master BR, 1 car
garage, fireplace, 1500 sq. ft. 2 living ar-
eas. Lawn mowi ng provi ded. Avai l . i n
May. $825/mo. Call 785-838-3403.
Near KU; Studio and 1 BR apts. Rm. or of-
fice apt. in private home. Possible ex-
change for misc. labor. Call 841-6254
Avail. Aug. Studio & 1 BR Apts. in
renovated older houses. All walking
distance to KU and downtown. Wood
floors, some with dishwashers, each
apt is unique, no dogs. From $399 to
$479 call Jim and Lois at 841-1074
Avail Aug. Large 2 BR Apt. in reno-
vated older house 10th and Ken-
tucky, wood floors, separate study,
DW, W/D hookups, off street park-
ing, no dogs $725 call Jim and Lois
841-1074
Avail. 5/1! GREAT downtown Mass.St.
Apt. 2 BD, 2 BA $750 /mo. + utilities. Call
785-550-2774
Avail June. Small 2 BR apt. 13th & Ver-
mont. DW, AC, off-street parki ng, no
dogs. $575/mo. 316-518-0860 / 841-1074
Avail. 6/1 or 8/1 at 1037 Tenn. 1 BR, base-
ment apt. $310+ util., no smoking or pets,
off str. parking, 1 yr lease 785-550-6812
Avail. Aug. Small 2 BR Apt. in reno-
vated older house, short walk to KU,
downtown and Dillons. Window AC,
ceiling fans, small private front
porch, off street parking, no dogs.
$495 call Jim and Lois 841-1074
Avail. June Small 3 BR Apt. in reno-
vated older house west of 13th and
Massachusetts. Window AC, private
deck, DW, wood floors, off street
parking, new 90% efficient gas fur-
nace, small BA, great closets, no
dogs. $725. Jim and Lois at 841-1074
Best Value! California Apts. 501 Califor-
nia Studios, 1,2, & 3 BRs. From $415.
Avail. Now & Aug.1. 841-4935
Available for June, 1 BR apts at Briar-
stone, 1000 Emery Rd. Great neighbor-
hood near KU. W/D hookups, ceiling fans,
mini blinds, balcony, DW, CA, $515/mo.
No pets. 749-7744.
Chase Court Luxury Apartments
1942 Stewart Ave.
1 & 2 BRs, washer/dryer, pool,
24 hr. fitness center, M-F breakfast
785-843-8220
Avail. June 1st. 3 BR. Walk to KU. Great
location. Newly remodeled inside and out.
841-3849
Lrg 2 BR apt. on 1st flr. of remodeled
home on east edge of campus. W/D, DW,
fridge, stove; upgraded wiring, plumbing;
high efficiency heating and CA; wd flrs; lrg
covered front porch with swing; off-street
parking; no pets/smking. Tom @ 841-8188
Walk to Campus! 1712 Ohio. 3 & 4 BR
Apts. Avai l . Aug. 1. Mi dwest Property
Mgmt. 841-4935
Applecroft Apartments
Starting at $490/mo. 1 & 2 BRs
Heat, A/C, Water, Trash paid!
785-843-8220
Seeking 3 fem. for 3 BR adjacent to KU
Athletic center. Avail. Aug 1 ‘05. Stdnt Oc-
cupied.Seen by appt. only. 785-528-4876
1 BR avail June 1 between campus &
downtown, close to GSP-Corbin, $450
mo. no util. no pets 841-1207
1, 2, 3 & 4 BR apts. & town homes
Now Leasing for Summer & Fall
walk-in closets, patio/balcony swimming
pool, KU bus route.
Visit www.holiday-apts.com
Or call 785-843-0011 to view
2 BR, 1 BA, lrg. 444 California. On bus
route, W/D, CA, pets ok, $600. 550-7325.
4 BR, 2 BA duplexes. Avail. August 1st.
All Appliances incl. W/D. On bus route.
$925/mo. 4th & California. Call 766-9823
For Rent: 3rd fl. apt. near football sta-
dium: rent- $450 mo.+ util.; will pay 1/2 of
security dep. if rented, call 316-371-7418.
3 BR, 2 BA, on bus rte., DW, W/D, newly
remodeled, $720/mo. water included, $50
electric paid per mo. 816-289-3502
2 & 3 BR Houses
Large Living Areas & Kitchens
842-3280
Affordable College Rates!
2 BR 1 & 1/2 BA
3 floor plans starting at $510
Taking deposits now.
Sunrise Place 841-8400
9th & Michigan
Small 3 BR house avail. June 1st. Rent
$799. DW, central ai r, 14 mo. l ease
550-7492 or 841-1074
3-4 BR, 2 Bath, washer, dryer, AC. Start-
ing Aug. 1. On cul de sac. 608 Saratoga.
760 2896.
3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car garage. Gorgeous
home. MUST SEE! Desi rabl e West
Lawrence location. 4832 Tempe St. pets
ok. $1200/mo. Avail Aug 1. 218-8254 or
218-3788.
2 BR, 2 BA, 5 min. walk to campus, quiet,
no pets, W/D, $824 mo.+ util. Call Erica
(785) 550-5572.
CHICAGO1 BR apt. sublet, Lincoln Park
Area, unfurnished, lots of storage,
$1175/mo. Avail. May 1. Call: 842-3868
1 BR for sublease May 12-July 7. Full fur-
niture close to KU and downtown. Close
to KU bus rte., laundry, dishwasher, pool.
$290 uti l i ti es i ncl uded. Cal l Mi ke
766-2821.
WOW!
3 BR 2 1/2 BA$820
4 BR 2 BA$920
Unbelievable space for your money.
Taking deposits now.
Sunrise Village 841-8400
660 Gateway Ct.
3 Br, 2 BA, 2 car garage l uxury town
home. All appliances avail. June 1st. No
pets. $975/mo. Call 766-9823
Summer Sublease 1 BR townhome, all
amenities, garage, FP, 854 sq. ft,
$580 + util. mo., NO pets. 913-486-9519.
Studio apt on bus route. $390/mo. 508
Wisconsin. Avail Aug 1. Also 2 BR apt.
ONE BLOCK TO KU. By Naismith hall.
1826 Arkansas W/D, CA $650/mo, pets
ok. Avail Aug 1. 218-8254 or 218-3788.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 2 BR, 2 BA, new
spacious townhome, over 1,100 sq. ft.
$375 mo.+ util. 845-8544 or 913-980-3928.
500! Police Impounds! Hondas, Chevys,
Toyotas, etc. From $500!
Cars/ trucks/SUVs/Jeeps.
For listings 800-366-0124 x 4565
715 and 717 Arkansas (Duplex) each 3
BR, 2 BA, W/D, DW, Microwave, cable
ready, large rooms, great location. Aug.1
Call 785-218-8893
4 BR, 3 BA. All appliances, W/D included.
Cl ose to KU Great condi ti on. On bus
route. June or August. Call 841-3849
1 & 2 BR apts. Walking distance to cam-
pus. Free water & gas. 550-2580.
www.lawrenceaptartments.cjb.net
3 BR, al l appl i ances, i n W. Lawrence
$1025 to $1100 starting Aug. 1. Well Main-
tained. Great Locations. 749-4010.
Townhomes
2 & 3 BR starting at $750
Leasing for Fall
842-3280
Garber
Property
Management
Now leasing for June/Aug.
2-3 bdrm townhomes at the
following locations:
*Bainbridge Circle
(1190 sq. ft to 1540 sq. ft)
*Brighton Circle
(1200 sq. ft to 1650 sq. ft)
*Adam Avenue (1700 sq. ft)
Providing
*Equipped kitchens
*W/D hk-ups
*Window coverings
*Garages w/openers
*Ceramic tile
*Fireplaces
*Lawn care provided
*NO PETS
841-4785
APARTMENTS APARTMENTS
FOR RENT
TOWN HOMES
FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT
APARTMENTS
HOMES
ROOMMATE/
SUBLEASE
AUTO FOR RENT
FOR RENT
APARTMENTS APARTMENTS
KANSANCLASSIFIEDS
IN A CLASS OF ITS OWN
“The Ultimate in Luxury Living”
• ONE MONTHFREE RENT!!!
• Luxury 1,2,3 BR apts.
• Full size washer and dryer
• 24 hour fitness room
• Computer Center
• Pool with sundeck
1/4 mile west on Wakarusa
5000 Clinton Parkway
www.pinnaclewoodsapartments.com
785-865-5454
Classifieds monday, April 4, 2005 the university daily kansan 5B
sports 6b the university daily kansan monday, april 4, 2005
Catch me if you can
Nothing went the Jayhawks’
way yesterday, particularly
when Pottorf went down with
an injury to her leg in the top of
the third, when A&M third
baseman Jamie Hinshaw ran
into her. Pottorf hung onto the
ball and got the out. The extent
of her injury is unknown. She
was replaced by Ashley
Goodrich, junior outfielder.
Kansas coach Tracy Bunge
said of the Aggies, “They’re a
team that is pretty much on fire.
I’m really impressed with the
way they’re playing ball. My
hats off to coach (Jo) Evans and
her staff.”
Amanda Scarborough, A&M
freshman pitcher earned the
victories for both games, mov-
ing her overall record to a stel-
lar 20-0. She earned Big 12
Pitcher of the Week and the
USA Softball National Player of
the Week for games last week.
The Aggies broke both games
open in the sixth inning. On
Saturday, they were able to
score four runs on two hits in
the sixth to gain a seven-run
lead. Yesterday, they put four
on the board in the sixth,
including a three-run triple
from Jamie Hinshaw.
Texas A&M had an arsenal
that included center fielder
Sharonda McDonald. She stole
four bases during the weekend
becoming the career record hold-
er in stolen bases at Texas A&M
in only a season and a half.
Bunge said McDonald could be
the fastest player in the country.
“If she puts anything down on
the field that is halfway decent,
she is going to beat it out,”
Bunge said. “If she gets on base,
she’s going to steal second and
then she’s going to steal third.”
McDonald has stolen 49 bases
consecutively without being
thrown out. The team is next in
action against UMKC tomorrow
at Arrocha Ballpark. Game time
is scheduled for 3 p.m.
Bunge said she would look
for the team to take a little frus-
tration out on UMKC.
“We need to play hard and
play aggressively and see what
happens,” she said.
— Edited by Jesse Truesdale
Aggies rally
to take 2 in 3
game series
Winning the first game of a
three-game series usually bodes
well for the rest of the weekend.
Don’t tell that to the Kansas
baseball team.
For the second consecutive
weekend, the Jayhawks failed to
turn a series-opening victory
into a series victory. Texas
A&M, like Nebraska the week-
end before, rallied to win the
last two games of the series. The
Jayhawks dropped to 22-12
overall and 2-4 in Big 12
Conference play.
Kansas junior first baseman
Jared Schweitzer’s two-run dou-
ble in the top of the 12th inning
scored junior Ritchie Price and
senior Sean Richardson and
gave the Jayhawks a 7-5 victory
against the No. 16 Aggies Friday
night. The Jayhawks had to rally
after relinquishing an early 4-0
lead. Senior pitcher Mike
Zagurski had a solid outing,
going 6 1/3 innings and allow-
ing two runs. Junior Don Czyz
(3-1) picked up the victory in an
extended relief appearance. The
Jayhawks’ closer pitched 4 1/3
innings and struck out five.
The double by Schweitzer
extended his hitting streak to
seven games.
“This was one of the greatest
games that I have been a part of,”
Kansas coach Ritch Price said of
the victory. “We were able to over-
come some mistakes and keep
fighting to come up with a win
over a quality team on the road.”
Saturday’s game was a differ-
ent story. Texas A&M pounded
Kansas pitching for 19 hits en
route to a 12-4 victory. With a 4-
2 lead in the third, Kansas sen-
ior starter Clint Schambach was
roughed up for five runs before
leaving the game. The Aggies
ran away from there, giving sen-
ior pitcher Kyle Marlatt his
fourth victory of the season.
Schambach fell to 2-3.
Richardson was a bright spot
for Kansas offensively. He went 2-
3 with two RBI. The Aggies were
paced by junior first baseman
Colby Mavroulis and sophomore
third baseman Austin Boggs.
Both homered and had two RBI.
“They came out swinging the
bats and jumped on us early,”
Price said. “We came back and
took the lead in the third, and I
really liked our chances. Then
all of a sudden the floodgates
kind of opened.”
Yesterday’s game was well-
pitched by both teams. Kansas
jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the
second inning on a single by
freshman designated hitter
Brock Simpson. Junior pitcher
Kodiak Quick gave up only
three runs before leaving the
game in the bottom of the sixth
with the Jayhawks trailing 3-1.
Richardson brought the
Jayhawks closer, making it 3-2
with a sacrifice fly in the sev-
enth. That was as close as
Kansas would get because the
Aggies added two more runs in
the bottom of the inning. The
Jayhawks’ rally fell short in the
ninth, and Texas A&M defeated
Kansas 7-5. Quick took the loss
and dropped to 7-3.
Texas A&M improved its
record to 22-10 overall and 4-5 in
the conference. Their season con-
tinues with a Tuesday game
against Sam Houston State before
going to Missouri next weekend.
Kansas will return to action
Wednesday in Hoglund
Ballpark against in-state rival
Wichita State in the first of four
games between the two clubs
this season.
— Edited by Lori Bettes
BY MATT WILSON
[email protected]
KANSAN SPORTSWRITER
Rachel Seymour/KANSAN
Caleb Santos-Silva, Wichita freshman, dives out into the air after the ball during a game of catch with
Kyle Owens, Kansas State freshman, behind Ellsworth Hall on Daisy Hill yesterday afternoon. Many students
dotted the hill yesterday to play sports, lay out, read or just relax. Daisy Hill wasn’t the only place on cam-
pus where people were enjoying the warm weather. Students were behind Oliver Hall performing similar
activities, while others lounged by the pool at Naismith Hall.
▼ BASEBALL
Too much
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B
(785) 231-1010
www.washburn.edu
At Washburn University
Online Courses OR
1st Five Week Session
May 24 to June 30
8 Week Session
May 24 to July 21
2nd Five Week Session
July 5 to August 4
Online Courses OR
1st Five Week Session
8 Week Session
2nd Five Week Session
Summer 2005 Summer 2005
Congratulations on
a great season!
From your
friends at
Z
Cosmetology
Academy
Settìng the Standard
lor Exce¦¦ence
±(±, lowa • ;(,-+(88

Sponsor Documents

Recommended

No recommend documents

Or use your account on DocShare.tips

Hide

Forgot your password?

Or register your new account on DocShare.tips

Hide

Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link to create a new password.

Back to log-in

Close