} Pass it on. (please) HWp ouf iucc«ttm recycling program on cam put Dy pun mg tna Or*gon Duty f mertta pack m itt original rac* wrwn you *• flrwnad raadmg it TT* ww allow anotnar panon to , raad it and/or Da eatlty PK*aC up tor racycimg 001 0 UNIVERSITY OF OREGON & Department of DANCE MAY CONCERTS Clip and save this calendar! Fof more information on School of Muse events call 346-5678. or call the Muse Hotline (346 3764) for a taped message TUa. OREGON COMPOSER'S FORUM CONCERT 5/4 New music by UO students 9 pm Bead Ha«. FREE Wad. CON BRIO CHAMBER PLAYERS 5/5 Faculty Artist Senes 8 pm BmN Hal $5 General Admission. $3 Students 8 Senior Citizens Thur. JAZZ COMBOS I 5/6 UO Jazz Ensembles 8 pm BeM Hal $4 General Admission. $2 Students & Senior Citizens Wed. "STRING QUINTESSENCE” 5/12 UO Faculty Stnng Quintet 8 pm BeaH Had $5 General Admission, S3 Students & Senior Citizens Thur. OREGON GOSPEL ENSEMBLE 5/13 UO Ensemble 8 pm Bead Hal $4 General Admission, $2 Students & Senior Citizens Frl. SPRING JAZZ CONCERT 5/14 Oregon Jazz Ensemble, Jazz Lab Bands 7 pm. Baal Hall $4 General Admission. $2 Students 8 Senior Citizens May SPRING STUDENT DANCE CONCERT 14*16 8 p.m. Dougherty Dance Theatre (2 pm Sunday) $5 General Admission. $3 Students 8 Senior Dozens Mon. UO WOMEN’S CHORUS, MEN’S ENSEMBLE 5/17 UO Choral Ensembles. 8 p.m. Beall Had FREE TUa. OREGON PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE 5/18 UO Ensemble. 8 pm Bead Had 84 General Admission. $2 Students 8 Senior Citizens Wad. JAZZ COMBOS II 5/19 UO Jazz Ensembles 9 p.m. Bead Hall $4 General Admission, $2 Students 8 Senkx Citizens Thur. BONES A BRASS 5/20 UO Brass Ensemble 8 pm Bead Had $4 General Admission. $2 Students 8 Senior Dozens Frl. OREGON VOCAL JAZZ ENSEMBLE 5/21 UO Jazz Ensemble 8 pm Bead Had $4 General Admission, $2 Students 8 Senior Dozens Sat. "AN ARIA SAMPLER" 5/22 UO Opera Workshop 8 p.m. Bead Hall $4 General Admission; $2 Students 8 Senior Dozens Sun. CHAMBER MUSIC AT TEA TIME 5/23 UO Chamber Ensembles 3 pm Beall Had $4 General Admission, $2 Students 8 Senior Dozens Mon. OREGON SYMPHONIC BAND 5/24 UO Ensemble 8 pm BeaH Hal $4 General Admission. $2 Students 8 Senior Citizens TUa. UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY 5/25 UO Ensemble 8 pm Bead Had $4 General Admission. $2 Students 8 Senior Citizens Wad. OREGON WIND ENSEMBLE 5/26 UO Ensemble 8 pm BeaH Had $4 General Admission. $2 Students 8 Senior Dozens Thur. GREEN GARTER BAND 4/27 UO Ensemble 8 pm BeaH Had $4 General Admission, $2 Students 8 Senior Dozens Koresh’s death raises questions WACO, Tintns (APj — The discovery that cult leader David Koresh was shot in the head before n quit k-moving fire killed his followers raises as many questions as it answers Who killed him'' When7 Why7 What does it say about the end of the 51-day standoff with federal authorities? "It s a good question,” leff lamar, the FBI special agent m charge during the standoff, said Monday. I he guntire lorn us wmenoav was getting shot |usl who ami whv I* the question " On Sunday, authorities said X ravs and denial records proved that the charred body and frag mented skull found three days •Iter the firs* were the remains of the f.V year-old Koresh Toxicology tests will he used to determine how much carbon monoxide laced his body. The higher the level, the greater the likelihood Koresh was alive when fire engulfed the compound April l‘l Results will take at least a week Preliminary findings showed Korseh died of a gunshot wound in the forehead. Justice of the Pm< « David Pareyo said He said he did not know whether any weapons were found near the body. What it means is unclear at this point. Although Koresh's hody was found alone, ail six cult mem bers identified publicly by authorities had been shot in the head Jamar would not speculate whether that was chance or trend. "Some people may have been trying to get out," Jamar said "Maybe they were shot.” Nine Branch Davidians escaped the burning compound They told lawyers that Koresh was alive when FBI agents started pumrneling the com pound with tear gas. They said Koresh spent his final hours making sure the women and children were wearing their gas masks properly. No attempts were made to gather the group from Bible study and laundry chores as the FBI's assault tightened, the survivors said. Then the fire started The survivors said a tank ramming the com pound walls ignited the blaze when it knocked over a lantern An independent investigation con cluded the fire — which took 45 minutes to raze the compound — was set by cult members Mavhe the cult members shot themselves to escape the inferno, some say "Kim is hv far the most horrifv ‘Fire is by far the most horrifying death any of us can imagine — Balenda Ganem, mother of cult member ing dtsath any of us can imagine," said Balendn Ganem. whose son, David Thibodeau, was among the survivors. "As to what any of us would do when confronting something of the magnitude of a fire, who's to say what any per son would do?" Koresh's mother in-law, Mary Jones, said he wouldn't have committed suicide. "God the Father told him you can't do that He says under no circumstances are you to kill yourself,'' said (ones, whose son, David; daughters, Rachel and Michelle; and several grandchildren died in the fire. Authorities have removed 72 bodies from the rubble. Koresh claimed 95 people —including 17 children, were inside and wanted to stay with him. FBI figures place that number at 86. The standoff began Feb 28 as agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms were attempting to serve arrest and search war rants because of suspected illegal weapons, drugs and child abuse. A gunfight killed four federal agents and an estimated six cult members. For the next 50 days, law enforcement officials surrounded the cult and tried coaxes and warnings to get the Davidians out. Koresh responded with promises, preachings, curses and threats. "Look and see, you fools, you will not proceed much further." he wrote the FBI on April 10. "Do you think you have power to stop My will?" Updated dictionary in stores today SPRINGFIELD. Mass (AP) — What do "safe sex." "politically correct" and "karaoke'' have in common? They've all been used enough in American language to make it into the 10th edition of Merri am-Webster's Collegiate Dictio nary The book, being released today, the 150th anniversary of Noah Webster's death, is to some the ultimate arbiter of cor rect spelling and usage To its editor-in-chief. Frederick Mish, it also represents a reflection of society itself "Our language is constantly (hanging and evolving." he said. At times those changes have brought howls of protest from language purists. "1 cringe at some of the things we have in the book myself." Mish said. "But my advice is to relax. There is no way in the world you are going to stop 350 million people from using words the way they want to.” For example, people persist in saying "ain't.” so it is included in the Collegiate. So are all of the most notorious four-letter words and racial slurs And so is the expression "politically correct" (the belief that language that offends should be eliminated) The new Collegiate, retitled Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary to reflect the compa ny's deeply felt ties to Noah Webster, contains 160,000 entries and 211.000 definitions in all. The editors who assembled it reviewed and updated every entry in the 10-year-old ninth edition and made more than a million changes. More than 10.000 of the entries are new words or mean ings. gleaned by editors who spend their days reading and making notes on word usage. Their jottings are stored in a computer, as well as added to the company's stock of more than 14 1/2 million 3-hy-5 cards listing all the words that stirred America since 1790. The file was started by Web ster. a vigorous supporter of colonial independence, who wrote the first truly American dictionary in 1006. VAN COOTS "SUNFLOWERS" WAS NOTHING COMPARED TO THIS DRAWING. ENTER TO WIN A FREE JANSRORT SWEATSHIRT. SHORTS AND T-SHIRT. UNIVERSITY OF ORECON BOOKSTORE 11TM 4 KINCAID M-F 7:45-4. SAT lO-S BU president testifies at MLK trial BOSTON (API — Boston Uni versity President John Silber tes tified Monday the school has a "moral obligation" to keep the papers of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King ]r. Silber said King's widow didn't contest the school's claim to the papers until 1985. Coretta Scott King testified earlier in her lawsuit she was unaware the school planned to claim the papers until then. Silber said he told Mrs. King in December 1985 that the school had a ' moral obligation" to retain the papers because it was her husband's wish. "We thought it quite appropri ate to think that, upon his death, Martin Luther King, like Lin coln. belonged to the ages." Sil ber said.