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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1999)
jdo COY 3/ C h £Jf i)3 M ush starts a/ 9i00 pm Ljv3 DJ an d n on srop d an sing AJso chock our our y/ookond spsclaJs on Friday on cl 'Prturrlny n\<jk) Pick up an Emerald at 93 campus & community locations. Kip Kinkel Continued from Page 1 witness, Thurston High School shooting victims took the chance to tell Kinkel exactly what they thought of him. Almost every vic tim asked that Kinkel be given a maximum sentence. Kinkel lis tened attentively to the victims’ statements and looked at them when asked. “I was shot at school, the one place I’m supposed to be safe,” said Elizabeth McKenzie, who was shot in the left thigh. “I am not a victim, I am a survivor, and I am a person.” McKenzie said the choice Kinkel made to enter the cafeteria and embark on the shooting spree on May 21, 1998, took away the choices of all the victims. “I didn’t deserve it. No one de serves to go through what we have gone through,” she said. Teresa Miltonberger, who was shot in the forehead, said if she were the judge she would not let Kinkel out of prison. She ad dressed her comments to Kinkel and said, “Murdering people is not going to get you anywhere. It doesn’t work like that.” She asked Kinkel to think about the victims’ families’ feel ings. Miltonberger’s father, Bill, said Kinkel put his family through “hell on earth.” He said his daughter’s physical scars are covered, but the emotional scars are not so well hidden. “The community is forever changed,” he said. Jake and Josh Ryker, two of the boys who tackled Kinkel in the Thurston cafeteria and thereby ended the shooting spree, also of fered statements in court, both di rectly addressing Kinkel. “I don’t care if you’re sick, in sane, crazy ... I don’t care,” Jake Ryker said. “I think life in prison is too good for you.” He continued, “I think the vic tims should get to do to you what you did to them ... You don’t de serve to live, you don’t deserve to breathe ... I can’t stand here and look at you without wanting to kill you.” But Josh Ryker did not echo his brother’s sentiments. He instead said he wants Kinkel to stay alive for a long time to remember all the faces and suffering of the vic tims. “What you did to me and all my friends you can never take back,” he said. Amber Ramsey, who has known Kinkel since the fourth grade, was shot in the right hip. She said Kinkel always had a temper, even when he was younger, and he was voted the “most likely person to start World Warm.” She said she wants Kinkel to “sit and think about what he has done to us every day.” Ramsey said she believes everyone should be forgiven, but it will take her a long time to forgive Kinkel for his actions. Kyle Howes, who suffered a broken tibia and lacerated thigh during the shootings, said he is not angry with Kinkel and doesn’t hate him. He said Kinkel needs to have hope that his sanity and clarity of life will return. “I can and really do forgive you,” he said. “I feel sorry for you. May God have mercy on your soul.” Springfield Police Detective Alan Worthen also spoke for the prosecution. Kinkel attempted to stab Worthen after he was arrest ed. He said there are many face less and nameless victims of the shooting and that Kinkel’s behav ior has affected many lives in the community. “He should never walk free in society again,” Worthen said. The Associated Press contributed to this report. www.xdrive.com "M Des^oP B J$ My Computer fS Floppy (A:) ♦ $pHard Drive (C:) j*2 CD-Rom(D:) _ Zip Drive (E) •♦XtDrive (x:)* & □ Public □Music: MP3s □History Study Group 3 □ Private □Resume □Photos 1^ Network Neighborhood y Recycle Bin ree is good. If it’s something you can actually use. Which means that X:Drive’s all good. XtDrive is the first Internet hard drive on the desktop. Difference is, you can access X:Drive anywhere, anytime. (A major breakthrough for schoolwork. And R&R.) Let’s say you’re doing a group grope. Think how much easier things’ll go when everyone has access to the same files, projects and presentations. No matter where they are on campus. (Or the planet.) It’s perfect for individual projects, too. Like term papers, essays, and resumes—even if you share a computer. ‘Cause your X:Drive files are password-protected. More good news. XiDrive gives you 25MB of space free. (That’s about the same as the 17 virus-infected floppies you won’t have to schlep around anymore.) Which brings us to another nifty feature. X:Drive lets you grab MP3s, video, groovy pix from the Web in seconds while you keep surfing. So, go to www.xdnve.com and lock and load. X:Drive’s a real bar gain. In fact, it’s the best freebie on the Web