Professional Documents
Culture Documents
fchambers@kansan.com
Mark Gottschall had been searching
the Internet for years for the album
Beautiful People, which he helped
make in 1972 in Spain. But each time,
Gottschall received no relevant results.
In October 2007, Gottschall, supervi-
sor of the journalism resource center,
realized he should have been search-
ing for the albums title in Spanish:
Maravillosa Gente.
Searching for the translation of the
name made all the difference. Gottschall
found a link that said the album was to
be re-released on CD, and that the pro-
duction company, Guerssen Records, was
looking for him.
It was just fate that made me Google
it that day. If I had not, I would never
have known about the re-issue. Talk
about luck, Gottschall said.
Guerssen Records couldnt find Bill
Quick, who was the main artist on the
album, so they needed Gottschall to
write the liner notes for the CD. After 35
years, Gottschalls dream of being on a
major record was finally coming true.
I felt sort of vindicated that people
would finally get to hear what I could
do, Gottschall said.
In 1971, Gottschall dropped out of col-
lege and decided to travel across Europe.
Being a guitar player, he knew he would
need to learn to play a more unusual
instrument to stand
out. So he bought a
banjo, a banjo begin-
ners book and trav-
eled to Spain.
One day, when
Gottschall was play-
ing his banjo in a
park, a man joined
him with a guitar. The
man said he would
introduce Gottschall
to Bill Quick, who
was making an
album, under one condition Gottschall
had to promise he would not ask Quick if
he could be on his album. The man said
every artist he knew, including himself,
had asked Quick to be on the album and
Quick was tired of being asked.
As soon as we knocked on the door,
Bill said in English, Is that a banjo? I
said, Yes. He said, Far out man. Do you
wanna be on my album? which I thought
was pretty funny because the other guy
told me not to ask if I could be on his
album, Gottschall said.
The record was being recorded at
Explosion studio, in Madrid, Spain.
Gottschall said Explosion was the big-
gest recording studio he had ever seen,
and would later find out it was one of
the best recording studios in Europe at
that time.
From the time I walked into that
studio I knew there was magic there,
Gottschall said. There was magic in
Bills songs. It was just a magical, magi-
cal time.
Gottschall said halfway through the
first song one of the producers told him
the harmony he was playing was not
what they were looking for and asked
him to play a different one. At that time
Gottschall still knew only one song from
the banjo book.
I went from thinking Im going to
be on this cool recording, to thinking
Im gonna get fired because this is all I
know, Gottschall said.
Gottschall then excused himself from
the room. As he was strumming on his
banjo, contemplating his predicament,
the producer walked by.
He said, Thats it. Thats what I want,
so it made it easy, Gottschall said.
From that day on, Gottschall and
Quick were close friends. On Sundays
they would go to the flea market in
Madrid and sell the
belts Quick made.
Afterward, they would
return to Quicks
apartment to sing and
play music together.
Gottschall said that
his and Quicks voices
blended together so
well that Quick asked
him to sing harmony
on the CD with him,
play the acoustic gui-
tar on several tracks and add a track of
his own to the CD. Gottschalls track is
called Youre not listening.
Gottschall was also asked to write lyr-
ics to a track Quick had written about
the flea market. Quick wanted to call it
Beautiful People. Gottschall said origi-
nally the title song was supposed to
be Take me Away, but that Beautiful
People replaced it.
Gottschall said when he began work-
ing on the album it was similar to
Santanas pop music. However, Gottschall
said the producer
thought he and Quick
sounded like Simon
and Garfunkel, so
many of the tracks on
the album morphed
into psychedelic folk
songs.
Gottschall said he
and Quick were even
interviewed on one of
Madrids most famous
FM stations, where
they performed two songs live.
Because Quicks name was on the
album deal, Gottschall did not receive
credit for writing the songs. However,
Alain Milhaud, one of the producers,
offered he and Quick a record deal when
the album was finished.
I turned down the deal and Ive been
kicking myself every since, Gottschall
said.
Gottschall said he turned down the
offer because he missed his girlfriend,
Jayne, who was still living in Austin. He
said at the time he thought that if he was
a good enough musician to receive a
record deal in Europe, that he could get
one in the U.S. as well.
Gottschall has tried to contact
Milhaud several times since then, with
no success. He said Milhaud was one of
the most prominent European producers
at the time. Gotschall has not heard from
Quick either since
1997. Gottschall said
he was the last known
person to have heard
from Quick.
Kelly Clark, an
Overland Park senior
who works in the
resource center, said
when she found out
about Gottschalls
newly acquired fame,
she told him he should
go on tour. Clark said that after listening
to the CD she was surprised at how cur-
rent the music sounded.
Its something I think wont ever go
out of style, Clark said.
Though Gottschalls music career
never skyrocketed like he had hoped, his
personal life turned out well. Gottschall
eventually married Jayne, though they
later divorced.
Jayne said Gottschalls story did not
surprise her because he had always lived
a colorful life. She said she was happy he
returned because she knew enough about
the music business to know that nothing
is certain, no matter how good Milhaud
may have made the deal sound.
Jayne said that Quick visited her and
Mark in Austin several times, and that
he was very nice and always brought
her gifts. One time Quick brought her a
beautiful shawl from Spain, and another
time he brought her earrings he had
made himself.
Jayne said she was very interested to
see if the re-release would draw Quick
out of hiding.
He was offbeat enough that Im not
surprised that nobody really knows
where he is now, she said. I hope hes
okay, because were all getting older.
Gottschall played as a professional
musician in Austin for 25 years before
moving to Lawrence. Occasionally
Gottschall performs downtown. He has
also made a CD of his own.
Gotschalls three children, Gino, Mike
and Mandi are all musically inclined as
well. Gino owns a music store in Austin
and Mike has a music MySpace page.
Mandi, who plays the guitar, said she
hoped to make a CD with her father in
the future.
Edited by Patrick De Oliveira
The student vOice since 1904
Wednesday, april 16, 2008 WWW.kansan.com volume 118 issue 132
All contents, unless stated otherwise,
2008 The University Daily Kansan
49 41
T-Showers
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72 48
index
weather
ASSOCIATED PRESS
POPE bEnEdict
arrivEs in u.s.,
addrEssEs
abusE scandal
full AP STORy PAgE 4A
Jayhawks
scOrE 11,
dEfEat bakEr
PAGE 1B
in thursdays kansan:
a stOry On
Julian wrights lifE
Playing fOr thE
nEw OrlEans
hOrnEts
Reliving the dream
Global Tunes
Mindy Ricketts/KANSAN
Mark gottschall, journalismresource center supervisor, discovered an albumhe recorded in Spain 35 years ago was being re-released on CD. After returning fromSpain,
Gottschall worked as a musician in Austin, Texas, for 25 years before moving to Kansas.
Mindy Ricketts/KANSAN
beautiful People,the albumgottschall contributed to 35 years ago, wil be re-released. The record company
wasnt able to contact the main artist on the album, Bill Quick, so Gottschall got to write the liner notes in the CD.
University employee
discovers his album,
recorded 35 years ago,
will be re-released
I felt sort of vindicated that
people would fnally get to hear
what I could do.
Mark Gottschall
Journalism resource center
supervisor
Its something I think wont
ever go out of style.
kelly clark
overland Park senior
campus
Volunteers
needed for
cancer relay
The American Cancer Society is
sponsoring the annual Relay for Life,
coming on May 2 and 3. The Relay will
feature the run, the luminary walk, and
a talk from a cancer survivor who goes
to the University of Kansas.
full STORy ON PAgE 3A
Rain garden
to help with
pollution
campus
Students plan to install the Universitys
first rain garden on campus in the fall.
The garden, which will span more
than 5,000 square feet, will include
plants that dont grow anywhere else on
campus and will direct more rainwater
into the ground rather than the citys
sewer system.
full STORy ON PAgE 10A
NEWS 2A wednesday, april 16, 2008
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et cetera
on campus
media partners
contact us
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Want to know what people
are talking about? Heres a list
of this weeks most e-mailed
stories from Kansan.com:
1. Award ceremony puts
season to rest
2. Mr. Jayhawk times fve
3. Championship parade
takes over downtown
4. Letter to the editor:
Wrong label
5. Baseball notes
The Free Runners
Clinic will begin at 9 a.m.
at Watkins Memorial
Health Center.
The workshop Con-
ducting Staf Searches-
Updates will begin at
10 a.m. in 103B Carruth-
OLeary.
The public event
Get a Milk Mustache!
will begin at 11:30 a.m.
at Wesco outside the
underground.
The workshop Access
2003: Forms will begin
at 1 p.m. in the Budig PC
Lab.
The panel discussion
Briefng on New NIH
Public Access Policy will
begin at 2 p.m. at Simons
Laboratories in the Higu-
chi Biosciences Center
Auditorium.
The lecture H-1B
and Employment Based
Permanent Residence
will begin at 3:30 p.m. in
Alderson Auditorium in
the Kansas Union.
The seminar Ameri-
can Seminar- Shawn
Alexander will begin
at 3:30 p.m. in the Hall
Center Seminar Room.
The International
Fashion Show will begin
at 5:30 p.m. in the Kansas
Union.
The lecture Univer-
sity Series at the Com-
mons From Prarie to
Ice Sheet will begin at 7
p.m. in Spooner Hall.
The Registrars ofce has
been temporarily housed in
Wescoe Hall while its of-
fces are renovated. As of this
week, it is back in its per-
manent location, Room 151
Strong Hall.
Jayhawks & Friends
What do you think?
by Ashley bArforoush
MORGAN MONSEERS
Overland Park freshman
I like it. I use the pass and now
when I use the bus I wont have to
worry about pulling my pass out
and I wont have to worry about
buying a new pass each semester.
chAdRick MillER
hutchison graduate student
Defnitely a good idea. Before,
as an undergrad, I would have
taken better advantage of it. I
think more students will be attend-
ing class now that they wont have
to worry about having a vehicle to
get to class.
chAd EllER
denver freshman
I think its a good idea, but
honestly I would never use it. But
for McCollum and those dorms far
away, it is a good idea because that
walk sucks.
kENdAl WhiTNEY
Menlo Park graduate student
I like that idea because in Feb-
ruary I hate walking up the hill, and
now I dont have to worry about
having a pass to ride the bus.
on the record
daily KU info
odd news
Performing CPR pays for
Navy medics towing bill
JACKSON, Mich. A Navy medic
is being reimbursed for a $60
towing bill he received while he
was helping perform CPR on a
heart attack victim.
Jackson County Undersherif
Tom Finco said the department
was paying back Hospital Corps-
man 3rd Class Tim Moore as a
goodwill gesture.
(Moore) said it wasnt neces-
sary, he understood, but we sent
him a check anyway, Finco said.
Moore, 24, who had just
returned from Iraq, was driving
on Interstate 94 on April 2 when
he saw an ambulance parked
on the side. He pulled over and
comforted a woman whose fanc
had sufered a heart attack inside
the ambulance.
When the rescuers learned of
Moores medical training, they
asked if he would help administer
CPR. He left his truck on the exit
ramp and got in. The man died at
Foote Hospital in Jackson.
In the meantime, Moores truck
parked partly over the white
line marking the side of the road
was deemed a travel hazard
and towed.
Moore, now stationed at
Camp Lejeune, N.C., said people
have been sending checks to his
parents after word spread about
the towing bill, but he plans to
donate that money to veterans
charities.
Boy to blow up balloons
with nose for contest
BLAINE, Wash. A 13-year-old
boy hopes to win a balloon-blow-
ing record by a nose.
Blowing through one nostril at
a time, Andrew Dahl infated 213
balloons within an hour Friday
a feat that has been submit-
ted for review by Guinness World
Records.
His father, Doug Dahl, mea-
sured the balloons to make sure
each was at least 20 centimeters,
the minimum diameter, and his
mother, Wendy Dahl, kept the
tally.
At one point he asked, Does
this count as practicing my trum-
pet? His mother replied, Only
if you can play that with your
nose.
Computer programmer
proposes with video game
JERSEY CITY, N.J. Hiding
a ring in a bouquet just wasnt
enough when a computer
programmer decided to pop the
question.
Bernie Peng reprogrammed
Tammy Lis favorite video game,
Bejeweled, so a ring and a mar-
riage proposal would show up on
the screen when she reached a
certain score.
Li reached the needed score
and said yes.
The word of the romantic feat
last December fltered out after
Peng, a fnancial software pro-
grammer, posted details on his
blog. The reprogramming was a
tricky task and took him a month.
I thought it was pretty cool, in
a nerdy way, Peng told The Star-
Ledger of Newark.
The couple plan to marry over
Labor Day weekend, and PopCap,
the Seattle company that makes
Bejeweled, will fy the couple to
Seattle as part of their honey-
moon.
Most video game compa-
nies would frown on people
manipulating their games, said
Garth Chouteau, a spokesman for
PopCap.
But it won him a woman. As
a bunch of geeks we have to say,
Bernie, hats of to you.
The company is also sup-
plying copies of Bejeweled to
hand out as favors to the wed-
ding guests.
Associated Press
March 18, 1925: Tri-State
Tornado. The deadliest tor-
nado event in U.S. history. 747
died. It traveled 219 miles.
http://www.ezl.com/~freball/
Disaster15.htm
It was so wide usually
you think about a tornado, it
has a funnel, and it may be a
block or two or three blocks
wide. But something about a
mile wide, well it just-
Eugene Porter, Murphysboro, Ky.,
resident
Your face
hERE
Submit all photos by e-mail to photos@kansan.comwith the subject lineJayhawks & Friendsand the following information: your full name, the full names of the people photographed, along with their
hometown (town and state) and year in school, what is going on in the photo, when and where the photo was taken and any other information you fnd vital or interesting.
The Kansan will publish recent pic-
tures of you and your friends on the
second page of the news and sports
sections. Sports-related photos will
run on 2B of the sports section (Spor-
tin Jayhawks), while all other photos
will run on 2A of the news section
(Jayhawks & Friends).
Photos will also be published
online at Kansan.com. The Kansan
reserves the right to not publish any
photos submitted.
What do you think about the neW $20 student Fee that Will
alloW all students to use the bus system next Fall?
The KU Public Safety
Ofce reported the crimi-
nal damage to property
of a wooden door at the
Natural History Museum
in the Entomology Lab
on Monday. The crime oc-
curred between 8 a.m. on
Sat. April 5 and 8 a.m. on
Sat. April 12 and the dam-
age was valued at $100.
A 21-year-old KU
student reported criminal
damage to the hood of
and top of a 2006 Kia
Spectra to the Lawrence
Police Department on
Friday. The crime occurred
between 10 p.m. on Mon.
April 7 and 12 p.m. Tues.
April 8 on the 800 block of
Maine Street. The damage
was valued at $1,000.
A 19-year-old KU stu-
dent reported the theft of
a cell phone to the Law-
rence Police Department
Friday. The crime occurred
between 9 p.m. on Thurs-
day and 11 a.m. on Friday
on the 2900 block Bob
Billings Parkway. The theft
was valued at $600.
A 21-year-old KU
student reported an ag-
gravated robbery to the
Lawrence Police Depart-
ment on Monday. The
crime occurred at about
12:35 a.m. on the 1000
block of Ohio Street. The
theft items stolen and
their values were not
reported.
A 20-year-old KU
student reported criminal
damage of the hood, top
and front windshield of a
2006 Honda Civic to the
Lawrence Police Depart-
ment last Wednesday. The
crime occurred at about
10:30 p.m. on Mon. April
7 on the 1000 block of
Massachusetts Street and
the damage was valued at
$1,430.
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news 3A wednesday, april 16, 2008
BY CALEB SOMMERVILLE
csommerville@kansan.com
The American Cancer Society
is sponsoring the annual Relay for
Life to help raise awareness and
money for cancer research.
The society will recruit teams
until the event starts on May 2.
Stacie Schroeder, community
manager-development for the
American Cancer Society, said the
teams were trying to raise more
money to meet the $80,000 goal.
According to the Relays Web
site, there are 291 participants
and 36 teams at the University of
Kansas so far.
The Web site also said that the
teams had raised about $7,984.
Schroeder said that they were
working on getting survivors to
speak at the event.
Laura Kelly, a Stage 3 non-
Hodgkins T-cell Lymphoma sur-
vivor, will be the speaker at the
opening ceremony on May 2. She
was diagnosed with cancer when
she was 14, but will be cancer-free
for four years this August.
Its a cause thats close to my
heart, Kelly said.
Kelly, a Lenexa sophomore, first
got involved with the American
Cancer Society and the Relay for
Life when she was going through
chemotherapy her sophomore year
of high school.
She participated in the Relay her
sophomore year, not really knowing
what to expect. The event ended up
being life-changing.
It was one of the most moving
experiences ever, Kelly said.
After that, she was the survi-
vor chairwoman for the Relay her
junior year, and co-chairwoman of
the whole event at her high school
her senior year.
Last year, she helped recruit
people to participate, but was not
able to serve on the committee this
year because of school and work
conflicts. Kelly still wanted to par-
ticipate, though.
I thought this would a fun
opportunity, Kelly said.
Cancer survivors and other peo-
ple who want to help can partici-
pate in the Relay by signing up at
http://events.cancer.org/rflkuks.
The Relay will begin at 6 p.m. on
May 2 at Memorial Stadium.
Edited by Patrick De Oliveira
Falling dollar value, global oil supply
contribute to raised price of crude oil
campus
ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS In image-conscious
France, it may soon be a crime
to glamorize the ultra-thin. A
new French bill cracks down on
Web sites that advise anorexics
on how to starve and could
be used to hit fashion industry
heavyweights, too.
The groundbreaking bill,
adopted Tuesday by Parliaments
lower house, recommends fines
of up to $71,000 and three-year
prison sentences for offenders
who encourage extreme thin-
ness. It goes to the Senate in the
coming weeks.
Critics said the bill is too
vague about whom it is targeting
and doesnt even clearly define
extreme thinness.
If passed, the law would be the
strongest of its kind anywhere,
fashion industry experts said. It
is the latest measure proposed
after the 2006 anorexia-linked
death of Brazilian model Ana
Carolina Reston prompted efforts
throughout the fashion industry
to address the health repercus-
sions of ultra-thin models.
Doctors and psychologists
treating patients with anorexia
nervosa a disorder character-
ized by an extreme fear of becom-
ing overweight welcomed the
French effort, but said anorexias
link with media images remains
hazy.
For the bills backers, the
message behind the measure is
important enough.
The bills author, conservative
French lawmaker Valery Boyer,
said she wanted to encourage
discussion about womens health
and body image. Health Minister
Roselyne Bachelot said Web sites
that encourage young girls to
starve should not be protected by
freedom of expression.
So-called pro-ana for pro-
anorexia sites and blogs have
flourished in the United States
and beyond, often hosted by ado-
lescents sharing stories of how
they deprive their bodies of nour-
ishment.
French lawmakers and fashion
industry members signed a non-
binding charter last week on pro-
moting healthier body images.
In 2007, Spain banned from cat-
walks models whose body mass-
to-height ratio is below 18.
Bill author Boyer said such
measures did not go far enough.
Her bill has focused attention
on pro-anorexia Web sites that
give advice on how to eat an apple
a day and nothing else.
world
Bill combats ultra-thin image
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Brazilian model Ana Carolina Reston participates in a fashion showin Belo Horizonte,
Brazil, in April 2005. The French parliaments lower house adopted a groundbreaking bill
Tuesday that would make it illegal for anyone including fashion magazines, advertisers
andWeb sites to publicly incite extreme thinness. Reston, a 21-year-old anorexic model
who weighed only 88 pounds, died Nov. 14, 2006, of generalized infection.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
VIENNA, Austria Oil prices
rose to new heights Tuesday, surg-
ing to almost $114 a barrel after
the U.S. dollar fell and worries
mounted about the global oil sup-
ply.
A report from the International
Energy Agency said Russian oil
production dropped this year for
the first time in a decade. Crude
oil shipments along one U.S. pipe-
line were said to be moving below
capacity. And Italys ENI reported
a 5,000 barrel per day reduction in
production at one of its facilities
in Nigeria.
Light, sweet crude for May deliv-
ery on the New York Mercantile
Exchange rose as high as $113.66
a barrel by afternoon in Europe
before backing off. That was $1.45
above the previous record set last
week.
The contract closed at a record
settlement price of $111.76 a bar-
rel on Monday.
The recent run above $100 a
barrel has been largely attributed
to a steadily depreciating U.S. cur-
rency because a weakening dollar
prompts investors to seek a safe
haven in hard commodities such
as oil and gold.
Weve seen another swing down
in the U.S. dollar so I think we saw
short term traders go back into
oil as a hedge against the falling
dollar, said Mark Pervan, senior
commodity strategist at the ANZ
Bank in Melbourne, Australia.
Stephen Schork, in his Schork
Report, described the rush into
oil on the falling dollar as an auto-
matic reflex.
Traders on the Nymex saw
the dollar take another tumble,
so they did what they have been
conditioned to do when the dollar
falls, i.e. they bought crude oil,
he wrote.
Mondays news from the U.S.
banking company Wachovia
Corp. supported oil prices by
making the U.S. dollar less attrac-
tive, said Victor Shum, an energy
analyst with Purvin & Gertz in
Singapore.
Wachovia, the fourth largest
bank in the U.S., reported a hefty
first-quarter loss and cut its divi-
dend, and said it was forced to
seek a $7 billion cash injection to
make up for a poorly timed expan-
sion of its mortgage business.
Relay helps cancer research
world
U
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Department of Music and Dance presents
STUDENT SENATE one community. many voices.
Paid for by Tickets on sale at the Lied Center, Murphy Hall and SUA box offices.
Call (785) 864-ARTS (2787) for tickets. $10 Public $7 Students and Senior Adults
The
7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 17, 2008
7:30 p.m. Friday, April 18, 2008
Lied Center of Kansas
Guest Choreographers
Karole Armitage and Bill Evans
Guest Artists and Soloists
Tap Soloist Bill Evans
Deanna Doyle Hodges, Beau Hancock and Patrick Suzeau
in a tribute to KU dance legend
Elizabeth Sherbon
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANDREWS AIR FORCE
BASE, Md. Pope Benedict XVI
arrived Tuesday in the United
States to a presidential handshake
and enthusiastic cheering, a warm
welcome that followed the pon-
tiff s candid admission hours ear-
lier that he is deeply ashamed of
the clergy sex abuse scandal that
has rocked the American church.
On his first papal trip to the
U.S., Benedict gave hundreds of
spectators a two-handed wave as
he stepped off a special Alitalia
airliner that brought him from
Rome. Students from a local
Catholic school screamed ecstati-
cally when the saw the pontiff,
who shook hands with President
Bush, first lady Laura Bush and
their daughter, Jenna on the tar-
mac.
The pope and the president
left in a motorcade a few minutes
later.
On the flight to the United
States from Rome, Benedict
addressed the most painful issue
for the Roman Catholic Church
in America clergy sex abuse.
The U.S. church has paid out $2
billion in abuse costs since 1950,
most of that in just the last six
years.
It is a great suffering for the
church in the United States and
for the church in general and
for me personally that this could
happen, Benedict said. It is dif-
ficult for me to understand how it
was possible that priests betray in
this way their mission ... to these
children.
I am deeply ashamed, and we
will do what is possible so this
cannot happen again in the future,
the pope said
on the flight
from Rome to
Washington,
speaking in
English as he
r e s p o n d e d
to questions
s u b m i t t e d
by reporters
ahead of time.
B e n e d i c t
pledged that
p e d o p h i l e s
would not be priests in the
Catholic Church.
We will absolutely exclude
pedophiles from the sacred min-
istry, Benedict said. It is more
important to have good priests
than many priests. We will do
everything possible to heal this
wound.
The popes promise failed
to mollify advocates for abuse
victims, however. They said the
problem is not just molester
priests, but bishops and other
church authorities who have let
errant clergymen continue to
serve even after repeated allega-
tions.
Its easy and tempting to
continually focus on the pedo-
phile priests themselves, said
Peter Isely, a board member of
the Survivors Network of those
Abused by Priests. Its harder but
crucial to focus on the broader
problem complicity in the rest
of the church hierarchy.
Benedicts pilgrimage is the
first trip by a pontiff to the
United States since the case
of a serial molester in Boston
triggered a crisis that spread
throughout the United States and
beyond in 2002. Hundreds of
new accusations many dating
back decades have surfaced
each year since. There were 691
new accusations in 2007 alone,
according to an annual report
from the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops.
As head of the Vatican agency
that enforces adherence to Catholic
doctrine, then-Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger was heavily involved in
gaining Vatican approval for the
reforms U.S. bishops proposed for
the American church. The bishops
have since released several reports
analyzing the scandal and have
pledged that all credibly accused
priests will be pulled from public
ministry.
Pedophilia is absolutely incom-
patible with the priesthood,
Benedict said.
Benedict described his pilgrim-
age as a journey to meet a great
people and a great church. He
spoke about the American model
of religious values within a system
of separation of church and state.
President Bush made the unusu-
al gesture of greeting Benedict at
Andrews Air Force Base the
first time he has welcomed a for-
eign leader there.
The pope said he will discuss
immigration with Bush, including
the difficulties of families who are
separated by immigration.
While the pope and Bush dif-
fer on such major issues on the
Iraq war, capital punishment and
the U.S. embargo against Cuba,
they do find common ground
in opposing abortion, gay mar-
riage and embryonic stem cell
research.
White House press secretary
Dana Perino, asked about the
popes comments regarding the
clergy sex abuse scandal, said she
wouldnt rule
out that the
topic would
come up in
conversation
between the
pope and the
president.
But she
added that I
dont think
its neces-
sarily on the
pres i dent s
top priorities for his agenda in
talking with the pope.
Perino said the two leaders
would likely discuss human rights,
religious tolerance and the fight
against violent extremism.
As for the war in Iraq, Perino
said, Obviously, there were dif-
ferences years back. She down-
played those, emphasizing instead
a strong bond between Bush and
the pope.
Benedict will hear from the
president that America and the
world need to hear his message,
that God is love, that human life is
sacred, that we all must be guided
by common moral law, and that
we have responsibilities to care for
our brothers and sisters in need,
at home and across the world,
Perino said.
NEWS 4A wednesday, april 16, 2008
religion
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Pope Benedict XVI arrives at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Tuesday, on his frst visit to the U.S. as Pope. The Pope addressed the clergy abuse scandal on the fight fromRome to the U.S.
Pope makes frst trip to U.S.
I am deeply ashamed, and we
will do what is possible so this
cannot happen again in the
future.
PoPe benedict XVi
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON A federal
jury convicted a woman Tuesday
of running a prostitution ser-
vice that catered to members of
Washingtons political elite.
Deborah Jeane Palfrey, 52,
sighed as the verdict was read. She
had repeatedly denied the escort
service engaged in prostitution,
saying that if any of the women
engaged in sex acts for money,
they did so without her knowl-
edge.
Palfrey caused a sensation last
year when she announced that to
raise money for her defense, she
i nt e nde d
to sell her
p h o n e
records to
any news
outlet will-
ing to pay.
P a l f r e y
said her
d e f u n c t
bus i ne s s ,
P a m e l a
Martin &
Associates,
was a
legal, high-
end erotic
f a n t a s y
service that serviced elite clients.
She was convicted on all counts
she faced: Money laundering,
using the mail for illegal purposes
and racketeering.
Three of Palfreys clients testi-
fied during the weeklong trial in
U.S. District Court for the District
of Columbia, explaining how they
found the service, how often they
called, what they were hoping for
and whether they got it during
their visits.
When a man agrees to pay
$250 for 90 minutes with a woman,
what do most men expect in that
time? prosecutor Daniel Butler
said during closing arguments
Monday. In that context, its pret-
ty clear. Most men want sex.
But the trial concluded without
revealing many new details about
the service or its clients. Sen.
David Vitter, R-La., was among
possible witnesses, but did not
take the stand.
Vitter has acknowledged being
involved with Palfreys escort ser-
vice. But after issuing brief state-
ments apologizing for a very seri-
ous sin, he has avoided follow-up
questions.
Harlan Ullman, a military
strategist who created the concept
of shock and awe that the United
States used
to open
hostilities
a g a i n s t
Iraq, also
did not
t e s t i f y .
Palfrey says
U l l m a n
was a regu-
lar client;
Ullman has
d e c l i n e d
to discuss
what he
has called
o u t r a -
geous alle-
g a t i o n s .
Randall L. Tobias, who resigned
as a deputy secretary of state after
acknowledging to ABC News that
he used Palfreys service for mas-
sages, also did not testify.
Defense attorney Preston
Burton argued that what went on
during appointments was between
the client and the escort. He com-
pared Palfrey to a taxi dispatcher,
who shouldnt be penalized for
the route the cab driver took.
Palfrey, who faces a maximum
of 55 years in prison, will remain
free pending her sentencing on
July 24.
Prostitution
service caters
to politicians
crime
Federal jury convicts
woman on 3 counts
She (Palfrey) was
convicted on all
counts she faced;
Money launder-
ing, using the
mail for illegal
purposes, and
racketeering.
When a man
agrees to pay
$250 for 90
minutes with a
woman, what do
most men expect
in that time?
daniel butler
Federal prosecutor
news 5A Wednesday, april 16, 2008
Life is calling.
How far
will you go?
Information Session
University of Kansas
Friday, April 18
7-8:30 p.m.
Kansas Union
Big 12 Room
For information contact
campus representative
Heather Sutter
110 Burge Union
785-864-7679
peacecorps@ku.edu
peacecorps.gov
iraq
60 die in car bomb attack
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Women injured in a car bomb attack are brought to a hospital in Baqouba, 60 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of Baghdad, Tuesday. According
to police and hospital ofcials, at least 38 people were killed and 64 wounded in the blast when a car parked in front of a restaurant in downtown
Baqouba exploded, just before noon onTuesday, across the street fromthe central courthouse and other government ofces.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
BAGHDAD Car bombs and
a suicide attacker struck crowd-
ed areas in Baghdad and former
insurgent strongholds to the north
and west of the capital Tuesday,
killing nearly 60 people and break-
ing a recent lull in violence in the
predominantly Sunni areas.
The attacks were a deadly
reminder of the threat posed by
suspected Sunni insurgents even
as clashes between Shiite militia
fighters and U.S.-Iraqi forces con-
tinued elsewhere.
The U.S. military condemned
the bombings and said they
appeared to have been carried out
by al-Qaida in Iraq.
The first blast occurred in
Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of
Baghdad, when a car parked in
front of a restaurant exploded just
before noon across the street from
the central courthouse and other
government offices.
One survivor described a huge
fire that sent black smoke billow-
ing into the sky and left charred
bodies inside their cars.
I was on my way to the govern-
ment office when a big explosion
occurred nearby, said the witness,
who would only identify himself
by his nickname Abu Ali. As I
approached the site, I saw cars on
fire, burned bodies and damaged
shops damaged with shattered
glass everywhere.
At least 40 people were killed
and 70 wounded in the blast,
according to hospital officials, who
spoke on condition of anonymity
because they werent authorized to
release the information.
AP Television News footage
showed many of the bodies cov-
ered in crisp white sheets in the
main hospitals courtyard while
the emergency room inside was
overwhelmed with the wounded.
The U.S. military in northern
Iraq gave a slightly lower toll, say-
ing 35 Iraqi citizens were killed,
including a policeman, and 66
wounded in the attack.
It was the deadliest bombing
in Iraq since March 6 when a
twin bombing killed 68 people
in a crowded shopping district
in the central Baghdad district of
Karradah.
A suicide attacker on a motor-
cycle later drove up to a kebab res-
taurant in Ramadi and detonated
his explosives vest around 12:30
p.m., killing at least 13 people
including three policemen and
wounding 20 other people, police
Capt. Abu Saif al-Anbari said.
Hospital officials said two chil-
dren were among the dead.
Police initially thought a parked
car had exploded in the industrial
area but later determined it was a
suicide attack, al-Anbari said.
Ahmed al-Dulaimi, a 27-year-
old mechanic, was at the restau-
rant when the blast occurred but
escaped injury because he was sit-
ting at a back table. He said his
cousin, who owned the restaurant,
had been killed.
Pieces of flesh flew into the air
and the roof fell over us. I saw the
horrible sight of bodies without
heads or without legs or hands,
he said.
Ramadi, 70 miles west of
Baghdad, is the capital of Anbar
province and has largely been
sealed off by checkpoints.
Like Baqouba, the area has
seen a sharp decline in violence
in recent months as Sunni tribal
leaders have joined forces with
the Americans against al-Qaida
in Iraq.
The U.S. military said overall
attacks in Diyala province have
dropped more than 76 percent
since June 2007.
Although attacks such as
todays event are tragic, it is not
indicative of the overall security
situation in Baqouba, Maj. Mike
Garcia, a spokesman for U.S. forc-
es in Diyala, said in a statement.
A parked car bomb also targeted
a police patrol in central Baghdad,
killing four civilians who were
passing by and wounding 15 other
people, police said.
Elsewhere in northern Iraq,
a double car bombing in Mosul
wounded three Iraqi policemen
and 15 civilians, the U.S. military
said. Mosul is considered one of
the last urban strongholds for al-
Qaida in Iraq and the American
and Iraqi militaries have promised
a security crackdown.
Breeding policy poorly worded
state
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WICHITA A city ordinance
requiring dog breeders to buy an
annual license was so ambigu-
ously written that it could be
interpreted to apply to all owners
whose dogs have puppies.
The city policy said breeders
must buy an $50 annual license to
breed dogs, but it doesnt define
what a breeder is, allowing for
the broad interpretation. Those
who violate the law, which went
into effect in December, face a
$100 fine.
If you got a dog with a litter
of puppies in Wichita, youve just
broken the law, said Hank Price,
a Wichita Kennel Club board
member.
City officials say the rule needs
tweaking and could be sent back
to the City Council for review in
the next few months.
Dennis Graves, the citys ani-
mal services supervisor, said tick-
ets for not having the license have
been written only when people
were caught selling dogs in park-
ing lots the intended target of
the measure. Only a few breeders
have applied for the licenses.
The ordinance also says its
unlawful for anybody to sell or
give away or accept any animal
on property not owned or rented
by the seller or buyer, unless its
at a pet shop, a state-licensed ani-
mal shelter or licensed for breed-
ing or sale.
If you have a litter of pup-
pies and youre going to do any-
thing like give one away, youre
violating the
law, said
Kim Jenning,
who owns
c h a m p i o n
Dal mat i ans.
Its inexpli-
cable to me.
The ordi-
nance was
aimed at
puppy mills
and pit bulls,
said Kay
Johnson, director of the citys
department of environmental
services.
The law may have been
designed to control the breeding
of dangerous dogs and to reduce
the population of unwanted pets,
owners say, but it hurts responsi-
ble dog breeders and wont affect
irresponsible owners who flout
laws anyway.
Any of these broad-brush, all-
inclusive kind of laws and ordi-
nances always punish the respon-
sible pet owners, said Jim Halsig,
owner of Bed and Biscuit Pet
Center, which grooms pets and
sells animal supplies.
The ordinance also requires
places where animals are housed
by licensed breeders to be open
during rea-
s o n a b l e
hours for
inspection by
a health offi-
cer.
Other dog
owners dont
think the city
needs anoth-
er pet ordi-
nance.
I would
love to see
them enforce the laws they have.
Then, when they can show us
thats not working, then I think
you look at new laws, said Treva
Faires, a Wichita Kennel Club
member.
Breeders licenses must be
renewed annually. The penalty for
failing to get a breeders license is
a mandatory court appearance
and fines of $100 for the first
offense and $250 for the second.
Any of these broad-brush,
all-inclusive kind of law and
ordinances always punish the
responsible pet owners.
jim halsig
Owner of Bed and Biscuit Pet Center
STATE
Coal plant supporters
outspending opponents
TOPEKa lobbyists have
reported spending $790,000 in
an ongoing debate about two
coal-fred power plants in south-
west Kansas.
most of the money has been
spent on advertising designed
to sway public opinion.
The campaigns began after
the states top environmental
regulator decided in October to
deny an air-quality permit for
the two plants. sunfower Elec-
tric Power Corp. wants to build
them in Finney County.
Know Your Power, a group
opposed to sunfowers project,
spent nearly $406,000 on adver-
tising last year.
since then, supporters have
outspent opponents by more
than 6-to-1.
a second bill allowing the plants
has gone to gov. Kathleen sebelius.
shes expected to veto it, just as she
rejected a bill last month.
Kansas State student
dies from balcony fall
maNhaTTaN, Kan. a 19-
year-old student at Kansas state
University died after falling from
a balcony at a university apart-
ment building.
University police said joshua
David Walker, a freshman from
johnson, died about 7 a.m.
saturday at Via Christi Regional
medical Center in Wichita.
University police responded
to a call at 1 a.m. saturday that
a student had fallen from a
second-foor balcony at the
apartment building. Walker was
a guest at the apartment; he
lived of campus.
The investigation was con-
tinuing and university police
said no additional details were
being released.
Associated Press
BRVJMBDPN
Always Think Safety First.
call 811 Before You Dig.
Aquila reminds you to call the national Call
Before You Dig line at least two working days before
you plant a tree, build a fence or begin any project
where you might dig into underground utility lines.
This GSFFTFSWJDF will ensure that the location of any
underground lines and facilities is clearly marked.
Dont take chances.
A single call to Kansas DIG SAFE will help you avoid
potential expense and the possibility of serious or
fatal injury. For your own safety, remember to call
before you dig.
Planning those outdoor projects?
Learn Your
Own Way
KU Independent Study
Over 150 KU classes are available
through distance learning.
Enroll and start any time!
785-864-5823
www.ContinuingEd.ku.edu
Check with your academic advisor before enrolling.
080794
entertainment 6a wednesday, april 16, 2008
10 is the easiest day, 0 the
most challenging.
HOROSCOPES
Aries (March21-April 19)
Today is a 7
Its easy to fgure out what needs
to be done. Be quick and win the
game, the prize and well-earned
applause. Leave the competition
in your dust.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7
For a sense of delicious security,
go through comfortable rou-
tines. Include the whole family.
Make plans for the future while
reminiscing about past good
times.
Gemini (May 21-June 21)
Today is a 6
Postpone an outing with friends.
You need to defrost the refrig-
erator or do something else the
general public never needs to
know about. Grab some private
time.
Cancer (June 22-July 22)
Today is a 7
You can provide the information
somebody else is worried about.
You know where to fnd it and
they dont. Ofer your assistance.
Leo(July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7
Your hard work is paying of and
not a moment too soon. The bill
collectors will be delighted and
theres enough left over for food.
Youre doing good!
Virgo(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7
You and your sweetheart have
reason to celebrate. You have
the resources you need. Now
you just have to agree on your
priorities, and go shopping.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7
Find the perfect thing for your
home in your own attic or ga-
rage. Some of the other stuf you
can take to the dump. Create
some space.
Scorpio(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7
The idea is so simple. Why didnt
you think of it before? Its a way
to make your job a lot more fun,
and quality doesnt sufer. Youre
brilliant.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7
Youre getting a boost in your
climb up the ladder to success.
Dont get distracted by the view.
Keep climbing and dont look
down.
Capricorn(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7
Try something a little more
radical than youve ever done
before. Its OK to step outside
your comfort zone. You have
magical powers.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7
Put your fnancial afairs in order
now, while youre in the mood.
The more treasure you can hide
away, the better youll sleep at
night.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March20)
Today is a 7
If you dont know the answer, ask
your friends or an expert. Dont
waste a lot of time trying to fgure
it out without enough informa-
tion.
CHICKEN STRIP
Charlie Hoogner
THE ADVENTURES OF JESUS AND JOE DIMAGGIO
Max Rinkel
ENTERTAINMENT
Cosby records hip-hop album
BY SANDY COHEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES Bill Cosbys
path has taken him from pudding
pops to hip hop.
The 70-year-old has recorded
a hip-hop album set for release
next month. Cosby Narratives
Vol. 1: State of Emergency blends
the comedians concepts and sto-
ries with a hip-hop, pop and jazz
soundtrack.
I do not rap on any of these
things, Cosby told The Associated
Press on Monday. I wouldnt know
how to fix my mouth to say some
of the words.
Cosby said the hip-hop music
he hears is profane and degrad-
ing. His album is the opposite of
what I think is the profanity for
no particular reason, the misogyny
for no particular reason, he said.
It really looks at the frustration
and the anger that a young man
may have.
The album, assembled by
Cosbys longtime musical collabo-
rator Bill Spaceman Patterson,
contains rhymes provided by guest
rappers. The subject matter? The
value of an education. The value
of respecting ones self and ... giv-
ing (listeners) a chance to raise
their self-esteem and confidence,
Cosby said.
Patterson said he was surprised
when Cosby first inquired about
making a rap record until the
comedian revealed he wouldnt be
the one doing the rapping.
People started speculating, is he
going to rap about Jell-O Pudding
Pops or what? Patterson said. But
hes always been involved in music
and he was there for the first gen-
eration of spoken word.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Comedian Bill Cosby recorded a hip-hop CD set for release next month. Cosby Narratives Vol.
1: State of Emergencyblends the comedians concepts and stories with a hip-hop, pop and jazz
soundtrack.
TEST PREPARATION
www.ContinuingEd.ku.edu (keyword: testprep) 785-864-5823
Register early! Save $100!
Spring and summer test
preparation classes
now enrolling.
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Roommate needed for 3BR, 2BA. town-
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DW, freplace, ect. Hawthorn Town-
homes. Contact Amanda @
jhawk626@ku.edu hawkchalk.com/1304
2-3 roommates to share 4 BR 2 BA town-
home close to KU & bus system. $450/mo
includes util. W/D, DW, CA, patio & 2 car
garage. 816-807-9493 or 785-979-4740.
2BR 1BA Available for June/July. 950
Monterwey way. $500/mo + utilities. W/D
on site, off-street parking. Call 727-8888.
3BR 2Bath Near Campus $990, great
parking, pets ok. Call: (620) 408-6766 or
(214) 704-9240 hawkchalk.com/1275
5 BEDROOM, 2 BATH NEAR MASS ST.
AND CAMPUS! INCLUDES SPACIOUS
PORCH, KITCHEN AND LIVING
ROOMS. PARKING IS AVAILABLE IN
FRONT AND BACK.CALL (913)424-
9650 hawkchalk.com/1273
Female roommate needed for summer
to rent 1 BR in a 2BR/2BA apartment at
Parkway Commons. Moving dates fexi-
ble. $405 rent. Must be dog friendly. Call
Heidi 316-519-9823 hawkchalk.
com/1323
FEMALE SUBLEASER!! Mstr bdrm w/
bath available end of May-Aug in a 4
bdrm house with washer/dryer. Rent $325
negotiable. Call Angela 913-963-6599
hawkchalk.com/1305
Fully Furnished bed/bath in 4x4 apt. Rent:
$375/month, utilities paid. May 14-July31.
w/d in apt, covered parking hawkchalk.-
com/1333
1 BR Apt. avail Apr. 20th $599/mo Cam-
pus Court at Naismith, brand new hard-
wood foors and appliances, W/D, 785-
713-1289, jprebyl@ku.edu hawkchalk.-
com/1310
2 bedrooms for rent in house walking dis
tance to campus. Call for more details.
Emily 913-669-9161
hawkchalk.com/1338
$400 2BR/1BA, ALL UTILS PD!
Summer sublet 5/10 -8/15. Furnished,ap-
pliances,C/A, W/D,freplace, deck. 8 mi. N
of campus. jimwit@gmail.com hawkchalk.-
com/1301
ROOMMATE/SUBLEASE
ROOMMATE/SUBLEASE
Available for June, cute 1BR apartment
in renovated older house, 9th Missis-
sippi, wood foors, D/W, cats ok,
$450/mo, call Jim & Lois 785-841-1074
Beautiful 2, 3 & 4 BR homes.
Available immediately. We love pets.
Call for details. 816-729-7513
Enjoy a panoramic view of Lawrence from
your well maintained, spacious, 3 bed-
room and 2 bath condo. Rent is only
$885.00 with water and trash paid. Featur-
ing a fully equipped kitchen, washer/dryer,
on the KU bus route, or enjoy a short 5
minute walk to class or downtown. For a
showing call 842-6264 or 865-8741
evenings & weekends.
Fabulous 4BR 2BA house. Just south of
campus. Double drive-way. Must see!
W/D. $1200/mo. 785-760-0144
Female Roomates needed to share 3BR
2BA condo with W/D near campus.
$290/mo. +1/3 util. Avail June 1 or Aug 1.
Please call 550-4544.
House for rent located 2 blocks from 6th
Street Hy-Vee. 5 bedrooms and 2 baths.
$1750/ month! If interested call Meg:
785.252.7566 hawkchalk.com/1318
Nice 3 BR or 4 BR townhomes each w 2
BA and W/D. Only $230-300/person. Call
Sharron 550-5979 after 5pm or week-
ends.
Nicely furnished room in old west-
Lawrence. Lots of windows on south side,
private bath, kitchen and laundry privi-
leges, 4 blocks from downtown and walk-
ing distance to KU. $350 and partial utili-
ties. Avail. May 1st. 424-0767 or
331-2114
Perfect for college students! 2BR in 4-
plex. 928 Alabama. Close to stadium.
W/D included. $500/mo. Call Edie 842-
1822
Rooms for responsible fem, possible rent
reduction for labor. Near KU. Also 3 BR
house; Residencial offce space
841-6254
Seniors and grads: 1 BR apts close to KU
& downtown. Upstairs or down, tile, car-
pet, or hrdwd, $410-425/mo+util. No smok-
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Call Big Blue Property 785-842-3175
Small 2BR apt. in renovated older
house avail. August, D/W, off-street
parking, 9th and Mississippi, cats ok,
$580/mo, call Jim & Lois 785-841-1074
Studio available August 1st at 1316 Iowa.
No pets. $450/mo. Please call 785-749-
6084. eresrental.com
3BR, 1 & 1/2 BA, renovated older
house, avail. August, New Hampshire
and 15th, wood foors, W/D, D/W, C/A,
fenced yard, very tiny dog ok,
$1125/mo, call Jim & Lois
785-841-1074
Avail. August nice 2BR apt. in reno-
vated older house, 14th and Vermont,
C/A, D/W, W/D, fenced yard, dog 2 yrs
old under 15 pounds ok, $775/mo, call
Jim & Lois 785-841-1074
Avail. August, Studio & 1BR apts. in
cute old houses, close to KU, separate
utilities, $399/mo, cats ok, Call Jim &
Lois 785-841-1074
FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT
sports 7b wednesday, april 16, 2008
ASSOCIATED PRESS
For someone whos on top of
the world, Trevor Immelman has
spent a lot of time looking up the
last few days.
One day after becoming the
Masters champion, Immelman
was courtside at Madison Square
Garden for the Boston Celtics 99-93
victory over the New York Knicks.
He was invited to the Celtics locker
room at halftime by coach Doc
Rivers, who wanted his team to
shake hands with a champion.
There might have been a train-
er that was shorter than me, said
Immelman, who stands 5-foot-9
with the help of golf spikes. But
Im standing next to Paul Pierce and
Kevin Garnett, and Im belt-high.
Its pretty incredible that human
beings are that damn big.
Tuesday morning, he was taken
by limousine to the Empire State
Building for a photo shoot atop the
tallest building in Manhattan.
There also were TV and radio
interviews on the agenda, including
his reading of a Top 10 list on the
Late Show with David Letterman
and an appearance on Live with
Regis and Kelly.
The highlight, though, might
have been halftime.
Born and raised in South Africa,
he now lives in Orlando, Fla., and
loves the NBA. Immelman is a reg-
ular at Orlando Magic games. Even
so, he found it surreal to be among
giants in green jerseys, listening
to them praise a golfer in a green
jacket.
They were telling me they were
in Atlanta and watched the end
of the tournament, and that they
were proud of me, Immelman said.
Its kind of weird to see superstars
congratulate me on something Ive
done.
There has been a lack of sleep,
and little time for all this to sink
in.
These are things that dont hap-
pen to ordinary people, Immelman
said.
All because he did something
extraordinary.
Not since Seve Ballesteros in
1980 had a player put his name
atop the leaderboard after the first
round and stay there over four
days at Augusta National, a course
where Immelman correctly noted
that theres a disaster around every
corner. He became the first South
African to win the Masters since
Gary Player, his idol and inspira-
tion, 30 years earlier.
And he joined Tiger Woods,
Jim Furyk, David Duval and Vijay
Singh as the players to win a major
by three shots in the last 10 years.
Thats pretty hefty company,
Immelman said. It will take some
time before that sinks in.
Until his Masters victory,
Immelman said his greatest golfing
achievement had been winning the
Nedbank Challenge four months
ago in South Africa.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
PHOENIX 112,
GOLDEN STATE 116
No stunning upsets on the hori-
zon for the Golden State Warriors.
They wont even be in the playoffs
this spring.
A year after shocking Western
Conference leader Dallas in the
first round of the playoffs, the
Warriors were eliminated from
contention 122-116 by Phoenix on
Monday night. The loss clinched
the eighth spot for Denver.
We gave our all, we played
hard to the end, guard Monta
Ellis said. I mean, the better team
won. Thats it.
Amare Stoudemire scored 11 of
his 28 points in the fourth quarter
and Phoenix recovered after blow-
ing a 17-point lead.
Steve Nash nearly had a triple-
double with 13 points, 14 assists
and nine rebounds as the Suns
remained in the midst of a scram-
ble for playoff positioning and
possible home-court advantage in
the first round.
Theres a lot of woulda, coulda,
shoulda, Nash said, but overall
with all things that have gone on
this year, weve put ourselves in a
good position. If we can win the
last game, we could creep into the
top four there. That would be nice,
but either way I think our team is
still getting better, and we can just
keep improving throughout the
playoffs.
UTAH 105, HOUSTON 96
At Salt Lake City, Carlos Boozer
had 21 points and 11 rebounds,
pulling the Jazz even with the
Rockets in the muddled Western
Conference standings with one
game to go.
Both teams are 54-27, but by
winning two of three against the
Rockets, the Jazz would hold
home-court advantage if they
still have identical records after
Wednesday and meet in the open-
ing round of the playoffs.
Mehmet Okur added 12 points
and 12 rebounds for the Jazz, who
won for the sixth time in seven
games and finished their home
schedule 37-4.
SAN ANTONIO 101,
SACRAMENTO 98
At Sacramento, Calif., Tony
Parker tied his season high with
32 points and added 11 assists for
San Antonio. The victory, coupled
with Houstons loss, put the Spurs
in position to clinch third place
in the conference for a second
straight season. A year ago, they
defeated Cleveland in the NBA
finals.
John Salmons led the Kings
with 29 points, Spencer Hawes
had 17, Beno Udrih scored 16 and
Garcia added 15.
Wizards 117, Pacers 110
At Washington, coach Eddie
Jordan went to his bench early
and often, getting 31 points from
Roger Mason, 14 from rookie Nick
Young and little resistance from
the Pacers defense as Indiana was
eliminated from playoff conten-
tion. Atlanta got the eighth spot
in the East.
The Wizards, who have won
five of six, entered the game with a
chance to gain home-court advan-
tage in their upcoming first-round
playoff series against Cleveland.
CLEVELAND 91,
PHILADELPHIA 90
At Philadelphia, Devin Brown
made two free throws with 0.2
seconds left after Philadelphia
was brought back from the locker
room. The Sixers appeared to have
won after Lou Williams hit a fade-
away jumper with 5.1 seconds left,
his second go-ahead basket in the
final minute. Instead, Brown was
fouled by Samuel Dalembert with
only a couple of ticks left.
The Sixers thought the game
was over and ran off the court,
while the refs huddled at midcourt
to look at the replay. The Cavaliers
stayed on the bench. After the play
was reviewed for a few minutes,
Dalembert was hit with his sixth
foul. The Sixers had to come back
and watch Brown stun them for
the controversial win.
Sixers coach Maurice Cheeks
argued with the refs and guard
Andre Miller punted the ball in
frustration.
LeBron James scored 27 points,
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 22 and
the Cavaliers clinched home-court
advantage in the first round of the
playoffs against Washington.
CHICAGO 151,
MILWAUKEE 135
At Milwaukee, Luol Deng
scored 32 points on 15-for-20
shooting and Ben Gordon added
29 points.
The Bulls also got 22 points
and 15 assists from Chris Duhon,
and three other players finished in
double digits as Chicago fell five
points short of the franchise record
set in 1990. The Bulls shot 67 per-
cent from the field, just off a fran-
chise high set in 1981. Milwaukee
lost its seventh straight. The lone
bright spot for the Bucks was
rookie Ramon Sessions, who set
a franchise record with 24 assists.
Sessions also scored 20 points
the first 20-20 with points and
assists in franchise history.
BOSTON 99,
NEW YORK 93
At New York, Rajon Rondo had
23 points and 10 rebounds for
Boston, which improved to 65-16
despite giving Kevin Garnett, Paul
Pierce and Ray Allen the night off.
Sam Cassell added 22 points for
the Celtics.
Nate Robinson scored 26 points,
and David Lee had 12 points and
16 rebounds for the Knicks, who
fell to 23-58 and need a win in
their season finale at Indiana to
avoid tying the franchise record
for losses, last matched two years
ago during Larry Browns lone
season.
TORONTO 91, MIAMI 75
At Toronto, Rasho Nesterovic
scored 20 points, while Chris
Bosh had 15 for the Raptors, who
locked up the sixth seed in the
Eastern Conference and a first-
round matchup with Orlando.
Nesterovic was 10-for-19 from
the field, scoring double figures
for the 17th consecutive game.
Daequan Cook had 22 points
for the Heat, who lost for the 21st
time in their past 24 games.
PGA
Immelman enjoys
life afer the Masters
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Trevor Immelman. left, of South Africa, who won the 2008 Masters golf tournament,
sits with his wife Carmenita as the NewYork Knicks and Boston Celtics warmup before their
basketball game Monday at Madison Square Garden in NewYork.
NBA
Regular season comes to a close
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Phoenix Suns Boris Diaw(3), of France, defends Golden State Warriors Monta Ellis (8) in
the third quarter of an NBA basketball game Monday in Phoenix. The Suns won 122-116.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK Rachel
Robinson walked past cheering
construction workers and into the
Jackie Robinson Rotunda for the
first time, stood on a balcony above
the 160-foot wide floor and was
awed as she gazed at the 70-foot
high arches.
Its like walking into a cathedral
in a way, she said. I love St. Peters
in Rome, but
I dont know
if I can com-
pare this to St.
Peters.
On the 61st
a n n i v e r s a r y
of the day her
husband broke
major league
b a s e b a l l s
color barrier,
more than 330
players, man-
agers and coaches including
nine entire teams wore Jackie
Robinsons No. 42 to celebrate
the Hall of Famers accomplish-
ments. The center of the celebra-
tion was at Citi Field, the New
York Mets $800 million ballpark
under construction adjacent to
Shea Stadium.
The Mets unveiled designs for
the rotunda, which will contain
eight huge pictures of Robinson
and have an 8-foot statue of his
number in Dodger blue. It will be
the central entrance for the ball-
park, which opens in 2009, and the
Mets estimate 30,000 fans per game
will pass through.
People will say: Ill meet you
at 42. Everybody will know where
that is, Mets owner Fred Wilpon
said, lovingly putting his hand on
the back of Rachel Robinson, still
spry at age 85.
But even as her husbands legacy
was being memorialized in stone,
brick and terrazzo, a study was
released that said blacks made up
only 8.2 percent of major league
players last year, down from 8.4 per-
cent in 2006 and the lowest level in
more than two decades. The figure
was 19 percent as recently as 1995
according to Richard Lapchick of
the University of Central Floridas
Institute for Diversity and Ethics
in Sports.
Im very disappointed by that
fact, Robinson said. Competition
from other sports is certainly a big
factor but there
are many fac-
tors. Weve got
to work on it
in terms of get-
ting younger
children play-
ing, into the
game, and get-
ting communi-
ties behind the
programs.
J a c k i e
R o b i n s o n
broke the color barrier when he
played for the Brooklyn Dodgers
for the first time on April 15,
1947. His number was retired for
all major league teams during cer-
emonies at Shea Stadium attended
by President Clinton on the 50th
anni vers ar y.
Yankees reliev-
er Mariano
Rivera is the
only player
r e m a i n i n g
from then who
still wears No.
42 throughout
the season.
Nine Jackie
R o b i n s o n
scholars read
values that
defined the player during a news
conference at Shea Stadium before
people moved over to the new ball-
park. The Robinson Rotunda will
have those values engraved into its
floor and etched into its archways:
Courage. Excellence. Persistence.
Justice. Teamwork. Commitment.
Citizenship. Determination.
Integrity.
My father did not write them
down, but very much he lived these
values, said Sharon Robinson,
Jackies daughter.
The rotunda will be open to
tours by
appoi nt ment
on days when
the team isnt
playing, and
Wilpon said
he expected
every school-
child in New
York to visit,
some more
than once. He
dreamed of
the rotunda as
an homage a much larger one
to the rotunda at Ebbets Field
in Brooklyn, where he attended
games as a child.
That rotunda was 80-feet wide
and 27-feet high, with a brass chan-
delier that had 12 arms resem-
bling bats, and bulbs resembling
balls. To get the right material for
the floor, Wilpon contacted Sandy
Koufax, his old teammate from
Lafayette High School. All Koufax
remembered was the rotunda was
dirty. At a Police Athletic League
dinner, former Dodgers pitcher
Ralph Branca told Wilpon it was
terrazzo.
This is an overwhelming
experience, Robinson said. At
my stage of life, youre looking
for permanence, youre looking for
things that are going to shore up
the future. So many times develop-
ments dont last, progress doesnt
last. What the rotunda means to
me is we have evidence of the prog-
ress weve made in the past.
She stood next to Wilpon, a
longtime family friend. When he
was about 16, he was a Dodgers
batting practice pitcher and became
a baby sitter for the Robinsons. Hes
long thought about creating this
tribute.
When fans and families and
children walk through that rotun-
da, Robinson said, I hope theyre
going to reflect on not just what
they see that Jackie Robinson
accomplished, but also think about
themselves and say, What am I
doing? How am I running my life?
Who am I affecting? What am I
doing in my community? I think
they ask the question and ponder
on that. And if people begin to
reflect on that, they might want to
join the struggle.
sports 8B Wednesday, april 16, 2008
MLB
Teams commemorate Jackie Robinson
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oakland Athletics players stand on the feld wearing the number 42 in tribute to hall-of-famer Jackie Robinson before a baseball game against
the Chicago White Sox in Chicago, Tuesday. The entire Athletics teamwore number 42 for Tuesdays game.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
This is an April 18, 1948, portrait of Brooklyn Dodgers baseball player Jackie Robinson. Baseball
celebrates Jackie Robinson Day Tuesday, marking the 61st anniversary of the end of the games
racial barrier.
People will say: Ill meet you at
42. Everybody will know where
that is.
Fred wilpon
new York Mets owner
Jackie Robinson broke the color
barrier when he played for the
Brooklyn Dodgers for the frst
time on April 15, 1947.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. D.J.
Williams is used to moving around
the Denver
Broncos defense,
but he hopes
this latest move
sticks.
Williams has
played all three
linebacker posi-
tions in his four-
year career, and
for 2008 he is
going from mid-
dle linebacker
back to the weak
side, a position he played through
college and in his rookie year of
2004.
I enjoyed playing (middle) last
year, I had fun, he said. I thought
I caught on well at the end, but the
team decided to move me back
to (weak side), so thats what Im
doing.
Switching positions has been an
every year occurrence for Williams,
but it hasnt been easy.
I havent been happy about the
movement, but I like the organiza-
tion, I like the city, Williams said
Tuesday at the Broncos practice
facility. I understand why I had
to move; it made the team better.
Sometimes its always not best for
you.
Williams size hes listed at
6-foot-1, 242 pounds made
him a versatile guy in the Denver
defense.
I already feel like a little knock-
around guy, like hey, we can put
him here, we can throw him there,
he said. Just as long as I was suc-
cessful at each position.
Williams moved to strong-side
linebacker his second year, back to
weak side in his third year and last
year he moved to the middle. He
said his best position is weak side,
but by moving around he has made
himself a valuable player.
If I would have played (weak
side) every year here, this would be
my ninth year playing (it) because
I played it all through college,
he said. A
lot of things
come second
nature. But
at the same
time, the fact
that I changed
a lot of posi-
tions, it puts
your value
up. Youre a
guy who can
be put any-
where.
Despite a strong statistical year
in 2007, Williams feels hes better at
weak side linebacker than at middle
linebacker. Williams was second in
the NFL in tackles with 170, 121
unassisted. He easily surpassed his
previous high of 114, 82 unassisted,
that he reached as a rookie.
Williams best game came
at Oakland on Dec. 6 when he
had 16 tackles, 12 unassisted, and
recovered a fumble. In two games
against the Raiders, Williams had
29 tackles.
sports 9b wednesday, april 16, 2008
college basketball
Former KU player to coach at USF
BY JOSH DUBOW
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO San
Francisco lured former NBA play-
er Rex Walters away from Florida
Atlantic to take over its struggling
basketball program.
Walters, who had a 31-33 record
in two seasons for the Owls, was
formally introduced at a news con-
ference Monday.
The University of San Francisco
is a national name and we need to
be a national basketball program,
Walters said. The challenge of that
really excited me.
Walters takes over for Jessie
Evans, who was forced to take a
leave of absence in the middle of
last season and then was fired last
month. Eddie Sutton took over the
program on an interim basis for the
remainder of the season as the Dons
finished 10-21 in their third straight
losing season.
USF has struggled in recent
years to compete with West Coast
Conference power Gonzaga, and
has also fallen behind Saint Marys,
San Diego and Santa Clara in recent
years in the conference.
Walters said his goal is to hang
banners at a school that won
NCAA titles in 1955 and 56 with
Bill Russell but has not been to the
NCAA tournament since 1998.
Theres something special here.
Theres something special about the
city, Walters said. I told the guys
they will all come in with a blank
slate. I dont worry so much about
what happened in the past. Im here
to talk about USF basketball today
and in the future.
Walters inherits a roster led by
Dior Lowhorn, who was No. 1 in
the WCC in scoring at 20.5 points
per game last season.
Walters will be the third new
coach in the eight-team WCC, join-
ing Tom Asbury at Pepperdine and
Bill Bayno at Loyola Marymount.
Walters spent one year as an
assistant at Florida Atlantic before
taking over the program when
Matt Doherty left to coach SMU.
The Owls went 16-15 in Walters
first season, before falling to 15-
18 this season. Walters previously
spent two years as an assistant at
Valparaiso.
Walters began his college career
at Northwestern. He transferred to
Kansas and played his final two col-
lege seasons under Roy Williams.
Walters averaged 15.6 points per
game with the Jayhawks, helping
the team reach the Final Four in
1993.
Walters said he wouldnt be
where he was if not for the time
he spent with Williams. He also
thanked some of his NBA coaches,
Chuck Daly, Larry Brown and Pat
Riley, for helping his progress.
Walters was selected 16th overall
by New Jersey in the 1993 NBA
draft and played seven seasons for
the Nets, Philadelphia and Miami.
He averaged 4.6 points per game in
his career.
ASSociAted PreSS
Former NBA player and Florida Atlantic coach rex Walters holds up a jersey with University of San Francisco Athletic Director Debra Gore-
Mann. Gore-Mann introducedWalters as the newSan Francisco mens basketball coach at a news conference in San Francisco Monday.
BY KAREN MATTHEWS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK A construction
workers bid to curse the New York
Yankees by planting a Boston Red
Sox jersey in their new stadium
was foiled Sunday when the home
team removed the offending shirt
from its burial spot.
After locating the shirt in a
service corridor behind what will
be a restaurant in the new Yankee
Stadium, construction workers
jackhammered through the con-
crete Sunday and pulled it out.
The team said it learned that a
Sox-rooting construction worker
had buried a shirt in the new
Bronx stadium, which will open
next year across the street from
the current ballpark, from a report
in the New York Post on Friday.
Yankees President Randy
Levine said team officials at first
considered leaving the shirt there.
The first thought was, you
know, its never a good thing to be
buried in cement when youre in
New York, Levine said. But then
we decided, why reward some-
body who had really bad motives
and was trying to do a really bad
thing?
On Saturday, construction
workers who knew the employee,
Gino Castignoli, phoned in tips
about the shirts location.
We had anonymous people
come tell us where it was, and we
were able to find it, said Frank
Gramarossa, a project executive
with Turner Construction, the
general contractor on the site.
It took about five hours of drill-
ing Saturday to locate the shirt
under 2 feet of concrete, he said.
On Sunday, Levine and
Yankees CEO Lonn Trost watched
as Gramarossa and foreman Rich
Corrado finished the job and
pulled the shirt from the rubble.
In shreds from the jackham-
mers, the shirt still bore the letters
Red Sox on the front. It was a
David Ortiz jersey, No. 34.
Trost said the Yankees had dis-
cussed possible criminal charges
against Castignoli with the dis-
trict attorneys office.
We will take appropriate
action since fortunately we do
know the name of the individual,
he said.
mlb
Worker attempts to curse
Yankee stadium with jersey
ASSociAted PreSS
Frank Gramarossa, project executive for the newYankee Stadium, removes
a Boston Red Sox jersey with the name of player David Ortiz fromthe ground at the
newYankee Stadiumin NewYork, Sunday.
Broncos move Williams again
I already feel like a knock-
around guy, like hey, we can put
him here, we can throw him
there.
D.J. Williams
Denver Broncos linebacker
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Department of Music and Dance presents
STUDENT SENATE
one community. many voices.
Paid for by
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center, Murphy Hall and SUA box offices.
Call (785) 864-ARTS (2787) for tickets.
$10 Public, $7 Students and Senior Adults
7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 17, 2008
7:30 p.m. Friday, April 18, 2008
Lied Center of Kansas
Guest Choreographers
Karole Armitage and Bill Evans
Guest Artists and Soloists
Tap Soloist Bill Evans, Deanna Doyle Hodges,
Beau Hancock and Patrick Suzeau
in a tribute to KU dance legend
Elizabeth Sherbon
9th & Iowa Sun-Thurs 11am-1a Fri-Sat 11am-3am
Call Us! 841-8002
USE KU CUISINE CASH
$2.
00
off
Visit Us! kudominos.com
your next order when using KU Cuisine Cash
*Not Valid with any other offer. Minimum delivery $8 expires 6/1/08
Before it expires in May!
sports 10B Wednesday, april 16, 2008
baseball
Team defeats Baker, loses pitcher
Jon Goering/KANSAN
The Kansas bench comes out to greet outfelder Brian Heere after he scored a run in the frst inning of the game. The Hawks jumped on the Wildcats early, scoring two runs in the bottomof the
frst inning.
Jon Goering/KANSAN
Senior shortstop Erik Morrison tries to get a tag down on a Baker baserunner at second base early inTuesdays game. Morrison fnished the game with one run and one RBI.
KANSAS 11, Baker 6
Jon Goering/KANSAN
Senior catcher Ryne Price leaps into a head-frst slide at second base duringTuesdays game
against Baker at Hoglund Ballpark. Price hit 3-for-3 in the game, with three RBIs and a stolen
base.
Jon Goering/KANSAN
Senior catcher Joe Souters fst-bumps frstbase coach Kevin Frady after hitting in two runs
during the third inning. The two runs put the Hawks up 4-0
Jon Goering/KANSAN
Senior outfelder John Allman slides to get around a tag at home plate. The Hawks improved to 23-16 overall with the victory.
Jon Goering/KANSAN
Sophomore second baseman Robby Price dives back to frst to easily beat a throw-over during the game. Price went 1-for-5 during the game,
recording one run and one RBI.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Baker 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 6 9 0
Kansas 2 0 2 4 1 0 0 2 X 11 13 2
pitching staff woes
The Jayhawks announced
another blow to the pitching
staf Tuesday night. Sophomore
left-handed pitcher Wally Marciel
will miss the rest of the season
with a torn ligament in his pitch-
ing elbow.
Im confdent that the sur-
gery will be a complete success
and that Wally will make a 100
percent recovery, coach Ritch
Price said in a press release Tues-
day. Hes going to receive the
best medical care in the country.
This is the second injury to
a pitcher this season, after the
Jayhawks lost junior pitcher
Andy Marks to a continuance of a
shoulder injury.
I have incredible respect
for both young men, who have
worked incredibly hard for us,
Price said in the release. The
most important thing is that we
do what is in the best interest for
both players.
Mo. state up next on
25-cent hot dog day
The Jayhawks will be hosting
Missouri State Wednesday at 6
p.m. and will be featuring a fan
favorite. For those students on
a tight budget, Kansas will be
holding 25-cent hotdog night.
First of all, 25-cent hotdog
night brings out fans that are
normally not baseball fans, said
Matt Baty, baseball marketing
coordinator. We hope that we
can attract some new people and
hopefully in the end gain some
new Kansas baseball fans.
Tyler Passmore
baseball notebook