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.--------------- ----------------- , , . Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982 Governlllen t confirllls recesston extstence WASIIIN<ITON (AP) The confirming a deep ren·ssion that has hlighted produc· tion and tossed workers off jobs, said ycsterday that the economy fell at thc t·nd of 19H I faste .r than at any time since a record dcdine in the spring of 1980. Administration officials, conced· ing that things will get worse before they gt·t better, renewed their blame of forml.'r President Carter for the ri.'CI.'ssion that simmered through last summer before it hit hard as President Reagan finished his first year in otlke. With consumer sales still sluggish and factories cutting output, new layoffs will likely push unemploy· ment above December's 8.9 percent rate before recovery begins in the spring, the officials said. policymakers' earlier failure to come to grips with deeply em- bedded inflation." Disagreeing, Democratic Rep. Henry Reuss, chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, said, "The sorry state of the economy is the direct result of President Reagan's program of huge tax cuts for the af. fluent, sharp increases in <,lefense spending leading to gaping deficits, and the tight monetary policies of the Federal Reserve, carried out at the administration's behest." The new report said "real," or inflation-adjusted, GNP rose 1.9 per- cent for all of 1981, mostly because of the robust 8.6 percent growth at an annual rate in the first quarter, as Carter was leaving office and the Reagan administration was taking charge. The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that the inflation-adjusted gross national product - the broadest measure of economic activity - dropped at an annual rate of 5.2 percent in the fouth quarter of 1981. Real GNP declined 0.2 percent in 1980. Gross national product is the retail value of all goods and services produced by the nation's economy. University Provost Timothy O'Meara (right) answers questions at the Senate meeting last night in the Center for Continuing Educa· tion. (photo by Tonia Hap) That was the sharpest drop since the record 9.9 percent annual rate in the spring quarter of the \980 reces· sion. Profs Goulet, Norling conduct nuclear panel Trl.'asury Sn·rl.'tary Donald T. Rt·gan said thl.' I.'C<>nomy will likely drop at an annual rate of up to 2 per· n·nt in the current quarter, but he said thl.' administration is not to blaml.'. "We inht·ritl.'d this mess," Regan said in rl.'marks prl.'pared for a group of administration appointees Wed· nl.'sday. "Those who blame Reaganomics for the current slump must bdit·vc in rl.'troactive causa- tion." lie and oOlt·rs in th administration say their push for the tight money policy by thl.' fl.'deral Rl.'serve Board - which many private analysts say was a main cause of the rl.'cession - was necessary to fight inflation. And Deputy Comml'fCI.' Senetary Joseph Wright Jr. assertt·d that "this rt·cession stt·mmed from By JIM McCLURE Staff Reporter Professors Denis Goulet and Ber· nard Norling presented views for and against nuclear arms in a panel discussion held last evening in LaFortune Student Center. "Running after more weapons has not in fact creatt:d more security," Goulet said in his opening remarks. Norling later stated that building is a symptom, not a cause of the problem." Each speaker made an opening statement of approximately 25 minutes before the floor was opened to questions from the audience which overtlowed the small Social Concerns Alcove in Lafortune. In his opening remarks, <ioulet stated that economic, political, and social security arc as important as military defense concerns. "Securiity is a holistic thing--it can- not be reduced to one dimension." Goulet, William and Dorothy O'Neill Professor of Education for Justice, took the position that the nuclear arms race is self-defeating because it promotes fear among citizens concerned about an arms buildup and also leads to a lack of trust in the government. Goulet stressed that he was advocating "not unilateral disarma- ment but a meaningful first step by the United States to break the log· jam" of the nuclear arms race. Goulet said this "first step" would have to be on a level with Anwar Sadat's initial overture toward a Middle East peace. Norling prefaced his opening U.S. effort Housewife wants 'Seven 'freed By MARIE PRAT Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala. ( AP)- She starts the day like most any housewife, getting the children up. fed and off to sd10ol. Tht·n jant· Drake sets to work trying to free the "Siht·rian Seven" from the Soviet Union. "It's more than an eight-hour-a-day job," says Mrs. Drake, a mother of two who has been at it for thrt·e and a half years. Seven Pentacostals - members of a fundamentalist Christian sect - hurst into the American Embassy in .\loscow on Junt· 27. 197H, seeking help in gaining exit visas. They haVl· remained tht·re ever since - nearly lilllr years in a I hy·20-Iil0t room in the embassy's TH URSDA hasemt·nt. And Drake has not thought of them. She organized the Society of Americans for Vashchenko Emigration, or SAVE, with a goal of getting the families of Pyotr Vashchenko and Maria Chmyk· halov out of Moscow and into American homes. The seven - Vashchenko, his wife and three daughters and Mrs. Chmykhalov and her teenage son - say they have been persecuted because oftheir religion. Mrs. Vashchenko was imprisoned during the 1960s af ter she tlrst made contact with U.S. diplomats in an ef. fort to emigrate. One of her sons, Alexander, was placed in a Siberian labor camp. The Soviets insist that the seven have to return to their homes in Chernogorsk in Siberia before their case will be considen:d. The Pentecostals say they do not trust the Soviet government, and refuse to leave. The U.S. embassy has said it will not force them out. Mrs. Drake's work has taken her to Washngton, Mos· cow. Bonn and EaM Berlin. put her picture on the cover of a national Sunday magazine and placed her in contact with diplomats and political leaders. She visited the Soviet Embassy in Washington in 1979 and 1980, including one trip with Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore. She said it was after one of those visits that Alexander Vashchenko, under pressure from Soviet au- thorities to disown his parents, was released from the labor camp. Last week former President Carter joined her in encouraging the seven not to lose hope. Mrs. Drake said her family supports her crusade, with her husband Tony, a veterinarian, paying as much as see HOUSEWIFE, page 4 remarks by saying "It would have been better for the human race if nuclear energy had never been in- vented." He cited the problems and mismanagement that inevitably oc· cur where human beings are in· volved. He added, however, "it's here, and it's not going to go away." The hiswry professor then gave many examples through the ages where attempts at disarmament were ignored and actual treaties vi- olated. He was dearly skeptical of the efft:ctiveness of nuclear disarm a- ment. Norling listed what hi.' felt were two positive consequences of nuclear arms as deterrents. "There has been no major war for 3 7 years," and added that "when tht· weapons art.' city-busting nuckar weapons governmemts give and take more from each other." Norling expressed hope for the future that some social or scientific breakthrough would eliminate nuclear weapons and the problems that he make them a necessary. Faculty discusses research, student life By MARK ROLFES Staff Reporter Problems in faculty research and aspects of student life were dis- cussed at last night's meeting of the Faculty Senate. Improving student life neces· sitates an increase in social space, according to Provost Timothy O'Meara, chairman of the meeting. The three alternatives dis(.·ussed were: building new dorms or townhouses without increasing the student body in order to increase so· cia! space in overcrowded dorms; creating small social centers for stu· dents; or building one large student center. A large student center, it was noted, would have to have sufficient facilities to ensure its use by StU· dents. One faculty member, however, expressed doubt that a new student center would reduce the drinking problem on campus. Also noted were the problems women have choosing between a career and a family. O'Meara stated that this was a prevalent problem in our society as a whole, not uniquely one at Notre Dame. Faculty research was a subject dis· cussed at length. Many faculty mem- bers three classes and feel tht:y can not devotl' enough time to rescar(.·h and still be able to prepare well for their classes. O'Meara recognized this problem, and expounded on University policy on research. All fa(.·ulty members at Notre Dame both teach and research. This is to preserve what o:Meara calls a "single class faculty." If some teachers were exclusively teachers and others exclusively researchers as is the case at other universities, the teaching faculty would most likely be looked down upon as "second class." The llnivcr· sity, however, believes that an l'm· phasis must he placed on undergraduate and graduate educa- tion. Another problem with research is lack of funding. Notre Dame has received grants from the federal government, such as for the Radia· tion Lab and other projects in physics and chemistry. Research in the arts, however, has been lacking in funds. Federal spending cuts will reduce this amount even more. O'Meara said it would be "unrealistic to expect the University to pick up the tab due to the large amounts of money involved." see FACULTY, page 4
12

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Page 1: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

.--------------- -~ -----------------

, , . Alumni Board -page. 7

VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

Governlllen t confirllls • • recesston extstence

WASIIIN<ITON (AP) The ~o~ovt'fnmcnt. confirming a deep ren·ssion that has hlighted produc· tion and tossed workers off jobs, said ycsterday that the economy fell at thc t·nd of 19H I faste .r than at any time since a record dcdine in the spring of 1980.

Administration officials, conced· ing that things will get worse before they gt·t better, renewed their blame of forml.'r President Carter for the ri.'CI.'ssion that simmered through last summer before it hit hard as President Reagan finished his first year in otlke.

With consumer sales still sluggish and factories cutting output, new layoffs will likely push unemploy· ment above December's 8.9 percent rate before recovery begins in the spring, the officials said.

policymakers' earlier failure to come to grips with deeply em­bedded inflation."

Disagreeing, Democratic Rep. Henry Reuss, chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, said, "The sorry state of the economy is the direct result of President Reagan's program of huge tax cuts for the af. fluent, sharp increases in <,lefense spending leading to gaping deficits, and the tight monetary policies of the Federal Reserve, carried out at the administration's behest."

The new report said "real," or inflation-adjusted, GNP rose 1.9 per­cent for all of 1981, mostly because of the robust 8.6 percent growth at an annual rate in the first quarter, as Carter was leaving office and the Reagan administration was taking charge.

The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that the inflation-adjusted gross national product - the broadest measure of economic activity - dropped at an annual rate of 5.2 percent in the fouth quarter of 1981.

Real GNP declined 0.2 percent in 1980. Gross national product is the retail value of all goods and services produced by the nation's economy.

University Provost Timothy O'Meara (right) answers questions at the Facu/~y Senate meeting

last night in the Center for Continuing Educa· tion. (photo by Tonia Hap)

That was the sharpest drop since the record 9.9 percent annual rate in the spring quarter of the \980 reces· sion.

Profs Goulet, Norling conduct nuclear panel Trl.'asury Sn·rl.'tary Donald T.

Rt·gan said thl.' I.'C<>nomy will likely drop at an annual rate of up to 2 per· n·nt in the current quarter, but he said thl.' administration is not to blaml.'.

"We inht·ritl.'d this mess," Regan said in rl.'marks prl.'pared for a group of administration appointees Wed· nl.'sday. "Those who blame Reaganomics for the current slump must bdit·vc in rl.'troactive causa­tion."

lie and oOlt·rs in th administration say their push for the tight money policy by thl.' fl.'deral Rl.'serve Board - which many private analysts say was a main cause of the rl.'cession -was necessary to fight inflation.

And Deputy Comml'fCI.' Senetary Joseph Wright Jr. assertt·d that "this rt·cession stt·mmed from

By JIM McCLURE Staff Reporter

Professors Denis Goulet and Ber· nard Norling presented views for and against nuclear arms in a panel discussion held last evening in LaFortune Student Center.

"Running after more weapons has not in fact creatt:d more security," Goulet said in his opening remarks. Norling later stated that "arm:~ments building is a symptom, not a cause of the problem."

Each speaker made an opening statement of approximately 25 minutes before the floor was opened to questions from the audience which overtlowed the small Social Concerns Alcove in Lafortune.

In his opening remarks, <ioulet stated that economic, political, and

social security arc as important as military defense concerns. "Securiity is a holistic thing--it can­not be reduced to one dimension." Goulet, William and Dorothy O'Neill Professor of Education for Justice, took the position that the nuclear arms race is self-defeating because it promotes fear among citizens concerned about an arms buildup and also leads to a lack of trust in the government.

Goulet stressed that he was advocating "not unilateral disarma­ment but a meaningful first step by the United States to break the log· jam" of the nuclear arms race. Goulet said this "first step" would have to be on a level with Anwar Sadat's initial overture toward a Middle East peace.

Norling prefaced his opening

U.S. effort

Housewife wants 'Seven 'freed By MARIE PRA T Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, Ala. ( AP)- She starts the day like most any housewife, getting the children up. fed and off to sd10ol. Tht·n jant· Drake sets to work trying to free the "Siht·rian Seven" from the Soviet Union.

"It's more than an eight-hour-a-day job," says Mrs. Drake, a ~5-year-old mother of two who has been at it for thrt·e and a half years.

Seven Pentacostals - members of a fundamentalist Christian sect - hurst into the American Embassy in .\loscow on Junt· 27. 197H, seeking help in gaining exit visas. They haVl· remained tht·re ever since - nearly lilllr years in a I 2· hy·20-Iil0t room

in the embassy's TH URSDA y;~~IJii~iftfj hasemt·nt. And

:~~~)~);t~:t.:r~~ -~FOCUS Drake has not thought of them.

She organized the Society of Americans for Vashchenko Emigration, or SAVE, with a goal of getting the families of Pyotr Vashchenko and Maria Chmyk· halov out of Moscow and into American homes.

The seven - Vashchenko, his wife and three

daughters and Mrs. Chmykhalov and her teenage son -say they have been persecuted because oftheir religion. Mrs. Vashchenko was imprisoned during the 1960s af ter she tlrst made contact with U.S. diplomats in an ef. fort to emigrate. One of her sons, Alexander, was placed in a Siberian labor camp.

The Soviets insist that the seven have to return to

their homes in Chernogorsk in Siberia before their case will be considen:d. The Pentecostals say they do not trust the Soviet government, and refuse to leave. The U.S. embassy has said it will not force them out.

Mrs. Drake's work has taken her to Washngton, Mos· cow. Bonn and EaM Berlin. put her picture on the cover of a national Sunday magazine and placed her in contact with diplomats and political leaders.

She visited the Soviet Embassy in Washington in 1979 and 1980, including one trip with Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore. She said it was after one of those visits that Alexander Vashchenko, under pressure from Soviet au­thorities to disown his parents, was released from the labor camp.

Last week former President Carter joined her in encouraging the seven not to lose hope.

Mrs. Drake said her family supports her crusade, with her husband Tony, a veterinarian, paying as much as

see HOUSEWIFE, page 4

remarks by saying "It would have been better for the human race if nuclear energy had never been in­vented." He cited the problems and mismanagement that inevitably oc· cur where human beings are in· volved. He added, however, "it's here, and it's not going to go away." The hiswry professor then gave many examples through the ages where attempts at disarmament were ignored and actual treaties vi­olated. He was dearly skeptical of the efft:ctiveness of nuclear disarm a-

ment. Norling listed what hi.' felt were two positive consequences of nuclear arms as deterrents. "There has been no major war for 3 7 years," and added that "when tht· weapons art.' city-busting nuckar weapons governmemts give and take more from each other."

Norling expressed hope for the future that some social or scientific breakthrough would eliminate nuclear weapons and the problems that he fc~ls make them a necessary.

Faculty discusses research, student life By MARK ROLFES Staff Reporter

Problems in faculty research and aspects of student life were dis­cussed at last night's meeting of the Faculty Senate.

Improving student life neces· sitates an increase in social space, according to Provost Timothy O'Meara, chairman of the meeting. The three alternatives dis(.·ussed were: building new dorms or townhouses without increasing the student body in order to increase so· cia! space in overcrowded dorms; creating small social centers for stu· dents; or building one large student center. A large student center, it was noted, would have to have sufficient facilities to ensure its use by StU· dents. One faculty member, however, expressed doubt that a new student center would reduce the drinking problem on campus.

Also noted were the problems women have choosing between a career and a family. O'Meara stated that this was a prevalent problem in our society as a whole, not uniquely one at Notre Dame.

Faculty research was a subject dis· cussed at length. Many faculty mem­bers t~:ach three classes and feel tht:y

can not devotl' enough time to rescar(.·h and still be able to prepare well for their classes.

O'Meara recognized this problem, and expounded on University policy on research. All fa(.·ulty members at Notre Dame both teach and research. This is to preserve what o:Meara calls a "single class faculty." If some teachers were exclusively teachers and others exclusively researchers as is the case at other universities, the teaching faculty would most likely be looked down upon as "second class." The llnivcr· sity, however, believes that an l'm· phasis must he placed on undergraduate and graduate educa­tion.

Another problem with research is lack of funding. Notre Dame has received grants from the federal government, such as for the Radia· tion Lab and other projects in physics and chemistry. Research in the arts, however, has been lacking in funds. Federal spending cuts will reduce this amount even more. O'Meara said it would be "unrealistic to expect the University to pick up the tab due to the large amounts of money involved."

see FACULTY, page 4

Page 2: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

News Brie s By The Observer and The Associated Press

The United Auto Workers pulled out of talks with General Motors Corporation yesterday, and both sides predicted the breakdown might further depress new car sales. VA W president Douglas Fraser announced the collapse ofthe talks shortly after noon, saying the two sides were deadlocked on economic and job security issues. He refused to elaborate. He said he would let the VA W's 300-member GM bargaining council decide whether to revive negotiations when it meets Saturday in Washington. Parallel bargaining at Ford Motor Co. had been in a holding pattern while the VA W concentrated on the GM talks, and Frasr said he doubted an agreement with Ford could be reached by Saturday. GM's top bar­gainer as well as Fraser warned that Wednesday's breakdown could plunge the depressed industry into deeper trouble. - AP

Western Europe is using the same tough words as the United States to condemn Polish martial law, but has yet to match American actions against the military regime or its Soviet ally. Nearly two weeks ago, U.S. Seuetary of State Alexander M. Haigjr. exhorted the Europeans to act, saying "We have spoken with one voice (about Poland). We created a clear and united framewok for action. Now we must act." President Reagan said Tuesday that U.S. sanctions against Poland and the Soviet Union have had some impact and he hinted he might take more such steps. The Europeans, many of whom express doubt about the effectiveness of the U.S. sanctions, met earlier this month to discuss Poland. In. meetings of the Com­mon Market and the North Atlantic alliance they said they would "consider" and "examine" possible actions, but little has yet emerged. - AP

Researchers say people with breathing difficulties of· ten die at night from heart problems caused by a lack of oxygen. Doctors from the University Hospital of Wales linked nighttime heart problems with low oxygen levels in people with chronic obstructive airways disease. They concluded that lack of oxygen contributes to heart failure in these patients, and heart irregularities were frequently reduced if patients breathed oxygen-enriched air while they slept. The study was conducted by Drs. V.G. Tirlapur and M.A. Mir and published in Thursday's New England journal of Medicine. - AP

The dean of Williams College has been ap-pointed to arbitate sexual harassment cases until faculty meet to discuss handling of such matters, college President john Chandler announced. The action followed last week's protests by students, who said two male students accused of sexual harassment were not disciplined adequately. Dean Daniel O'Connor was appointed Tues­day to temporarily replace a disciplinary board that put the two male students on probation last semester. Williams Against Sexual Harass­ment, a coalition of students at the private northwestern Massachu­setts liberal arts school, criticized the board. O'Connor will handle sexual harassment matters until the faculty studies disciplinary procedures. The faculty was scheduled to meet Feb. IO.- AP

A law school graduate convicted of harassing Caroline Kennedy has been committed for psychiatric treatment with charges against him dismissed. Kevin King, 35, of Palo Alto, Calif., was committed to Manhattan State Psychiatric Center Tues­day. He was being transferred to a California psychiatric facility yes­terday, according to the Manhattan district attorney's office. - AP

Five divers drowned in a pressurized chamber aboard the submarine U.S.S. Grayback early Sunday when the cham­ber's oxygen system failed. The accident occurred on the Subic Bay naval base, 50 miles northeast of Manila. A Navy spokesman said the men had no warning that the tank was not filling with oxygen as it should have as water was draining out. One of the five, Ensign Wil­liam Robinson, 24, formerly of South Bend, received his NROTC commission in May, I 980 through the University of Notre Dame. An Indiana University at South Bend graduate, Robinson worked as a volunteer with the Red Cross, the Clay Township Fire Department, and the Bendix Woods Ski Patrol. His body is en route to Orvis­Plumber funeral home jn South Bend. - The Observer

Snow ending today with mostly cloudy skies, high in the 30's. Tomorrow, mostly cloudy with snow or rain developing. High of30.

Thursday, January 21, 1982- page 2

A New Senior Bar- And More Within the confines of the Golden Dome, a decision

has apparently been made about the fate of the Notre Dame Alumni-Senior Club. Senior Bar as we know it stands to be demolished in four or five months to make way for a new structure.

Shed a tear for the grand old house but face reality: the place is a firetrap and woefully inadequate during peak usage times such as football weekends. I've dis­cussed the future of the bar in this column before, primarily from a management point of view (i.e. there should remain a significant amount of student and alumni control in any future enterprise). Today, the focus will be structural.

The gist of the argument is this: the construction of a new senior bar building offers a unique opportunity to improve social-life on the ND-SMC campus. Students have talked, screamed, and argued about the need for an updated student center on the campus for years now, with little effect. This could be the chance to get moving on the issue. I'm not proposing that the Univer­sity turn the senior bar into a full-line student center: that is neither financially nor philosophically accept­able to most students and alumni, let alone the ad­ministration. Seniors and alumni don't want bowling

John McGrath Editor in Chiel

Inside

downstairs portion of the building would offer a large dance floor, stage facilities to encourage frequent bookings of local and regional bands, food service, and again, a good amount of seating for patrons. The big difference here, and the key to the success of the con­cept, is the fact that no alcohol would be served downstairs.

This would enable the facility to have an incredible amount of flexibility. Not only could patrons of the ex­clusively senior and over-21 "upstairs" bar enjoy dan­cing and live entertainment any time they wish by simply going downstairs, but significantly, underclas­smen could greatly enhance their social possibilities by sharing this facility with their older peers. In effect, Notre Dame would finally be able to acheive the goal

that it has been striving for alleys, meeting rooms, or perhaps a movie theatre in the senior bar. And the ad­ministration doesn't want a student center far out on Juniper Road.

ALL- N[W unsuccessfully with the moribound LaFortune Club: creating an exciting nightclub atmosphere on campus that would invite dating and friendly interac­tion - in a non-alcoholic at· mosphere.

But in contrast to this is Fr. Hesburgh's view that Notre Dame probably needs a set of dispersed social cen­ters more than the one monstrous new student cen­ter building most students visualize. Hesburgh voiced this opinion as recently as early December, when he told a crowd of students in the Howard Hall Chapel -in front of the rolling cameras of a CBS "60 Minutes" film crew - not to look for any shiny new student center per se too soon. And when Fr. Hesburgh talks, people listen.

So here's the idea: design the senior bar to be a multi· use facility for all ages of college students. This concept is nothing new; Dooley's Bar in East Lansing, Mich. has been raking in the bucks for years now on their phenomenonly successful two-level format. Upstairs, there is a large bar facility that would put any South Bend drinking hole to shame. There is food service, complete bar facilities, a game room, and plenty of tables and places to sit. (see, they learned the secret of running a respectable and safe establishment years ago: give the people a place to sit and they won't be so rowdy and destructive. Few places in South Bend have ever caught on to this fact).

The "upstairs bar" is strictly policed. The people at the door are very tough about bouncing underaged people - and there is a limit on the number of people admitted to the bar at ay one time to avoid the familiar South Bend crush. The result is a very mature and engaging atmosphere - much like the ideal of a senior bar. If this approach were to be duplicated here, seniors and alumni would be provided with a clean, modern, and relatively large facility to replace the current build­ing.

The key to the success of Dooley's- and potentially one part of a solution to the Notre Dame social problem -is the "downstairs" component of the structure. The

__ The_Obs.er.y:er __ Design Editor ....................... Monica Gugk Design Assistants ........... Suzanne LaCroix

Mike McCaughey Typesetters ........................ Toni Rutherford News Editor ..................... Cathy Domanico Copy Editors ........................ Joe Mucumeci

Tim Neely Sports Copy Editor .............. Chris Needks

Key rules would prevent the deterioration of this un­derclass priveledge into the legal and ethical quagmire of underage alcohol abuse. First, as mentioned before, no alcohol would be served downstairs, although food and non-alcoholic beverages would be available. Second, no alcoh­hol could be brought

downstairs by patrons coming down from upstairs. And third, no alcohol could be taken from the upstairs bar outside the building at any time. These rules would be strictly enforced.

But since there still would be no alcohol served in the downstairs "nightclub," what would make it profitable where the LaaFortune Club has failed so miserably? First, the LaFortune Ballroom is acoustically and aes­thetically unsuited for any live or recorded music. Second, hardly any permanent fixtures can be posi­tioned in the ballroom because of the daily need to rear­range the room for Placement Bureau interviews. And finally, the fact that the "downstairs nightclub" at the proposed senior bar is located on the fringe of the campus, and carries with it the more "swinging" reputa­tion of being a first-class nightspot frequented by stu­dents of all classes, would give it the "feel" of being more like a traditional off-campus nightclub. Yet, its proximity to campus would be a safety factor for stu­dents walking back and forth.

As an added benefit, the downstairs facilities could be utilized to accomodate overflow football weekend crowds or to hold hall formals.

So, there it is. If the University really wants a new senior bar (I haven't heard any seniors screaming to have the present one torn down), and if it doesn'.t want to build a big central student center, then maybe this compromise should be investigated.

ATTENTION ENGINEERING

STUDENTS Typist ..................................... .Jeanine Hynes ND Day Editor .............. Randy Goskowicz SMC Day Editor .... , ........... Juk Tremarchi Ad Design ................. John & Bob & Corby Photographer...... .. ............ Tonia Hap Guest Appearances ... Kandi for everyone

The Observer (USPS 598 920) IS

published Monday through Fnday and on home football Saturdays. except dunng exam and vacation penods The Observer IS published by the students of Notre Dame and Sa1nt Mary"s Col· lege Subscnpt1ons may be purchased lor $25 per year ($15 per semester) by wnt1ng The Observer. P 0 Box Q.

Notre· Dame. lnd1ana 46556

The Air Force has just announced a new program for engineering students that pays S900 per mo., for up to 12 mos., while you are attending school. To qualify, you must beaU .S. Citizen, meet all mental, moral and physical requirements of an officer training school candidate. You must be maj<>ring in an accredited civil, aeronautical, aerospace, architectural, astronautical, electrical, industrial or nuclear engineering program.

The Observer IS a member of The Associated Press All reproduction nghts are reserved

Second class postage pa1d at Notre Dame. lnd1ana 46556

For more information

Call Sgt. Marty Lazar, collect. South Bend 219-233-4747 Valparaiso 219-464-4151

OR VISIT SGT. LAZAR AT THE NOTRE DAME PLACEMENT OFFICE ON JAN. 21st.

Page 3: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

I ~l~'h_e_O __ b_se_r_v~e_r ________ ·~~----~~~~~---------------------------------------=---------__ T_h_u_~_sd_~~Y-·~Ja~n_u_a_ry~2-1~,-19_8 __ 2 __ ~p~a~g:e_:3 j Career center j

SMC schedules workshops By TONI RUTHERFORD '>ell'S .\lajf

Srn-~~ managt:tlll'nt. dit:ting, prqudt<.T, and wonwn and SUl"Ct:s~ .trl' ~onw ••f the Ji~l·u~sion topic~ on tht· .,prin).t 'l'llll·stl·r agt·nda at tht· "amt \1arv's < :ounsding and < .an·cr lkvdopmc:nt Cc:ntc:r ( C&CD<: ).

t .t·ntt·r dirc:ctor~ .\tarv Elizabeth (.\tid) lki>am\. Mary Thl.'is, and Kathv l';trrar havl' scheduled thl' workshop ~l'rks tilr Wednt:sdays at C>: :~ll p.m. 111 Staplt'ton l.oungt: stan· ing .January 2.., and continuing through l'c:hruary 2·1.

Otht:r upcoming pro~o:rams in· dudt· the .:ontinuanct: of the: Prohkm~ in Eating group, spon~orl'd in conJUnction with the l'svdJOlogical St"rvict·s Centt:r at

:'1/otrc: Dame. Thl' t1rst mn·ting of thi' senH.·ster will take place Thur,da\· . .Jan. 2S at "":00 p.m. on thl· third tloor of :'1/otre Damt·'s Studl'nt llealth Cnl!l'f. Interested student~ should contact Dr. Rvhit·ki or Dr. Strnhe at :-.J.D.. or \tary Thl.'is at S,\1<:.

.'. se,sion bv \1 ary Theis on as· st·nivenl·s~ and dating will ht·gin Thursdav, Feb. -1 from <>:50 to H:OO p.m. and run for tintr conse<.·utivt• st·ssions. These wtll he hdd in the Student Aftairs Conti:rl'nn· Room and will indude the art of making nmversation and getting ac· quaintetl. traditional roles and ex· pcctations, and being in the right place at the right time. Also, the Women's Topic Group, a lunchtime group meeting Tuesdays from I .2: I 5

to I :50 in the Campus Ministry Apanment. will begin Feb. 2. Topic suggl'stion~ indude sdf con<.·ep!. hotly image. and suggestions from pankipants. Students intcrcstt·d in l.'itht·r program should Si!-(n up at the C&CCD.

A workshop series hl'ing planned by Kathy Farrar tilr sometime· in Fl'bruary will fc:ature women in the workplact·. Students arc asked to contact the .:enter tiJr further details.

"Tht· Counseling and Cart'l'r lkvdopmc:nt Center has two futK· tions," says lkPauw. "We otfl-r ~tu· dc:nts both pnsonal counseling and career hdp." For more information about tht· center or any of its programs, call .28+4835 or 284· +131.

Soviets claim arms equality MOSCOW (AP)- A glossy book·

let on the so-called "U.S. war machine" appears to bt· a Moscow's latest bid to turn West Europeans against America over the issue of nuclear armamc:nts.

The 78-pagt· publication, titled "Whence The Threat To Peace," is the Kremlin's latest answer to the Pentagon·~ own 99·page pamphlet, "Soviet Military Power," which last September depicted the Soviets as having achieved military super­iority.

The Soviet booklet rclcasl'd this month accuses the Reagan ad· minstration of launching an ex· tcnsivc arms buildup to attain U.S. military superiority over the Soviet Union "In tht· next few years."

Maps portray the Soviet Union vir­tually under siege from U.S. ground ha'>es. vessels and aircraft. Charts purport to show big tlows of wt·apons from American arsenals to

overseas allks. Nuclear weapons of the United

States, Britain and France "confront"

the Soviets in Europe, the booklet says, while China's nuclear forces "threaten" from the East.

The publication seeks to prove that "rough parity" exists bctwec:n NATO and thl' Warsaw Pact in man­power, aircraft, nuclear missiles and other armaments.

New U.S. medium-range missiles arc not needed in Western Europe because it is already well protected by the American nuclear umbrella, argues the booklet, which is being distributed in several languages.

The Soviet statements are not new, and the booklet offers no new evidence to buttress assertions -repeated daily in the state-run Soviet media - of U.S. warmongering.

U.S. State Department spokesman Dean Fischer on Monday dismissed tht· pamphlet as a "slick repackaging job" of standard Soviet propaganda themes.

His comments drew an angry rebuttal Tuesday from the official Tass news agency, which reported that the Western European media

Reagan celebrates first year in office

WASHINGTON (AP)- President Reagan, cclchrating the "impressive start" he says his administration has made, told his appointees through­out the government yesterday that "we have laid the foundations for economic recovery and national renewal."

"The American people haven't hccn led astray by the peddlers of pessimism and despair," Reagan said, calling attention to a public opinion poll he said showt·d support for his economic program.

In the first presidential pep talk directed at the government's top 2,.200 oftkials, Reagan said he had promised to reduce escalating government spending and regula· tion, cut intlation and interest rates, and "n:storc confidence in America at home and respect ti>r America ahroad."

"Wt· have kept those promises," he said. In all, he added, "we have kt·pt I 04 major promises we made to the American people."

lie did not list thl'm, in the prepared text of his speech for the Reagan Administration Executive Forum.

Speaking in a govt·rnment auditorium ncar the White Housl', one year to the hour after he took his inaugural oath, the president said tht· rct·ord of his first year in office provided "an impressive list of achievements."

He said a New York Times-CBS News poll showed that 60 percent of the people believe his economic

..

program will help the nation. But the poll also said 5 I percent ofthosc questioned believed his policies had hurt the econony so far, a detail the president did not mention.

The American people, Reagan said, "understand that the damage of decades of waste, mismanagement. inflation and economic decay will not vanish overnight. In fact, they've also notked that quite a few of the people shedding crocodile tears ovt·r our current economic plight and taking potshots at our recovery program arc the very people who led us into this swamp in the t1rst place."

Uc urged his listeners not to lose sight of their task. "I know it isn't al· ways easy," he said. "As the old saying goes, when you're up to your armpits in alligators, it's sometimes hard to remember that you're here to drain the swamp."

The task, he said, is "to drain the swamp of over-taxation, over· regulation. and runaway inflation that has dangerously c:roded our free way of life."

"We have made an impressive start," the president said. "In this first year of our trusteeship we have built a competent, dedicated ex· ccutivc team. We have laid the foundations for economic recovery and national renewal."

But, he said, "we still have a long way to go - a lot to do bdi>rc we can achieve all that we hope for the America of today and the America we will pass on to our children."

had treated the booklet "most at· tentivcly and seriously."

Many Western European leaders, Tass said, have no desire "to turn their countries into launching pads for new American missiles" and the "broad popular masses" demand an end to the "U.S. nuclear ambitions."

The Soviet pamphlet seems to be aimed at "peace movements" in the Netherlands, Belgium, West Ger­many and other NATO countries which held huge rallies last year against deployment of new U.S. missiles.

Negotiators from the United States and the Soviet Union are now meeting in Geneva to discuss the fate of the missiles. A U.S. proposal calls for Moscow's withdrawal of its new SS-20 missiles in return for NATO scrapping plans to deploy 572 new American missiles starting in late 1983.

The booklet claims that the West would gain "an almost 50 percent advantage" over the Warsaw Pact in medium-range delivery systems if the U.S. missiles arc deployed.

Soviet Defense Ministry authors also dismiss the U.S. "zero option" proposal in Geneva, writing that "obviously this wutld mean uni­lateral disarmament for the Soviet Union."

The Pentagon book says the Soviets had targeted I 75 new SS-20 missiles with 525 warheads against Western Europe as of July 19tH. That goes unchallenged in the Soviet pamphlet.

Soap opera at/diets in Zabm Hall tune in for their dai~y dose of "love on the air." (photo by Tonia Hap)

'c,al!(~~-~~-1-~·~,)il· -------it. Neil Simon's

"CHAPTER TWO" Jan21&22 at7,9,and11:30PM

at the Engineering Auditorium

~-------------------------· 1 juniors and sophomores 1 SUITCASE I PARTY!! I at Giuseppe 's 1

Friday Jan 29 9PM 1

Win a trip for 2 I to Ft. Lauderdale ! ! I

I Tix $5°0

; on sale in LaFortune LobbJI I 11:30 ·1:00PM and at the dining II

I halls 5·6 PM from Jan 18 to Jan 22 I I --------------------------~

SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE HEAR ND ALUMNI BOARD DISCUSS:

*STUDENT LIFE

*CAMPUS ISSUES

*SUMMER JOB PLACEMENT

THURSDAY NIGHT 9:00 IN_: MORRISSEY HOWARD

WALSH ZAHM BREEN-PHILLIPS FLANNER

SPONSORED BY ALUMNI ASSOC. & HPC

I

1

Page 4: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

The Observer Thursday, january 21, 1982 - page 4

• • • Housewife

Two avid sports fans catch up on the latest campus athletic news at mealtime. (photo by Tonia Hap)

continued from page I

53,000 a year to support SAVE, which has abom 2,000 members. "It took that much for the mailings," she said.

Daughters Elizabeth, 9, and Deborah, 6, help out stuffing en­velopes and folding letters.

"I don't think my six-year-old ever remembers not hearing the Vashchenko name," Mrs. Drake says.

In 1977, Mrs. Drake began doing some volunteer work for the Alabama Council to Save Soviet jews.

"That gave me an interest and basic knowledge of the persecution of Soviet jews and Christians," she says.

Then Mrs. Drake, a Presbyterian, heard about the "Siberian Seven."

"I heard the story on the news the very day that it happened, but I didn't know about the Alabama con­nection until two weeks later when this minister put a message in the

paper asking for prayers and help (for the seven)," she said.

That minister, the Rev. Cecil Wil­liamson of Selma, had sent an invita­tion for the seven to come to America, a procedural move re­quired by Soviet emigration authori­ties.

"We started working that very day in july of 1978," said Mrs. Drake. "Right at first, I thought, I'll promise five years of my life to this. It was soon afterwards, about six months later, that I knew I would work the rest of my life for their freedom.

"I became emotionally involved and it just grew and grew and grew," she said. "Then I got to know them personally. It's as though you've reached out and become their lifeline."

After she gets the children off to school, "I go into my little office and answer letters, or write newsletters - the dull part of the work which takes hours and hours and hours.

"I pick up my children and fix sup-

anew slant on math.

HThe Texas Instruments newTI-40 and Tl-55-11 calculators have angled displays for easy-to-see-answers:'

The slanted display makes these calculators easier to use at arm's length-and that's just the beginning. The economical TI-40, with built-in functions like trig, stat, logs, roots, reciprocals and more, will help you through math and science courses­especially since it comes with the informative book, Understanding Calculator Math.

The book explains how to use the TI-40 to work through, and understand, common problems.

If you're an advanced math or science major, you'll be

more interested in the TI-55-II, which comes with the Calculator Decision-Making Sourcebook. The TI-55-II features 56-step

programmability, multiple memories, scientific and statistical operations,

conversion factors and much more-a total ofll2 functions.

An extremely powerful cal­culator, at an excellent price. Both calculators have LCD displays, long battery life and fit right in your pocket.

TI-40 and TI-55-II calcu­lators. 'I\vo new slants on math from Texas Instruments~~-c.,-

Look for them wherever ur ' / calculators are sold. r

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED

per. After supper I don't do any more work," she said.

Once or twice a week, Williamson and other members of SAVE gather at Mrs. Drake's mother's home to

telephone the Vashchenkos and Chmykhalovs. Mrs. Drake does not speak Russian but one of the Vashchenko daughters speaks English.

These calls have been especially important since Augustina Vashchenko, 52, and her daughter Lidiya, 31, began a hunger strike Christmas Day.

Mrs. Vashchenko is drinking water and apple juice. Her daughter drinks water, unsweetened tea and the liquid of dried fruits soaked in water, the family said.

It was the hunger strike that got Mrs. Drake to call Carter.

Mrs. Drake said that, during a visit to Moscow, the families asked her to

contact the former president. "I told them no. I didn't see build­

ing their hopes about something that was impossible," she said.

But when the two gave up all solid food, she said, "We had reached a point where something had to be done.

"I thought if anything could en­courage them to call off the hunger strike, it would be a phone call from him," she said. Carter agreed t to make the call if there was no publicity, but a friend leaked it to the news media.

"Million of people know you and are praying for you," Miss Vas­chenko quoted Carter as saying. Yet the hunger strike continued.

Despite the long hours devoted to the Vashchenkos, Mrs. Drake says her family is holding up "remarkably well."

"There have been a few late din­ners, and the house is not spotless," she said. "But my children haw learned some rc:al valuc:s through this. It's very important for them to know you have: to help pc:ople."

. .. Faculty

continued from page 1

Another topic discused was the procc:dure of hiring non-Catholic faculty members. In the interview process, applicants are asked their views on Notre Dame's Catholk character. O'Meara denied that Notre Dame discriminates against hiring non-Catholics, as evidenced by the large numbe,r of non-Catholic faculty. O'Meara said that the ques­tions of that nature are asked to ensure that the applicant is in­terested in Notre Dame as some­thing more than just a place where he can get a job. The University wants faculty that view Notre Dame more than that. "After all, Notre Dame is a Catholic university and we must decide what that means and what we want the University to be."

Mass marks

abortion

decision To commemorate the Supreme:

Court's 197 3 decision legalizing abortion on demand in this countrv, Bishop ~c~anos of the South Bend­Fort Wayne diocese ·will celebrate Mass in Sacred Heart Church at 5: I') p.m. on Friday, january 22. All stu­dents, faculty, and friends arc urged to attend.

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---------------~----~--- ----___ ----~-~-~ Thursday, january 21, 1982 page 5 The Observer

Air Florida jet

Diver retrieves recorders WASHINGTON (AP) - A Navy

frogman, following an electronic listening dt·vicc, retrieved two flight recorders yt·sterday from the week­old wreckage of an Air Florida jet_ The "black boxes" will be analyzed for dues to the cause of the fatal crash.

After days of frustration with the Potomac River's icc and sub-surface murkiness, Lt. John Sechrist, of Vas­hon Island, Wash .. found the critical recorders on his tirst dive. He t·arried a sonar receiver that homed in on the "ping" emitted by the recorders, whil:h apparently were: undamagt·d.

Laboratory technicians wt·re cx­pt·ctnl to take anywhere from a few hours to possibly several days to analyzt· the recorders, which monitor cot·kpit convcrations and tht· key instruments. But Robert Buckhorn, of the National Transportation Safety Board, said tht· rt·sults may not he rdeased to the publk any time soon.

"I don't think at this point you're going to get anything," he said, ad­ding that authorities likely would

conceal the results until they could he tied with other aspects of the in­vestigation.

Buckhorn said the voice re­corder's metal box was hanged up, but the apparatus appeared in working condition.

Francis McAdams. a board mem­ber, called the recorders "most criti­cal" in trying to determine why the Boeing 737 clipped a busy com­muter bridge Jan. I; and plunged bt·ncath the river's ice, killing 78 people, including four motorists. Among the 79 pt·ople on the plane, only t<>Ur passengers and a steward­ess survived.

Rudolph Kapustin, the NTSB's chief staff investigator. said the flight data rt"Cordcr, which provides such information as air speed, altitude and time of liftoff, is "in excellent shape" and its five-inch deep rct·ord­ing foil has "good traces on it."

The military divers, meanwhile, resumed their quest for bodies still the the river, finding two more shor­ly after the recorders were recovered. Sixteen additional bodies were believed to be still in

Church leaders send letter to Polish chief

WARSAW, Poland (AP) - The bishops of Poland's powerful Roman Catholic Church sent martial law chief Gen. WojciechJaruzclski a let­ter yesterday that observers said might urge actions to quickly end tht economic and political crisis.

The bishops. meeting under Poland's Roman Catholic primate, Archbishop Jozcf Glemp. said the letter had been decided on at a meeting of the episcopate Tuesday that discussed the "pastoral tasks of tht· church in the curn·nt, very com­plicated situation in the country."

The bishops gave no details of the letter, but observers said it could urgt· polky decisions aimed at following up a church-government agreement Monday to cooperate to "au:deratc the pace of getting out of the crisis." :OThc bishops also sent a "special pastoral message to believers,'' and decided that Feb. 2, Candlemas Day. will be a day of prayt:rs for "all those who arc help­ing our country" with llood relief and other aid, tht· official PAP nt:ws agency said.

At tht· Vatican. tht· ollkc of the Polish bishops' conference con-11rmcd the letter had bel'n sent to Jaruzcbki. and Pope John Paul II dt·darcd that his nativt· Poland "has tht· full right to be a country of sovereign people."

Thl' Polish church h 1 as grown morl' and more outspoken since im-

position of martial law Ike. 13 and Glemp has warned the government against continued internment, ar­rests and extraction of loyalty oaths from activists of the now-suspended independent union Solidarity.

East Germany's ADN news agency reported that a Polish court in Biclsko-Biala sentenced four Solidarity officials to prison terms of two to thrl'e years for trying to or­ganize an underground command structure for Solidarity in defiance of martial law.

Poland's hardline army daily Zo/­nierz Wo/nosci launched a new at­tack on Solidarity, accusing it of mapping plans last year to usc "fugitives and common criminals" in a general uprising to "dispose of state representatives and party ac­tivists."

The army daily, in a separate ar­ticle, also said Jaruzclski planned to ask indl'pl'ndt:nt unions to join with the administration in running fac­tories hut stressed Poland's Com­munist Party must have "the lead."

Poland owes an cstimatt:d S26. '\­billion to the West, and President Reagan warned at a Washington news conference Tuesday of un­spt:dtied further sanctions against Warsaw and Moscow if the martial law situation deteriorates furtht:r.

Reagan followed up Wednesday by dedaringJan. :,o ','Solidarity Day"

CULTURAL ARTS COMMISSION

presents:

MIKHAIL BARYSHNIKO

and The American Ballet Theatre

Saturday Evening, February 6,1982 Bus leaves 6: 15 PM from Library Circle· Returns atter show Tickets- $26°0

- Bus and Performance Available at Student Union Ticket Office

the frigid water. Some officials expressed fears that the current may have swept several· away, perhaps never to be found.

NTSB investigators have inter­viewed more than I 00 witnesses to the crash and were examining some of the wreckage, including the plane's left wing, tail assembly and shell of the cockpit, at a hanger at National Airport. Some major pieces, including both engines, were yet to be recovered although they have been located in the river.

.\1uch of the investigation has cen­tered on whether the Air Florida jet might have had too much icc on its wings when it took off during a steady snowfall after waiting at least 4:, minutes l(>r clearance.

The two electronic recorders were expected to shed light on all these observations, investigators said.

For example, the voice recorder, which is turned on while the plane is still at the boarding gate, could show whether the crew walked back to the passenger compartment to check for icc on the wings or whether the pilot raised concern about power as he was taking off.

A perfectionist ponders his latest piece of pollery in the old Fieldhouse. (photo by Tonia Hap)

• CII~EIH!ll * friday night film series A groUptng of dlsttnQUIShed hlms shown tn conJunctiOn wtth the course COTH 320/MUT 377 (The Contemporary ltahan Cmema) and sponsored by the Department of Commun1cat.ton & Thea!re

All show•ngs a/ Annenberg Auditorium, the Snlle Museum of Art, Noire Dame Campus at 7 30 P M

lndtvtdua/ Admtsstons $1 00

January 22 The Gospel According to Saint Matthew

Dtrected by Pter Paolo Paso/tnt, 1964 (136 mtnutes. B&Wi A complex ctnema!lc mterpretat1on of the Gospel text by one of Italy's most rad>cal lelt-wtng tntellectuals.

January 29 The Decameron Dtrected by Pter Paolo Paso/tnt, 1972

(111 mtnutes. Color) An earthy adaptalton ol ten of Boccacc•o's tales set wtthtn an en­ltrely new frame story and embelltshed wtth a further ten Oflgtnal ep1sodes The director continually appears and reappears. 1n the gu1se of a mt::Jieval pamter. presc'ltmg wry comments on the meantng ol /tie and art

February 5 Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion

Dtrected by Elto Petrt. 1 970 (114 mtnutes. Color) Thts elegantly executed thflller tS a study ol the abuse ol power Its protagoniSt. currently the chtel ol the government's poltttcal tntelltgence untt, commtts a murder and deltberate/y plants evtdence that wtll lead to htmsell. then takes personal charge ol the Investigation

February 12 The Confonnlat Dtrected by Bernardo Bertolucc•. 1970

(1 08 mtnutes. Color) The 1nterrelat10nSh1p at pervers1on. conform1ty and the totahtanan sp1r11 IS explored 1n a ser1es of dazzlmg, h1ghly styl1zed 1mages as Jhe dtrec/or equales the rtse ol FaSCism wtth the psychosexual /tie ol hts protagoniSt. lor whom conformity becomes an obses­SIOn after a traumatiC homosexual expenence of hiS adolescence

February 19 The Spider's Stratagem Dtrected by Bernardo

Bertolucc•. 1970 (97 mtnutes. Colon A young man rev1s1ts the town ol h1s assass1nated father and en­counters myster1es wh1ch unfold upon funher mystenes 1n a sp1der's web that tangles h1story and flcl10n. tra1tor and hero, pasr and presenr tnto one tnextncable skem

February 26 Amarcord Dtrected by Federtco Felltnt, 1974

t 127 mtnutes. Color) Based on Fell1m's recollections as a youth 1n a small town at prewar Italy, Jhe story centers around a young man who longs lor the freedom ol adulthood but cannot qUtte leave the safely ol adolescence

March 5 The Garden of the Flnzi-Contlnls Dtrected by

Vtltorto De Stca. 1971 (96 mtnutes. Color) Dep•ct•ng hie tn the Jewtsh community ol Ferrara when the ant•· SemitiC ediCts ot the Fasc1st reg1me were begmn1ng to take ef­fect. the ftlm evokes a magtcal. doomed world wtth tmages ol great lyflcal power

Sefles Ttcket 13 ftlms for $10 00

March 12 Death In V.nlce Dtrected by Luchtno Vtscontt, 1971

(130 mtnutes. Color) The theme of fatal obsesston tS developed agatnst a sensuous photographtc recreatton ol Ventce at the turn of lhe century wtth the mustc at Mahler remlorcmg the haunttng. melancholy mood

March 26 The Innocent Dtrected by luchtno V•sconli. 1979

{115 mtnuJes. Color) The decay of an era and a marrtage are both presented wtthtn a power!ul. sumptuous VISion of a soc1al class mov1ng Inexorably towards F asc1sm

Aon/2 Seven Beauties Dtrected by una Wertmuller. 1976

(116 mtnutes Color) The dtrector at the peak ol her energ•es. tells a relentlessly Iun­ny. profoundly pess1m1SIIC tate of the morality of a surv1vor. set mamly 1n a Naz1 concentrat1on camp

Aon/16 To Forget Venice Dtrected by Franco Brusalt. 1960

(1 08 mtnuJes Color) Th1s po1gnan1 drama explores the Interrelated lives of ftve people who gather together at a country home dur1ng a cr1ttcat 11me of the1r lives RIChly evocattve ano VISUally detatled. Brusatt"s ttlrn laces the complex ex1stent1al problems of the present age

Aprt/23 La Grande Bourgoolse Dtrected by Mauro Bologntn•.

1977 f115 mtnutes. Color) Thts lushly photogtaphed !tim ts a deptctton ol a celebrated Jurn· of-the-century murder case •n Italy Beneath the surface ol thts exc111ng mystery IS an mSIQhtlul v1ew of some of Italy's most troubling contemporary 1ssues

Apn/30 Tree of the Wooden Clogs Dtrected by Ermanno

Olm1. 1978 (1 85 mtnutes. Color) A pamlerly eptc of peasant hie m Lombardy 1n !he late n1neteenth century The d1rector combmes an awareness of tmportant h1slor1ca1 events with an 1deahzed. mov1ng v1ston of community t1es and uad1t10ns Tne 111m has been r~3cogn1zed as one or the most maJeStiC masterp1eces 1n the history ol 1tal1an c1nema

~**************************************************) ***************************************************:

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Editorials Thursday, January 21, 1982- page 6

Who really runs the country? Federal judges have been doing

their best recently to confirm a widespread susp1c1on that "the courts run the country." A flurry of notable decisions by a handful of fel­lows has caught Americans by surprise and, in some cases, left them in shock.

On Christmas Eve, a f,de1 al court judge in Boise, Idaho, singlehanded­ly voided , as unconstitutional, Congress' 1978 extension of the Equal Rights Amendment ratifica­tion deadline and upheld the ··authority'' of states to rescind their ratification decisions. Unless the Supreme Court speedily overturns the ruling, the amendment can be given up for lost.

Four days later, a senior District Court judge in Chicago ruled that the suburban village of Morton Grove, IlL, had a right to ban the sale and possession of handguns. Gun control fans lauded the decision as a victory for a civilized society.

And on Tuesday, Jan. 5, a federal judge in Little Rock threw out a state law requiring equal treatment of evolutionary theory and "creation science" in the Arkansas public schools. Despite considerable local support for the teachings of Genesis, separation of church and state was reaffirmed.

It would be negligent, of course, to underestimate the import of these· decisions for both the players in­volved and the times in which we live. In each case, a black-robed St. George has scotched the dragons of feminism, firearms, and fundamen­talism. For the moment, America may be better off as a result of the latter two verdicts.

Yet even the~e rulings may prove that it's unfair to accuse the judiciary of wielding too much power.

To begin with, Americans tend to be more interested in who wins and who loses than in the merits of the issues at hand. As a result, judges ap­pear to hold more power than they ac­tually do.

As average court-watchers, for example, we care less about the fine points of congressional authority than whether the National Organiza­tion for Women will overcome the Phyllis Schlatlys of the world. We also cheer when the underdog gun­control folks ring up a hit against the well-financed National Rifle As­sociation; whether or not to bear arms seems a secondary consideration. And though the rivals in Little Rock seem as strong in their convictions as ever, the case might have pleased spectators best by ending in a draw.

Yet, in our passion for final scores, we act as if ajudge's decision can't be challenged and possibly overturned in other arenas. The judge in Idaho, Marion Callister ( who moonlights as a bishop in the anti­ERA Mormon church ), seems to have not cared that the courts have, in the past, tacitly allowed Congress to set its own deadlines for ratification of constitutional amendments.

By the same token, residents of Friendship Heights, a Washington suburb which recently banned the

4possession of bullets, probably recognize that the Morton Grove

·ruling -- and by extension its own ordinance-- isn't safe from an ap­peal by the NRA. Sometimes judges are ignored entirely: On the same day of the Arkansas ruling, the Mississip­pi Senate overwhelmingly approved a "creation science" provision for that state's public schools.

Judges seem all-powerful in part because they preside over the busiest social and political battleground in America today. We've asked them to resolve all kinds of conflicts and per­sonal disagreements; it's reached the point where some college graduates are suing their schools for failing to educate them adequately. Not surprisingly, as the late Yale Univer-

sity legal scholar Alexander Bickt, wrote: ··All too many federal judges have been induced to view them­selves as problem solvers, as charged with a duty to act when majoritarian institutions do not." If the courts are powerful, we have only ourselves to blame.

Of course, some judges are legal lightweights who lack training but possess political connections.

But even Supreme Court justices have learned that they don't always have the last word. The High Couit's 1954 desegregation and 1973 abor­tion rulings, for example, have been undermined or ignored across the country. And the judiciary's con-

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Here and Now

servative critics in Congress have pledged to limit the Court's jurisdic­tion further in 1982 with action on anti-busing and anti-abortion amend­ments to the Constitution,

When rulings on emotional issues are handed down Americans will temporarily acquiesce as good citizens. But they know there'll al­ways be another round.

Reagan must assert position on Poland The accelerating impatience with

such as Helmut Schmidt, who celebated the imposition of martial law in Poland by visiting East Ger­many and cooing with the folks on the other side of the great wall, is especially vexing because on the one

hand we are entitled to be indignant; but on the other hand, our indigna­tion perfectly suits the strategic designs of the Soviet Union.

Mr. Reagan is ju.stifiably under fire for not acting more decisively in the matter of Poland. Henry Kissin-

P.O. Box Q Pro jess or replies to letter on Kung

Dear Editor; Professor Janet Smith's impassioned defense (Letter to Editor Dec. II: £d.'s note) of doctrinal purity and her invective against the· 'scandal" of letting Hans Kung appear on campus would have· warmed the heart of Cardinal Ric­helieu. Yet beneath the sound and fury lies a great deal of fuzzy think­ing, much of it quite disturbing from the pen of one who professes to belong to a community of learning.

Basically, Professor Smith seems unable to distinguish between a uni­versity and a seminary. Is the purpose of a Catholic University "to teach Catholic doctrine"? My non­Catholic colleagues must feel even more incapable of meeting that test than I do. If a university is not a place where all questions, even about Catholic doctrine, may be asked in an atmosphere of calm and honest dis­course, then I, for one, am in the wrong business.

Professor Smith's attempt-to refute the_ applic~~ility o_!_ the notion of

academic freedom in this case by comparing Fr. Kung to advocates of genocide or believers in a flat world would be profoundly offensive if not merely silly. Even the Vatican has been more charitable than that.

Professor Smith must fear that the Catholic faith is an incredibly fragile thing, and our students rather feeble of mind, if it and they must be protected from the kinds of questions Kung raises. Faith, like so many other sets of understandings which we profess about the world and our­selves, is strongest when it is tested, scrutinized, challenged. One would hope that we are all intelligent enough to make measured judge­ments about what Kung or anyone else tells us about these and other matters.

We are, after all, in the business of thinking. Or are we?

KerryS. McNamara Government and In!'/ Studies

ger correctly indicts our failure to close off financial credit for the Soviet Union precisely at a moment when it has been proved that negotia­tions with the Soviet Union don't ac­complish anything. We are at fault for indecisive leadership. But we cannot signify to Europe that we have arrived at terminal impatience. Not without giving to the Soviets that which they most desire, namely the dissolutin of the NATO alliance.

Ah, but they say, it is for all intents and purposes already a shambles. That is only half true. The day to watch for is the day in 1983 when the alliance is scheduled to begin the deployment of our theater nuclear weapons. We are, for reasons that elude some of Lis, at present negotiat­ing whether to go forward with a commitment to deploy. Mr. Reagan said in November that this was a zero option negotiation. By that he meant that either the Soviet Union would withdraw its SS-20 missiles -- in which case we would hold back on our Pershing and Tomahawk missiles -- or else we would proceed to deploy.

The question arises: If Mr. Reagan is resolute in his intentions, why is it necessary to negotiate in the matter? The next queston that arises is : Assuming that the Soviet Union were to withdraw its theater missiles, where would they then be located ? With a range of 4,500 miles, they could retreat to an area east of Mos­cow and still serve their deadly purpose as instruments of intimida­tion against Europe~n cities.

==Ihe_Llbseaer==

To judge by past experience with Soviet negotiators, it is unlikely that they will withdraw their missiles, never mind that doing so would be of unquestionable significance. More likely the Soviet negotiators will, in the coming year, accelerate the propaganda aimed at dissipating the European world. When the day comes to go forward with the deploy­ment of the NATO missiles, the Soviet Union counts on a Euope prostate with fear, indecision and flatulence. That Europe the Soviet Union will rub in our face as as area faintly weak, unwilling to resist what will be recognized as a Soviet jugger­naut.

Our task is to recognize that for all that there is demoralization in Europe, particularly among the intel­lectuals, the prospect of life under the dominion of the Soviet Union will ul­timately bring right reason to the councils of an area of the world where freedom and civilization have most conspicuously flourished.

Now Mr. Reagan's special problem these days is, without rodomontade, to exert geniune leadership. He has not done so in the matter of Poland, but it is possible that he has his reasons, and that they are not widely disclosed. For· in­stance, if he were convinced that the suppression of Solidarity would not be successful, then it would be preferable that its resonant failures should happen without significant American connivance. If the' people of Poland actually prevailed over the

William F. Buckley

On the Right

quislings, causing the Soviet Union physically to come in then a relative­ly aloof America might make the Polish triumph more galvanizing. That we can see.

But it hardly seems to be in prospect. Control of the mail, of the radio and television, the telephone and assemblies, travel and even street corner communications, is generally enough to mobilize any movement. If Poland is to be the ex­ception, and if President Reagan has confidence that this is so, then the movement is blessed.

But if Mr. Reagan is wrong. then his miscalculation will bring a grief, and a resignation, ·that is appropriate to the occasion. Poland has given us a kind of corporate valor almost un­heard of in this century. More: it gave us hope that -- to use Marxist ter­minology -- the contradictions im­plicit in communism would finally overtake the system. causing the gradual dissolution of this most odious accretion of the 20th century. If Poland goes down, then the Soviet Union's pressure will rise. And NATO will face the final test of 1983, but will do so without the strategic sense of confidence in American leadership. The stakes are that big.

Editorial Board Editor·in·Cbief ............. ............... John :vtcGrath

Founded November 3, 1966 Executive News Editor.... .. Kt'lli Flint !JPorts Editor.............................. Skip Desjardin

The Observer is an independent newspaper published by the students of the University of Notre Dame duLac and Saint Mary's College. It does not necessarily reflect the policies of the administration of either institution. The news is report· ed as accurately and as objectively as possible. Editorials represent the opinion of a majority of the Editorial Board. Commentaries, opinions and letters are the views of their authors. Column space is available to all members of the community, and the free expression of varying opinions on campus, thrOUjh letters, is encouraged.

P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556

Neu•s Editor ........ .................... David Rickabaugh Photo Editor ....................................... .john Macor S.\1C Executit•e Editor.. ...\1ary Agnes Carq Editorials Editor ....................... Anthony Walton !JMCNeu•s Editnr .... Cathy Domanico Features Editor ......................... Gregory Swiercz

Department Managers Business Manager ......................... Rich Coppola Production Manager ................... Michael Monk Controller ............................................ ,Joe Mulflur Circulation Manager ............. Tom MacLennan Advertising Manager ....................... Chris Owen Systems Manager ........................... Bruce Oakley

Page 7: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

Features Thursday,January 21, 1982- page 7

Alumni open winter meetings Student sessions tonight feature job placement

By MEAGAN BOYLE News Stuff

T ht· Notn· D~me Alumni As· sonauon wtnter hoan.J

mtTting will he held this weekend, featuring the traditional hall visita· tion by hoard members, at which timt· an expanded summer job program li1r students will be outlined. Tim Truesdell. assistant director of the Alumni Association said that the hall visits "would st:rvc as a vehicle to brief students on the programs available and also get input on services students would like to see provided by their Alumni Associaton."

Results of last year's summer job placement program will be reported this weekend at the Alumni Soard meeting. "Though the program was piece· meal in past years," explained Truesdell, "all clubs have been contacted to participate in this summer's programs."

With the cost of education increasing and the decreasing number of government grants available, the Alumni Associaton has increased its emphasis on financial aid for students. "A sum· mer job has now become essential to financing a college education." Now students will not only be able to use the Placement Office to find summer employment, hut the Alumni Office as well.

Applications will he available during the alumni hoard hall visit a· tions and in the Alumni Office, 20 I Administration Building. Truesdell encourages students of all academic disciplines to apply for the program, stressing that "the diversity of the Notre Dame alumni should provide assistance in all sectors of the job market."

The hall visitation program is of. fered by the Alumni Board in con· jun<:tion with the Student Alumni Relations Group, heatkd by senior Bob Mad)onald. The group, known a~ SARG, works with the Alumni Board to bring Notre Dame students and Notre Dame graduates t·loser. Together, SARG and the Alumni Board sponsor the spring senior-alumni picnic, the hall visitation program and anum· her of receptions for alumni and students throughout the academic year.

A dinner will bt.· held Friday at the Morris Inn for SARG members and the Alumni Board along with tht· Hall Presidents Council, Stu· dent Body President and Viet.·· Presidt.·nt, Don Murday and Tara Kenney, and the Alumni Associa· tion otlkers. Rev. Richard McBrien will he guest speaker.

Tlw residence hall visitations arc schedukt.l for 9 p.m. this eve· ning in five halls on campus. Times art· listt·d below.

The Alumni Board representatives include Michael Read, '69, President of the Notre Dame Alumni Association; George D. Williams. '62, Honorary Presi· dent of the Notre Dame Alumni As· sociation; Robert Rohling, 'SO, alumni board member represent· ing Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Utah, Colorado, Kansas;

Hennan Kriegshauser, 'S"l, alumni board member represent· ing Iowa and Missouri;Joseph Gall Sr .. '44, alumni board mem· her representing Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massa· chusetts, Vermont, Connecticut;

Nordy Hoffmann, '3.3, alumni hoard member representing East· ern Pennsylvania, Maryland, the District of Columbia, West Vir· ginia, Delaware; Romano L. Maz­zoli, 'S4, alumni board member representing Indiana and Ken· tucky; Charles Perrin, 'SO, alumni

hoard member representing II· linois; D.Jerry Me Glynn, '60, alumni hoard member represent· ing Northern California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington; Clement O'Neill, 'S6, alumni board mem· her representing Arizona, New Mexico, Southern California; Paul Kruse 'Sl B.S., '52 M.S., '54 Ph.D., alumni board member represent· ing Wisconsin and Minnesota;

JohnJ. Kean, ·s I, alumni board member representing Michigan; Michael Neumeister, '69, alumni board member representing New York, Southern Connecticut, New jersey;John Short, '74, represent· ative at-large; Thomas Maus, '57, alumni board member represent· ing North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida; Patricia Don­danville, '78, representative at· large, Walter NashertJr., '54, alumni board member represent· ing Texas and Oklahoma; Michael Joyce, '64, alumni board member representing Ohio and Western Pennsylvania; and Donald Bis­hop, '77, representative at-large.

Howard Pangborn. Fisher Badin

Alumni Dillon Sorin Walsh Off-campus

Keenan Stanford Farley

l..e'WlS St. Edward Cavanaugh

Grace Flanner Pasquerilla E . Pasquerilla .. ···· Off·ca.mpus

Walsh

Breen· Phillips

Members of the Alumni board are (left to right from bottom): Charles Perrin, Michael Read, Donald Bisbop,jobnj. Kean, Pat~y Dondanville, Romano Mazzoli, Thomas Maus, Robert Robling,

Walter Nusbert, Paul Kruse, Clement O'Neill, Mic· bael Neumeister, Micbaeljoyce, D.jeny McG(ynn, joseph Gall, Herman Kriegsbauser, john Short, George D. Williams and F. Nordy Hoffman.

join us this sunday for our

cabaret brunch

classical music provided by the elkhart string quartet

for reservations call259-9925

Page 8: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

_ ...

Sports Brie/§ Thursday, January 21, 1982- page 8

Hy The Obserr'er and The Associated Press

The SMC basketball team dropped a respectable 67-57 decision to upper-division Saint Joseph's College Tuesday night, on the Puma's home court in Rensselaer, Ind. The loss dropped the Belles to an even 5-S on the season. Last night's contest against Southwestern Michigan College was cancelled, but the team will be back in action Saturday night to face visiting Butler University in Angela Athletic Facility. Tip-off is scheduled for 6:00. - The Ob· server

Sports board Kentucky beats

Central Division Milwaukee 26 13 .667 Atlanta t8 18 .500 6.5 HOCKEY Indiana 18 22 450 8.5 Chicago 16 23 .410 10 Detroit 16 24 400 10.5

In this year's NHLplayoff format, the top four teams Cleveland 7 31 184 18.5 Florida in each division make the playoffs, regardless of overall league standing. Western Conference

Midwest Division PRINCE OF WALES CONFERENCE w L Pet. GB

Adams Division San Antonio 24 13 .849 GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)- Sopho· more guard Jim Master scored 22 points to lead ninth-ranked Ken­tucky to a 91-76 victory over win­starved Florida last night in a Southeastern Conference college basketball game here.

w L T GF GA Pis. Denver 21 19 525 4.5 Buffalo 27 11 9 191 140 63 Houston 18 21 462 7 Boston 26 14 6 192 163 58 Quebec 25 17 6 219 191 56

Kansas C1ty 14 25 .359 11 Utah 13 24 351 11

Montreal 22 11 12 204 134 56 Dallas 10 28 263 14.5 Hartford 11 24 10 151 200 32 Pacific Division

Every Saturday night, the Student Union will spon­sor a ski trip to Swiss Valley. Advance tickets can be purchased at the ticket office for 52. SO, or for 53.00 on the shuttle bus. The bus will depart from the Main Circle at 5 p.m. every Saturday and return to campus at I I p.m. All are invited to come and join the fun. - The Observer

Patrick Division .os Angeles 29 11 .725 Ph1ladelph1a 28 15 2 186 163 58 )eattle 26 12 684 1.5 N Y. Islanders 25 13 6 185 150 56 'hoenuc 23 14 622 4.5 NY Rangers 21 19 6 167 178 48 iolden State 21 17 .553 6.5 Pittsburgh 20 19 7 178 181 47 ortland 21 17 553 6.5 Washington 12 27 168 194 31 an 01ego 12 27 308 16

The ND-SMC Ski Team time trials were postponed last Sunday because the ski area was closed. Practice and trials· have been rescheduled for today. M~embcrs should meet at the Main Circle at 4:30 p.m. Drivers aare needed. The trials will be held at Swiss Valley Ski Area in Michigan. Maps will be available at the Circle. The trials arc mandatory for anyone who wishes to be on the roster this year. - The Observer

CLARENCE CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Yesterday's Results oston 112. lnd1ana 103

The Wildcats used almost perfect scoring from the foul line to overcome a young but determined Florida team that lost a record I Oth traight game and fell to 4- I I for the

;cason.

Smythe Dvision w L

Edmonton 28 12 Calgary 17 20 Vancouver 15 23 Los Angeles 13 26 Colorado 10 30

T GF GA 911267 197

11 190 211 10 164 176 7 182 223 7 132 214

Pis 65 45 40 33 27

11ladelph1a 115, Portland 1 10 ash1ngton 1 06. Seattle 95 •lias 109, Milwaukee 104 JS Angeles 132. New Jersey 1 13 m D1ego 1 08. Golden State 99

Norris Division

A screaming hometown crowd of norc than I I ,000, also a record in he Stephen C. O'Connell Center, atched the Gators take an early

ead and go ahead by as many as eight points halfway during the first

criod.

Mmnesota 18 14 St. LOUIS 22 21 W,nntpeg 17 21 Chicago 17 20 Toronto 15 20 Detroit 14 25

14 187 158 4 182 192

10 182 209 9 202 207

12 199 209 8 159 195

50 48 44 43 42 36

S~NIM.M!NG#:i>· ~,. ~ '~ ' f " ;1• • , , _ •, ~ ~r': ;

ROCKNE MEMORIAL Hours until spring break

A Physical Fitness program that will meet four times a week will have its first meeting tomorrow. Anyone that is interested should be at the A.C.C auxiliary gym at 4 p.m. The Observer

Yeaterday' a Results Pittsburgh 5. Boston 4 Building houra

Saturdays 8 a.m to midnight Sundays 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Weekdays 7:30a.m. to m1dn1ght

But with I 0: 19 left in the half, Wildcat forward Derrick Hord went to the line and hit two shots to push Kentucky ahead 23-22.

Hartford 4, Quebec 2 NY. Rangers 3. N.Y. Islanders 2 Calgary 4. Toronto 4

Florida recouped bri t efly and went up by 30·25, but then Kentucky, spurred by the sure hand of the 6-foot, 4-inch Master and steady foul shooting, edged ahead and took a 51-42 lead into the second half.

The ND Judo Club will hold its first practice of the season on Sunday, january 24, at 2 p.m. at the Rock. All new members are invited to attend. For further information, call John Engeman at 8437.- The Observer

Lacrosse practice begins Monday afternoon at 5:30. Attendance is mandatory for all team members. For details, call Rich O'Leary at 239-5108. -The Observer

Detroit 5, Ch1cago 4 Wmn~peg 3, Wash1ngton 0 Edmonton 8. St. LoUis 6 M1nnesota 3. Colorado 1

NBA

Swimming pool hours

Weekends 1 p.m. to 6 p.m 7 p.m. to m1dn1ght

Weekdays 7:30a.m. to 8 a.m. 12:05 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. 3 p.m. to 3:45p.m. 8:15pm. to m1dn1ght

Weight room hours

Weekends 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Weekdays 3 p.m to 1 1 p.m.

Eastern Conference The use of the Rockne Memonal1s hm1ted to Notre

Dame students, faculty and adm1n1strat1Ve managenal staff upon presentation of a current I. D. card.

Tom Heitz scored 15 points for the Wildcats and Melvin Turpin, fill· ing in at center for the injured Sam Bowie, added 14 for Kentucky, which raised its record to 11-3 over­all and 4-2 in the SEC.

Sign ups have been extended until Friday for Atlantic Division

both men's and women's interhall volleyball tournaments. Team members must be from the same hall to participate in the elimina­tion. - The Observer

Boston Philadelphia Wash1ngton New York New Jersey

1

Classifieds I NOTICES

NEED RIDERS TO DETROIT FRIDAY. JAN 22 RETURNING SATURDAY. JAN 23 CALL MARY 4342

LOST/FOUND

LOST a Silver heart locket w1th my name engraved on 11. If found please call Amalia at3818

LOST. One pa1r of black sk1,gloves They last warmed my now frozen hands last Fnday at the Beach Party at the SMC Club House Anyone wtth 1nto please call 8501 or 8512 My hands would be very thankful

Found. Blue and green scarf D1scovered at Bendix Woods 1 /14/82 Call John at 1764 to 1den!lfy

LOST- one leh hand brown calfskin leat­her glove 1n/around Washington Hall at callbacks on the even~ng of the 18th . 1f found . please contact Dav1d Barber at 8109. Thanx!

FOUND: White sk1 cap w1th red and yet· low stnpes between Farley and North 01n1ng Hall. Tuesday. Cta1m at Adm. Bldg. Lost and Found.

ANYONE KNOWING THE WHEREABOUTS OF CASSETE TAPES WHICH ARE MISSiNG FROM SMC BEACH PARTY. PLEASE RETURN TO LEMANS DESK.

LOST: SILVER AMETRON WATCH LOST SOMEWHERE NEAR MEN'S LOCKER ROOM AT THE ROCK ANYONE HAVING ANY iNFORMATION OF THE WHEREABOUTS OF THIS WATCH CAN CONTACT ME AT x3113. ASKFOABOB

FOR RENT

Furn. Efficiency $1 00 month also 1 &2 ,;! Bed Apts. Close to N.D.& town call25585

Fum. Effic1ency $100 month also 1&2 Bed Apts. Close toN. D.& town call25585

FOR RENT: IndiVIdual or group. Com· fort able house close to campus. bus $500 per semester plus share of ut1ht1es. Call 288·3942 aher 5:30pm

ROOMMATE WANTED· completely fur­niShed apt . super locale. NAME YOUR RENT- Dave 283·1 169

NEE;DED One roommate House near campus. bars. Cat1233·2969

WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS(5 BLOCKS) CRAWLING DIST FROM CORBY S- NOTRE DAME APTS ON BUS ATE BAA. PRIVACY. INEXPENSIVE CALL KIRK 283-8930

WANTED

COMPARATIVE GOVT 342 BOOKS CALL MIKE AT 1689

Need 4 GA·s (2 pr) for MARQUETTE Call AI x1384

YOUR USED FICTION: THE AMBAS­SADORS. LOST IN THE FUN HOUSE. A MONTH OF SUNDAYS. and THE MOVIEGOER CALL Paula at 4648 anytime

Keyboard player needed for rock band now tormmg. Expenence preferred Call Dan at 8694 or Ralph at 6871

Drummer w1th expenence needed tor rock band now form1ng. MUST BE SERIOUS ABOUT ITI Call Dan at 8684 or Ralph at 6871

Need 2 GA·s for North Carolina State CALL 8738

WANTED.MANY MARQUETTE BAS· KETBALL TIX AS SOON AS POSSIBLE CALL DENIS AT 8402

I need two student Marquette B·ball liCk· ets. Call Kathy. 3848. ......... . ....... 1 OR 2 ROOMMATES,GRAD OR LAW TO SHARE. HOUSE IN NICE AREA. CALL KEN AT 239'·5694 OR 289·3945.

WORKERS NEEDED FOR STUDENT UNION PUBLICITY. PAID POSITIONS. TABLE. TENT DISTRIBUTION AND AL­TEAIII·HE POSTEA HANGERS. SIGN UP AT S. U. OFFICE BY FRIDAY

AIDE NEEDED to Champa1gn. Ill.. thiS weekend (Fn .. Jan. 22 • Sun. 24)S Call Mlkeat4540

Drummer to start rock group Must dnnk. too Call M1ke O'Connor at 1851 a her m1dn1te weekdays.

Drummer to start rocK group. Must dnnk.too Call M1ke OConnor at 1851 af· ter m1dn1te weekdays.

Anyone di'1v1ng to NO from W1s lor Mar· quette wknd? If so. fnend w1ll share dnv1ng & expenses. Call M1ke 7987

FOR SALE j FOR SALE - Two studded snow t~res W1ll f1t most compact cars. $25 DO each For more 1nfo call Andy at 8448

PROFESSIONAL SPORTS CLOTHING. UNIFORM JERSEYS. TEAM JACKETS AND MUCH MORE EVERY MAJOR LEAGUE FOOT­BALL.BASEBALL.HOCKEY AND SOC­CER TEAM AVAILABLE EXACTLY THE SAME THINGS THAT THE PROS WEAR WHEN THEY PLAY. GREAT COLLECTORS ITEMS EVEN HAVE BENGAL S SUPER BOWL JERSEYS FOR MORE INFO CALL TIM 1609.

USED & OUT ·PAINT BOOKS bought. sold. searched ERASMUS BOOKS. Tues·Sunday. 12·6 1027 E Wayne (One block south of Eddy·Jefferson Intersec­tion)

TICKETS

DESPERATELY NEED 2 MU GAs. PLEASE HELP!! CALL SUSAN 6354

Ne~d 2' ~t~dent or GA ;;~kets f~r Maryland Call Bruce 288-5442

NEED MARQUETTE TIX ·STUDENT OR GA. KATIE 8001

NEED 1-4 MARYLAND GAS CALL JILL 4802 OR SANDY 4879 (SMC)

Need 2 Marquette GA s.Call Art 3110.

Desperately need 2 MARQUETTE GAS. PLEASE HELPII CALL SUSAN 6354 SOON!

w 30 27 19 18 16

L Pet. GB 9 .769

12 .692 3 FAMILY USE 19 .500 21 .462 22 .421

10.5 12

13.5

For the above. members of the 1mmed1ate fam1ly may use the Rockne fac11ities from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sundays.

Forward Ronnie Williams led the Gators with 25 and Vernon Delancy had 16 for Florida, which fell to 1-6 in the SEC.

NEED TWO STUDENT OR GA MARYLAND TICKETS. CALL AFTER 5. BRIAN 288-5442

WANTED. MARQUETTE STUDENT OR GAS. CALL MIKE OR VINCE. 272·7645

PERSONALS

God ts not without s1n. He created Mac or He s the man(?) for UMOC!

ATTN POLICE FANSI Please respond to my MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE and f1nd me a nde to the Cleveland concert on January 29 - Will share usual. If I don't get dnven to Cleveland. I'll be DRIVEN TO TEARS' Call4330 SMC today!

HELPHELPHELPHELPHELP' I need a t1cket (or more) for the Pollee concert 1n Ch1cago! W1ll be w1lling to dnve anyone to Ch1cago tor the concert tf they can get me a tlcket(s)! W1llmg to spend. some of my hard·earned cash (Smce Corby s burned out - what else 15 there to do anyway?) for a t1cket! Call 01ane at 7933 today!

LaGAOTT A RETURNS' SIX days remam

LOGAN CENTER VOLUNTEERS Start the semester nght. don t m1ss the first Saturday Rec thiS Saturday from 9 00· 11 ·30 am For those of you who can't wa1t -there w1ll be a dance Fnday from 7.30-1 O.OOpm New and old volunteers welcome

Suzanne What's th1S about squeeztng your fluffy ta1i? Ry

JUNIORS and SOPHS: SUITCASE PARTY at G1useppe·s Fn. Jan 29 9 PM $5.00 t1x on sale Jan 18-22 from 1 1 :30-1 PM 1n La Fortune Lobby and 5·6 PM the dtnmg halls. Wtn a tnp For two to Ft Lauderdale!

Susan. fencLng star: your& my !dOl!

ROMAN HOLIDAY. 3 Guys and 25 Food­magnets in one vehicle( not the 64!).

TWENTY years ago today. the female race was blest w1th the BIRTH of BREN­DAN SMITH Show your grad1tude w1th a BIRTHDAY KISSI (You'll recogniZe him as the tall. dark. beefcake from St. Ed's.) HAPPY BIRTHDAY. CUTIEI

The Observer will accept classifieds Mon­day through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. However. classifieds to appear in the next issue must be received by 3 p.m. the business day prior to insertion. All classifieds must be prepaid. either in person or through the mail.

Dear Oom1n1que. Continued success at Notre Dame An­

glers. fam1ly and Ulia wont be the same Without you

A bJentot. A1chard

Grosses Btses a Ntquette ..

Volunteer RecrUitment Meetmg for SAVE (Student Advocates and Volunteers for the Elderly) IS scheduled for Thursday (1/21/82) 1n Room 200- Haggar Hall at 4.30 p m. SAVE offers four programs for the elderly to Interested volunteers For more 1nformat1on. contact VSO 239-7308.

CONGRATULATIONS. KEVIN OMILIAK ON YOUR ENGAGEMENT TO YOUR HTH ITS ABOUT TIME1

The governor at New Jersey. when asked why the state IS pay1ng John Macor s tUitiOn. Listen. would you want the guy hangmg

around your state twelve months a year? The people who hang around the shore are compla1n1ng that he s g1v1ng the place a bad reputat1on JOHN MACOA IS THE UMOC!!!!

Judy. If you'd g1ve your belt to a recrUit who d1d you g1ve your toothbrush to ?

TheWs

JOHN MACORS PERSONALITY IS EVEN UGLIER THAN HE IS!!! GO UMOCII!

MUSICIANS Looking for a drum­mer.vocallst and keyboard player to help form a rock band for 2nd semester. In­terested? Call DeMar 341 0 or Ke1th 3507

ND/SMC WOMEN - Fmd a stud at the Grace Study Lounge bash Fnday n1ght Fest1v1t1es start 1n the 1Oth and 11th floor study lounges at 8 30. and on lower floors later. BE THERE!!!!!

Just when you thought tt was safe to return to the basement of Lafortune. DARBY S PLACE RETURNS!!! It IS open from m1dn1ght unt1l three from Sunday to FRIDAY n1ghts.

TO MY SECRET SIS-Can t thank you enough for the cook1es and browmes. Gtve me another call sometJme Mark m 202 P.S Can you fall1n love w1th a picture?

From Mark·s su1temate 1n 201: Where IS MY secret SIS? I search the wasted tundra (or IS that frozen waste?}. but I hear not a peep or a cook1e from her I MUST HAVE AELEASE!!!(and food). AAAAA· AGGHHH!!

JoeM

YumYum. Thanks for the bite of the B1g Apple

Eve couldnt have done 11 better. OXOX. Nank• Poo

To John w1th no socks. Now barefoot and bronzed. thts proves

the Kelly Corollary. we·ll be 1eatous 1f Dom1noes start falling!

Love. MMC KLP

So Alright Aireadyll What's this garbage about some peon lightweight named Macor? So what's he done, huh? Got a record? I've seen the kid; tall, not even overweight .. .in fact, I think he exercises! and shaveslll!f So look, let's talk about contenders, huh? t mean here you've got a perfect can· didate: 1) He's an incumbent; he got third last year with no experience, and wasn't really trying I 2) He's qualified. Just ask the thousands who voted tor him last year ..• former girlfriends wilt be avalfable for references. 3) He truly cares about the needy this money goes to and doesn't shave a percent­age off the top. 4) He never got hts Win· ner's T-shirl last year, and wants one bad.

NIGHTSOUNDS 105 FM 10 30 PM

SO YOU WANT A CAMPAIGN PROMISE? LAST YEAR WE RAISED NEARLY $250! THIS IS THE BIGriME' THIS YEAR THE JOE MUSUMECI FOR UMOC CAMPAIGN WANTS TO RAISE 1000 DOLLARS!!!!!! THAT'S RIGHT, 1000 BIG ONESI!! ALL FOR PEOPLE WHO NEED IT MORE THAN WE DO. SO I'VE CONTRIBUTED THE FIRST FIVE DOLLARS TO THE OUEST. EVERYBODY MATCHING MY OWN CONTRIBUTION GETS TO TAKE A FREE SLAP AT MY AWARD· WINNING FEATURES! Th1s message was payed for by the Moose for UMOC Committee Joe Musumeci, the one, the only real choice for UMOC ... MUSUMECI THE PEOP~E'S CHOICE Ill I

Page 9: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

Th~ Observ~r - Sports Thursday,January 21, 1982 page 9

Sherrill accepts offer from A&M

PITTSBURGH (AP)- Jackie Sher­rill is starting over as athktic difl·c­tor and ti10thall coal'11 at Texas A&~- with a big l·halknge and a rich contral't that douhks his income.

St-rafino "Foge" Fazio is the new he;1d limthall coach at Pin, with a big grin and I H starters hack from the tl·am Shl·rrill n>ached to the No. 4 ranking last season.

Tom Wilson is out of work, finally fired as coach at Texas A& M aftn holding on whik the Aggks wooed his successor.

And Dr. Frank Vandiver is still prl·sidt_.nt of Texas A&M, although he said hl· gaw thought to quitting his joh during thl· school's hiring­tiring throes.

That is how it stands in Pittsburgh and College Station, Texas. follow­ing fast-paced devdopments Tues­day in the hig money world of major college football.

"People_. know how hard I've workl·d hl·re. Now, I don't get to rdax. I've got to start all over," Sher­rill said with grim determination Tuesday at his farewell press con­ference.

Sherrill, .38, led Pitt to three con­secutive Il-l seasons over the past three years. Texas A&M was 7-S last season. and 21-19 over three years undt·r Wilson.

But Sherrill is rolling up his slct·ves in College Station today he-

Missouri • rematns

unbeaten COUJ~BIA, .\lo. (AP) - Ricky

hazier sank six l·rudal free throws in the lln;ll minute as unbeaten. Sl'l'!Jild-ranked \lbsouri survin·d an up~t·t hid hy arch-rival Kansas, tur­ning hack the .Jay hawks -!I- .~s in a B•J.: Eight ha.,kt·thall game last night.

The untkrdog .Jayhawks posted a 20·1 ') haiti ime lead and quickly jumped ahead hy tlve poims afin in­tt·rmission·as the Tigt·rs had trouble with Kansas' alternating zone and man·to·man tkfenses.

The Tigers, I S-0, went into a stall with ~,IS. rt·maining afit·r a short Jumper hy Stevt· Stipanovich gave Missouri a ~+.B lead.

Frazier. who lt-d the Tigers with IS points, hit two fret· throws with :\:28 lett tor a :\6-3:\ \-tissouri lead and Kansas nl'Vl"r got closer than thrt"l" points again.

The vi<:tory strl·tched Missouri's homl· winning streak to 27 games.

The 41 poims was the lowest any Missouri tt·am has scored sinct· a 41-:\(l vit:tory over Colorado in 195 I.

Erratutn In yesterday's "Irish Items"

l"olumn. Bill \larquard erroneously fl'portt·d that former Notre Dame quartnhack Daryk Lamonica playt·d in Supl·r Bowl II for the Kan!;a.~ City ChiefS. Actually, Lamonica did play in the second Supt·r Bowl, but for the: Oakland Raiders.

Also, Mantuard failed to mention that Dkk Szymanski, a 1955 Notre Daml· graduatt·, played for the Bal­rimort· Colt~ in Super Bowl Ill. lroni· cally, the third Super Bowl wa~ Szvrnanski's llnal NFL gamt·. The for­m~·r lTnter .111d linebacker ret ired

that Jay, and is now the a~sbtant general managn of tht· Colts.

The Obsert•('l' n·grets these errors. - The Uhserl'er

cause the Aggics offered him a con­tract that will make him a Texas millionaire.

Sherrill said only that his base salary will be S9S,OOO per yt·ar, but the deal is reportedly worth at least double that per year when fringes are included, such as tdevison show revenues.

Reportedly, Sherrill asked for more than the S2.2S-million, I l 0-ycar pact the Aggies unsuccessfully offered Michigan's Bo Schem­bechler.

At Pitt, Sherrill made a base pay of S60,000 per year, plus another 540,000 in extras. He admitted the A&M money - and the security it will bring his family - was the key.

Sherrill was sucn·eded im· mediately at Pitt by Fazio, 42, who had been the Panthers' defensive coordinator and assistant head coach.

"I do not consider this a changing of the guard," said Fazio. "I just con­sider this a continuation of the program the administration and the alumni arc committed to."

Pitt made no counter-offer after Sherrill visited A&M Monday. Sher­rill said he expected none.

Former Pitt bead footballl coach jackie She1Till announces his resignation to the press on Tues­day. In the background is his star quarterback,

Dan Marino whose T-shirt proclaims Sherrill's new destination- coach and athletic direction of TexasA&M.'

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WE SHAPE THE FUTURE!

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Page 10: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

l r

---------------- ------------- -----. -·--· --·- .. --·· .. --·-----

The Observer- Sports

continued from page 12

joined the squad either last season Qr this ont". Rarely did Matvey see any of them except during practice times and gamt:s.

Two weeks in the .\1orrb Inn changed that. While otht:r Notrt" Dame students wert: enjoying their Christmas break, DiStanislao's club returned to campus and began prt:paring for a game against a very good Missouri club. Because all dorms were closed for the holiday period, the team bunked in the campus hotel.

"I got to know a lot of people a lot better," says .''11atvey. "Just spending that much time with everybody helped."

Former Indiana Pacers forward Mike Ban tum ( 42) is returning home. Bantom was sold yesterday to the Philadelphia 76ers. He grew up in Philly and went to college at St. joseph's.

It perhaps would be titting if this story could have a kind of prodigal son ending. An "And they all lived happily ever after" conclusion that would create the illusion that every­thing is just hunky-dory in paradise.

Indeed, there is a chapter that would fit that mold. Against the Tigers, Matvey played what may have been her best game in the last two years. She scored I 1 points, hauled down eight rebounds, and played 20 minutes, including the last 13 minutes of the game, when the Irish came from five points down to record a seven-point win.

Those numbers don't even begin to measure her effectiveness, though.

"A couple times, Shari got her fin­gers on the ball, knocked a pass away, little things that disrupted their offense," says Murphy, a graduate assistant. "She had a couple of taps on missed shots, kept the ball alive until one of her teammates could come down with it. It's a cliche, but she did some things that don't show up in the boxscore, and it was because of those things that we won."

DiStanislao echoed the senti­ments of her former player.

"I can honestly say that if it weren't for Shari, things might have ended up differently," says Mary D.

NOTRE DAME STUDENT UNION's A.NNlJAL

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· Seven nights accommodations at the beautiful and exciting Plaza Hmel of Daytona Beach. Located at 600 Nonh Atlamic Ave. il is the most demanded hotel on the strip at that time.

· A truly great schedule of activities including our famous pool deck panies and belly flop comes!.

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· All taxes and gratuities.

OUR TRIPS ARE ALWAYS THE BEST DEAL AND THE BEST TIME The Plaza Hotel, located right in the middle of !he Rrip. Is definitely !he place robe during spring break. Ask ati}One who has been lo Daytona. The hotel has a pool, big party deck. restaurant, tour bars, color 1V. air conditioned rooms and plenty ol activities. Pictures arc available where you sip up. Our motor coaches are nothing bul the higbc!ll qualiry highway coaches. We also gl~ you more enras with our trip than anyone else:. Don'! blow it and Jl(l on a Iowa qualiry lrip.

LAST YE4R OYER 71 PEOPLE HAD THE TIME OF THEIR UFE ON THIS TRIP.

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Thursday,January 21, 1982- page 10

"We needed her leadership - that was the first big game away from home for our freshmen, and by the time things got dowri to the nitty­gritty, there were a lot of people in that arena (waiting to watch the second game of the doubleheader between the two men's teams), and they were chetTing for Missouri. Our freshmen saw the way Shari was playing, and consequently, they were able to . . "

She paused, in silent search for the right word. Pat Knapp found it.

" ... Meet the challange." "That's right," says DiStanislao.

"It's important for a person to be a presenet: on the court. both in per· formance and leadership. In the Mis· so uri game, Shari was our presence."

"All the coaches were really happy with the way I played against Missouri," says Matvey. "They all came up to me and hugged me after the game. I was really intense for that one, and I guess I played pretty well, although I don't think I really did anything differently."

A fairy-tale ending? Yes. The end? No. That's not the end, simply because

this story really doesn't have an end yet. Minutes have been hard to come by for Matvey in the last two Irish games, both wins. But minutes don't make the player. AI McGuire makes an appropriate distinction - "It's quality minutes, when you play, and

... Matvey what you do wht:n you're: in there:, nor how long."

Murphy puts it another way. "People can measure a person's

performance by how many points they score, or how many rebounds they get, or how many minutes they play, or how many records they hold. 1 think Shari is starting to realize that she's competing against individuals now, not against the record books."

"The groundwork for all ufShari;s records was laid against teams that didn't have the caliber of talent of the teams we're playing now," says DiStanislao. "Shari is playing on a team now that is only looking tor her to score some of its points.\ Defense is a segment of the game that Shari wasn't accustomed to playing -now, she's playing good defense for longer periods oftime.

"Shari is just beginning to scratch the surface of her physical poten­tial," she adds. "There's no doubt that she's a fixture on this team -she's our starting center. And she's just beginning to develop into a quality Division I player. She just needs to add a few more moves to her offensive reportoire, and go to the boards with a little more gusto, and continue to apply herself on defense. She's making tremendous progress."

Progress. It's too bad there isn't a spot for that on a stat sheet.

Big Ten teams play new version of Fatnily Feud By JOE MOOSHIL AP Sports Writer

The squabbling, scrambling Big Ten basketball race resumes tonight with thr::e of the four co-leaders hit­ting the road amid budding feuds and talk of putting in shot clocks.

Iowa, Minnesota and Purdue - all tied with Ohio State for first place -will put their 3-1 records on the line on the road.

Iowa is at Northwestern, Min­nesota at Wisconsin and Purdue plays at Ohio State, while Indiana journeys to Illinois and Michigan State visits Michigan.

One feud involves Indiana Coach Bobby Knight and Ohio State, while the other is developing between Minnesota and Iowa.

Knight accused Ohio State's Troy Taylor of a flagrant foul against Jim Thomas on Saturday and sent videotape to Columbus with an as­sistant coac t h earlier in the week to support his claim.

Taylor, a freshman, countered that Knight swore at him. Knight denies that charge but he did criticize the Ohio State coaching staff on his television show Sunday, a move that did not sit too well with Ohio State Athletic Director Hugh Hindman.

Words also were exchanged last week when Minnesota's Randy Breuer took exception to when Iowa Coach Lute Olson called Mic­hael Payne, Iowa's freshman, "the best center in the conference."

After Minnesota defeated Iowa, Breuer said "Lute Olson better stop living in the past. All Lute does is talk, talk, talk with nothing to back it up."

Minnesota Coach Jim Dutcher then called Olson to apologize for Breuer's statement and similar remarks made by Darryl Mitchell. Dutcher talked to his players later and told them to be careful of what they say because "everything they say is quotable."

Meanwhile, the scoring average in the Big Ten has been going down, down, down and some of the coaches are blaming it on deliberate play with slowdown tactics.

Following Illinois' 55-51 victory over Michigan State last Saturday, both coaches Lou Henson of Illinois and Jud Heathcote of Michigan State said they would campaign for the use of shot clocks which would force a team to shoot within 25, 30 or 35 seconds after receiving posses­sion.

''I'm not criticizing anyone who slows it up," said Henson. "It's per­fectly legaL But it's not good for bas­ketball."

SffiC ORIENTATION '81 APPLICATIONS ARE NOW

BEING ACCEPTED FOR: Chairman Assistant Chairman Social Chairman 'Big Sister /Little Sister Off-Campus

Chairman Chairman i General Committee Transfer Chairman

Workers Applications are available in the Student

Activities Office ( 166 Lemans Hall) Deadline for applications-- Tues. Feb 2, 1982

!Please sign up for an interview when you return yo'Ur application.

Page 11: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

Thursday,January 21, 1982- page 11

Molarity Michael Molinelli Campus

Doonesbury

Simon ~E. \\MS KlltEC -EYE.~ Mf\N Wi11l

11\-£ ~~~(, . MAYBE SHE: IS 1\T THE ~ '*" 11\E liAR­tbA t>UT LUKE ~!'ENCEF:

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fAll\ER, 1'1 l 1:1D L AURf\ WHE I'( sHE WA'>

TO ';il>11Y, W T t LOll E MAll. 1 THIN~ S~E Hfh Ar N011\E Vf\Mt 1\ND I~ Ll~ IN(, ~E WHERE IN flREf~- 'f't\lll\P~

flOW ]D YOU ¥.NOW n151'

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•8 a.m. - Meeting, Alumni Board, Cemer for Continuing Education • 1 1: 1 S a.m. - First Class, Introduction to TSO, Computing Center • 3:30p.m. -First Class, Introduction to TSO •4 p.m. - Lecture, "Infrared and Far Infrared Laser Magnetic Resonance Spectra of the CH2 Radical", Dr. Trevor). Sears, Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, Conference Theatre, Radiation Lab • 7, 9: IS, II :30 p.m. - Film, "Chapter Two", Engineering Auditorium, Sl admission •7 p.m. - Lecture, "The Urban Plunge and Economic Issues", Dr. Thomas P. Swartz, Depart­ment of Economics, Library Auditorium, Sponsored hy Center of Experiential Learning • ., p.m. - Wrestling, Bowling Green and Defiance at Notre Dame, ACC • 7 p.m. - Meeting, For all interested in running for Student Body President and Vice-President, Student Government Offices, Second Floor LaFortune •7:30 p.m. -Lecture, "Martha and Mary, The Sis­terhood of Man: An Inquiry Into Study and Spirituality", Rev. Nicholas A yo, C.S.C., Program of Liberal Studies, Memorial Library Lounge •7:30 p.m. - Meeting, All interested in running for the Student Senate, Student Government Offices, Second Floor Oftkes • 8 p.m. - Concert, Rod Stewart, ACC, S 12. SO and S I 0. SO

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16 MASH 22 CBS News 28 Joker's Wild 34 The MacNeil/Lehrer Report 46 Rev. David Paul 16 Allin Tht· Family 22 Family Feud 28 Tic Tac Dough 34 Straight Talk 46 W. V. Grant 16 Fame 22 College ll:u;ketball: Purdue at Ohio

State 28 Mork and Mindy 34 Sneak Previews 46 Lester Sumrall Teaching 28 Best of the West 34 This Old House 46 Pattern For Living 16 Dilfrem Strokes 28 Barney Miller 34 Austin City Limits 46 Today with Lester Sumrall 16 Gimme A Break 28 Taxi 16 Hill Street Blues 22 Nurse 28 20/20 34 Michigan Outdoors

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1982 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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Page 12: Alumni Board -page. 7 · 1/21/1982  · Alumni Board -page. 7 VOL XVI. NO. 71J an indc:-pc:-ndent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1982

' • I ' • r

---------------.

Snorts Thursday, january 21, 1982- page 12

Face Crusaders

Irish \VOnien travel to Valpo By MARK HANNUKSELA Sports Writer

Riding the crest of a five-game winning streak, Notre Dame's women's basketball team will travel to Valparaiso, Ind., tonight for a 7 o'clock date with the Crusaders in Valpo's Hilltop Gymnasium.

The Irish have won the seven pre­vious meetings between the two schools, including last year's 57-48 contest at the ACC.

The closest Valpo has ever come to beating a Notre Dame squad was in the North District Division III tournament two seasons ago, when the Irish prevailed 52-49.

"They're going to keep coming at us," says Irish Coach Mary DiStanis­lao. "They'll be like St. Francis in the respect that they'll hustle the full 40 minutes. We will have to play well and establish the tempo. If we do that, we should be o.k. If we don't, then it'll be like pulling teeth."

Guard Carol Radivan is the leading scorer for Coach Sandy Harms' club. She is averaging 14 points per outing.

"She's a decent shooter," says DiS­tanislao. "She can drive, and she can pull up and shoot. We'll have to keep her from penetrating."

Kathy W eisen is the only other Crusader scoring in double figures. She averages 10 ppg.

Irish center Shari Matvey, bolder of 34 Notre Dame records, bas accepted her new limited role with the team. See Mark Hannuk­sela's profile below. (photo by john Macor)

Valpo's tallest player, 5-10 Carla Sebasty, is also its leading reboun­der. Sebasty is pulling down a shade over five rebounds per game.

Support your local hockey teant If there was ever a right time for a columm that deals

with that annual issue of Notre Dame hockey support, this is it. Notre Dame's ace-in-the-hole (football) al­ready has been trumped, and its traditionally strong second hand is being dealt with mercilessly by the op­position.

That leaves few alternatives for that incessently wan­ton beast known as the student body. Unfortunately, many have written off sports as a whole and arc perfect­ly willing to wait and see what develops next year.

That is the sound, but awfully safe, thing to do. There is, after all, a very good chance that both the football and basketball teams will be back to normal come next fall and winter.

But for those who shun complacency and yearn for an immediate fix of the thrill of collegiate athletics, all is not lost. In fact, things might just be a little better than one would think.

You sec, there is this bunch of guys who hang out in the North Dome of the ACC and partake in this pretty excellent game called ice hockey. And not only do they play this sport, but they have the tendency to play it well.

Admittedly, this has not always been the case. Last year, for instance, the Irish struggled from start to finish - especially at the ACC. Sadly, Lefty Smith's squad of a year ago floundered to a 4-13-1 record on home icc, and although the team did play better on the road, there was little to cheer about for Irish partisans.

For the first half of this season, Notre Dame has seen good and bad times both home and away. Presently, the Irish sport a 6-5-0 record at the ACC and a 6-5-2 record on foreign ice, including two wins at the "neutral" Joe Louis Arena in Detroit over Michigan and Michigan Tech.

Granted, this t record won't keep people awake at night with excitement, but it does show that some serious progress has been made. And the best thing about this whole situation is that right now, just when they need to most, the team is playing as well as it has in a long time.

By outscoring their opponents 36-22 in the last six games, the Irish have shown that not only do they finally deserve some home support, but that they have earned it. From Dave Laurion all the way up ice to Dave Poulin, Notre Dame is playing good, hard-skating hockey, and lately, they have done it against some of the better teams in the country,

If the Irish can be considered hot, this weekend's op­ponent must be, at the very least, sweltering. Bowling Green is undoubtedly the hottest hockey team in the nation -a fact that will be readily verified by any of the Falcons' opponents in the last two months.

Michael Olenik Sports Writer

In its last 16 games, Bowling Green has lost but once. That includes its present streak of nine consecutive wins - an excellent achievement for any hockey program. Obviously, something will have to bend when these two teams meet Friday night and Saturday after­noon.

The funny thing is that Notre Dame has no intention of being pliable in any way whatsoever. It is not a feeling of overconfidence, but of determination. The Irish realize that this series is very important, and that a sweep is within their grasp.

The question then, no longer concerns the team it­self. It instead deals with a second, and yet still impor­tant issue.

Will it matter to anyone besides the team? Will the team be left to face the Falcons before the

usual I 500-1900 diehards who make their appearance a token visit more than anything else? Or is it possible to muster a semblance of legitimate support for a team that genuinely needs it?

Hooefuhy, it is possible. It seems awfully possible for the schools that the Irish visit on the road, whether it is primarily a hockey school such as Northern Michigan or a more diversified one like Michigan.

But for some reason, this school, that only two short years ago pledged its support for the hockey program on national TV, refuses to check out the product of its efforts. Rather, it leaves the team with virtually no home advantage - a fact that can only hurt a team's morale and, ultimately, its performance.

The result of an enthusiastic atmosphere helps this team immeasurably. As defense man John Schmidt puts it, "The noise is what realy gives us a lift - whether it's home or on the road. We just get psyched when the crowd gets into the game, and unfortunately, that only seems to happen when we are playing away."

So, just to be crazy or at least different, why don't some people stop by the rink this weekend" It really isn't that painful of an experience to watch this Irish team play hockey, and who knows, you might even have a decent time as you ride out the effects of a happy hour. Just keep an eye or an ear on the pep band and enjoy yourself.

The team would appreciate it.

Notre Dame is led both in scoring and rebounding by freshman Mary Beth Schueth. Schueth averages just under 12 points a game, and 9.6 rebounds per game.

Also scoring in double figures for the Irish are freshmen Carrie Bates (II. 7 ppg.) and Ruth Kaiser ( 11.2 ppg.).

Another freshman, Laura Doug­herty, is just under double figures at 9.8.

Dougherty, a native of Hillsdale, N.J., already has tied an Irish record in her short stint under the Dome. In Sunday's 76-60 win over SMU, Doug­herty was perfect on six attempts from the free throw line, tying a single game record held by sopho­more teammate jenny Klauke (set last season against Virginia) and jane Politiski (set in january of 1979 against Saint Mary's).

"Laura is fitting in very comfortab­ly at both guards slots," says DiS­tanislao. "She's showing improvement with every game, and

she's really starting to Jive up to her advance billing."

In her last two outings, Dougherty has shot 1 0-of-14 from the floor. All of her shots have come from the 15-18 foot range, straight away.

The Crusaders will enter the con­test with a 3-4 mark after downing Manchester College by a point Tues­day. They have played two op­ponents who also have matched up against the 9-3 Irish. Valpo dropped a 91-36 contest to Butler University in the second game of the season. The Crusaders also defeated Saint Mary's, 66-58.

The Irish downed SMC, 92-29, in their third game, before bowing to Butler, 67-58.

IRISH ITEMS: The Irish return home to play four games at the ACC in a week's time, beginning Saturday afternoon against St. Ambrose and Sunday versus a talented Michigan team .. Ball State and Marquette close out the week-long homestand.

Matvey accepts her new limited role By MARK HANNUKSELA Sports Writer

it.

Pick a record, any record. Yeah, that's right, any one. Chances are, Shari Matvey holds

She's tall, and she's a sharpshooter in other words, she's the

franchise. Or was. It's not often that the owner Of 34

individual records finds herself forced to make adjustments in mid­career. It goes without saying that in the rare instances when such adjust­ments arc necessary, they are met with a certain degree of resistance.

You can't teach an old dog ... If there's a starting point in this

story, it was December 5, 1981 -little more than a month and a half ago. UCLA's eighth-ranked women's basketball team paid its first-ever visit to the ACC. The Bruins were ex­pected to leave with a win - the margin of victory was up to them.

Fresh off an 18-point outing against St. joseph's in the season­opener, Matvey, Notre Dame's junior center, was ready for her first real test against stellar opposition. So were her parents, who drove to Notre Dame from their Youngstown, Ohio, home to watch her perform. Little did they suspect that when freshman Carrie Bates replaced Matvey in the Notre Dame lineup at the 16:20 mark of the second half, their daughter would not return.

Less than a week later, Notre Dame traveled to Indianapolis for a game with Division II power Butler University. Early in the second half, Irish head coach Mary DiStanislao brought Matvey to the bench be­cause of a couple of defensive lapses. Mary D and her assistants, Patrick Knapp and Mary Murphy, explained the problem to Matvcy, and told her how to prevent such lapses in the future. Matvcy never returned to the lineup.

Two days later, Matvey played on­ly six minutes against Northern Il­linois. All six came while Notre Dame was building a 37-25 first-half lead. Following the completion of final exams a week later, Matvcy and her teammates took part in a tourna­ment hosted by the University of Pennsylvania. In two games, Mat-

vey's total playing time added up to 17 minutes.

For someone used to nothing but highs, the first low looks worse than rock bottom. It's to Matvey's credit that she didn't let that low point des­toy her. But she couldn't stop the frustration. Friends who asked about the reduced playing time did no­thing to help matters.

Without a doubt, Christmas couldn't have come at a better time.

"I was so glad just to get away for six days," she says, the relief still evi­dent in her expression. "Basketball is so time consuming - I probably spend 80 percent of my time on it. I was really frustrated at that point -sometimes I wouldn't play very much, and at times I was unsure of myself on the court.

"It was good just to forget about it for a while."

Somewhere in that six-day respite, Matvey readjusted her prioities.

"I decided that I'm just going to go out and play." she says. "I'm going to be intense and hustle and play good defense and do everything the coaches want. Basketball is still fun, and I enjoy being part of this team."

Being part of the team. That was another adjustment forced upon Matvey. DiStanislao explains it this way.

"Whenever something becomes extinct," DiStanislao says, "a kind of fraternity develops. It's the 'old guard,' if you will. There's a certain camaraderie among those people who were part of that thing."

Matvey and senior captain Missy Conboy are the only holdovers from the pre-DiStanislao era. Of the remaining nine members of the team, six are DiStanislao recruits. The other three arc walk-ons who

see MA1VEY, page 10

Inside: BigTen,p.lO

Sherrill, p. 9

Standings, p. 8