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Pope — page 4 The Observer/Pete Laches VOL XVIII, NO. 141 the independent student newspaper serving nut re dame ami saint man's MONDAY, MAY 7, 1984 Alcohol policy gets mixed reviews from South Bend groups Democratic Senator Gary H art o f Colorado receives a T-shirt from Bemie Pellegrino, campus coordinator fo r Hart’s campaign, after Hart spoke to an overflow crowd Friday at South Bend’s Century Center. More on the presidential hopeful’s address is in the story below. Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign speech By TIMOTHY GIANOTTI Senior S ta ff Reporter The city of South Bend cannot make up its mind about Notre Dame’s new alcohol policy. On one hand, owners and managers of local bars think the policy w ill drastically increase the circulation of false identification and the number of minors in their es tablishments. On the other hand, Mayor Roger Parent feels the new policy is a necessary step on the road to “ a new consciousness.” Assistant Manager of Bridget McGuire’s Filing Station, Greg Jack son, admits the new policyis going to make the tavern’s job a lot tougher than it presently is. “We are kind of disheartened about the new policy, ” said Jackson. “We are going to be flooded with young people and fake I.D.’s.” He said Bridget’s tries very hard to prevent illegal drinking, and he an ticipates a great challenge facing his security people next year. South Bend Police w ill be jacking up patrols and watching local bars much more closely, he said. He ex pects they are afraid minors will venture off campus to drink and take to the streets drunk. It w ill create a “larger area of con gestion" at times when there is usually no traffic problem, Jackson said. Owner of Corby’s, Harold A. Rowley, Jr., agreed. It is going to precipitate a number of problems.” The tavern industry has not had many problems this year, Jackson said. Alcohol-related vandalism and violence is at a low. “ It has been a good year,” he said. One contributor to the an ticipated off campus drinking surge w ill be the new identification sys tem at Senior Bar, said general manager John Bowie. A computer, similar to those presently stationed in the dining halls, w ill be installed to verify the age of customers, he said. The new, permanent student identification cards w ll feature a magnetized birth date which the computer w ill regis ter. In addition to this, said Bowie, Senior Bar w ill continue to require see POLICY, page 5 By TOM MOWLE Assistant News Editor defense cuts because they are a “cut . in pay and readiness and more into nuclear weapons this country simp ly doesn’t need.” Hart supports a freeze on deploy ment and testing of nuclear weapons, “a ban on weapons in space, whether nuclear or non nuclear, and an end to the prolifera tion of nuclear technologies in the third world.” He does not support Selective Service in its current form, but would prefer some form of uni versal service with no exemptions. This service would have a non- military option such as the Peace Corps. He promoted more spending in education because “human minds and human skills are our most im portant and most precious asset.” He warned Reagan, “if you think educa tion is too expensive, wait till you see how much ignorance costs.” Hart said he would go beyond the education progrms of the ’60s and ’70s and increase teacher salaries and training and “elevate the overall quality of education.” He said a reduction to 70 percent from the current 100 percent tax deduction on business lunches would “fully finance the hot lunch program and add three million children to the program.” More jobs would be created by in vestments in the physical structure of the nation — bridges, roads, and dams — Hart said. More industrial growth would be promoted, he said, with tax reform that would “take the premium off mergers, buyouts and runaway plants, and place it on productivity and growth.” After his speech, Hart specified some proposals in this area, such as requiring three to six month notification before a plant closing and establishing an individual train ing account for each worker which could be used to pay for retraining or relocation of the worker. He felt $13 billion could be saved by “reorganizing our health system, w ith a new concentration on preventive medicine and competi tion.” Hart said he would be able to provide the “new leadership” the country needs. “The old approach of my own party,” he added, was to promise everything to various con stituency groups in hope of putting together a winning coalition. But it is not fair, nor is it wise government, to mortgage the future to pay for political generosity now.” Hart concluded his 19 minute address by saying he offered the kind of leadership that would “call forth the best in the American people.” Committee requests more required courses By SARAH HAMILTON News E ditor The Curriculum Committee recommended the addition of two courses to the present 13 Questions on alcohol answered by Hesburgh By KEITH HARRISON, Jr. Sen io r S taffReporter “I think it’s a very moderate policy,” said Father Theodore Hes burgh, University president, refer ring to the new campus alcohol policy. Many people have misunderstood the policy because they have not read it, said Hesburgh, who spoke at Cavanaugh Hall last night. “When I first came here, we were at ‘A,’ which was totally dry,” said Hesburgh. “Then later we went to ‘Z,’ which was pretty wet. Now we’re going to ‘M,’ which is some where in between the two ex tremes." The new alcohol policy will not deny students the opportunity to Father Theodore Hesburgh make responsible decisions, said Hesburgh. “People say that we’re taking away student responsibility,” said Hesburgh. “That’s not true. The new policy gives people a chance to exercise some responsibility. If they don’t exercise responsibility, then we may have to take further action.” “What we’re not doing is telling people to go break the law,” said Hesburgh. Hesburgh also commented on the student rallies and protests that have recently taken place on campus. Al though he was not on campus at the time of the rallies, he saw the televi sion coverage of them. “I can say that we have a great student body, they are intelligent, bright and ded icated. The way they were portrayed is not the way they are,” he said. Releasing the University directives the day after the an nouncement of the alcohol policy “confused the issue,” said Hesburgh. “You’re talking about two things,” he said. "First there is the policy it self, which has been approved and is not negotiable. Then there are the directives, which are the regulations which w ill be used to carry out the new policy,” said Hesburgh. The directives are being negotiated, and a final draft should be ready by sum mer, according to Hesburgh. Hesburgh discussed his role in the see HESBURGH, page 4 University required courses in its final report. An additional course in history/social science and one in fine arts/literature have been sug gested for all students. According to the report, concern was expressed during committee deliberations that "the arts should be better integrated into University life in general and specifically into the curriculum.” The committee discussed the need for one require ment in literature and one in fine arts, but due to constraints on the curriculum, one course in either of the two fields was considered suffi cient. As the curriculum stands, a stu dent can graduate without taking a social science class. This is also true for history. Recognizing this problem, the committee advised that the quantity of required courses in these areas be increased to two. The curricular choice must con tinue because of the sizes of the departments as well as the limits of the majors. Another recommendation in the committee’s report is “the lengthen ing of the time frame within which certain courses must be taken.” “It was what we needed to do to let students have more freedom” in fulfilling requirements said commit see CLASSES, page 6 Notice Today’s issue is the last Observer for this semester. Good luck on Finals and have an enjoyable sum mer! Democratic Presidential hopeful Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado told an overflow crowd at South Bend’s Century Center Friday that Presi dent Ronald Reagan’s policies are an “economic Vietnam." Besides the dangers of deficits, Hart mentioned education, health care, defense and the nation’s physi cal plant as areas of special concern. The Senator cited a group of past Secretaries of the Treasury who said “a weakening economy in 1985 threatens to send the deficits soaring . . to $300 billion to $400 billion in the late 1980’s. The danger of such high deficits, he said, is they “ soak up capital, com pete with other borrowers for money, and confuse the relationship between the dollar and other cur rencies, to the point where it is vir tually impossible for us to compete in w orld trade.” Hart said the deficits are “stealing from our future" and the recovery w ill be "paid for entirely out of the pockets of coming generations.” Continuing the theme of future generations, Hart added “if these deficits continue to grow as they have, by the time your three year old child is 18, she w ill have to earn $10,000 a year just to pay his or her share of the interest on the national debt.” Hart blamed Reagan for these problems, saying “the first thing we have to do is send Ronald Reagan back to the ranch for a well- deserved retirement. I don’t know if he deserves it, but certainly we do!” Hart outlined his solutions to the deficit as requiring “sacrifice of all Americans except those least able to do so.” He favors reversing some of the Reagan tax cut and postponing tax indexing. In defense, the Senator would can cel the MX missile and the B I bomber, and stress “larger numbers of less costly weapons and readiness for tbe kind of wars and missions that are most likely to happen.” He criticized Reagan’s proposed
30

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Page 1: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Pope — page 4

T h e O b s e rv e r/P e te Laches

VOL XVIII, NO. 141 the independent student newspaper serving nut re dame ami saint m an's MONDAY, MAY 7, 1984

Alcohol policy getsmixed reviews from South Bend groups

D e m o c ra tic S e n a to r G a ry H a r t o f C o lo ra d o receives a T -sh ir t f r o m B e m ie P e lle g rin o , ca m p u s c o o rd in a to r f o r H a r t ’s ca m p a ig n , a f te r H a r t spoke to a n o v e rf lo w

c ro w d F rid a y a t S ou th B e n d ’s C e n tu ry Center. M o re on the p re s id e n tia l h o p e fu l’s address is in the s to ry be low .

Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign speech

By TIMOTHY GIANOTTISenior S ta ff Reporter

The c ity o f South Bend cannot make up its m in d about N o tre Dam e’s new a lco h o l po licy .

O n one hand, ow ne rs and managers o f loca l bars th in k the p o lic y w i l l d ra s tica lly increase the c irc u la tio n o f false id e n tif ic a tio n and the n u m b e r o f m ino rs in th e ir es­tablishm ents.

O n the o th e r hand, M ayor Roger Parent feels the n e w p o lic y is a necessary step on the road to “ a new consciousness.”

Assistant M anager o f B ridge t M cG u ire ’s F ilin g Station, G reg Jack­son, adm its the new p o lic y is go ing to make the tave rn ’s jo b a lo t to u gh e r than it p resen tly is.

“ W e are k in d o f d isheartened about the new p o lic y , ” said Jackson. “ W e are go ing to be flo o d ed w ith yo u n g peop le and fake I.D .’s.”

He said B rid g e t’s tr ies ve ry hard to p reven t illega l d rin k in g , and he an­tic ipa tes a great cha llenge facing his se cu rity peop le ne x t year.

South Bend P o lice w i l l be ja ck in g up pa tro ls and w a tch in g loca l bars m uch m ore close ly , he said. He e x ­

pects they are afra id m in o rs w il l ve n tu re o f f cam pus to d r in k and take to the streets d runk.

I t w i l l c reate a “ la rge r area o f c o n ­ges tion " at tim es w hen the re is usua lly no tra ffic p ro b le m , Jackson said.

O w n e r o f C o rb y ’s, H aro ld A. R ow ley, Jr., agreed. I t is go ing to p re c ip ita te a n u m b e r o f p ro b le m s .”

The tave rn in d u s try has no t had m any p rob le m s th is year, Jackson said. A lco h o l-re la te d vandalism and v io le n ce is at a low .

“ I t has been a good year,” he said.O ne c o n tr ib u to r to the an­

tic ip a te d o f f cam pus d r in k in g surge w il l be the new id e n tif ic a tio n sys­tem at S en ior Bar, said general m anager John Bow ie.

A co m p u te r, s im ila r to those p rese n tly s ta tioned in the d in in g halls, w i l l be ins ta lled to ve rify the age o f custom ers, he said. The new, p e rm anent s tuden t id e n tif ica tio n cards w l l fea ture a m agnetized b ir th date w h ic h the co m p u te r w i l l reg is­ter.

In a d d itio n to th is, said Bow ie, S en ior Bar w i l l co n tin u e to requ ire

see POLICY, page 5

By TOM MOWLEA ssis tan t News E d ito r

defense cu ts because they are a “ c u t . in pay and readiness and m ore in to n uc lea r w eapons th is c o u n try s im p ­ly doesn ’t need.”

H art supports a freeze on d e p lo y ­m en t and te s tin g o f nuc lea r weapons, “ a ban on weapons in space, w h e th e r nuc lea r o r n o n ­nuclear, and an end to the p ro life ra ­t io n o f nuc le a r techno log ies in the th ird w o r ld .” He does n o t su p p ort Selective Service in its c u rre n t fo rm , b u t w o u ld p re fe r some fo rm o f u n i­versal serv ice w ith no exem ptions. T h is serv ice w o u ld have a non- m ilita ry o p tio n such as the Peace Corps.

He p ro m o te d m ore spending in e d uca tion because “ hum an m inds and hum an sk ills are o u r m ost im ­p o rta n t and m ost p re c io u s asset.” He w a rned Reagan, “ i f yo u th in k educa­tio n is to o expensive, w a it t i l l you see h o w m uch igno rance costs.”

H art said he w o u ld go beyond the educa tion p rog rm s o f the ’60s and ’70s and increase teacher salaries and tra in in g and “ e levate the o ve ra ll q u a lity o f e d uca tion .” He said a re d u c tio n to 70 p e rce n t fro m the c u rre n t 100 p e rce n t tax d e d u c tio n on business lunches w o u ld “ fu lly finance the h o t lu n c h p rog ram and add th ree m ill io n c h ild re n to the p rog ram .”

M ore jobs w o u ld be crea ted b y in ­vestm ents in the phys ica l s tru c tu re o f the na tion — bridges, roads, and dams — H art said. M ore in d u s tria l g ro w th w o u ld be p ro m o te d , he said, w ith tax re fo rm tha t w o u ld “ take the p re m iu m o f f m ergers, buyou ts and runaw ay p lants, and p lace i t on p ro d u c t iv ity and g ro w th .”

A fte r h is speech, H art spec ified some proposa ls in th is area, such as re q u ir in g th re e to s ix m o n th n o tif ic a tio n be fo re a p lan t c los ing and estab lish ing an in d iv id u a l tra in ­ing accoun t fo r each w o rk e r w h ic h c o u ld be used to pay fo r re tra in in g o r re lo c a tio n o f the w o rke r.

He fe lt $13 b il l io n co u ld be saved by “ reo rgan iz ing o u r hea lth system, w ith a ne w co n ce n tra tio n on p re ve n tive m ed ic ine and c o m p e ti­t io n .”

H art said he w o u ld be able to

p ro v id e the “ new leadersh ip ” the c o u n try needs. “ The o ld approach o f m y o w n p a rty ,” he added, was to p rom ise e ve ry th in g to various c o n ­s titu e n cy g roups in hope o f p u tt in g to g e th e r a w in n in g co a lit io n . B ut i t is n o t fa ir, n o r is i t w ise governm ent, to m ortgage the fu tu re to pay fo r p o lit ic a l generos ity n o w .”

H art c o n c lu d e d h is 19 m in u te address by saying he o ffe red the k in d o f leadersh ip tha t w o u ld “ ca ll fo r th the best in the A m erican peop le .”

Committee requests more required coursesBy SARAH HAMILTONNews E d ito r

T he C u rric u lu m C o m m itte e recom m ended the add itio n o f tw o courses to the presen t 13

Questions on alcohol answered by HesburghBy KEITH HARRISON, Jr.Sen io r S ta ff R eporter

“ I th in k i t ’s a ve ry m oderate p o lic y ,” said Father T heo d o re Hes­burgh , U n ive rs ity p res iden t, re fe r­r in g to th e ne w cam pus a lcoho l po licy .

M any peop le have m isunders tood the p o lic y because they have n o t read it, said H esburgh, w h o spoke at Cavanaugh H a ll last n ight.

“ W hen I f irs t came here, w e w ere at ‘A,’ w h ic h was to ta lly d ry ,” said Hesburgh. “ T hen la te r w e w e n t to ‘Z,’ w h ic h was p re tty w e t. N o w w e ’re go ing to ‘M ,’ w h ic h is som e­w h e re in be tw een the tw o e x ­trem es."

The n e w a lco h o l p o lic y w i l l n o t deny students the o p p o r tu n ity to

F a th e r Theodore H esburgh

make responsib le decisions, said Hesburgh. “ People say tha t w e ’re tak ing away s tuden t re sp o n s ib ility ,” said Hesburgh. “ T ha t’s n o t true . The new p o lic y gives peop le a chance to exerc ise som e resp o n s ib ility . I f they d on ’t exe rc ise resp o n s ib ility , then w e m ay have to take fu r th e r ac tio n .”

“ W hat w e ’re n o t d o in g is te ll in g peop le to go break the law ,” said Hesburgh.

H esburgh also com m e n te d on the s tuden t ra llie s and pro tests th a t have re c e n tly taken p lace on campus. A l­th o ug h he was n o t on cam pus at the tim e o f the ra llies, he saw the te le v i­s ion coverage o f them . “ I can say tha t w e have a great s tuden t body, they are in te llig e n t, b r ig h t and de d ­icated. The w ay they w e re po rtra ye d is n o t the w ay they are,” he said.

Releasing the U n ive rs ity d ire c tive s the day after the an­nouncem en t o f the a lcoho l p o lic y “ confused the issue,” said Hesburgh.

“ Y o u ’re ta lk in g about tw o th ings,” he said. "F irs t the re is the p o lic y i t ­self, w h ic h has been approved and is n o t negotiab le. Then the re are the d irec tives, w h ic h are the regu la tions w h ic h w i l l be used to ca rry o u t the ne w p o lic y ,” said Hesburgh. The d ire c tive s are be ing negotia ted , and a fin a l d ra ft shou ld be ready by sum ­m er, acco rd in g to Hesburgh.

H esburgh discussed h is ro le in the

see HESBURGH, page 4

U n ive rs ity re q u ire d courses in its fin a l repo rt. An a dd itiona l course in h is to ry /s o c ia l science and one in fine a rts / lite ra tu re have been sug­gested fo r a ll students.

A cc o rd in g to th e rep o rt, conce rn was expressed d u r in g co m m itte e d e lib e ra tio n s tha t " th e arts shou ld be b e tte r in teg ra ted in to U n ive rs ity life in genera l and sp e c ifica lly in to the c u rr ic u lu m .” The co m m itte e discussed the need fo r one re q u ire ­m en t in lite ra tu re and one in fine arts, b u t due to co ns tra in ts on the c u rr ic u lu m , one course in e ith e r o f the tw o fie lds was cons ide red su ffi­c ien t.

As the c u rr ic u lu m stands, a stu ­d en t can graduate w ith o u t ta k in g a socia l science class. T h is is also tru e fo r h is to ry . R ecogn iz ing th is p ro b le m , the co m m itte e advised tha t the q u a n tity o f re q u ire d courses in these areas be increased to tw o . The c u rr ic u la r ch o ice m ust c o n ­tin u e because o f the sizes o f the departm en ts as w e ll as the lim its o f the m ajors.

A n o th e r reco m m en d a tio n in the c o m m itte e ’s re p o rt is “ the len g the n ­in g o f the tim e fram e w ith in w h ic h c e rta in courses m ust be taken.”

“ I t was w h a t w e needed to do to le t s tudents have m ore free d o m ” in fu lf i l l in g req u ire m e n ts said c o m m it

see CLASSES, page 6

Notice

Today’s issue is the last Observer for this semester. Good luck on Finals and have an enjoyable sum­mer!

D em ocra tic P residen tia l ho p e fu l Sen. G ary H art o f C o lo rado to ld an o v e rf lo w c ro w d at South B end ’s C e n tu ry C en te r Friday tha t P resi­den t Ronald Reagan’s p o lic ie s are an “ e co n om ic V ie tnam ."

Besides the dangers o f de fic its , H art m en tio n e d education , hea lth care, defense and the n a tio n ’s p h ys i­cal p lan t as areas o f specia l concern .

The Senator c ite d a g ro u p o f past Secretaries o f the T reasury w h o said “ a w eaken ing econom y in 1985 threatens to send the de fic its soaring . . to $300 b il l io n to $400 b il l io n in the late 1980 ’s.

The danger o f such h igh de fic its , he said, is they “ soak up cap ita l, c o m ­pete w ith o th e r b o rro w e rs fo r m oney, and confuse the re la tio n sh ip be tw een the d o lla r and o th e r c u r ­rencies, to the p o in t w h e re i t is v ir ­tu a lly im poss ib le fo r us to com pe te in w o r ld trade.”

H art said the d e fic its are “ stea ling fro m o u r fu tu re " and the reco ve ry w i l l be "p a id fo r e n tire ly o u t o f the pocke ts o f c o m in g generations.”

C o n tin u in g the them e o f fu tu re generations, H art added “ i f these de fic its co n tin u e to g ro w as they have, by the tim e y o u r th ree year o ld c h ild is 18, she w i l l have to earn $10,000 a year ju s t to pay h is o r he r share o f the in te re s t on the na tiona l d eb t.”

H art b lam ed Reagan fo r these p rob lem s, saying “ the firs t th in g w e have to do is send Ronald Reagan back to the ranch fo r a w e ll- deserved re tire m en t. I d o n ’t k n o w i f he deserves it, b u t ce rta in ly w e d o !”

H art o u tlin e d his so lu tio n s to the d e fic it as re q u ir in g “ sacrifice o f all A m ericans e xce p t those least able to do so.” He favors reve rs ing som e o f the Reagan tax c u t and p o s tpo n in g tax index ing .

In defense, the Senator w o u ld can­ce l the M X m issile and the B I bom ber, and stress “ la rge r num bers o f less co s tly w eapons and readiness fo r tbe k in d o f w ars and m issions that are m ost lik e ly to happen.” He c r it ic iz e d Reagan’s proposed

Page 2: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 2

In BriefD r. Robert A. H ow land, pro fessor o f m echan ica l

eng inee ring , was nam ed ou ts tan d in g teacher o f the year Friday n ig h t at th e 1984 H o n o r A w ard C erem ony o f the C ollege o f Engineering. H ow land , w hose classes in c lu d e m echanics fo r sophom ore en­g ineers, was recogn ized fo r his a b ility to teach beyond the equations and re la te the system atic approach o f so lv in g eng inee ring prob lem s. Dean Roger Schm itz, w h o read a c ita tio n a n nounc ing th e award, said H ow land has earned the respect o f his s tudents by h is open-ended o ffice hours, w it and in v o lv e m e n t in e x tra cu rr ic u la rs A lso at the honors banquet, fo u r sen io r eng in ee rin g students — Anna Bleyer, M ark Kraem er, D avid Sarphie and M ary Soko loski — w ere g iven the Rev. Thom as A. S te iner Prize, w h ic h annua lly honors the co lle g e ’s to p graduates. Dr. L ione l B a ldw in , dean o f C o lo rado State U n ive r­s ity ’s C o llege o f E ng ineering, was aw arded the 1984 E ng ineering H o n o r A w ard. — The O bserver

Mishawaka police arrested a Notre Dameju n io r Friday a fte rnoon at the U n ive rs ity Park M all w hen the s tuden t got in to a figh t w ith an o ff-d u ty South Bend p o lice o ffice r. D e tec tive Sgt. Je rry S chroder said the s tuden t was arrested at 5:15 and was trans fe rred to St. Joseph C o u n ty Ja il F riday n igh t. S ch roder w o u ld no t e labo ra te on deta ils o f the in c id e n t. He said the o ff-du ty p o licem an was w o rk in g as a s e c u rity o ffic e r fo r H udson ’s D epa rt­m ent Store. Form al charges are expec te d to be f ile d today. — The O bserver

K nute Rockne S bust is m iss ing fro m its pedestal inthe Rockne M em oria l b u ild in g . T he b ronze bust, w h ic h is about 24inches ta ll, was made by N ison T re g o r in 1940. — The O bserver

D id yOU fo il to re p o r t som e incom e, to c la im tax c re d its o r d educ tions , o r e rro u n e ou s ly c la im d e d uc tio n s o r c re d its to w h ic h you w e re n o t e n tit le d on a p re v io u s ly f ile d federa l in com e tax retu rn? You can c o rre c t these e rro rs by f i l in g an am ended re tu rn , the In te rn a l Revenue Service said. The am ended re tu rn is f ile d on Form 1040X, "A m ended U.S. In d iv id u a l Incom e Tax R e tu rn ," and can be used to c o rre c t any p re v io u s ly file d Form 1040, 1040A o r 1040EZ. Form 1040X m ust be filed w ith in th re e years fro m the date o f the o r ig in a l re tu rn o r w ith in tw o years fro m the tim e the tax was paid, w h ic h e v e r is later. It is no t necessary to file an am ended re tu rn to c o rre c t a d d itio n and su b tra c tio n e rro rs , o r i f you fa iled to subm it a re q u ire d schedule. Form 1040X and in s tru c tio n s m ay be ob ta ined by c a llin g the IRS to ll- fre e at 1 -800-424-1040. — The O bserver

The U niversity C lub at Notre Dam eclosed th is w eekend w h ile tests a ttem p ted to d isco ve r w h e th e r an em p loyee m ig h t have tran sm itte d bacteria d u rin g food hand ling o r p repara tion . The inves tiga tion began a fte r 33 o f 36 m em bers o f the U n ive rs ity 's deve lo pm e n t d e p a rtm en t s ta ff became i l l a fte r a lu n c h ­eon at the c lu b on A p ril 27 w ith sym ptom s o f nausea, v o m itin g and cram ps. M em bers o f a no the r lu n ch e on party on M onday also became ill. N o one was hosp ita lized. John D c itch le y , food superv iso r fo r the St. Joseph C o u n ty H ealth D epa rtm en t, said test resu lts o f em p loyee s to o l c u ltu re s p ro b a b ly w o u ld n o t be co m p le te d u n t il last n igh t. The c lu b manager said a llega tions o f food p o iso n in g re p o rte d in The S ou th B end T r ib u n e have n o t been p roven. — The O bserver

Of InterestGuest tickets fo r C om m encem ent win be

ava ilab le at the R eg istra r’s o ffice W ednesday th ro u g h Friday. Each s tuden t m ust present his o r h e r s tuden t ( o r o th e r p h o to ) I D card and a re c e ip t sho w in g he o r she has ren te d a cap and gow n. — The O bserver

WeatherA 60 percent chance of showers

and possib le th u nd e rs to rm s today. B reezy and m ild w ith the h igh in the u p p e r 60s to near 70. A 20 pe rce n t chance o f even ing show ers to n ig h t then c learing. Breezy and c o o le r w ith the lo w in the m id to u p p e r 40s. P artly sunny, b reezy and c o o le r Tues­day. H igh in th e u p p e r 50s to a lm ost 60. —AP

The ObserverT h e O b s e rv e r ( I SPS 599 2 -4 0 0 0 ) i*. pub lished M onday th ro u g h ir id u y and on hom e fo o tb a ll Saturdays, excep t d u r in g exam and vacation periods. T h e O b s e rv e r is pub lished by the s tudents o f the U n ive rs ity o f N o tre Dame and Saint M ary's C o llege Subscrip tions may be purchased fo r $25 per year ( $ 1 5 per sem este r) by w r it in g T h e O b s e rv e r, P ( ) Box Q. N o tre Dame, Indiana tb55(>

T h e O b s e rv e r is a m em ber o f T h e As­so c ia te d P ress. A ll re p ro d u c tio n righ ts are reserved

D e s ig n E d i t o r ...............D e s ig n A s s is ta n t .........L a y o u t S ta f f ..................T y p e s e tte rs .................... M ich e lle and Ted

N e w s E d i t o r ..................

S p o rts C o p y E d i t o r ....V ie w p o in t L a y o u t ..... ....... John M ennellF e a tu re s C o p y E d i to r ........... M ary Healy

S M C D a y E d i to r ...........

P h o to g ra p h e r ................ .....Tho m Bradley

Theology requirements misguidedThe Real W orld .The very idea is enough to send sh ivers d o w n the

spine o f any red -b looded D om er. Yet in a few weeks all o f us w i l l pack o f f in to that w o r ld o f unw ashed dishes and unpa id b ills — some o f us fo r good.

Few w o u ld argue that N o tre Dame is rep resenta tive o f the so-ca lled real w o r ld . In the real w o r ld the re are no parie ta ls and no exams. And, eve ryone isn ’t C atho lic .

Roman C a tho lic ism always has been an in teg ra l pa rt o f th is U n ive rs ity , and indeed th is C a th o lic character, to g e th e r w ith K nu te Rockne and h is fo o tb a ll legacy, com prise N o tre Dame in a nu tshe ll. W ith o u t its o u t­s tand ing C a th o lic tra d itio n , N o tre Dame jus t w o u ld n ’t be N o tre Dame.

T h is C a th o lic e n v iro n m e n t a ttrac ts m any students to the U n ive rs ity . M ost apprecia te the o p p o r tu n ity to g ro w in fa ith w ith o thers o f th e ir o w n re lig io us tra d i­tion . B ut in a schoo l th a t’s 92 pe rce n t C a tho lic , i t ’s easy to fo rge t o th e r re lig io ns exist.

U pon leaving the sanctity o f N o tre Dame, w e w i l l have to deal w ith peop le w h o a t­tend services, ra th e r than Mass, on Sunday. T h is w i l l be a new e xpe rience fo r m any students w h o g re w up in C a th o lic fam ilies and schools.

M any com e to N o tre Dame seeking to fu rth e r th e ir “ C a th o lic ” education .A nd the re ex ists here m any o p p o rtu n it ie s to g ro w in fa ith as w e ll as academ ics.Can we, how eve r, ca ll o u r­selves t ru ly educated i f w e are igno ran t o f o th e r belie fs and re lig io us trad itions?

A ppa ren tly some m em bers o f the T heo lo g y D epa rt­m en t th in k so.

In case you haven ’t heard, the D epa rtm en t has re c e n tly changed its requ irem en ts . A ll s tuden ts are n ow re q u ire d to co m p le te a tw o course sequence in C ath ­o lic theo logy.

Thus, s tudents in te res ted in s tud y in g o th e r re lig io us tra d itio n s w i l l have to use an e le c tive to do so. For en ­g ineers and o the rs w h o have v ir tu a lly no free e lectives, the o p p o r tu n ity to s tudy Islam o r Judaism has a ll b u t vanished.

Since m any students o p t to take th e ir second course in C a th o lic th e o log y anyway, th is re q u ire m e n t may seem ra th e r ins ign ifican t. C onsider, how ever, tha t th is new re s tr ic t io n a ll b u t guarantees the vast m a jo r ity o f s tudents g radua ting fro m N o tre Dam e w il l have had l i t t le o r no con tac t w ith o th e r re lig io u s trad itions .

Some w i l l argue th is is a C a tho lic u n iv e rs ity and as such has a resp o n s ib ility to educate its s tudents in th is

re lig io n . I f one is u n w ill in g to s tudy C a th o lic ism one shou ld , perhaps, choose a no the r U n ive rs ity .

As a C a tho lic u n ive rs ity , N o tre Dam e c e rta in ly w ants to p ro m o te C atho lic ism . Does it, how eve r, w a n t to p ro m o te narrow ness as well? Yes, Yes, Yes!!! By re s tr ic t ­in g o u r o p p o r tu n ity to s tudy o th e r theo log ies , these new req u ire m e n ts n a rro w the scope o f o u r education .

To be C a th o lic is n o t to be e xc lu s ive ly C a tho lic . As a u n ive rs ity w h ic h c la im s to p ro v id e its s tuden ts w ith a

l ib e ra l educa tion , N o tre Dame is ob lig a ted to a llo w and even encourage us to e xp lo re a cross-section o f o p in io n s and beliefs.

A n o th e r p ro b a b le resu lt o f th is ne w p o lic y is a decrease in the q u a lity o f in ­s tru c tio n in lo w e r-le ve lth e o log y courses. The new th e o lo g y sequence w il lfo rce some pro fessors to teach o u t o f th e ir area o f e x ­pertise . For exam ple , a p ro fessor w hose fie ld isAsian re lig io n s m ig h t be fo rce d to teach a lo w e r-le v e l C a th o lic th e o log y o r teach o n ly upp er-le ve l courses. Thus m any non the o log y m ajors w i l l be in s tru c te d by

fa cu lty m em bers teach ing ou ts ide th e ir o w n areas o f concen tra tion .

An educated person shou ld at least be fa m ilia r w ith re lig io us tra d itio n s ou ts ide his o r h e r ow n , and a m em ­b e r o f soc ie ty w h o seeks to understand and deal w ith o thers cannot be insensitive to th e ir re lig io us tra d i­tions.

S tudents shou ld be encouraged to e x p lo re and u n ­derstand o th e r re lig io ns i f they so desire. The C a th o lic tra d it io n o f N o tre Dame w il l no t be fu rth e red , and N o tre Dam e’s image as a fine u n ive rs ity may ac tua lly be harm ed by th is l im i f on o u r o p p o r tu n ity to s tudy o th e r theologies.

These req u ire m e n ts w i l l o n ly fu r th e r the u n rea lis tic image o f an a ll C a tho lic w o r ld . P ro testants on campus (yes, the re are som e) co m p la in o th e r s tudents au tom a tica lly assume they are Catholic. Some c la im C a th o lic s tudents dem onstra te a lm ost no kno w le d g e o f n on C a tho lic denom ina tions.

In a schoo l w h e re non C a tho lics are a m in o r ity , th is is understandable. In the Teal w o r ld ,” w he re C atho lics are the m in o r ity , igno rance o f o th e r re lig io u s tra d itio n s w i l l appear as ju s t th a t — ignorance.

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TAPE NO TITLE 1 Friendship Building7 Dealing with Constructive Criticism8 Dealing with Anger9 Understanding Jealousy ana Mow

to Deal with itto Mow to Say NO 16 Becoming Open to Others 16 Dating Skills30 Anxiety and Possible Ways to Cope

32 How to Deal with Lonlmess33 Mow to Handle Fears35 Building self Esteem & Confidence 37 Relaxing Exercises36 Coping with Stress 39 Female Sex Rote

Changes ana Stress 44 Learning to Accept Yourself 6i What is Therapy * Mow to Use It 63 How to Cope with a Broken

Relationship 65 Understanding Gnet 90 Helping a Friend160 Early signs of an Alcohol Problem161 Responsible Decisions About

Drinking402 Self Assertiveness431 What is Depression432 How to Deal with Depression433 Depression as a Life Style478 Becoming Independent from Parent;479 Dealing with Alcoholic Parents491 Suicidal Crisis492 Recognizing Suicidal Potential

493 Helping Someone m a Suicidal Crisis

Counsellne Is a com pletely anonymous service offered by the Counseling & Psychological Services Center. UNO

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Transfer OrientationOrganizational M eeting

Monday,May 7 6:30 p.m.Little Theatre

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Amy StephanAssistant News Editor

Inside Monday

Page 3: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 3

Police ticket students in tavern raids Friday

Eating outS tudents g o t a chance to ea t S a tu rd a y lu n c h o u t- o n G reen F ie ld . I n a d d it io n to a v a r ie ty o f fo o d s , p ic -

doors a t a p ic n ic p u t o n b y N o tre D a m e F oo d Sendees n icke rs were a b le to sa m p le the m u s ic o f The Law .

A rth u rA n d e r s e n

We are pleased to announce the following 1984 graduates of the University of Notre Dame have recently become associated with our firm:

ATLANTA O FFICE W illiam J. Dawahare, BBAAuditJohn T. Gunning, BBAAudit

BALTIMORE O FFICE John J. Ruhlmann, BBAAudit

BOSTON OFFICE Daniel E. Fitzsimmons, BBAAudit

CHICAGO OFFICE Brian T. Burt, BBAConsultingMark E. Buschman, BBAAuditChristine L. Callahan, BBAAuditDavid E. Cam pbell, BBAAuditStephen P. Colbourn, BBAConsultingPatricia M. Cooney, MBAConsultingKathleen M. Coughlin, BBAAuditJames M. Dee, BBAAuditRian M. Gorey, MBAConsultingDaniel G. Hanigan, BBA Consulting Timothy H. Hart, BBAAuditJames J. Herrmann, BBAAuditPeter B. Holland, BBAAuditMichael L. Howard, JDTaxJohn M. Kuhns, BS Consulting Robert F. Lutz, BBAAuditLucy A. Mills, BBAAuditJudith D. Murtagh, JDTaxDaniel K. Nelson, BBAAudit

Richard E. Paxton, BBAAuditRusell M. Rempala, MBAConsultingJoseph S. Roveda, BSConsultingMary Kay Stangle, BBAAuditJoseph H. Stephan, BBAAuditW illiam G. Stotzer, BBAAudit

CHICAGO — WORLD HEADQUARTERS Margaret E. Ford, BATechnical Services

CLEVELAND O FFICE James H. Bares, BBAAuditErnest L. Vallorz, Jr., JDTax

DALLAS OFFICE John A. Butler, BBAAuditAnne M. Drollinger, BBAAudit

DENVER O FFICE J. M ichael Cornett, BBATax

DETROIT O FFICE Joseph J. McCarthy, BBATaxSharon J. Terpin, BSConsulting

HARTFORD O FFICE Theodore J. Haussler, BAConsultingFrederick J. McCarthy, BAConsultingJames D. Stapleton, BBAAudit

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PHOENIX O FFICE Glen G. Gwarda, BBAAudit

PITTSBURGH O FFICE Keith P. Creehan, BSConsultingSally J. Esposto, BBATaxMary E. Lang, BSConsulting

ROCHESTER O FFICE Mary E. Stevens, BBAAudit

ST. LOUIS O FFICE Mary C. McCown, BBAAuditChristopher J. Stephen, BSConsulting

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WASHINGTON, D.C. O FFICE Kevin G. McCarthy, BBAAudit

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Special to th e O bserver

T h irty -seven ticke ts w e re issued, some to N o tre Dame and Saint M ary ’s students, and a tavern o w n e r was arrested late Friday w h e n In ­diana State Po lice excise o ffice rs and South Bend p o lice ra ided C o rb y ’s Tavern and B ridge t M cG u ire ’s F il l­in g Station.

Sgt. G reg D e itch ley , an excise o f­fic e r said he d id n o t have figures to break d o w n the c ita tio n s be tw een students and loca l residents.

D e itch le y said the 37 tic ke ts in ­c lu d e d c ita tio n s fo r underage d r in k ­ing, possession o f false id e n tif ica tio n , and co n su m p tio n o f a lco h o lic beverages by a m in o r. He said 29 you ths w e re g iven c ita tio n s fo r v io la tions o f state liq u o r laws. Some rece ived m ore than one c ita ­tion .

H aro ld R ow ley, the o w n e r o f C o rb y ’s Tavern, was arrested and charged w ith in te rfe r in g w ith a p o lice o ffice r. He was released Satur­day m o rn in g from the St. Joseph C o u n ty Jail.

D e itch le y said R ow ley "became b e llig e re n t ” w h ile p o lic e w ere try in g to c o n d u c t th e ir in ves tiga tion at C o rb y ’s Tavern. He said w hen R ow ley “ got in the w ay ” o f the inves­tig a tio n , he was arrested.

D e itc h le y said the you ths w ere taken to the m ain South Bend p o lice s ta tion to be g iven c ita tions, bu t w e re n o t arrested. He said the local res idents w e re released to th e ir parents.

Those g iven c ita tio n s w i l l have to appear w ith in five days in tra ffic and m isdem eanor co u rt, w he re they c o u ld be fined, D e itch le y said. He said they m ig h t have to appear in In ­d ianapo lis be fo re the Ind iana A l­c o h o lic Beverage C om m is ion (A B C ).

D e itch le y said the raids w e re part o f P ro je c t SUDS (S top Underage D r in k in g Sales), w h ic h is a p rogram o f the g o v e rn o r’s task fo rce on d ru n k d riv in g .

D e itch le y said one o f the goals o f P ro jec t SUDS is to com b in e the ef­fo rts o f loca l and state law en fo rce ­m ent agencies.

T h e O b s e rv e r /T h o m B ra d le y Senator expects FCE minimum to be passed

By JOHN MENNELLS en ior S ta ff R eporter

Enough F acu lty /C ourse Evalua­tio n fo rm s shou ld be re tu rn e d to satisfy s tuden t gove rn m e n t o ffic ia ls and le g itim iz e a re p o rt to be pub lished n e x t year.

In an O bserver a rtic le Friday, Bob R iley, fo rm e r D is tr ic t T w o senator w h o o rgan ized the survey, said at least 40 p e rce n t needed to be re tu rned . Last n ig h t he to ld The O b­server, “ I ’m n o t w o r r ie d that w e can get th e 40 p e rce n t.”

A lth o u g h he cannot d e te rm in e the fu ll e ffec t o f the O bserver a rtic le and a le tte r sent to a ll s tudents o ve r the w eekend asking fo r support, R iley expects them to help.

I f less than 40 p e rce n t o f the su r­veys are re tu rn e d , an a ttem p t w i l l be made to p u b lish the re p o rt fo r c e r­ta in classes w h e re the re was enough response.

R iley em phasized the p ro b le m w ith m a il c le rks n o t p u tt in g the fo rm s in the boxes. “ W e to o k the tim e to pu t the labels on the en ­ve lopes so th e y w o u ld get de live red , ” he said, “ W e w a n te d to

make sure everyone go t one.’’ Some c le rks delayed a few days b u t got them de live red . The o n ly ha ll w ith a m a jo r de lve ry p ro b le m was A lum n i.

R iley had harsh w o rds fo r the A lu m n i m ail c le rk , M ike James, w h o was the head o f the S enior F e llow C om m ittee . In A lu m n i, the fo rm s w e re th ro w n in a p ile and d iscarded a fe w days la te r w h e n they w e re n o t p icke d up by students. “ W e w o rke d lo n g and hard to get these o u t,” R iley said. He said he was d is ­appo in ted the process was in te r ­ru p te d by som eone no t d o in g a jo b he was pa id to do.

A lu m n i res iden ts w h o w ish to f i l l o u t a fo rm b u t d id n o t rece ive one shou ld co n tac t s tuden t gove rnm ent offices, R iley said. The cost o f the survey was a p p ro x im a te ly $1000, a cco rd in g to R iley. “ O th e r schools may spend 30 tim es as m uch and have pa id staffs, ” he said. “ The fo rm was sm all and in co m p le te b u t i t was the best w e c o u ld do w ith ou r budget. ” The re p o rt based on the survey w i l l be pub lished som etim e n e x t year b u t de ta ils are no t ye t fina lized.

Du Lac report releasedBy d a n McCu l l o u g hNews E d ito r

The pu rpose o f the Jud ic ia l C oun ­c i l ’s re p o rt on D u Lac, the N o tre Dame gu ide to s tuden t life , is “ basica lly to g ive the ad m in is tra tio n an idea o f h o w the s tudents fe lt about i t and to show w e fe lt i t co u ld be im p roved , ” exp la ined B ill B e r­gamo, a m em b e r o f the c o u n c il’s Du Lac R eview C om m ittee .

The re p o r t was released yeste r­day.

Bergam o e xp la ined the Ju d ic ia l C o u n c il re v iew s the N o tre Dam e b ook o f ru les and regu la tions every fe w years to g ive it studen t in p u t and make i t m ore app licab le to c u rre n t s ituations. In re v ie w in g the c u rre n t handbook, Bergam o said the c o m ­m itte e “ re w o rd e d some o f the ru les” and made some recom m enda tions on changes o f c u rre n t rules.

O ne o f the im m ed ia te conce rns o f the co m m itte e was to m atch the pun ishm en t to the offense, said o u tg o in g J u d ic ia l C o u n c il C o o r­d in a to r Bob Gleason. “ D u Lac fo r ­m e r ly neve r tie d the pun ish m e n t to th e ru le ,” he said. T o c o rre c t th is.

G leason said the co m m itte e has recom m ended the pun ish m e n t be p laced in b o ld p r in t d ire c t ly beneath the ru le . “ W h e th e r you agree o r d is ­agree w ith a penalty, the s tudent shou ld k n o w w h a t the pena lty is fo r b reak ing a regu la tion .”

F rom the com m ittee , the re p o rt is g iven to m em bers o f the adm in is tra ­tio n , in c lu d in g Dean o f S tudents James R oem er and V ice P resident fo r S tudent A ffa irs Father John Van W olv lear.

A m ong the recom m enda tions o f the co m m itte e , the sentence, “ The U n ive rs ity ru les set fe w lim its on s tu ­den t be h av io r p re c ise ly because the re are m ore p o s itive reasons fo r the students to do tha t them selves,” is recom m ended to be rem oved from D u Lac’s p ream ble to “ b e tte r preserve the c re d ib il ity o f the e n tire section .”

C om m ented Bergamo, “ In c o m in g freshm en read tha t and then c o n ­tin u e to read the rest o f the pages o f ru les and th e y ’re go ing to th ink , ‘W h o are they try in g to kid?’ ”

The re p o r t also com m en ts on s tu ­den t c o n d u c t away fro m campus.

Page 4: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 4

Pope threatened with toy pistolAssociated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — As 8 00 ,000 peop le w a tched yesterday, Pope John Paul II canon ized 103 m artyrs, in c lu d in g Korea ’s firs t saints, in a tr ib u te to the c o u n try ’s g ro w in g Roman C a tho lic C hurch . B efore the ce rem ony, p o lice seized a s tuden t w h o b rand ished a to y p is ­to l at the pope's m otorcade.

The p o n tiff, on an 11 -day p ilg rim a g e to Asia, heads to N ew G uinea today a fte r his five-day stay in South Korea.

Applause fro m the th ro n g in Y o id o Plaza, and shouts o f “ M ansei!” o r “ L ive 10,000 years!” g ree ted the sm ilin g pope as he a rrive d fo r the canon iza tion cerem ony. He began

the Mass by d e liv e r in g b r ie f readings in the Korean language.

“ H o w lo n g have w e w a ite d fo r th is day. H o w fe rv e n tly w e have prayed fo r th is m om en t to a rr ive ,” said C ar­d in a l Stephen K im , the Roman C ath­o lic A rch b ish o p o f Seoul, in an e m o tio n a l w e lcom e.

The canon iza tion o f 93 Korean and 10 French m artyrs slain in Korea, the firs t such ce rem ony ou ts ide the Vatican since the 13th ce n tu ry , was ha iled by the Vatican as the p o n ti f fs “ persona l tr ib u te ” to the w o r ld ’s fastest g ro w in g Roman C a th o lic C hurch .

The ch u rch , w h ic h has been ga in ing m em bers at an annual rate o f nearly 10 p e rce n t fo r th ree decades, has 1.7 m ill io n adherents am ong South K orea ’s 40 m ill io n people.

In h is h o m ily , John Paul said the

“ sp lend id flo w e rin g o f the ch u rc h in Korea today is indeed the fru it o f the h e ro ic w itness o f the m artyrs ," and the Korean ch u rch “ deserves fu ll ad­m ira tio n by the e n tire c h u rc h .”

W earing red and go ld s ilk vest­m ents pa tte rned a fte r “ ko ryo n g p o ” used by Korean kings fo r special cerem onies, the pope stood on a p la tfo rm b u ilt in the shape o f an alpha and omega, firs t and last le tte rs o f the G reek a lphabet, rep resen ting the beg in n ing and the end. A g iant w h ite cross to w e re d overhead.

E a rlie r, the pope was on h is w ay to a p raye r service at M yongdong Cat­hedra l in Seoul w hen a man leaped from the c ro w d lin in g the cu rb , b rand ish ing a to y p is to l.

W itnesses said he fire d the to y once o r tw ice .

Local veteran supporting increased help for disabled veterans in HouseBy KEITH HARRISON, Jr.S en io r S ta ff Reporter

P residen t Reagan “ w ants to send you yo u n g peop le a ll o ve r C entra l Am erica, bu t he sure as h e ll doesn't g ive a dam n about tak ing care o f ve terans," said Steve Marozsan, cha irm an o f Veterans For C o n s titu ­tio n a l Rights, Inc.

Marozsan, a ve te ran fro m South Bend, was re fe rrin g to Reagan’s lack o f su p p ort fo r a leg is la tive b i l l tha t “ w o u ld g ive veterans the r ig h ts . . tha t eve ry A m ercan c itiz e n has,” he said.

The b ill, w h ic h is be ing co ­sponsored by p res iden tia l cand idate Gary Hart, has tw o aims.

First, i t w o u ld g ive veterans the a b ility to appeal to a federa l c o u rt i f they d isagreed w ith a Ve te ran ’s A d ­m in is tra tio n decis ion. T he VA decides w h e th e r o r no t a d isabled vete ran is e lig ib le fo r m o n th ly c o m ­pensation fo r h is in ju ries .

U nder the presen t law, a veteran m ay o n ly appeal to the Board o f Veteran Appeals, w h ic h is p a rt o f the VA.

The p ro b le m w ith the VA, said Marozsan, is they w o rk u n d e r a quo ta system. “ Each year, o n ly 12

Hesburghcontinued from page I

fo rm u la tio n o f the p o lic y . “ 1 p layed a ve ry ac tive ro le ," he said. “ 1 m et w ith the O ffice rs o f the U n ive rs ity , I m et w ith the U n ive rs ity Trustees, and I m et w ith the cha irm an o f the c o m ­m ittee , Father Beauchamp, several tim es .”

“ I d id n 't m eet w ith the w h o le a l­co h o l c o m m itte e because i f you send a g ro u p o f peop le to do a job , then you le t them do it, ” H esburgh said.

R esponding to the charge that a llo w in g ta ilga te rs at G reen F ield c o n tra d ic ts the idea that d ru n k e n ­ness is im m o ra l, H esburgh said, “ W e ’re n o t a llo w in g drunkenness at ta ilgaters. W e 're assum ing tha t s tu ­dents w i l l show re sp o n s ib ility .”

I f the studen ts do no t show re sp o n s ib ility , “ they w i l l be es­c o rte d away fro m the s tad ium ,” said H esburgh

H esburgh d id n o t spend m uch t im e d iscussing the co n tro ve rs ia l n e w d e fin it io n o f a party . “ That w h o le m a tte r is be ing negotia ted ,” he said.

Trapped!

pe rcen t o f all c la im ants are gran ted com pensa tion ,” said Marozsan. “ T hey fo llo w tha t quo ta re lig io u s ly .”

Second, H a rt’s b il l w o u ld increase a ve te ran ’s chances o f w in n in g an ap­peal w ith in the VA, said Marozsan. U nder a present law, w r it te n in 1913, i f a veteran w ishes to h ire a la w ye r fo r his hearing at the Board o f Veteran Appeals, the m ost the a tto r ­ney is p e rm itte d to charge is $10.

Few law yers w i l l w o rk fo r th is fee, m ain ta ins Marozsan. H art's b i l l w i l l le t the law yers charge up to 25 p e r­ce n t o f the aw ard the ve te ran is seeking.

The b i l l has been passed u n ­an im ous ly by the Senate, b u t has no t ye t been vo ted on by the House o f Representatives. T he reason fo r th is, said Marozsan, is tha t the b i l l m ust firs t go to the House Veteran Affairs C om m ittee .

“ T h is c o m m itte e is staffed by ex-

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VA o ffic ia ls , and they have p igeonho led the b il l , ” said M aroz­san.

The na tiona l m edia poses ano the r p rob lem , a cco rd in g to Marozsan. “ The South Bend T rib u n e and the lo ­cal te lev is ion sta tions have done th e ir job , b u t w e can’t get the s to ry o u t o f South Bend,” he said. “ In e f­fect, the na tiona l new s m edia has th ro w n an iro n cu rta in a round South Bend.”

O ne p lace w h e re Marozsan has found h e lp is at the U n ive rs ity o f N o tre Dame. Marozsan b ro u g h t his case to Father D on M cN e ill, d ire c to r o f the C en te r fo r Social Concerns. M c N e ill n o tif ie d the Law School at the U n ive rs ity , and an a rtic le on ve te ran ’s r ig h ts soon appeared in the schoo l’sf o u m a l o f L e g is la t io n .

“ The o n ly p ro b le m w ith tha t ar­tic le is tha t i t ’s n o t g e ttin g in to the hands o f the p u b lic ,” said Marozsan.

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Page 5: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 5

University to pass Observer budget

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By JEFF HARRINGTONSen io r S ta ff Reporter

The U n ive rs ity w i l l approve The O bserver's firs t fu ll-yea r budge t p lan since the new spaper jo in e d N o tre Dam e’s a cco u n tin g system th is semester, Father D avid Tyson, e x ­ecu tive assistant to the p res iden t, said yesterday.

“ I hope to have it f in a lly app roved ( to d a y ) o r Tuesday. 1 th in k o u r acco u n tin g peop le w e re ve ry pleased w ith it , ” said Tyson, w h o acts as The Observer's budget u n it d ire c to r.

O bserver finances w e re o ff ic ia lly p laced u n d e r the B udget U n it C o n ­t r o l System Feb. 1, nea rly five m on ths after the U n ive rs ity o rd e re d the paper to jo in its in te rn a l budget system o r face the c u to f f o f ap­p ro x im a te ly $70,000 in s tuden t fees. The request cam e in the wake o f a U n ive rs ity -co n d u c te d aud it o f the paper last sum m er w h ic h revealed several cases o f financ ia l m ism anagem ent in the '82 '83 O b­server opera tion .

The paper’s o p e ra tio n u n d e r the ne w system has been “ w o rk in g ve ry e ffe c tive ly ,” Tyson said. “ I have heard o f no com p la in ts . W e tr ie d to ta lk o u t the snags. . in e a rlie r m eetings.”

O bserver o ffic ia ls , how ever, are s t ill w a ry o f U n ive rs ity financ ia l c o n ­tro l. “ I ’m n o t happy to be on the Budget U n it system, bu t at th is p o in t in tim e i t ’s a necessary e v il,” O b­

server E d ito r-in -C h ie f Bob Vonder- he ide said.

N o tin g the paper had “ no ch o ice ’ b u t to jo in the U n ive rs ity system, V onde rhe ide said the ques­tio n o f financ ia l c o n tro l d ic ta tin g e d ito ria l co n te n t s t ill rem ains. “ A new spaper w hose finances are c o n ­tro lle d by an o rgan iza tion it n o rm a l­ly sc ru tin izes is n o t an independen t newspaper. I t ’s conce ivab le tha t the U n ive rs ity w i l l in te rfe re w ith the e d ito ria l side o f The Observer. W e lo o k in o u r files and fin d tha t in 1975 they con fisca ted Observers fo r ru n ­n ing an abo rtio n ad . . .H ow can w e tru s t them ?”

V onde rhe ide added, “ As o f now , w e ’ve been pleased w ith the U n ive r­s ity ’s conscious desire to stay o u t o f the e d ito r ia l (s id e o f the paper). I t ’s been w o rk in g up to now , b u t w e ’re s t ill k in d o f cau tious.”

M aripa t H orne , O bserver c o n tro l­ler, agreed. “ W e haven’t had any p rob lem s ye t w ith ( th e U n iv e rs ity ) que s tion in g h o w the m oney is be ing spent. I fee l tha t i f they w an ted to, they co u ld easily d ic ta te e d ito ria l c o n tro l, b u t I d o n ’t foresee such a p ro b le m ”

Tyson said he “ w o u ld be surprised i f ( The O bserve r) said the re w o u ld be any in te rfe re nce be ­cause o f financ ia l c o n tro l.” The im ­passe e a rlie r in the semester was c le a rly the U n ive rs ity saying finan ­c ia l a c c o u n ta b ility and co m in g u n ­de r the system w e re separate from e d ito r ia l co n tro l.

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B oth parties rank the ro le o f finan ­c ia l a id fo r O bserver em ployees as the key p ro b le m ye t to be solved. The federa l g o ve rnm en t requ ires students to re p o rt all in com e earned to d e te rm in e th e ir a id packages. U n­de r the Budget U n it C o n tro l System, some students have had th e ir loans reduced since the U n ive rs ity n o w has access to O bserver em ployees’ earnings.

“ The (fin a n c ia l a id ) p ro b le m s till ex is ts . . . T he re is n o th in g 1 know o f the U n ive rs ity can do to be o f as­sistance because o f federa l laws,” said Tyson. “ The p ro b le m is that w hen U n ive rs ity checks are issued, w e ’re accountab le w ith respect to fin a n c ia l a id .”

V onde rhe ide agreed the “ biggest p ro b le m ” in h e re n t in the budget u n it system is the financ ia l aid r ift. " I can’t foresee i t be ing a m a jo r p ro b le m b u t i t w i l l cause some headaches . . . . For the vast m a jo r ity o f peop le up here it w i l l neve r cause a p ro b le m .”

V onde rhe ide was o p tim is tic The O bserver w o u ld even tua lly gain financ ia l independence from the U n ive rs ity . C a lcu la ting the new spaper w o u ld make $25,000 th is schoo l year, he said The O b­server is “ n o t go ing to be on ( th e U n ive rs ity budge t system ) forever. I f w e co n tin u e to make $25,000 e ve n tua lly w e ’l l be at a p o in t o f be ing independen t. ”

“ T h a t’s th e b o tto m line : to even­tu a lly hand le e ve ry th in g on o u r o w n .”

C o n ce rn in g the r ig h t o f The O b­server to one day take its e lf o f f o f the budget u n it system, Tyson said, "T h a t’s one o f those ‘w h a t i f k in d o f th ings . . . .W hat i f The O bserver becom es fin a n c ia lly independent? I t w o u ld have to be exam ined at the tim e .”

“ I hope The O bserver w i l l see ( the U n ive rs ity budge t sys tem ) as m ore o f a b e n e fit than a d e tr im e n t.”

Policycontinued from page 1

tw o p ieces o f id e n tifca tio n from eve ry custom er.

“ W e are go ing to be tough, ” B ow ie said.

B u t Senior Bar w i l l n o t be insen- s it iv e to studen ts ’ needs, B ow ie said. E very Saturday n ig h t w i l l be a no n ­a lco h o lic n ig h t at the bar, and s tu ­dents o f a ll ages w i l l be w e lco m e to dance, use the game room , and o r ­d e r fo o d and soft d rinks.

“ T he y w i l l be fun ,” said B ow ie , “ b u t the students w i l l have to dec ide fo r them selves w ha t th e ir idea o f fu n ­is.”

M ayor Roger Parent agreed. He traced a m etam orphos is w ith in the c o m m u n ity o f South Bend, and, in h is eyes, the U n ive rs ity is jus t b e g in ­n ing to fo llo w suit.

He stated the re has been an insen­s it iv ity to w a rd a lcoho l usage and a lco h o l abuse in the past, b u t i t is changing.

“ Socie ty is try in g to tu rn its e lf a round,” said Parent. “ T he re is a deepen ing concensus to he lp those w h o abuse.” A graduate s tuden t at N o tre Dame fo r th ree years, Parent h o lds s trong c o n v ic tio n s c o n c e rn ­in g the d u ty o f the U n ivers ity .

“ T he u n iv e rs ity is an in s titu t io n to tra in the m in d ,” Parent said. “ I can­n o t th in k o f a n y th ing m ore des tru c tive to tha t process than al­co h o l abuse ”

A lth o u g h he was n o t consu lted in the fo rm a tio n o f the p o lic y , Parent feels a persona l resp o n s ib ility to w a rd the N o tre Dame co m m u n ity .

“ I w o u ld lik e to m eet w th s tudent leaders and p a rtic ip a te in encourag ­in g students n o t to abuse a lcoho l, ” he says. “ W e w a n t to be good ne igh ­bors, and w e w a n t re c ip ro c a l ac­t io n .”

Page 6: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 6

Hesburgh favors LaFortune workBy MARK POTTERCopy E d ito r

U n ive rs ity P resident Father T heo d o re Hesburgh had some good new s last n ig h t about the p roposed renova tion o f LaFortune Student C enter. H esburgh said, "W e 'l l see w ha t i t ’s go ing to cost, and I ’ l l just have to go o u t and raise the m oney ” Last w eek in an in te rv ie w , E xecu tive Assistant to the President, Father D avid Tyson, had ca lled m oney a "m a jo r obstac le ” fo r the p roposed renova tions to the studen t center.

H esburgh, speaking in an in te r ­v ie w last n igh t in Cavanaugh Hall, w h e re he said Mass, appeared q u ite s u p p o rtive o f the plan to renovate LaFortune. "1 asked Tyson to put plans to g e th e r to do w h a t they can to the b u ild in g from to p to b o ttom . 1 to ld h im to see w ha t you can do w ith it in the m ost c rea tive and im ­ag ina tive w ay possible, ” H esburgh said. Last w eek a co m m itte e o f five students and D ire c to r o f S tudent A c­t iv it ie s James M cD o nn e ll gave Tyson a set o f ideas fo r the renova­t io n o f LaFortune.

Last n igh t Tyson said the plans are no w be ing w o rk e d on by the ar­c h ite c tu re firm o f C o le Associates Inc. C o le Associates have done “ m ost o f the renova tions on campus, in c lu d in g a ll o f the d o rm renova ­tio n s ," Tyson said. The a rch ite c ts arc n o w w o rk in g up a general p lan to present to the O ffice rs o f the U n iv e r­s ity. O nce the O ffice rs app rove a plan, the a rch ite c ts have to co n ve rt the genera l p lan in to specifics Tyson said, “ Tha t pa rt genera lly does n o t take as long as m aking up the in it ia l genera l plan. ” Tyson es­tim a te d last w eek i t w o u ld take " th re e to fo u r w eeks ” fo r the a r­c h ite c ts to d ra w up the in it ia l p lans."

H esburgh said, “ I ’ve been ta lk in g about th is ( th e renova tion o f L aFo rtune ) fo r m onths, b u t it doesn’t seem to m ove to o fast at tim es ." Tyson stated, " I ’m h o p in g and 1 th in k Father H esburgh is to o that i f the in it ia l plans are done in June w e can get them approved in June ’ Tyson said the tim e the plans are approved "depends o n w h o o f the O ffice rs is a ro u n d d u rin g the

Murday report studies quality of student lifeBy ROBERT SIENKIEWICZS ta ff R eporter

“ A d m in is tra to rs are s ing led o u t fro m fa cu lty m em bers and ha ll re c ­tors, a pparen tly because o f the a t­titu d e studen ts pe rce ive . . .. G ran ted , the U n ive rs ity is n o t a dem ocracy h u t s tuden ts need to have a sense that th e ir o p in io n s are respected, ” states the N o tre Dame S tudent Life Needs Assessment R eport.

A s tudy o f s tuden t life was made d u rin g the S pring o f 1982 w ith the c o o p e ra tio n o f the U n ive rs ity ad­m in is tra tio n . The research was c o n ­d u c ted th ro u g h the U n ive rs ity o f South C a ro lina ’s P sycho logy D e p a rt­m ent to ensure o b je c t iv ity and c o n ­fid e n tia lity .

The re p o rt, w r it te n by D avid M urday, was requested by N o tre Dame S tudent G overnm ent. In

the a d m in is tra tio n ’s eyes, how ever, th is o b je c t iv ity and c o n fid e n tia lity was n o t ensured. A cco rd in g to D ire c to r o f S tudent A c tiv it ie s J im M cD o nn e ll, I fe lt tha t the re p o rt was basica lly a c o n flic t o f in te re s t ”

M cD o n n e ll w e n t on to c ite the re la tio n sh ip be tw een the ’8 1-’82 s tuden t b ody p res iden t, D on M u r­day, and the w r ite r o f the rep o rt, Dave M urday. “ W hen y o u ’re the s tu ­den t b o d y p res iden t try in g to b r in g about som e change, you can ’t get y o u r b ro th e r to c o n d u c t a s tudy ”

A cco rd in g to M urday, i t to o k five m on ths to com p le te . T he research, w h ic h to o k place be tw een January and May, in c lu d e d s tru c tu re d in te r ­views, a survey o f se lected students, facu lty , and adm in is tra to rs , and a la te r survey o f a random sample o f students, facu lty , and ad­m in is tra to rs .

Classescontinued from page 1

tee m em ber and C hairm an o f the Aerospace and M echan ica lE ng ineering D epa rtm en t A lb inSzewczyk.

In agreem ent w ith the P h ilosophy D epartm en t, the C o m m itte e advo­cated the U n ive rs ity re q u ire m e n t in P h ilosophy becom e a tw o sem ester in tro d u c to ry course. Because the tw o semesters w o u ld , in e ffect, be one course, the c o m m itte e re c o m ­m ended tha t tw o semesters be taken w ith in the firs t tw o years o f s tudy in co nsecu tive semesters.

Presently, m ost s tudents fu lf i l l th e ir na tu ra l science re q u ire m e n t in the freshm an year. Easing th is re ­q u ire m e n t, the c o m m itte e re c o m ­m ended the courses in science be c o m p le te d by the end o f sophom ore year. T he re was som e d iscussion o f add ing a th ird re q u ire d course, bu t the re was no t enough su p p o rt to m ake such a change.

The present c u rr ic u lu m demands students take tw o semesters o f m athem atics in th e ir freshm an year. T he c o m m itte e ’s re p o rt proposes tha t o n ly one sem ester m ust be taken in the firs t year, b u t b o th m ust he satisfied by the end o f the sopho ­m ore year.

T he c o m m itte e p roposed that the firs t T heo lo g y re q u ire d course c o ve r the c r it ic a l s tudy o f sc r ip tu re and the d o c tr in a l d e ve lo pm e n t o f the firs t five ce n tu r ie s o f the C h ris ­tian era. The second course shou ld focus on a s ing le d o c tr in a l them e o r g ro u p o f them es w h ic h deal w ith

C h ris tian th o u g h t and life . Th is re co m m en d a tio n was m ade in ac­c o rd w ith those o ffe re d by the T he o lo g y D epa rtm en t Students w i l l have to beg in sa tis fy ing th e ir T h e o l­ogy re q u ire m e n t w ith in the firs t tw o years, a c co rd in g to the re co m ­m ended changes.

The p roposed re q u ire m e n t in fine arts o r lite ra tu re and the a d d itio na l re q u ire m e n t in h is to ry o r social science can be satisfied at any tim e. N o changes w ere suggested in the s tru c tu re o f C o m po s itio n and L ite ra tu re , Freshman Seminar, Physi­ca l E duca tion o r ROTC re q u ire ­ments.

Provost T im o th y O ’Meara, w h t o rgan ized the co m m itte e d u rin g the Spring sem ester o f 1983, said no w that the c o m m itte e ’s re p o rt is c o m ­p le ted, it w i l l be sent to va rious u n i­ve rs ity co u n c ils in c lu d in g a ll o f the C o llege C ou n c ils and the Faculty Senate. In p u t w i l l be d ire c te d to the E xecu tive C o m m itte e o f the A cadem ic C ounc il. The re p o rt w i l l then be discussed by the A cadem ic C ounc il.

A cc o rd in g to O ’Meara, “ The A cadem ic C o u n c il is the m ain body on c u rr ic u lu m . ” The dec is ion o f the Academ ic C o u n c il w i l l becom e p o lic y “ fo r a ll p ra c tica l purposes ” O f course the U n ive rs ity p res iden t w il l have to g ive his approva l, b u t “ I cannot ever reca ll the pres iden go ing ano the r w ay ," said O ’Meara.

C o m m e n tin g on the re p o rt, the p rovos t said,“ I th in k i t ’s a good rep o rt, b u t 1 d o n ’t w a n t to go in to the deta ils r ig h t now . ” He w ants to w a it u n t il the re p o rt is d iscussed by the A cadem ic C o u n c il. O ’Meara p re d ic te d tha t d iscussion w i l l be ldngtby-. -

sum m er.” B u t he added, “ w e can pass them a round even i f eve ryone is no t here and so get approva l fo r th e m .” A lthough no w o rk can s ta rt u n t il the plans are approved by the O ffice rs, H esburgh said th a t is “ no b ig p ro b le m .” He said, "W e can go o ve r the plans q u ick ly . I f they are good w e can approve them as soon as w e have them . I t co u ld take five m inu tes in a m ee ting ."

Hesburgh said, “ Assum ing 1 have the m oney, w e w an t to d o w h a te ve r w e can th is sum m er.” T yson said, “ Some o f the w o rk can be started th is sum m er, b u t I ’m d o u b tfu l tha t any m a jo r re co n s tru c tio n o r renova­tio n co u ld be s tarted and co m p le te d d u rin g the sum m er ” He c ited , “ som e o f the plans g roups have fo r m o v in g and som e o f the p a in tin g on the firs t f lo o r ” as w o rk th a t c o u ld be co m p le te d th is sum m er.

H esburgh th in ks the renova tion w i l l be expensive. He said, “ I t w i l l p ro b a b ly cost at least a m ill io n d o l­lars.” He in tends to get in vo lve d w ith the fund ra is ing fo r the p ro je c t. He said, “ I ’l l ju s t have to go o u t and f in d som eone w il l in g to pa rt w ith at least a m ill io n do lla rs .”

Hesburgh said, “ W e have lo ts o f space w e can make use of, le ts see w h a t w e can d o w ith it . ” As an e x ­am ple he said, "W e have a fu ll f lo o r o f socia l space in b o th o f the Pasquerillas b u t I ’ve gone th ro u g h the re w hen the re has been no one in j the re ”

Speaking to a g ro u p o f s tudents in Cavanaugh’s s tudy lounge last n igh t Hesburgh c la im ed, " I said to Tyson, fo r the lo ve o f M ike, le t ’s get tha t p lace fix e d up, le ts go fro m to p to b o tto m and see w ha t w e can d o w ith i t and le t ’s n o t jus t p u t bandages on the p lace.”

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A Rosey tim e The Observer/Thom Bradley

Rosey G rie r, fo rm e r defensive l in e m a n f o r the Los Angeles Rams, spoke in the A.C.C. p i t a n d in the L ib ra ry A u d ito r iu m o ve r the weekend. G rie r, w h o is a lso fa m e d f o r b is n e e d le p o in t w o rk , spoke to a g ro u p o f b ig b sch o o l a n d co llege a th le te s a b o u t c o m m itm e n t. The ta lk s w ere sponsored b y the S p ir itu a l R ock o f N o tre D a m e a n d The C h r is t ia n C enter Youth.

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Page 7: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 7

Professor’s Apple program boughtBy NANCY HUI INews S ta ff

W h ile m ost s tudents b r in g apples to teachers, th is tim e the teacher b rings an “ A pp le ” to the students.

J. P h ilip Bays, pro fessor o f C hem is try at Saint M ary ’s, has crea ted a co m p u te r p rog ram fo r use on A pp le com pu te rs . Bays has crea ted a w ay to im p ro ve u n d e r­stand ing and to p ra c tice app ly ing th e te ch n iqu e o f m o lecu la r s te reoc­hem istry .

Bays w ro te a c o m p u te r p rog ram w h ic h deals sp e c ifica lly w ith these concepts o f o rgan ic chem is try . Com press, a ch e m is try co m p u te r p ro g ra m m in g com pany in N e w H am pshire bo u gh t it and is n o w m arke tin g i t as an in s tru c tio n a l package.

The prog ram , e n tit le d “ O rgan ic S te reochem is try ," illu s tra tes three- d im ens iona l features o f o rgan ic m olecules. The package inc lu d e s a tu to r ia l w h ic h de fines te rm s and gives exam ples. I t also features some p rac tice p ro b le m s w h ic h c o r ­respond to these concepts.

Bays said th is p rog ram is advan­tageous to “ b o th students and professors.” I t a llow s students to rece ive a co m p le te set o f in s tru c ­tio n s and to see 3-D d isplays th a t are n o t possib le to illu s tra te in the class­room , he said. I t also p rov ides access to an in f in ite n u m b e r o f ran d o m ly generated d r i l l p rob lem s.

T h is te ch n iq u e is an e ffec tive w ay to p ro v id e o rgan ic s tudents w ith d r ills on 3-D m o lecu la r ch e m is try tha t are n o t availab le in tex tbooks , he said.

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Bays was in tro d u c e d to the tu to r ia l ch e m is try m e th o d about ten years ago w h e n he began e x ­p e rim e n tin g on the co m p u te r. He used the In te rc o lo r C o m p u te r Sys­tem at Saint M ary ’s C ollege to teach h im s e lf the BASIC language and becom e fa m ilia r w ith graph ics and cha racte r m an ipu la tion .

Bays used his com m and o f the BASIC language, h is a b ility to use graph ics and h is unders tand ing o f in ­s tru c tio n a l needs to deve lo p the p rog ram w h ic h illu s tra te s the s te reochem is try o f O rgan ic m olecules.

“ I was lea rn ing new techn iques as I was w r it in g the p rog ram ,” Bays said. He e xp e rim e n te d in his ch e m is try courses w h ile he made revis ions. “ M y s tudents served as gu inea pigs, ” he said. In tw o years he crea ted th is “ th o u g h t p ro v o k in g ” tu to ria l.

Bays had n o t p lanned on se lling the p rog ram at firs t. The m ore he deve loped it, the m ore i t seemed u n like any o th e r in s tru c tio n a l p rogram , he said.

He in fo rm e d Com press C om pu te r C om pany about h is p rogram . A fte r m ak ing a fe w m in o r changes, he was able to m arke t the p rog ram w ith Com press. The com pany sells i t as a f lo p p y d iske tte made o n ly fo r the 4 8 K A pple . I t is so ld in in d iv id u a l packages fo r $65 o r w ith a back-up co p y fo r $75.I t is availab le in hard d isk fo r n e tw o rk systems.

W h ile it is so ld d ire c t ly to in s t itu ­tio n s o r th ro u g h pub lishe rs w h ic h m arke t i t as a supp lem en t to a te x tb o o k , s tudents may purchase it fo r th e ir o w n use.

A lth o u g h he was unaw are o f the dem and o r response o f custom ers th ro u g h Com press, Bays re fe rre d to the “ o p t im is t ic ” rea c tio n fro m those w h o had used i t be fo re i t was m arketed.

A refreshing breakA S a lva d o ra n g u e r r i l la h o ld s a n A m e ric a n -m a d e M -1 6 o n h is

la p as he d r in k s a so ft d r in k a t a ro a d b lo c k in La P a lm a , E l S a l­vador. L a P a lm a is n e a r San S a lv a d o r w here le f t -w in g g u e rr il la s b u rn e d b a l lo t boxes a n d staged h a ra ss in g ra id s yeste rday in an a tte m p t to d is ru p t vo ting . R u n o f f e lec tions were h e ld to d e te rm in e the c o u n try ’s p res iden t. I n very e a rly re tu rns , c e n tris t C h ris tia n D e m o c ra t fo s e N a p o le o n D u a rte , a fo rm e r p res iden t, led r ig h t is t R oberto D ’A u b isso n 5 4 p e rc e n t to 4 6 percen t. S ig n if ic a n t re tu rn s are n o t expected to be in u n t i l la te r today. E lsew here in E l S a l­vador, shots were f i r e d a t tw o he lico p te rs c a rry in g A m b a ssa do r Thom as P icke rin g , tw o congressm en, a n d reporters. O ne a ir c ra f t w as h it, b u t n o one w as re p o rte d in ju re d in the in c id e n t.

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Mondale beats Hart in TexasAssociated Press

AUSTIN, Tex. — W a lte r F. M onda le go t th e su p p o rt he w an ted deep in the heart o f Texas and Gary H a rt’s state cam paign m anager sug­gested yesterday i t m ig h t be tim e fo r the sena to r to cons id e r end ing his p re s id e n tia l quest. B u t H art said he has no in te n tio n o f d ro p p in g o u t o f the race.

“ I t w i l l be d if f ic u lt n o w fo r h im , having lo s t Texas, to w in the n o m in a tio n ,” Rep. M a rtin Frost, D- Texas, to ld a news con ference the m o rn in g a fte r M onda le cap tu red the m a jo r share o f delegates e lected in state p re c in c t caucuses.

M onda le and H art w ere cam pa ign ing in O h io yesterday and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a surp rise w in n e r Saturday in the Louisiana p rim a ry , was in N o rth Carolina.

A t a new s con ference in W ashing­to n be fo re fly in g to C leveland, H art said, “ The issue is no t w h o w in s states, b u t w h o w in s delegates.”

H art also repeated his c o n te n tio n tha t w ith the e x ce p tio n o f M issouri, M ondale has never to p pe d 50 p e r­cent, th e re fo re fa ilin g “ to dem onstra te that he represen ts the real m a jo r ity o f th is p a rty .”

The C o lo rad o senator said he be lieves v o te r sen tim en t is sh iftin g his w ay in O h io and Indiana.

Frost said he w o u ld h o ld “ some p riva te discussions” w ith H art la te r th is week. W hen pressed on w h e th e r he w o u ld advise the can­d ida te to w ith d ra w fro m the race fo r the D e m ocra tic p res id e n tia l no m in a tio n , Frost ju s t ke p t repeat­in g tha t he fe lt H art needed to ca rry Texas.

Page 8: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 8

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Page 9: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Showcase Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 9

S i r O b n o x i o u s

Mission accomplished

by Marc Ramirezfe a tu re s co lum nist

O bv ious ly the re is n o th in g m ore fo r Sir O b n o x io u s to do here. Ever s ince Sir O b n o x io u s cam e to N o tre Dam e late last year,

obnoxiousness has begun to c lim b at a steady rate, and n o w it rears its ugly sku ll w ith o u t any shame at all. As it shou ld , o f course.

But the p o in t has been reached w h e re Sir O b n o x io u s ’ presence is no longer necessary. W hen Sir O b n o x io u s firs t a rr ive d the re was a m ission to fu lf i l l — one, to preach the tenets o f boorishness, and tw o , to get r id o f M iss Manners. B u t the m ission has been accom plished, and th ings seem to be ru n n in g q u ite sm oo th ly .

Sir O b n ox iou s was pleased to see such events as V ik in g N ig h t at South D in in g Hall, w h e re peop le h e ro ic a lly ate w ith o u t bend ing th e ir e lbows. Such was in d ica tive o f Sir O b n o x io u s ’ o w n eating habits, and Sir O b n ox iou s even learned a fe w n ew tr ic k s fro m the g rubby infidels.

But then Sir O b nox ious was m ild ly su rp rised — no, q u ite surprised — at w ha t transp ired next. Sir O b n ox iou s ta lked and ta lked about the w onde rs o f rudeness, and d ire c te d a ll o f those harangues to w a rd the masses. In N o tre Dam e’s case, tha t was the stu­dents. B u t strange ly enough, i t was th e a d m in is tra tio n that responded m ost en thus ias tica lly to Sir O b n o x io u s ’ call. And it d id it in the m ost o b n ox iou s w ay possib le — w ith o u t any sty le at all.

It n itp icke d at the students, p ro v o k in g anger w ith every jab. I t at­tem p ted to ir k students by ta k in g ove r financ ia l c o n tro l o f the s tu ­dent paper, b u t w hen tha t d id n ’t w o rk , i t tu rn e d to d o w n -a n d -d irty m ethods o f be ing obnox ious.

I t invaded d o rm food sales w ith o u t any w a rn ing , poked a round fo r som eth ing to c r it ic iz e , and was o b n ox iou s enough n o t to even p u r­chase anything.

It p lan ted n ice green grass on the quads, made i t abso lu te ly p e r­fect to p lay Frisbee, baseball and fo o tb a ll on, and then to ld everyone to stay off.

I t came o u t w ith a w o n d e rfu lly w o rde d , im m ense ly p o p u la r a l­co h o l p o lic y w ith in c re d ib ly o b n o x io u s re s tr ic tio n s in c lu d in g the nu m b e r o f people in each room .

The adm in is tra tion 's t im in g was a troc ious, and the re fo re it was good.

But the students made Sir O b n o x io u s p ro u d b y resp o n d in g w ith obnoxiousness o f th e ir ow n . The n ig h t the a lcoho l p o lic y was an­nounced, a lm ost 2,000 scream ing, rav ing students s to rm e d A lu m n i and C o rby Halls, and they w e re ve ry o b n ox iou s indeed.

The day after, several s tudents adm ira b ly a ttem p ted to o u tdo the V ik in g D in n e r by h o ld in g a d ru n ke n bash in th e South D in in g Hall.

The p o in t o f all th is is, o f course, tha t Sir O b n ox iou s no lo n g e r needs to be here. I t seems that obnoxiousness has f in a lly tr iu m p h e d o ve r the w im pyness o f politeness. And Sir O b n o x io u s ’ b it te r r iva l, Miss M anners — she sent flo w e rs last w eek just to make Sir O b ­nox ious angry — has been ru n o u t o f tow n .

So Sir O b n o x io u s is prepared to depart fro m th is place, p ro u d o f all that has been accom plished. B u t o f course a fe w last p o in te rs on the art o f obnoxiousness m ust be le ft beh ind.

R em em ber to neve r open doors fo r anyone unless yo u e n te r o r e x ­it first.

A lways s trive to be c rea tive at the breakfast, lu n c h and d in n e r tables. Inven t new co lo rs th ro u g h m ix in g d rin ks such as grape ju ice and choco la te m ilk , o r create new rec ipes to take hom e to m om by co m b in in g foods such as ra v io li and Lucky Charms.

See h o w far yo u can th ro w a b iscu it, o r i f yo u can land a co o k ie in the b o w l o f y o g u rt fo u r tables d o w n fro m you. D rive peop le crazy by d ro p p in g a glass on the f lo o r and ca tch in g it be fo re th a t fatal second bounce. O r see h o w far yo u can ro l l an apple d o w n the aisle be fo re it h its som eone’s foot.

As peop le are s tudying, ask them tr iv ia questions w h ic h you k n o w w il l s tum p them , b u t w i l l in tr ig u e them so m uch th e y w o n ’t be able to s top th in k in g about them.

Go to m ovies tha t y o u ’ve a lready seen, make sure yo u s it beh ind people w h o have never seen them , and te ll them e ve ry th in g th a t’s go ing to happen th ro u g h o u t the e n tire m ovie. An in te re s tin g tw is t is to do th is and then change the ending.

Sir O b n ox iou s w o u ld love to say goodbye, b u t since fa rew e lls a l­ways seem to end up be ing e x tre m e ly sappy and m e lod ram a tic , Sir O b n ox iou s hates them . So i t appears a re tu rn to sunny Beverly H ills is nex t on the agenda. O r m aybe Sir O b n ox iou s w i l l a tte m p t to teach obnoxiousness at M iam i U n ive rs ity .

W ell, m aybe not.

D e a r S ir O bn ox iou s :Guess w h a t /d id the o th e r n ight? I th in k y o u ’l l lik e it. I w e n t to see

the 7:00 sh o w in g o f “ The Big C h ill ” at the E ng ineering A u d ito r iu m , and I go t in free! I w e n t early to get in line , and the a u d ito r iu m was open, and the re was no one around, so I w e n t in and sat dow n . P re tty soon so d id a w h o le bunch o f o th e r people, and th e y never b o the re d to c o lle c t fro m us! And the m ov ie was great, too ! W hat do yo u th in k about that?

B il l , the Free L o a fe r

D is g u s tin g Reader:F irst o f all, i t is p a in fu lly obv io u s th a t you d o n ’t kn o w the firs t th in g

about obnoxiousness by y o u r p lac ing o f the w o rd "d ea r ” be fore Sir O b n ox iou s ’ name. Second, I d o n 't lik e y o u r name, and th ird , I d o n ’t l ik e j ’ott. And I happen to k n o w tha t you w e n t to the 9:30 sh o w in g o f o f a m ov ie d u rin g ja m e s Bond w e e k and you got ove rcharged by fifty cents. So there . G et a clue.

Ben Rand, A ndy Griscom and Scott Johnston demonstrate “Dunk the Duchess, ’’one o f the beer gamesdes- cribed in their book The Complete Book of Beer Drinking Games, published by R J Publications, New Haven, Connecticut.

A book ND would like to censorKevin Williams

fe a tu res s ta ff w rite r

If the new a lcoho l p o lic y made any p ro v is ions fo r b u rn in g books, The

C om ple te B o o k o f Beer D r in k in g Gam es w o u ld p ro b a b ly be the firs t on the p ile .

S im p ly pu t, th is b o o k is a c o lle c ­t io n o f im ag ina tive ways to consum e large q u a n titie s o f beer. F ifty games — in c lu d in g such favorites as Q ua r­ters, Acey-D eucy, and M ex ican — p ro v id e fo r hours o f en jo ym e n t fo r everyone fro m th e ligh tes t lig h tw e ig h t to the m ost ha rd -co re partie r.

B eyond the game descrip tions, the boo k con ta ins essays, lists, and tr iv ia in m uch the same sty le as any o f the p o p u la r O f f ic ia l "Whatever H andbooks .

The games are o rgan ized in to five sections c o rre sp o n d in g to each games’s rate o f a lco h o l consu m p ­tio n , o r “ b o o t fac to r.” Games w ith a b o o t fa c to r o f one are designed,

a cco rd ing to th e book, “ fo r the beg inne r w h o w ishes to e xpe rience the e xc ite m e n t and cam eraderie o f beer-gam ing. ” An exam ple o f a b o o t fa c to r one game is “ B u m -o u t.”

In “ B u rn -o u t” a napkin is p laced o ve r the m o u th o f a glass w hose edge has been m oistened s lig h tly to h o ld the napkin. A d im e is p laced in the ce n te r o f the napkin. Players take tu rns b u rn in g sm all ho les in the nap­k in w ith a c igare tte . The p laye r w h o makes the d im e d ro p in to the glass is the loser and m ust d r in k a p re d e te rm in e d q u a n tity o f beer.

B oo t fa c to r five games are p layed fo r th e express purpose o f g e ttin g d ru n k q u ick ly . “ B o o t a B o u t” is one such game.

“ B oot-a-B out” is a m e thod fo r d e te rm in in g w h o buys each p itch e r. O ne p laye r buys the firs t p itc h e r and d rinks as m uch o f the beer as he desires. He then passes the p itc h e r

to the n e x t p laye r w h o does the same. The person w h o d rin ks from the p itc h e r before the p laye r w h o em pties i t buys the n e x t one.

O ne o f the firs t subjects the book addresses is beer-gam ing e tique tte . Ten d iffe re n t ru les are suggested, in c lu d in g no p o in tin g , no using the w o rk “ d r in k ” in any o f its form s, and the d isc ree t d ig it ru le . W hen the d is­c ree t d ig it ru le goes in to effect, any p la ye r m ay — at any tim e — d is­c re e tly hang h is fo re fin g e r o f f the edge o f the table. Each p laye r w h o no tices m ust do the same th ing . The last person to hang his d ig it d rinks.

In an a tte m p t to in c lu d e some so­c ia lly redeem ing qua lity , The C om ­p le te B o o k o f B eer D r in k in g Games ded icates an e n tire page to th e evils o f d r iv in g d runk. In a w o rd — D o n ’t.

The C om p le te B o o k o f Beer D r in k in g G am es is u se fiil as a refe rence book, b u t i t lacks qu a lity en te rta in m e n t. Inane jokes and an o ve r w o rk e d v o m itt in g them e de trac t fro m the book, b u t one can fin d a fe w flashes o f in sp ired h u m o r scattered th roughou t.

Monies ]ias a\\ the ingredients, but doesn’t quite swing it

by Cat Francisfe a tu re s copy ed ito r

6 i O w in g S h ift” is a nosta lg ic lo o kd a t the W o r ld W a r I I years and

the w o m e n w h o w e n t to w o rk at the jobs vacated by m en gone to w ar. I t is also a cu rio u s ly d isa p p o in tin g m ovie.

I wasn’t sure w h a t to exp e c t fro m “ S w ing Shift.” A nd I d o n ’t th in k the m akers o f the m ov ie w e re sure e ithe r. I t seemed random , a c o lle c ­t io n o f scenes and an occasional h u m o ro u s line.

The m o v ie ’s p lo t is re la tiv e ly s im ple. G o ld ie H aw n plays Kay W alsh, the devo ted and co n sc ien ­tio u s w ife o f Jack (E d H arris ). H e r ab ject d e v o tio n to he r husband at the m o v ie ’s b e g in n ing w i l l set on edge the te e th o f eve ry fe m in is t in th e audience. Jack goes o f f to w a r and Kay decides to take a jo b at M acB ride A irc ra ft Com pany.

The m ov ie focuses on the trans­fo rm a tio n o f Kay, fro m dem ure and naive to self-assertive and w il l in g to e xp lo re he r o w n feelings. In th is, she is a ided by tw o friends: h e r next-

d o o r ne ighbo r, Hazel Zanussi (p laye d by C h ris tin e L a h ti) and he r co -w o rke r, L ucky Lockhard t (K u r t

Goldie Hawn as Kay Russell), w h o fa lls in love w ith Kay.

The ac tion is s lo w at firs t, b u t f in a lly p icks up w h e n Kay is h ire d to w o rk the sw ing sh ift ( 4 p.m. to m id ­

n ig h t). B u t then, in e xp lica b ly , i t becom es lo s t som ew here am ong the tang led and confused e m o tio n s o f the players. The end ing is a le t­dow n , as w e ll as be ing m ore than a l i t t le p red ic tab le .

Russell p u lls up some o f the m o v ie ’s qu a lity , b u t o n ly in a m in o r fashion. H is pe rfo rm ance as L ock­hard t, an asp iring jazz m usic ian, is an in te re s tin g con tras t to his w o rk in “ S ilkw o od .” B u t since he is the m ost lika b le cha rac te r in the e n tire m ov ie , the aud ience is even m ore d isappo in ted by the end ing, in w h ic h he s im p ly w anders away fro m the ac tion o f the p lo t.

H aw n is adequate as Kay, and does a c re d ib le jo b o f p o rtra y in g a w om an w h o begins to rea lize she can be som e th ing o th e r than a co m p le m e n t to he r husband. B u t she does n o t do enough. The o n ly m a jo r change w e see in the cha rac te r by the end o f the f ilm is th a t she is no lo n g e r fe tch ing he r husband’s beer.

“ S w ing S h ift” has a p ro m is in g and am using p lo t, n ice ca m e ra w o rk , and som e to p rate actors. B u t som e­w h e re th e m ix tu re goes w ro ng , and the resu ltan t m ishm ash is n o t w o r th the p ric e o f adm ission.

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Viewpoint Monday, May 7, 1984 — page 10

One more Loret Ruppe controversyCongressm an H enry Hyde, one o f the

lead ing p ro - life p o lit ic ia n s in W ashington, says Lo re t Ruppe is “ fo llo w in g th e law ," and is “ n o t o u t o f step w ith the p o lic y o f th is ( th e Reagan ) a d m in is tra tio n ." James Bopp, Jr., the genera l counse l fo r the N a tiona l R ight to Life C o m m itte e , re jec ts the Justice D epa rtm e n t in

David Grote

Speaking out of turn

te rp re ta tio n o f the Pregnancy D is c r im in a tio n A ct and says it “ does no t re q u ire the paym ent o f trave l o r pe r d iem expenses to Peace C orps em p loyees seeking abortions."

Confused? I f so, you are n o t alone. T he c o n ­trove rsy su rro u n d in g Ruppe and the Peace C orps a b o rtio n p o lic y is co m p lica te d . The Pregnancy D isc r im in a tio n A ct im p lie s that any e m p lo ym e n t p ra c tice o r p o lic y trea tin g p regnan t em ployees d iffe re n tly fro m o th e r

d isab led w o rke rs is a p rim a facie v io la tio n o f the C iv il R ights Act. I t seems the Peace Corps has a p o lic y o f p ro v id in g trave l expenses fo r any v o lu n te e r re q u ir in g m ed ica l care. The ques tion b e ing raised conce rns the w ay in w h ic h an a b o rtio n is de fined w ith in the con ­te x t o f th is law.

The O bserve r, last Friday, ran a s ta tem ent by Ruppe o u t lin in g the ac tion she to o k in try in g to change the Peace C orps a b o rtio n p o licy . W hat i t am oun ts to is the Justice D epartm en t saying she c o u ld no t deny paying transporta ­t io n expenses to vo lun tee rs seeking abortions as lo n g as she pa id those expenses fo r o th e r d isab led ( i l l ) vo lun teers.

Ruppe is an em p loyee o f the U.S. go ve rn ­m en t and is b o u nd to obey the law. The Justice D epa rtm en t to ld he r h o w to in te rp re t the law. Even i f Ruppe is d ia m e tr ica lly opposed to the Justice D e p a rtm e n t’s in te r ­p re ta tio n , to d isobey i t is to fo r fe it he r pos i­t io n as Peace C orps d ire c to r .

Some peop le argue i f Ruppe is t ru ly against a b o rtion , she shou ld be d o in g so m e th ing to change it. I ’m against abo rtion . I th in k the re

shou ld be an am endm ent o u tla w in g it. But, I have ye t to w r ite a le tte r to the P resident, m y senator, o r m y rep resen ta tive su p p o rtin g it. Am I to be condem ned fo r inaction? Is Lore t Ruppe to be condem ned fo r n o t w o rk in g to change it? Some people m ig h t say “ yes,” bu t I am sure m ost peop le w o u ld be m ore len ien t.

T he abo rtio n question is n o t the o n ly con trove rsey s u rro u n d in g the N o tre Dame co m ­m encem ent speaker, though. B o th The O bserver and Father Hesburgh rece ived anonym ous packets o f new spaper c lip p in g s w h ic h pa in ted an u n fla tte r in g p o tra it o f Ruppe. Rum ors fro m W ash ing ton are that these are n o t the o n ly instances o f anonym ous sent m ateria ls a ttack ing Lo re t Ruppe.

It seems Ruppe has made som e enem ies in h e r te rm as Peace Corps D ire c to r . The reason is th a t she is a m odera te w o m e n in a c o n ­servative adm in is tra tion . The facts are that un ­d e r R uppe’s leadership, the Peace C orps has seen its budge t g ro w by 20 p e rce n t in the last th ree years, tha t th e num ber o f vo lu n tee rs has been increasing, and tha t th is was ac­com p lished desp ite the Reagan ad m in is tra ­

tio n 's o rig in a l d e te rm in a tion to d ra s tica lly reduce its budget and its im p o rta n ce in A m erican fo re ig n po licy .

By te s tify in g be fore the K iss inger c o m m is ­sion on Latin A m erica and by ga in ing the sup­p o rt o f Secretary o f State Schu ltz in a re p o rt w h ic h described the Peace C orps as a key to U.S. fo re ign p o lic y , Loret Ruppe has changed the a d m in is tra tio n ’s op in io n .

In a house e d ito ria l on A p r il 13, 1984 The O bserver e d ito r ia l board stated the o p in io n that Lore t Ruppe shou ld n o t have been p icke d as the co m m encem en t speaker. As a m em ber o f tha t board, I s t il l agree w ith tha t op in ion . W h e th e r i t is the w h in e o f a spo iled c h ild o r not, I fee l that N o tre Dam e’s com m e n ce m e n t speaker shou ld be som eone m ore p restig ious than Lo re t Ruppe

But in th a t same e d ito r ia l Ruppe was described as a p o o r a d m in is tra to r and as h y p o c rit ic a l in he r hand ling o f the a b o rtio n po licy . F u rth e r in fo rm a tio n , though , has raised serious questions about the v a lid ity o f these statements. I feel th is v ie w p o in t may have been hasty and un in fo rm ed .

The changed face of Gary HartFriday, G ary H art de live re d a “ m a jo r p o lic y

speech” here in South Bend, at least so say his cam paign advertisem ents. Does anyone rem e m be r G ary H a rt’s last v is it to South Bend?

I t o ccu re d in February o f last year w hen Senator Hart spoke to a small, i f n o t a ttentive , g ro u p in the lib ra ry a u d ito riu m . H art was im -

John Madigan

Guest column

pressive: he cata loged th is n a tio n ’s m ilita ry , eco n om ic and socia l p rob lem s, g iv in g a de ta iled exp la n a tio n o f th e ir causes and im ­p lica tions.

He spoke w ith no reserve, w ith o u t a p repa red tex t. H art was th in k in g a loud, one m om e n t p o n de rin g the need fo r a b o ld new course o f in d u s tr ia l p o lic y , o n ly to im m e d ia te ­ly fo llo w th is assertation w ith a c r it iq u e o f the th e o ry o f in d u s tr ia l p o lic y as a rticu la te d by th in ke rs such as R obert Reich.

T he o v e rr id in g fee ling w h ic h H a rt le ft his aud ience was that he had a f irm g r ip on the p rob le m s facing o u r co u n try . He unders tood w e ll o u r a lte rin g in d u s tria l eco n om y and the

ra p id ly chang ing dem ograph ic and social na ture o f o u r society.

I was amazed at the b read th o f h is though t: no t o n ly d id he cons id e r the p rob le m s crea ted by the changes o c c u rr in g in o u r soc ie ty , he m ore im p o rta n tly recogn ized tha t these n e w p rob le m s are in te rre la ted . P o licy designed to e ffect one w o u ld b r in g change to the others.

To lis ten to H art was to be in the presence o f a man, a th in ke r, ph ilosoph iz ing . H art d id n ’t s tum p fo r a d o cke t o f program s. Instead, he w o n d e re d a loud about so lu tions. O u t o f cha racte r fo r an am b itious p o lit ic ia n , he ad­m itte d w ith o u t hes ita tion tha t he hadn ’t yet f ig u re d h o w to a ttack the p rob le m s fac ing o u r cou n try .

He im pressed m e as a th in k e r w h o m igh t someday p ro v id e the v is ion w h ic h th is c o u n try has so longed lacked. I was exc ite d w h e n H art cam e from n o w h e re to cap tu re 15 pe rce n t o f the vo te and second place in the Io w a caucuses last February.

H is p o p u la r ity w ith the f ic k le N ew H am psh ire vo te rs p leasantly su rp rised me, too. S till, I th o u g h t I und ers to o d th is p o p u la rity . H art was a man w h o m esm erized by the d e p th and s in c e rity o f h is th o ug h t and conv ic tio n s . He was no t a man easy to u n d e r­

stand o r re late to. H art was a man w h o o ffe red the b o ld dynam ics o f change tem pe red by hard reason.

W eeks be fore the Io w a caucuses vau lted h im to na tiona l p rom inence , H art to ld a re p o r­te r, “ I d o n ’t have to sell m yself. I have to sell the need to change genera tions o f leader­ship . . . I co ns tan tly try to avo id w ha t tu rn s peop le o f f about p o lit ic s — h yp o c risy and sha llow em otiona lism . I am n o t an e n te r­ta ine r.”

T h is is w ha t appealed to me m ore than a year ago. I t ’s p ro b a b ly also w h a t caused vo te rs in Io w a and N ew H am pshire to tu rn fro m the o ld -sty le , e m p ty p o lit ic k in g o f W a lte r M ondale.

W hat, then, has happened to G ary H art since his firs t s tu n n ing successes? Succum b­ing to the pressure o f ru n n in g a m ode rn m edia cam paign, H art became conce rned w ith that ve ry side o f p o lit ic s w h ic h he had c la im ed to m ost abhor.

Soon he h ired P a trick C addell, the s lickest o f the p o lit ic a l im age makers. H o p in g to p lay p o lit ic a l hardba ll w ith the huge M ondale o r ­ganization, H art has p u t m ore fa ith in m arke t­ing techn iques than he has in the s im ple , in tense sty le by w h ic h he had spread h is c o n ­v ic tions.

M uch has been made o f h o w H art has rece n tly a ttem p ted to cap tu re the m ys tique o f the Kennedy era. I t has even been said tha t the w ay he wears his c lo thes, t i lts h is head and jabs w ith h is hand, is in d ire c t im m ita tio n o f Kennedy. I co u ld ignore such accusations fo r o n ly so long. I n o w c rin ge each tim e H art refers to K ennedy in a cam paign speech.

W hat Gary H art has fa iled to realize is that he already was the co n ve yo r o f a m ystique , his o w n m ystique . Instead o f c a p ita liz in g on his o w n strengths, he is lo o k in g to crea te an image he s im p ly does n o t m atch. Instead o f g iv in g substance to the “ n ew ideas” he has been e xpound ing , he has s lipped in to the b a ckb iting sty le o f cam paigning.

W h ich is the real Gary H art — the tro u b le d p o licym ake r w ith an eye to the fu tu re o f 1983, o r the sm ooth, p red ic tab le p o lit ic ia n o f 1984? Senator H art has in tu rn im pressed me, and d isappo in ted me. I hope Gary H art reappears on the na tiona l p o lit ic a l scene in 1988 o r 1992, m ore m ature , m ore ready to rea lize the p o ten tia l he show ed d u rin g his v is it to N o tre Dame last year.

Jo h n M a d ig a n is a s e n io r in the C o llege o f A rts & Letters, m a jo r in g in econom ics.

P.O. Box QKnee-jerk Response

D e a r E d ito r :Reading Bud M acFarlane’s le tte r, “ R icke rt

was W ro n g ” on May 3 ,1 was s tru ck by the ap­parent lack o f unders tand ing on the pa rt o f the w r ite r , as he sought to chastise James R icke rt fo r f in d in g fault w ith the th e o log y d e p a rt­m e n t’s new requ irem ents .

MacFarlane argues tha t the d e p a rtm en t is co rre c t in in s is tin g on an a d d itio na l course in C a tho lic ism because, as he says, the C a th o lic C h u rch “ is the one, h o ly and a p o s to lic gua r­d ian o f the T ru th that G od has revea led .”

In h is o w n statements, the w r ite r reveals that he has a basic m isunde rs tand ing o f the d iffe rence be tw een re lig io n and theo logy . I f MacFarlane w ants re lig io n , le t h im go to a B ib le study class, o r le t h im be c o n te n t w ith Sunday sermons.

T heo logy, at respected in s titu tio n s , is the o b je c tive , professional, in te lle c tu a l s tudy o f the na ture o f G od and re lig io us t ru th ; i t is the ra tio n a l in q u iry in to re lig io us questions. O ne co n ce rned w ith the o log y does no t a ttack a w r ite r because he does n o t share a co m m o n faith. O ne co n ce rn e d w ith th e o lo g y does no t exam ine tenets o b je c tiv e ly a fte r b e co m in g b lin d e d by the b righ tness o f h is God.

A dep a rtm en t co n ce rn e d w ith th e o log y does no t in s titu te such reac tiona ry , n a rro w ­m inded requ irem en ts , n o r does i t p ra c tic a lly

fo rce one o f the m ost p ro m in e n t theolog ians in the na tion , such as Stanley Hauerwas, to m ove on to m uch g reener pastures, s im p ly be­cause he does n o t spout the C a th o lic pa rty line.

Thus, w h ile 1 fin d M acFarlane’s v ie w p o in t b o th oppressive and nox ious , i t is u n fo r­tu n a te ly b e co m in g clear tha t th is knee-je rk reac tion to th ings fo re ign is b e co m in g the ru le , ra th e r than the e xce p tion , here at N o tre Dame.

T im o th y E ig o G ra d u a te S tuden t

Illegitimate complaintD e a r E d ito r :

In the c u rre n t ra ft o f attacks on the a d m it­te d ly r id ic u lo u s a lcoho l p o lic y , the re in one c r it ic is m that m ust be discarded. I t has been stated repea ted ly that the new ru les w il l p ro m o te o f f cam pus d r in k in g and d ru n k d riv in g , and that any in ju r ie s s tem m ing from such a c tiv ity are the adm in is tra tion 's respon­s ib ility .

W ith so m any le g itim a te co m p la in ts against the U n ive rs ity ’s co dd ling , w h y does th is lame and p e tu lan t response persist? A n y fo o l w h o feels c o m p e lle d to d riv e d ru n k needs a nanny lo o k in g a fter h im . W e are above that, aren’t we?

R ic h a rd P ilg e rFresh m a n -■ • - ■ -", -• - - - , ■ -

m m . .

BEEF?

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Page 11: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Viewpoint Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 11

Investigating one’s employment opportunitiesI t is an un fo rtuna te in d ica tio n o f o u r tim es

that even at a p restig ious in s titu t io n lik e N o tre Dame, many students w o rry a great deal about th e ir em p loym en t prospects. W h ile some o f these fears are exaggerated, the sad fact is that there a re fe w e r jobs genera lly de fined as ap­p rop ria te fo r co llege graduates re la tive to the

Kitty Arnold

Guest column

to ta l n um ber o f s tudents co m p le tin g degrees. It is l i t t le w o n d e r than th a t s tudents here and e lsew here are apprehensive about th e ir fu ture.

As p lacem ent d ire c to r, I can attest to the d iff ic u ltie s some students face in e n te rin g a tig h t jo b m arket. Nonetheless, a d ip lo m a from N o tre Dame is a respected c o m m o d ity in the eyes o f em ployers.

I hear com m en ts again and again about the fine academ ic rep u ta tio n tha t o u r in s titu t io n en joys fro m organ izations o f all types. That re p u ta tio n does not, how ever, guarantee each

and eve ry in d iv id u a l a good jo b upon gradua­tion . Even the m any types o f services o ffe red by m y o ffice o n ly go so far in assisting stu­dents. The e ffo rt and in it ia t iv e o f the in ­d iv id u a l is the key e lem en t fo r success.

E m p loym en t success is a fu n c tio n o f be ing a le rt to o p p o rtu n itie s to lea rn about career o p tio ns and the process o f g e ttin g a job . I w ish tha t 1 p e rio d ic a lly had a cap tive aud ience o f students so 1 c o u ld b r in g to th e ir a tte n tio n the various th ings they co u ld do to f in d cha lleng ­in g re w a rd in g w o rk .

Instead, they m ust avail them selves to the services and ac tiv ities . Sadly, th e re are many s tudents w h o , fo r a va rie ty o f reasons, do not p lan in any system atic w ay and w h o needless­ly pan ick th is tim e o f year.

I t is g ra tify in g to f in d the e xce p tio n a l p e r­son w h o has been a lert and w hose p lann ing has pa id off. Several weeks ago I m et a recen t graduate o f ano the r m a jo r m id w e s te m u n i­ve rs ity w h o reco u n te d the process he had fo llo w e d in d e te rm in in g h is career ch o ice and in g e ttin g the h ig h ly responsib le p o s itio n he c u rre n t ly holds.

I was ve ry im pressed w ith th e conscious and de libe ra te research he had co n d u c te d to becom e m ore know ledgeab le about his career. W hat was m ost im pressive was th a t he

had begun his investiga tions in h is freshm an year, and had c o n tin u e d to ga ther in fo rm a tio n th ro u g h o u t h is e n tire co llege career.

He had a ttended various career re la ted m eetings, read p e rtin e n t books and p e r io d i­cals, ta lked to facu lty , used h is schoo l’s career and p lacem ent resources, sought advice from alum ni, spoken to upperclassm en in h is fie ld , and ac tive ly pa rtic ip a te d in the pro fessiona l association re la ted to h is d isc ip lin e . A rm ed w ith so m uch p ra c tica l know ledge, he knew that he w o u ld be a m uch m ore p ro fic ie n t in ­te rv iew ee . Based on his c u rre n t pos itio n , he was o b v io u s ly r igh t.

A n o th e r to p ic w e discussed was co rpo ra te co llege re c ru it in g in general. T h is young man was som ew hat c r it ic a l o f a few o f h is fe llo w students fo r be ing p o o rly p repared fo r th e ir in te rv ie w s because he perce ived , q u ite c o r­re c tly , that em p loye rs fo rm e d o p in io n s o f the schoo l based on th e ir in te ra c tio n s w ith a small nu m b e r o f in d iv id u a l students.

He observed tha t s tudents o ften do no t rea lize th a t th e ir actions have ram ifica tions beyond th e ir o w n em p loym en t. I have seen evidence o f tha t th is year, n o t so m uch in lack o f p re p a ra tion fo r in te rv iew s, b u t in the aston ish ing ly large n u m b e r o f s tuden ts w h o d id noi: show up fo r th e ir jo b in te rv ie w s .

In m y m ore cha ritab le m om ents, I have tended to be lieve that those ind iv idua ls d id n o t understand tha t th e ir ir re s p o n s ib ility c o u ld adverse ly a ffect o thers. In l ig h t o f the fact tha t m any co rp o ra tio ns are c u tt in g back on th e n u m b e r o f campuses they v is it, w e can i l l a ffo rd to have peop le m iss in te rv ie w s fo r o th e r than le g itim a te em ergencies. W e are in ­s titu t in g m ore s tr ing e n t sanctions to p re ve n t a repeat o f th is un fo rtu n a te o ccu rre n ce n ex t year.

The yo u n g m an I have jus t re fe rre d to is not e xce p tion a l w hen com pared to m any N o tre Dame students. W e have a trem endous ly ta len ted g ro u p o f m en and w o m en w h o are destined to be leaders in a ll areas o f endeavor. I t is m y jo b to h e lp cu ltiva te th a t enorm ous p o te n tia l by p ro v id in g as m any avenues as possib le to fa c ilita te de libe ra te , system atic career e x p lo ra tio n by o u r students.

Since the re is l i t t le in life w h ic h so strong ly in fluences one ’s self-image and self-esteem as does on e ’s voca tion , I cannot stress enough the need to investiga te and p lan fo r e n try in to the w o r ld o f w o rk . I t rea lly can m ake a d if ­fe rence in y o u r life.

K it ty A rn o ld is the D ire c to r o f Career a n d P la ce m e n t Services a t N o tre D am e.

The secular Notre Dame of the 1980’sN o t a ll sen iors are un in te res ted in w ha t

goes o n at N o tre Dame a fte r May 20. A fte r liv in g here fo r fo u r years, I can lis t ju s t as m any reasons fo r d is lik in g th is place as fo r l ik in g it. I f I shou ld shed a tear on g raduation day, i t is lik e ly to be one o f jo y no t sadness o r nostalgia.

Yet, h o w e ve r fa in tly , I can s t ill rem em ber the sense o f e xc ite m e n t and p rid e I had as a

Cyrus L. King_____________

Guest column

freshman. Just be ing associated w ith N o tre Dame m eant som eth ing special; som e th ing I co u ld never q u ite grasp u n t il I los t m ost o f those feelings.

In the days p r io r to m y dec is ion to attend N o tre Dame, m y v is ion o f the G o lden D om e was q u ite d iffe re n t from m y p resen t one. I th o u g h t the adm in is tra to rs o f the n a tio n ’s lead ing C a tho lic in s titu t io n w o u ld be w il l in g to w o rk tog e th e r w ith students to create an atm osphere o f m u tu a l respect and adm ira tion . Today I am n o t so sure.

The new a lcoho l p o lic y shou ld n o t be to o su rp ris ing to seniors, w h o have seen the p a rty s itua tion at N o tre Dame go fro m bad to w orse; fro m a re s tr ic t io n on section pa rties and kegs to an e lim in a tio n o f no n -a lco h o lic get toget- hers. W hat has happened to the sense o f coo p era tio n and m u tua l respect be tw een the N o tre Dame adm in is tra tion , fa cu lty and stu­dents.

C o n tra ry to w ha t m any be lieve , n o th in g has happened — i t neve r existed. A t least s tudents have a c lea r p ic tu re o f w here th e y stand now , even i f i t is under the feet o f the adm in is tra ­tion . T here has aiways been a pa ren t c h ild re la tionsh ip , and unless b o th students and fa cu lty m em bers step back and rede fine th e ir goals and d e te rm ine pos itive m ethods to achieve them , tha t re la tio n sh ip w i l l rem ain.

The co n tro ve rsy o ve r the a lco h o l p o lic y is jus t ano ther case in p o in t w h ic h illu s tra te s the stra ined re la tio n sh ip be tw een students and adm in is tra to rs. The a lco h o l p o lic y has b ro u g h t m ore insan ity to the N o tre Dame cam pus than a U.S.C. pep ra lly . Why?

B o th th e N o tre Dame a dm in is tra tion and its s tudents are g u ilty o f th ro w in g a re lig io us in ­s titu t io n in to the u nbecom ing th r i l l seeking

secu lar w o r ld o f the 1980s. Life at N o tre Dame is so b o rin g tha t w e are seeking to sp ice it up w ith a heated co n tro ve rsy tha t q u ite frankly, “ doesn ’t am oun t to a h i l l o f beans.”

Everyone w ants to liv e a th r i l ln g fu n f ille d life. The peop le o f the 80s tend to be lieve that i f life is n o t one co n tinuous o rgasm ic e x ­perience , i t is som ehow unfuH ulling . W e have all exaggerated the am oun t o f fu n w e had on sp ring breaks o r h o w m uch m ore “ fu n ” o u r hom e to w n s are than South Bend. B u t none o f us have had as m uch fun as w e have described. Some o f us te ll s to ries w h ic h makes i t hard to be lieve w e ’ve s lep t since b ir th .

W e m ust realize that some less-than- e x c it in g th ings are w o r th w h ile (h o m e w o rk fo r e xa m p le ) and that some e x c it in g th ings are n o t w o r th w h ile (a ra lly su p p o rtin g al­co h o l fo r exam ple).

M en w i l l neve r achieve peace because they do n ’t w a n t it. Saying 'w e had a useful c o n ­versa tion w ith the adm in is tra tio n ,” is n o t as e x c it in g as sa y in g “ w e s to rm ed the ad­m in is tra tio n b u ild in g and shook i t to its ra f­ters.”

For the adm in is tra tion , saying “ w e f in a lly to o k a to u gh stance against a lcoho l,” makes them seem m ore im p o rta n t than sa y in g “ we have w o rk e d ha rde r w ith s tudents to fin d al­te rna tives to a lcoho l.” In a re lig io us atmos­phere, co o p e ra tio n shou ld always be a w o n d e rfu lly th r i l l in g sign tha t m aybe som e­day a ll m en can com e to g e th e r fo r a long b o rin g handskake.

W e have already embarassed ourselves on na tiona l te le v is io n and degraded o u r campus w ith r id ic u lo u s banners. N o tre Dam e m ust p u t an end to th is th r i l l seeking adventu re and analyze w h a t has transpired.

T he ad m in is tra tio n has show n p o o r leader­ship b y be ing unsym pathe tic and nearsighted. By a ttach ing to o m uch im p o rta n ce to its job , the ad m in is tra tio n co u ld be g u ilty o f th r il l- seek ing T hey have changed fro m a c o v e rt to an o v e rt pa ren tin g ro le w ith w o rd s like “ e xp u ls io n ” and “ non- negotiab le .” T he ad­m in is tra tio n has overestim ated the a lcoho l p ro b le m and taken on an a lm ost crusade lik e stance against drunkenness.

In the fu tu re , u n ive rs ity o ffic ia ls should never d isco u n t the p o ss ib ility tha t s tudents are capable o f p ro v id in g useful in p u t in to U n i­ve rs ity p o lic ie s w h ic h affect them .

T here are those students w h o w o u ld be u n ­

reasonable regardless o f the leve l o f se n s itiv ity and ins igh t show n by the ad­m in is tra tio n . H ow ever, the a lcoho l p o lic y has shocked and d isheartened even the m ost sensitive students.

Some cons id e r a lco h o l the sole issue, and w i l l be lam en ting the u n iv e rs ity ’s dec is io n u n ­t i l they rece ive th e ir d ip lom as. These students are U n ive rs ity puppets. The adm in is tra tio n has used th e ir seem ing dependence on al­coho l fo r th r i l l and exc ite m e n t to p o in t out w h y th e ir p o lic y is so urgent.

D r in k in g beer shou ld n o t have as m uch in ­fluence on student soc ia liz ing as some stu­dents w o u ld lead us to believe. These students have lie d to them selves by exaggera ting the am oun t o f fun they have had o n th e ir a l­c o h o lic trips. I f o u r soc ia liz ing depends so m uch o n a lcoho l, then changes are needed.

A n o th e r g ro u p o f s tudents has a m ore le g itim a te gripe. These students are n o t to ta l­ly su ip rise d by the new p o lic y and w o u ld have taken the m ore sensible parts o f the d ire c tiv e in s tr ide w e re i t n o t fo r the a d m in is tra tio n ’s to ta l d isregard fo r s tuden t in p u t. These stu­dents are m ore concerned w ith the student adm in is tra tio n re la tionsh ip , and realize that soc iiil life , n o t a lcoho l, is the m a jo r issue.

I t is n o t su rp ris in g tha t a C a th o lic in s titu ­t io n w o u ld som ehow m o d ify its a lcoho l p o lic y . L im it in g the students ’ capac ity to th ro w n o n -a lco h o lic parties, how eve r, is a b it ex trem e.

The m ost d isa p p o in tin g p a rt o f the ad­m in is tra tio n ’s p roposa l is the fa ilu re to p ro v id e m ean ing fu l d ire c tio n fo r s tuden t so­c ia l life . I f the adm in is tra tio n had cared to lis ­ten, N o tre D am e’s s tudents co u ld have p ro t ided some m ean ing fu l suggestions.

T he m ost obv ious suggestion w o u ld be fo r the U n ive rs ity to b u ild a new s tuden t center. M aybe a b o w lin g a lley, p o o l tables, v ideo games, a p lace to eat, a dance f lo o r la rge r than Senior Bar’s 4 x 4 fo o t square, and m usic videos. C lassw ork and sc h o o lw o rk are im p o r­tan t parts o f co llege life , b u t lea rn in g h o w to re la te to peop le in d iffe re n t se ttings is ju s t as im p o rta n t.

N o tre Dam e shou ld be a p lace fo r to d ay ’s leaders and a b ree d in g g ro u n d fo r fu tu re leaders. B u t the people here are so hom ogeneous tha t th e y m ay fin d i t d if f ic u lt to re la te to peop le ou ts ide th is c losed s e ttin g W hat w o u ld happen i f N o tre Dam e’s students

never deve loped p o s itive ways o f dea ling w ith even themselves?

A m od e rn s tuden t ce n te r m ig h t also make s tuden t fu n c tio n s m ore pa la tab le to those nuns, b ro th e rs and pries ts w h o c la im to be so conce rned about s tuden t a lcoho l abuse, yet are ra re ly seen m aking co n tac t w ith students ou ts ide o f fo rm a l s itua tions. M aybe schoo l o f­fic ia ls can ba rtend at s tuden t fu n c tion s and make b e tte r ju dgm en ts about w h ic h students have had enough to d rink .

The a d m in is tra tio n m ust get o u t o f the hab it o f using ru les to deal w ith s tuden t p rob lem s. D o n ’t hand us u ltim a tu m s and w a lk away secure in the b e lie f tha t you have done a ll you can. B e tte r leadership, h a rde r w o rk and sen­s it iv ity on the p a rt o f b o th the adm in is tra tio n and s tudents w i l l so lve m ost o f o u r prob lem s.

W e m ust change the a ttitu d e th a t ge tting d ru n k eve ry w eekend is okay be fo re w e can solve the a lco h o l p rob lem . A ru le bann ing al­co h o l may be use fu l in keep ing som e students fro m su ccu m b in g to pee r pressure to get d runk, fo r fear o f pun ishm en t. B u t a change in a ttitudes, b e tte r leadersh ip and a ne w student ce n te r are a ll b e tte r ways o f dea ling w ith a l­c o h o l and m ee tin g a genuine s tu d en t need fo r an im p ro v e d socia l a tm osphere.

C yrus L. K in g is a s e n io r in the C ollege o f A r ts & Letters a t N o tre Dam e.

Correction

On April 30 The Ob­server ran a letter to the editor titled “Alcohol at tailgaters,” signed by Mic­hael Welch, ND class of 1983- Michael Welch was not the author of this letter, however. The Observer is sorry for any incon­venience this may have caused Welch.

The ObserverP.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219)239-5303

The Observer is the independent newspaper published by the students of the University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary's College. It does not necessarily reflect the policies of the administration of either institution. The news is reported as accurately and as objectively as possible. Unsigned ediftmals represent the opinion of a majority of the Editorial Board. Commentaries, fB tt# r^h d the Inside Column present the views of their authors. Column space is available to all members of the community, and the free expression of varying opinions on campus, through letters, is encouraged.

Editorial Board

Edilor-in-Chief Bob VonderheideManaging E d ito r ..................Mark WorschehExecutive Editor..............Margaret FosmoeNews E d ito r Sarah HamiltonNews E d ito r ....................... Dan McCulloughSaint Mary's E d ito r Anne MonastyrskiSports Editor....................... Michael SullivanVie /vpoint E d ito r......................... Dave GroteFea tures E d ito r........................... Mary HealyPhoto Editor............................... Pete Laches

Department Managers

Business M anager....................Dave TaicletC ontro ller............................... Maripat HorneAdvertising M anager............... Jeanie PooleCirculation Manager................... Jeff O’NeillSystems Manager Kevin Williams

Founded November 3,1966

Page 12: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 12

The Observer N otre Dame office, located on the th ird flo o r o f LaFortune Student Center, accepts classified advertis ing from 9 a.m. u n til 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Observer Saint M ary’s office, located on the th ird f lo o r o f Haggar College Center, accepts classifieds from 12:30 p.m. un til 3 p.m.. M on­day though Friday. Deadline fo r next day classifieds is 3 p.m. A ll classifieds must be prepaid, e ither in person o r by mail. Charge is 10 cents per five charac ters per day.________________________________________________________

ClassifiedsNOTICES

ROOMMATE(S) NEEDED FOR SUM­MER. 4 bdrm hse, utilities & phone incl. Nice yard, garage 280-8461/284-5128 for info; approx $125/m o.

CO M PUTERIZED TYPING SERVICE - 277-6046. W ptek up 6 deliver.

W E NAVE THE LOW EST AIRFARES TO EURO PE I FOR FREE COLOR BRO CHURE. WRITE TO: CAMPUS TRAVEL, BOX 11367, ST. LOWS, MO 63106.

W O RDPROCESSING AND TYPING. RESUMES. 272-6627.

EXPERT TYPIST 277-8534 AFTER 5:30

EXPERT TYPING DONE IN MY HOME. THESES. TERM PAPERS, ETC CALL MRS CO KER, 233-7009

GET TO P $$$ FOR YOUR TEXTS!!! Buy Back Paperbacks; Monarch and Cliff

Notes Mon thru Fri, 1-4 p.m.

PANDORA S BOOKS 937 S BEND AVE

PIZZA I 30 m inutes or free! Special hours for FINALS 11am to 3am. CALL 277- 2151 to order D O M IN O S PIZZA DELIVERS!

SENIORS!

It's last testament time. Take out an O b­server personal in the Commencement issue (Friday M ay 18) and let 'em have it! Come up to the office, 3rd floor LaFortune, and get yours today!!

ST. LO W S CLUB B A G G AG ETRUCK

W ill p ick-up on SATURDAY, MAY 12 TIMES:

11:30-12:30 at ND Bookstore 12:45-1 45 at Stepan Center

2:00-3:00 at LeM ans parking lot Please have all of your belongings clearly marked

BUFFALO CLUB BUFFALO CLUB Baggage truck Tues.MAY 8, W ed.M ay 9,Sun M ay 13 Posters and details all over campus. A ny Questions call Nick 8207 BUFFALO CLUBBUFFALO CLUB

ALASKA SUM M ER JOBS - Good moneySS. Parka, Fisheries, wilderness resorts, logging end much m ors...Sum m er Em ploym ent Guide. 1964 Hstings. $4.96. NorthOuest, 300 Union Ave., Btdg. 12, Campbell, CA 95006.

LOST/FOUNDLOST G REEN USM C/ARM Y FIELD JACKET-Dad has threatened m y exist­ence if I can't find It.If found- PETE 3165.

LOST: Ladies Gold Timex Quartz watch w ith brown band at AnTostal mudpits on Sat, April 28 Please call Kathy at 8663.

FOUND A BLUE AND G OLD NOTRE DAME BASEBALL CAP IN HAYS HEA- LY. CALL M ARK AT 1987

CHAIN AND INTRAMURAL MEDAL LOST ON ACC RACQUETBALL COURTS. W ILL THE PERSON W HO CALLED BEFORE EASTER BREAK (DAN ?) PLEASE CALL AGAIN! ANN MARIE 2845087 O R PAUL 2720746

FOUND: burgundy umbrella, the collap­sible kind, before Easter To claim call 2914

LOST DURING HOLY WEEK A SMALL LIGHT BROW N WALLET. CALL 239- 8010.

LOST: SET OF KEYS ON KEY RING — PRO BABLY LOST DURING THURSDAY PICNIC AT SAINT M ARY S. TW O OF THE KEYS ARE MARKED 1124. PLEASE CALL JEFF AT 7820 SOON.

LO ST: Wallet w ith all o f m y identification. If found please call E ileen at 277-1325

REW ARD O FFERED! FOR RETURN OF POCKET CAM ERA IN ROYAL BLUE CASE THE FILM INSIDE IS WHAT I REALLY WANT. IF YOU REALLY NEED THE CAM ERA PLEASE. DROP IT OFF EITHER A T LOST AND FOUND IN THE AD BUILDING O R W ITH THE RECTOR OF W ALSH HALL. OR CALL 8050

LOST: B lue ND Band Jacket in F line at North D ining Hall. If taken, please call Mike at 1475.

LOST(STOLEN) PUCH TEN SPEED RED.METEORLUXE, W ITH ALL THE EXTRAS TAKEN FROM SIDE OF THE MATH BUILDING ON LAST THURSDAY BETW EEN 1 30 & 2 :30 pm ANY CLUES REPORT TO M EAKS 277-3306

WANTEDPHOENIX BOUND, BUT I NEED A PLACE TO STAY FROM JUNE 9 TILL AUGUST 11 ANY SUGGESTIONS OR O FFERS? PLEASE CALL PAUL AT 239- 5313 OR 277-4851

GRADUATION TICKETS NEEDED CALL PAUL AT 239-5313 or 277-4851

0 Ride W anted to W ESTCHESTER CO.. NY leave Friday afternoon M ay 11. Call RAY 1101

NEED RIDE to NJ after 5 /1 2 Liz 1267

Need a ride to Boston after Finals. Call Stan at 1401

SUMMER POLITICAL WORK CITIZENS ACTION COALITION IS NOW HIRING THOSE INTERESTED IN GRASSRO O TS EFFORTS FORECONOMIC JUSTICE AND ENVIRON­MENTAL REFORM CALL 232-7918 FOR INTERVIEW $180 & UP/W K.

1 NEED RIDE TO BOSTON CAN LEAVE 5 /1 2 at 10PM. CALL BOB 1580

Ride offered to Mass on M ay 13. Call Charles at 8094

I need a ride home to Utica or Syracuse for summer. I can leave as early as Satur­day but would prefer to leave Monday, M ay 14. Please call Brian 1165.

Need a ride to Roch./upsta te NY. Can leave Fri. 5/11 P.M. or anytim e after. Ter­ry 8725/8762

W ANTED: 1 RIDER TO PHILA/SO UTH JERSEY O N 5 /12 . CALL JEFF 8854

Need a ride to M D /D C on 5 /1 3 or later. W ill only have 1 suitcase, call Megan 284- 4238

NYCfTY RIDE NEEDED! CITY GIRL NEEDS TO G ET TO HER HOME TURF PLEASE HELPIW ILL SHARE EX­PENSES. LEAVING MON.AFT. PAU LA283-8115

Ride needed to D C. leaving after 10 A.M. 5 /14. Call Brian x6741.

Need ride to Jacksonville, FLORIDA on the 15th. W ill RENT car if necessary. David 3127

NEED RIDE FOR TW O TO PHOENIX AREA. W ILL SHARE A L L CALL MIKE AT X8770.

NEED RIDE FOR TW O TO LOS AN­G ELE S/S O U TH E R N CALIFORNIA AREA. W ILL SHARE ALL. CALL MIKE AT x6770.

NEEDED: REFRIGERATOR CALLLAURA 8034

Ride needed to BOSTON. Can leave Friday 5 /11. Will share usual. Call John at 1802

CAMP STAFF: Certified W ATER SAF TEY INSTRUCTOR. ASST COOK, and ASST. CARETAKER, In charge o f Pool and Grounds for Presbyterian Summer cam p near Buchanan. Ml. Call 234-4159 for application form.

FOR SALEIS fT TRUE YOU CAN BUY JEEPS FOR $44 THROUGH THE U.S. GOVERN­MENT? G ET THE FACTS TODAY! CALL (312) 742-1142, EXT. 7316.

BARGAIN: ENG AGEM ENT AND WED­DING RING FOR SALE Contact Garry Rush, 239-7735

FOR SALE: 2 COUCHES. BAR STOOL, RUG. BAR(REAL CHEAP!) EVERY­THING M UST GO! SOLD TO THE HIG­HEST BIDDER, OR FIRST COME FIRST SERVED! CALL JEFF AT 8854 NOW!

1977 Fiat Spyder conv. Must sell. Call 287-7762 after 3.

FOR SALE- 2 COUCHES, 1 BAR S TO O L RUG, BAR (REAL CHEAP!). FIRST COME FIRST SERVED FOR THE RIGHT PRICE. CALL JEFF AT 8654 OR STOP BY 321 ST. ED'S. HURRY NOW FOR THE BEST BUYS!

ATTN GRADS 1984 ND MEN S CLASS RING FOR SALE, 277-6999

FOR SALE. 74 MERCURY COUGAR $475 PURRS LIKE A KITTEN AND YOU CAN DRINK IN IT. CALL BILL 288-0137.

FOR RENT TICKETSTW O BEDROOM TOW NHOUSE APARTM ENT FOR RENT OVER THE SUMM ER. W ithin walking distance of campus, price is 250 /m onth w /o utilities but is NEGOTIABLE. If AT ALL interested please call 283-1479.

TW O HO M ES AVAILABLE FOR NEXT SCHO O L Y E A R W ILL ACCOM­MODATE FOUR AND SIX STUDENTS.

^ f t lA A F T E R F T V E . 234-9364.

HELP!! NEED GRADUATION TICKETS SO BRO THER&2 SISTERS CAN COME BEFORE GOING TO PRISON CALL 283-1204 MIKE. W ILL PAY MONEY IS CLEAN

$$ NEED 4 GRAD TIX $$ LARRY 1638 OR 1601

GOTTA HAVE GRAD. TIX. Need not be together Call Tom /John 6146 or 1761.

NEED ONLY 1 GRADUATION TICKET! W ILL PAY $$$ 4305

IN SEARCH OF: Graduation tickets - Mark 0693

Willing to pay $$$ for Graduation tlx. Call Dave at 8167 or leave message with return phone number at 239-7757,

Josie needs graduation tickets! Will pay $$$ call 7819 or7813.

HELP! DESPERATELY NEED GRADUATION TICKETS! call Heather at 288-3511

FREE MOLSON GOLD or cash for grad tix a nd /or hotel resv. call Louis 3136

NEED GRADUATION TIX DESPERATE­LY! Relatives com ing! W ILL PAY $$$. Call G reg (283-) 3317

NEED GRAD. TICKETS BOB 8658

PERSONALSMargaret, Dave, Bob, Tom , Troy, Suaan, Guillerm o, Chria, Suzanne, Lev, M aureen, Paul, Lima, Carol, John, Ed, Jeff, Mark, Sarah, Mary, Tom , Teaa, Kevin, Keith, all the typeaettera 6 the rest o f the m idnight m anlaca: check the bag BEFORE you feed the dog

S.F.

All Applied Data A nalysis students don't forget the meeting at 6:00 pm at the Library C ircle on Thursday.

Save Harold T.Save Harold T.Save Harold T.Save Harold T.Save Harold T.

W e'll m iss you - the Civils

Looking for any ND females that will be working in the Denver area next year and may need a roommate. Call Michelle at 7187.

SUMMER is almost here and soon you w ill be going home. Some of us are not so fortunate. Some of us w ill be spending our summer in sunny South Bend. And as if that weren't reason enough to take pity on me, I don 't have a car with which to escape the confines of th is fair city, to take me to work, or even to go to the grocery store. Perhaps you have a car that you do not want to bring home because it is too far, too much trouble, etc. O r perhaps you would like to leave your car here because this sad tale has moved you to tears. If you do have a car that you want taken care o f for the summer by a very reliable person, call Sarah at 1311. Please.

Feeling bored in your afternoons? Never get a chance to talk to people?Well, The Observer m ight be just what you need. Earn some m oney and meet some strange and interesting people by becoming a Day Editor. If you're in­terested, call Tom Mowle at 239-5303 in the afternoon.

Bruce Springsteen will not be at com­mencement, but I need more tickets anyway. Call Dave Dziedzic at 283-3671 or 239-5303 if you w ant $$$ for your tick­ets.

SANDW ICHES DELIVERED FAST! CALL THE YELLOW SUB AT 272-4453 BETW EEN 8611 pm MON-THUR 8&1pm FRI-SAT!

Need a great team, club, organization, etc. unifier?! Your slogan, or name, motto or whatever you want can be impressed forever on key chains, medallions buttons etc.! O rder today or write for more info:

Konrady Graphics Ltd.P.O. Box 174

C rown Point, In. 46307

HELP ME HELP ME HELP ME I’M DROW NING I'M DROW NING I’M DROW NING I'M CRAZY I'M NUTS I’M CONFUSED I'M LONELY I'M IN LOVE

Before I leave for the summer, I would like to thank the people who made m y first year here worthwhile.To Howard 4 -North, especia lly John, Carl, Gerry, Andy, and Harry (Dad): thanks for The Experience.To The O bserver staff, especia lly Mike, Jeff, Dave, Sarah, Marc, and Mary: thanks for the opportunities and all your help.To those chouette g irls in Walsh, Susie, M E., Sue: thanks for the abuse. Je vous akne.Oh yeah, J.P. McG: get ready to Dew It!!!

— Phil

NO,ITS NOT AG AINST UNIVERSITY POLICY TO HAVE ONE so w hy not buy m y loft? I gotta sell it cuz it won't fit in my parents' Volkswagen. Call Teresa x4404

FOR SALE - 76 Ford Monarch Loves BEER 234-8248

Bruce Springsteen will not be at com ­mencement, but I still need tickets, anyway. Call Dave Dziedzic at 283-3671 or 239-5303 if you want $$$ for your tick-

NEED A STUDY BREAK? DOMINO'S PIZZA w ill be open at 11 am to 3am Mon­day, May, 7 to Tuesday, May, 15. 30 m inute service guaranteed CALL 277-

»ts. 2151 to order..*2l .X * Y k . f i t , >..X .:.A .Xz ~ \X > . .X X \ \ \ . , : i & s ... .C V i v

' * *>a »:vo > :o x x > x x x x x x v \ v a&g r e e a o a y x * w

SEX! SEX! SEX! NOW THAT I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE HELP ME. I NEED AT LEAST ONE GRADUATION TICKET. PLEASE CALL ME IF YOU CAN HELP JACK 7982 AFTER 10PM

Applications for 1985 AnTostal Chair­man are now available at the Student Government offices in LaFortune.

NEED A PLACE TO STAY THIS SUM­MER? Need to sublet a two-bedroom townhouse apartment within walking dis­tance o f campus. Price is $250/m onth w ithout utilities (very negotiable). IN­TERESTED? Please call 283-1479 if at all interested.

I need a ride to Omaha!! I w ill be ready to leave at noon on Saturday, M ay 12. If you can help, p lease call John at 8208.

Want to live O.C. next year? Need 1 male roommate for Cam pus View. Call Bob 1489 or Joe 1553.

SENIORS! SENIO RS! SENIORS!Express your final thoughts with an Ob­server personal. We will publish one final Commencement issue on Friday, May 18. Come up to the office and tell the world how you feel about ND, SMC, friends, rules, good tim es and bad, and all of the things that have made your four years here special. Office hours: W eekdays from 10 to 4 p.m. Charge is only 10 cents for every 5 characters. This is your last shot!

To the k indly person(s) sending me roses with cryptic messages: PLEASE IDEN­TIFY YOURSELF. I am flustered (and very flattered)...

To the members of the Holy Cross Com­munity: Flash, Bro. Paul, Claude, Schneibs and everyone else. Thanks for everyth ing you helped me see in two years w ith the community.

Keith P.

ATTENTION "LAST CLASS DAY PAR- TIERS!

wear your o ld shoes to the bars... the in­credible Barfing M achine will be cruising through C orby’s, Bridget's and Nickies for her 1st time so be on your toes! Happy 21st Marybeth (Bruton). Love. Evie & Cath

TO GREG, THE FOURTH FLOOR OF ST. ED'S AND ALL MY OTHER FRIENDS W HO W O N’T BE HERE FOR GRADUATION. THANKS FOR YOUR PATIENCE AND FRIENDSHIP KEITH

D .C ./M D. BAGGAGE TRUCK

D .C ./M D . BAGGAGE TRUCK

PRICES BASED ON $5/N .D . BOX (B IKES $15)

LOAD UP:MAY 12 at BOOKSTORE 2-4 PM at SMC (LEM ANS) 4:30-5:30 PM

MAY 13 at BOOKSTORE 11-3 PM at SMC (LEMANS) 3 :3 04 :0 0 PM

BUFFALO CLUB SEE AD UNDER NOTICE SECTION BUFFALO CLUB

HEY! need one ride to DC area, can leave Sunday am. call SCOTT 8209.

lo c a l software development company offers full-time summer position to student experienced in Assem bly language programming for the IBM Personal Com ­puter. Call W ilmes System s at 234-7688 during business hours, or call Jim Wilmes at 289-3896 evenings or weekends.

M2, Eli, Danny Domer, McKevin, Amy, Carol, Tom, Kathleen and especially Janice. Thanks for a fun and wonderful year. Good Luck on finals and have fun this summer. Love, Mary.

Knucklehead, I love you and I'll m iss you. Deb

Dear Dave, Suzanne, Gus, Pete, Cathy, and Marc: Thanks for a ll o f your help over the last couple weeks. At one time, the end seemed so far away. Now that it's come and gone, we can take pride in the way everything worked out. The best that can be hoped for is that everyth ing goes as well next year.

Jeff

M EUND A MOOREWHAT CAN I SAY? LIFE HAS JUST BECOME WAY WAY TOO MUCH FUN

OF LATE . . . I DON'T KNOW HOW NEXT SEMESTER W ILL BE W ITHOUT

YOU, M.P., AND M A U R E E N - BUT. HEY COME NEXT JA N U A R Y -

LOOKOUT I'LL BE BACK READY TO MAKE UP FOR ALL THOSSE LOST W EEKDAY AS WELL AS WEEKEND

NITESHERE'S TO FOOTBALL WEEKENDS AND OTHER MISCELLANEOUS

ROADTRIPS THANKS MEL -I CAN 'T W AIT Tl COME

BACK AND PLAY!!!

B F t a SWD

M a rlp et LIGHT O F M Y LIFE I'llnavar leave you Love, ME-E-E

NEED RIDE FOR TW O TO PHOENIX VIC IN ITY. CALL MIKE AT x6770. W ILL SHARE A L L

KERRY, JACKIE, DIANA: D idn't we have a great year? W ho cares if our GPAs plummeted? Thanks for listening— you always do!!

Carol

TO ALL THE GIRLS AT SMC W HO I HAVE GROWN TO KNO W AND LOVE.

THANKS THOM

VIV and KATHLEEN: You are two cool SMC chics! Poland and Ireland have no finer daughters!!

Carol

NANCY. M.A., M.A., ROSA: You Pop- Farleyites have been w ild wom en this year. Have a wonderful summer!

Carol

MARIPATRICIA! MARIPATRICIAI M ARIPATRICIA!

YES, WE HAVE HAD A GREAT TIME THESE PAST FEW MONTHS AND

MORE FUN TO COME NEXT SPRING!!! IT S BEEN GREAT TO BE BACK AND PLAY THIS SEMESTER ...I AM REALLY GOING TO

MISS YOU N EXT F A L L KIOOO I’LL BE BACK FOR A TAILGATER OR TW O OR THREE OR FOUR... HERE'S TOO A BOTTLE OF R O S E -G A L L O THE BIG ONE! AND OF COURSE ONE OF LARRY THE LOBSTER'S

CIGARETTES AND THE BIG CHILL Cl AO, BELLA— I'M REALLY GONNA

MISS YA’ LOVE, LISA

DAVIDCongratulations on getting an interview with the commissioner's office!! Good luck - 1 know they'll just love you!

Love.Me

............................................................................. ENVIRONM ENTAL CANVASSERSNEED RIDE FOR TW O TO LOS AN- FIGHT HAZARDOUS W ASTES ANDGELESSO UTHERN CALIFO RNIA POLLUTION W ITH THE MIDW EST'S AREA W ILL SHARE ALL. CALL MIKE LARGEST ENVIRONMENTAL WATAT X6770. TCHDOG GROUP. GO OO D OPPOR-............................................................................. TUNITY TO LEARN ABOUT

NOVENA TO ST. JUDE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ANDOh Holy St. Jude, Apostle & Martyr, TO DISCUSS POLLUTION PROBLEMSgreat In virtue and rich In miraclea, WITH HOMEOW NERS. EARN $600&near klnem an o f Jeeua Christ, faithful MO. CALL CBE 874-5500and Intercessor off all who Invoke your .............................................................................special patronage In tim e of need, to Hiiii! Remember O ne Paddle, Twoyou I have recourse from the depths of Paddle, All That Stuff And Gee And Ohm y heart and hum bly beg to whom God Phooey And Foooo. Yuk! Yuk! Yuk!has given such great power to com e to .............................................................................m y assistance. Help m e In m y present the MAD CLERIC is hereand urgent petition, In return I prom ise .............................................................................to m ake your nam e known A cause you Mad Clerics m arry mad men to madto be Invoked. St. Jude, pray for us all women who in turn have wolf-manwho Invoke your aid. Amen. Say 3 O ur children.Fathers, 3 Hall Mary'a, 3 Gloria's. Say .............................................................................for 9 consecutive days. Publication SM ALL SOWmust be prom ised. This novena has S.P.O.S.never been known to fall. Thank you FATTYfor answ ering my prayers. L A .R . HOOSIER............................................................................. THANKS FOR ALL THE G O OD TIMES

MY DEAREST PA, THANKS FOR A O VER THE PAST YEAR.PHENOMENAL YEAR! YOU MAKE ME .............................................................................SO VERY HAPPY!!! I LOVE YOU A L­WAYS, CA

Upon see ing the UM OC voting results, we are greatly d istresssed that BOB LUCIAN d id n o t win. We fe lt that we d id not have to cam paign for BO B After all, we fe lt that it w as com m on sense to vote for BOB, the “ Ball Boy.” ft's too b ad that he w o n ’t be around next year. But, next year, there w ill be a cam pa ign fo r BOB in abstentia. Have no fear, BOB will prevail.

TOM: CO NG RATULATIO NS ON A SUPER YEAR. WE HAVE B IJ0V H ) SEEING YOU GROW M ) MATLRE AT

CHFE DAME . VSE APPLAUD V O IR BFCRTS A D THAIK GOO EVERY DAY THAT YOU /F E O IR SOI . DAD A D M 0 M A D .

KEVIN. LISA, MELINDA, MARI PAT, LOU, I HAVE HAD A G REAT TIME MY SENIOR YEAR W ITH YOU, W HO WOULD HAVE THO UG HT IT WOULD TAKE JUNIO RS TO MAKE M Y SENIOR YEAR TERRIFIC ! PLEASE VISIT NEXT YEAR!! THANK YOU ALL LOVE MO

GERI FITZG ERALD Congratulations on your engagement! Happy future! We all love you and John. Love.Yogi, Boo Boo, and friends

To the Thursday night O bserver crew- Jeff, Tess, Ed, Lisa, Dorothy, Steve, Vic, Madman, Kevin, Dave, Paul C - Thanx for a great 2nd semester. You 're the best in the business. Have a great summer! See

you in the fall. Mad C leric (a.k.a Small)

Kathleen Doyle used to be an Assistant News Editor. I'll bet you d idn 't know that.

Julie FarabaughHere's to the rekindling o f a good friendship-hoping for a better one! See you this sum m er (lots I hope). Good luck on finals. If you want to know who sent this, see above ad!

Kathleen Doyle- You goddess you. W hy, if it w eren't for you, well, well. I just don ’t know.But you're great.

BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETH BETHNow that I have your attention, I want you to know that I never want you to te ll me to take a barn again. That was pathetic. W orthy o f slime. But tha t's okay.

O ne last personal to harass Becky Two MARGIE & PAUL, da to lovebirds.B ringm an... Now that the class is over, can H iiii!! Do you really read the Personals? Ifwe tell??? (Don't S tand So Close To Me) so, all I want four graduantin is a ghetto............................................................................. blaster, a bike that works, a horse an lion

THANK YOU KEVIN O 'SHEA - SMC S cub. I am willing to bargain and negotiateFAVORITE DOMER AND CHAMPION these ishews. Y IYIYIYEEOF RIGHTS ..............................................................................

THANK YOU ST. JUDE FOR PRAYERS PHOENIX, ARIZONAANSW ERED AMEN!! ARE YOU GOING THERE? DO YOU............................................................................. NEED A RIDE? HUH? DO YA, HUH?Becks, Well, call Judy at 288-0280 for deta ils andEven though we make fun o f Jungle U., I call her soon. Go on, make her day.am rea lly proud o f your acceptance andfellowship. Thanks for all the good times .............................................................................here and abroad. I’m going to miss you

lots! T i amo m ia arnica preferita! Rosie M a u re en . . . w hy the heck do you haveto go and graduate on m e . . . K'a been

............................................................................. 40 m uch fun thta sem ester..tues. nftesat 25 cent beers, nancy's, Julio's and any other pizza place that will take checks 11 (thanks for being such a super friend and party c om pan ion . . . It Just w on't be the sam e next year then again there 's all those potential roadtrips to Chicago-how hard can 1st yr. law school be anyw ays???let s see just how m uch m ore fun we can havelllbest of luck, klddo In ALL you E X P L O IT S . . . Iotas' luv, LISA

Jean Jean the Camping Macchina!!

Dear Diane Elizabeth, I will love you a l­ways, Bo.

ARE YOU STRO NG ? DO YOU LIKE TO MEET NEW PEO PLE? Saint M ary s O rientation is looking for you! We need 40 men to help move in the 500 incoming SMC freshm an next August. Benefits are many, including free meals at SMC. If in­terested please CALL CAROL AT 284- 5095 TODAY!

ARTIST, YOU STILL OWE ME A SONG SO WHY DO N 'T WE TRY ANOTHER BOTTLE OF W INE! LOVE, W IILLLBUR

3N REG INA clowns,laundry room crazy picture clubhouse, yellow van, pig pie quiet hours? thanks for a great year good luck love m om /ka tie

SHIRLEY, W HAT CAN I SAY? I W ILL M ISS YOU MUCH, AND OUR GOSSIP EVEN M ORE! LOVE MAUREEN

TOM. YOU ARE SPECIAL THANK YOU FOR THIS YEAR I W ILL M ISS YOU MUCH LOVE. THE O NE W HO W ILL ENVY PUDGE VERY MUCH THIS SUM­MER!

PETE, GIF, THOM, SCOTT: Hurray for O bserver photographers who work like slaves to keep this rag looking great! Scott and Paul: Good luck down the hall. Pete and Thom : See ya next year!

Carol

* VVVVVVVVVVV<"<"<"«,:i,;ivi\m-,-<,V

LISA IS A FANTASTIC W ENCH but nobody believes me.

MARIBETH (OR SOM ETHING LIKE THAT):

Guess who's rooting (or routing, or whatever) for you? Anyone for a back- rub? I'm glad you'll be around next week.

That's a ll very touch ing, b u t can you m ake her feet s w e a t . . .

Excuse me, Dan, could you tell m e how to get to the law library????

Margaret, just to let you know that its 151 D illon and not 140 Dillon. You're going to enjoy being a Dillonite jus t as soon as you learn the words to the fight song.

see CLASSIFIEDS, page 13

Page 13: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 13

SENIOR BAR DJ APPLICATIONS

Monday, Tuesday, and W ednesday May 7-9

[Pick up at Student A ctivities, LaFortune P lease inc lu d e a dem o tape.

Lacrossecontinued from page 16

in c o n tro l, b u t Berm an again b ro u g h t MSU c lo se r by sco ring at the end o f the half.

The Spartans c o n tin u e d to ro l l in the second half. B e rm a i tr im m e d the lead to 6-5 in the o p e n ing seconds o f the half, and, a lm ost ten m inu tes la te r, the score had n o t changed. H ow ever, Dan C h ris t tie d the score at s ix w ith 5:0:2 le ft in the quarte r. Seven seconds la te r, C h ris t fed Pat C h e rry o n a fastfc reak to p u t

ns

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MSU in f ro n t fo r the firs t and last tim e, 7-6.

MSU co n tin u e d to dom ina te p lay u n t i l the fin a l m in u te o f the qu a rte r w h e n T ro c c h i to o k a pass from G ro te to t ie the score. The goal seemed to spu r the Ir ish as they q u ic k ly ju m pe d o u t in to the lead on a goal by John W ilson . Pearsall then scored 20 seconds in to the fo u rth qu a rte r to increase the lead to 10-8.

O nce again, though, MSU fough t back. The teams traded goals, b u t w ith less than th ree m in u te s rem a in ­ing, Ir ish goa lie Rob Simpson, w h o w o u ld stop 21 MSU shots in the game, d ro p p e d the ba ll w h ile try in g to c lea r it. W ilk e p icke d up the loose

ba ll and scored easily to c u t the lead to 10-9.

The goal seemed to stun the Ir ish and the Spartans cap ita lized by sco ring 23 seconds la te r to t ie the game. MSU then c o n tro lle d the en­su ing face o f f and N o tre Dam e hopes d id no t lo o k good.

H ow ever, MSU th re w the ba ll away, se ttin g the stage fo r T ro c c h i’s b ig goal.

D esp ite the M LA tit le , how ever, N o tre Dam e’s season is over. Be­cause m ost o f the Ir ish opponen ts are D iv is io n III , w h ile the Ir is h have to be D iv is io n I, N o tre Dame does no t q u a lify fo r the D iv is io n I p os t­season tou rnam en t.

Classifiedscontinued from page 12

TO THE FIVE G UYS I THR EW UP ON IN CO RBY’S: Sorry, it was m y D irthday. . . Ted

Mr. Sm all:What to say? Th is year has been like no

o ther before it (and hopefu lly like no other after it). You were one o f the few bastions o f insan ity in a p lace crowded filled with editors o f various species. W ill LaFortune ever be the sam e? Will M em phis ever be the same? W ill w e ever be the same?

— Kevin

Jeff (Romeo):Thanks A W HOLE LOT for I he past few w eeks! Gosh, if it w eren't fo r you and rum & cokes and Merlin and the Commons and Buzz C lub and all tha t o ttie r silliness I m ight have been able to graduate on time! Here’s t o . . . ! !

Love, Juliet

Tom , My M anllW hat the hell are w e still doing up here?

Did you know that it’s im possib le to swal­low a whole tea bag? Here 's to NUKE GOD:, W ander Indiana, I QUIT, Ther­m onuclear War, and a host o f o ther ob­noxious past-times.

Q: W hat are you doing? The system 's running slow.

A: I know. It’s m y system and I'll do whatever I want.Did you also know tha t TS T (PC) is a BOZO NO-NO?

News D epartm entThanks for the great "trial m o n th !" Now

that the bugs are worked out (!) we re looking forward to a productive and e ffi­cient year. Have a safe and enjoyable summer.

— Dan and Sarah

Dave G rote ’s laws:1. W hen in doubt, let Joe do it.2. W hen you d rop a n ickel down the sink, send Joe in a fter it.3. When you w ish upon a star, it's probably Joe.4. W hen you have a co lum n to write, give Joe a call.

When do you think they 'll make tag- team drinking an O lym pic event? Probab­ly when there ’s some competition in our class (if that's possible). Buzz Club was a riot — thanks for the initiation. Do you still have m y shirt? Did the cat have kittens yet? Nurse, pass the hem ostats please.

H ey Kevin —You're right, "Girls jus t wanna' have F-U- N . . . " and Mo and I did — Thanks for being there ’ all those various occassions and on all those long walks home from our watering holes' — it’s on to D C. and Chicago — til next y e a r . . . and Lou, can ’t we go to Naugles o r the donut shop o r . . . o r . . . somewhere must be o p e n -b y e you, two . . . signed your two favorite next door neighbors!!!

U sa:Thsnx ALO T for putting up with all

m y Insanity th is year! Hey! Have a great tim e In D C. next sem ester! I’ ll m iss you!

Love, M.P.

Szarah,Papa Szm urf izs a rzaving hom os-

zexual.

Mark W orscwheheh,Who broke wind?

Bob Vanderwende,Who broke wind?W as it Mark W ?Indeed.

IR ISH GARDENS Open 12:30-5:30 in the Basemento f LaFortuner>

Mary Healy,W e know who has been sending you flowers, but w e're not te lling until at least next Saturday. But then, you w on’t be here. Hal Ha! How do you m ake a British luxury liner sink? O ver­load It w ith flowers.

For all you throats who want to catch up to Com m odore V ic (20) Sciulli, he's taken up residence at the Motel 6 on 31. Please, no friends or prostitutes need visit. He's studying.

Margaret,Lighten up, w ench! The days are

growing shorter, and so are you.

Dzave,I think our secret Is still safe. Nobody

suspects a thing.

Bew are sportawritersWhen you com e back to school next

fall, th ings w ill be d ifferent around the office. Y ou ’ll even be able to see the top of the desk. Reporting should be easier and the qua lity o f w riting w ill improve. I will p robably be in touch with you before you leave, but if I can't get a hold o f you, you ’ll hear from me over the summer. By the way, if you w ill be staying at a different address from the one in the phone book, com e up to the office and g ive me the cor­rect one.

— Mike S.

Mary, M aureen, Maripat, Jeff, and all you o ther hom eward-bound people,Rem em ber to send us poor souls who are staying in South Bend som e letters over the summer. Things get lone ly around here, and it would be a nice to hear from some of you.

— Mike, Kevin, etc.

Herb rea lly likes Karen It's not quite love yet, but it's definitely more than friendship

G ive us our dally bread In individual slices.

- Elvis Costello

U n it e d L im oCALL 674-6993 To O’H are CALL 674-6993

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2:35 p.m. 2:50 p.m. 3:05 p.m. 3:20 p.m. 3:40 p.m. 4:10 p.m. 6 0 0 p.m.4:35 p.m. 4:50 p.m. 5:05 p.m. 5:20 p.m. 5:40 p.m. 6:10 p.m. 8:00 p.m.6:35 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 7:20 p.m. 7:40 p.m. 8:10 p.m. 10:00 p.m.

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8:30 a.m. 10:20 a.m. 10:50 a.m. 11:05 a.m. 11:20 a.m. 11:35 a.m. 11:50 a.m.10:30 a.m. 12:20 p.m. 12:50 p.m. 1:05 p.m. 1:20 p.m. 1:35 p.m. 1:50 p.m.12:30 p.m. 2:20 p.m. 2:50 p.m. 3:05 p.m. 3:20 p.m. 3:35 p.m. 3:50 p.m.

2:30 p.m. 4:20 p.m. 4:50 p.m. 5:05 p.m. 5:20 p.m. 5:35 p.m. 5:50 p.m.4:30 p.m. 6:20 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 7:20 p.m. 7:35 p.m. 7:50 p.m.6:30 p.m. 8:20 p.m. 8:50 p.m. 9:05 p.m. 9:20 p.m. 9:35 p.m. 9:50 p.m.8:30 p.m. 10:20 p.m. 10:50 p.m. 11:05 p.m. 11:20 p.m. 11:35 p.m. 11:50 p.m.

10:30 p.m. 12:20 a.m. 12:50 a.m. 1:05 a.m. 1:20 am . 1:35 a.m. 1:50 a.m.12:30 a.m. 2:20 a.m. 2:50 a.m. 3:05 a.m. 3:20 a.m. 3:35 a.m. 3:50 a.m.

ALL STOPS EASTERN STD. TIME

L Clip and SiEFFECTIVE APRIL 29. 1984 SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.

Clip and Save this Schedule

Page 14: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 14

Saint Mary’s soccer club defeats NDBy JEAN CRUTCHERSports W rite r

The Saint M ary ’s socce r c lu b ended is sp ring season o ve r An Tos- ta l w eekend by c a p tu r in g firs t p lace in the N o tre Dame tou rnam en t.

The Belles defeated N o tre Dam e 3-1 in the fina l to w in the same to u rn a m e n t tha t they c o u ld o n ly fin ish fo u rth in last year.

Saint M ary ’s beat Kalam azoo 1-0 and N o rth w e s te rn 3-0 to reach the finals.

Coach John Akers a ttr ib u te s the success o f the c lu b to the “ d e d ica tio n o f the players and the coach. T he re is also a lo t o f c o m p e ti­t io n w ith in the team w h ic h he lps to d r iv e the p layers to do th e ir best. ”

Akers also m en tio n e d tha t the su p p o rt and h e lp o f the a th le tic departm en t, co llege, and g rounds c re w " is app rec ia ted and has he lped the c lub . Instead o f be ing shoved o f f beh ind Angela, the c lu b has been a llo w e d to use the M adelleva fie ld T h is lo c a tio n has caused m ore cam pus in te re s t n the sp o rt.”

T h is past w in te r, Saint M ary ’s hosted its firs t annual in d o o r to u rn a ­m ent. T he Belles w o n the conso la ­t io n b racke t by bea ting N o tre Dame.

L ook in g to n e x t fa ll, Saint M ary ’s w i l l be fo llo w in g an in te rco lle g a te schedule and w i l l p lay such schoo ls as M ich igan , M ich igan State, N o rth w e s te rn , and M arquette .

Because so m uch in te re s t has been show n in the spo rt, "there p ro b a b ly w i l l be tryou ts , ” said Akers. "W e are lo o k in g fo rw a rd to the re tu rn o f peop le fro m fo re ig n stud ies p rog ram s w h o w e are sure w i l l b lend in w e ll w ith the re tu rn in g m em bers o f the team as w e ll as new fre s h m e n .”

“ W e are fo rtu n a te tha t th is year a great m any freshm en jo in e d the c lu b and that w e are o n ly los ing fo u r seniors. W e a n tic ipa te tha t the q u a lity o f p lay w i l l im p ro v e n e x t year and that the c lu b w i l l be ve ry c o m p e tit iv e .”

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TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS S..4CE 1938

Sports BriefsA ll re tu rn in g students shou ld have rece ived a

1984 fo o tb a ll t ic k e t app lica tions. Those w h o have n o t shou ld com e to the ACC t ic k e t o ffice by th e end o f the semester. — The O bserver

The in te rh a ll lacrosse cham p ion fo r th is year isGrace, w h o defeated Keenan 12-3. T he re w e re 10 teams in vo lve d th is year, the firs t fo r in te rh a ll lacrosse action . — The O bserver

Sports transactions th is w eekend in c lu d e d the reassigning o f p itc h e r D ennis “ O il Can” B oyd by the Boston Red Sox to P aw tucke t o f the In te rn a tio n a l League a fte r h is loss to the Chicago W h ite Sox Saturday. Steve C ra w fo rd , p itch e r, was reca lled by the Red Sox. — A P

The ND w om en’s g o lf team defeated EvansviUe720-741. M eda lis t fo r the m atch was Nancy Foster o f Evansville w ith 84-79-163 . For the Irish, A ng ie L loyd was 83-84 -167 and C athy Pen na was 86-84-170 . — The O bserver

The Saint M ary S softball team p a rtic ip a te d in theNA1A D is tr ic t 21 State Tournam ent. The Belles lost th e ir firs t game in the do u b le e lim in a tio n con test to T ay lo r, 17-8. In th e ir second game, Saint M ary 's defeated M anchester, 7-5. A nn ie Day was the w in n in g p itc h e r and Jenn ie Adam o h it a th ree run tr ip le . In th e ir fina l game o f the season, H u n tin g to n scored all th ree runs in the firs t tw o inn ings to beat the Belles 3-2. T h e ir re co rd fo r the season is 25-5. — The O bserver

111 th e in terh all soccer cham p ionsh ip , D illo n beat The Law School 1 -0. — The O bserver

Saint M ary S tennis team played N ortheaste rnI llin o is Friday, w in n in g 7-0. M ary C aro le H all led the w ay w ith a 6-1, 6-0 v ic to ry o ve r K a thy C ooper. — The O bserver

H oly Cross crushed D illo n in the 12- softbaiifina l, 11-0. — The O bserver

P u t u s t p t h e T e s t !

DOMINO’S PIZZA is ready fprfinals. We will be open 11 a.m. to

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Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 15

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taps 14 Aft. ravine

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prince

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member

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lake13 Hindrance21 Wavy, in

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forests

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tenses: 56 Stashabbr. 57 Small

45 Tell children

Friday’s Solution

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a a a a

Hunannu b d q b □ □

1 2 3*

5 6 7 8• * 10 11 12 13

14 15'

16

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Page 16: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Sports Monday, May 7 ,1984 — page 16

ND lacrosse team wins MLA championship

T h e O b s e rv e r /T h o m B rad ley

Notre Dame wins Midwest Catholics

ByCHUCKEHRMANSports W rite r

The Ir ish fin ish e d firs t Saturday at the M idw est C a th o lic C ham ­p io n sh ip h e ld here at N o tre Dame.

DePaul to o k second.In d iv id u a l w in n e rs inc lu d e : M ike C o llin s (1 0 ,0 0 0 ), B il l C o u rtn e y

(s teep le chase),J im C randal ( ja v e lin ) , G ary LeKander ( t r ip le ju m p ), J im M o y a r( 1 ,500), M ike Brennan (1 1 0 h igh hu rd les), John M cN e lis (8 0 0 ) , M itc h Van Eyken (1 0 0 ) , Dan Shannon (2 0 0 ) , James Patterson ( lo n g ju m p ), and the 4 x400 re lay team o f Je ff Van W ie, Van Eyken, Shannon, and G ilm ore .

B o th C o u rtn e y and M oyar q u a lifie d fo r the u p co m in g IC4As.

Record 23-22

Baseball team wins three of four

By MIKE SULLIVANSports E d ito r

The N o tre Dam e lacrosse team ’s lead ing scorer, a ttackm an Bob T ro c ­ch i, fin ished the 1984 season on Saturday w ith 36 goals, bu t none was m o re va luab le than the 3 6 th goal. It was h is fina l goal w ith I 38 re m a in ­in g in the fo u rth q u a rte r o f Satur­day’s con tes t w ith M ich igan State tha t gave the Ir ish a hard fough t 11- 10 v ic to ry o v e r the Spartans.

T he N o tre Dame w in , c o u p le d w ith D en iso n ’s v ic to ry o v e r O h io W esleyan, earned R ich O 'Leary 's squad the M id w e s t Lacrosse Associa­t io n cham p ionsh ip , and gave the Irish , w h o have no scholarships, a reasonable c la im to the t i t le o f the best lacrosse team in the M idw est.

N o tre Dam e ended its season w ith a 9-3 reco rd , its best in its fo u r years as a va rs ity sport. Its 8-1 MLA re co rd tie d it w ith D enison fo r firs t p lace in th e con fe rence ; how ever, the Ir ish w e re aw arded the ch a m p io n sh ip by v ir tu e o f th e ir 12-11 w in o v e r D en ison on A p r il 25.

E n te rin g Saturday’s game, O ’Leary and h is p layers knew that they had to w in in o rd e r to have a chance at the M IA t it le . They also knew that D en ison had to beat O h io Wesleyan. A b o u t fifte e n m in u te s a fte r fu lf i l l in g th e ir end o f the scenario, they heard that D en ison had done the same.

H ow eve r, M ich igan State — the

team that had made the w h o le scenario possib le in the firs t p lace by upse ttin g O h io W esleyan last w eek — a lm ost ru in e d the Ir ish hopes on C a rtie r Field. The Spartans b ro u g h t th e ir tough , phys ica l s ty le o f p lay w ith them and made N o tre Dame earn eve ry goal i t scored.

T hat is, exce p t fo r the last one. W ith the score tie d at 10 and M ic h i­gan State h o ld in g the m om e n tu m o f a tw o goal streak, N o tre Dame w o rk e d fo r a shot. S en ior Steve Pear­sall, w h o had scored a goal e a rlie r in the game, to o k a shot tha t th e MSU goalie s topped easily. The ball, how e ve r, ro lle d o u t fro m u n d e r the n e tt in g o f h is s tick and T ro c c h i, in the r ig h t p lace at the r ig h t tim e, poked the loose ba ll in to the net.

Up to th a t p o in t, though , the Spar­tans p ro v id e d a to u g h e r cha llenge than expected . The Ir ish had des troyed nearly every o p p on e n t e xce p t D en ison d u r in g th e ir v ic to ry streak, c o n tro ll in g m ost o f the games fro m the outset. M ich igan State, though , was g rea tly im p ro ve d fro m last year and neve r a llow ed N o tre Dam e to take co m p le te c o n ­t r o l o f the game.

“ M ich igan State is a good team — a lo t b e tte r than m ost peop le g ive them c re d it fo r," said O ’Leary. “ T hey make you p lay th e ir phys ica l game and take you o u t o f y o u r o w n gam e .”

The Spartans w e re able to stay c lose th ro u g h o u t the game by w in ­

n ing m ost o f the face-offs and using a pa tien t b a ll-c o n tro l offense. T h e ir aggressive p lay also he lped offset N o tre Dam e’s su p e rio r ta len t and kep t the ba ll away fro m a exp los ive Ir ish attack.

“ T hey w ere w in n in g m ost o f the face-offs and w e re c o n tro ll in g the ba ll m ost o f the tim e ,” O ’Leary e x ­p la ined. “ I d o n ’t th in k they w e re o u tp la y in g us, though, because w e rea lly aren ’t a b a ll-c o n tro l team. W e get the ba ll and go to the goal, so, unless w e get a large lead, w e ’re no t

go ing to try to keep th e ball. ”D esp ite the fact tha t MSU c o n ­

tro lle d the ba ll fo r m uch o f the firs t quarte r, N o tre Dame he ld a good edge on the scoreboard. M ark Steranka ba tted the ba ll in to the goal to g ive the Ir ish an ea rly lead, and sen io r t r i capta in K ev in Sm ith in ­creased the lead to 2-0 by sco ring o ff a pass fro m Joe Franklin.

The Spartans c u t the lead to 2-1, b u t T om G ro te was able to duke his de fender and score to cap o f f the sco ring in the quarte r.

W hen T ro c c h i scored the firs t o f h is th ree goals early in the second quarte r, the Ir ish seemed w e ll in c o n tro l, 4-1. H ow ever, MSU’s Riney W ilke and Marc Berman scored less than a m in u te apart to cu t the lead to one.

The Ir ish rebounded , how ever, w hen S m ith batted in a goal on an extra -m an s itu a tio n and T im C o r­rigan bounced a shot in the upper c o rn e r o f the net. W ith a 6-3 lead, N o tre Dame once again looked to be

see LACROSSE, page 13

K e v in S m ith , a t r i-c a p ta in o n the lacrosse team , p io n s h ip la s t w eekend d e fe a tin g M ic h ig a n State 11-scored one o f the g o a ls as the I r is h w o n the M LA cham - 10. See M ik e S u ll iv a n ’s s to ry above.

Ir ish w e re able to end the game ear­ly, how ever, w ith a s ix -ru n ra lly in th e ir h a lf o f the inn ing .

T h ird baseman J im Dee ended the con test w ith h is fo u rth hom e-run o f the season w h ic h made the score 14- 4. W atzke to o k the w in , and his re c o rd n ow stands at an im pressive 4-0.

Dee had th re e h its, in c lu d in g his hom e-run and a doub le , and d ro ve in fo u r runs. M ike M e tz le r co n tin u e d to tear up oppos ing p itc h in g , as he w e n t 2-2 w ith tw o doub les and 4 RBI. O u tf ie ld e r M ike T rudeau c o n ­tr ib u te d a do u b le and tw o singles.

The Ir is h w o n the second game even m ore ha n d ily than the firs t. W h ile they slugged fo u rte e n and scored ano the r fo u rte e n runs, h u r le r Jason Schom er shu t o u t H u n tin g to n on five hits.

T w o runs crossed the p la te fo r the Ir ish in the firs t inn ing , b u t tha t was n o th in g com pared to w h a t w o u ld happen in th e ir h a lf o f the th ird .

A p o w e r d isp lay b y the Ir is h in th is in n in g le d to a n in e -ru n o u tbu rs t. B o th V uono and M e tz le r h it hom ers to h ig h lig h t the inn ing . W ith th is show o f o ffensive fire p o w e r, the Ir is h increased th e ir lead to 11 -0. A n o th e r th re e runs in the fo u rth seemed to ice the game fo r the Ir ish at 14-0.

W h ile the Ir is h h itte rs to re the c o ve r o f f the ball, p itc h e r Schom er a llo w e d H u n tin g to n no th ing . He benefited fro m ou ts tand ing defensive plays b y T rudeau in the firs t inn ing , and by Steve Passinault in the th ird . B o th e ffo rts saved runs fo r the Ir is h hu rle r.

A fte r H u n tin g to n c o u ld n o t score in the f ifth , the game was ca lled a 14- 0 v ic to ry fo r the Irish . Schom er p icke d up the w in to raise his re co rd to 3-2.

V u o n o ’s tw o hom ers gave h im 5 RBI to lead th e team, and M e tz le r p icked up 3 RBI w ith his smash ove r the ce n te rfie ld fence. Dee ch ip p e d in w ith th ree singles.

The Ir ish trave l to Valparaiso today fo r a s ingle game. T o m o rro w , the team w il l c lose the season w ith a d oub leheader against N o rth w e s te rn at Jake K lin e Held.

Edmonton Oilers face Islanders in Cup finalsAssociated Press

U N IO N D A LE , N.Y. — I t no w w i l l be up to the E dm on ton O ile rs to do w h a t M o n tre a l c o u ld n ’t do — stop the N e w Y o rk Islanders and p reserve the Canadiens’ N ationa l H ockey League re c o rd o f f ive c o n ­secu tive Stanley Cups, achieved fro m 1956-60.

“ W e w a n te d to beat them fo r the p layers fro m those teams,” said M on tre a l fo rw a rd M ario T re m b lay a fte r the Is landers w o n the P rince o f W ales C on fe rence fin a l p la yo ff series in s ix games w ith a 4-1 v ic to ry Saturday n igh t. “ B u t they had too m uch fo r us. ”

For the firs t tw o games, the Canadiens w e re in c o n tro l o f the series. They w o n tw ic e at hom e and made the Is landers lo o k lik e any­th in g b u t fo u r tim e cham pions. But the Islanders h it th e ir s tr ide in Game 3 and o u tsco red M o n tre a l 15-5 the rest o f the series.

" I ’m glad w e had a chance to get a crack at them , ” said Canadiens cap­ta in Bob Gainey, w h o played the last tw o games w ith a separated le ft shou lder. “ I t gave us a taste o f w h a t it takes to beat a c lu b lik e th is. ”

B ut o n ly a taste. The Canadiens neve r came c lose to f in ish in g the meal.

“ A ll i t to o k fo r us was to get a fast start and I saw it co m in g w hen w e

go t tw o q u ick goals in the th ird game, ” said Is lander M ike Bossy, w h o had th ree game w in n in g goals in the series. “ W e g o t a 5-0 lead and c o u ld re lax. W e never had a b ig lead in any game be fore that, w h e re w e co u ld s it back and have fun ou t the re .”

“ F rom then on, w e w e re back to b e ing in c o n tro l o f o u r game.”

T he y ’l l need to ta l c o n tro l o f th e ir game to beat the O ile rs in the Stan­ley C up fina l, w h ic h opens here Thursday n igh t. The Is landers sw ept E d m on ton in fo u r games in the 1983 fin a l series.

“ T h e y ’re go ing to co m e at us m uch faster, ” said Is landers ’ captain D enis P o tv in , w h o established a p la yo ff m ark w ith 98 ca ree r assists w ith tw o assists in the c lin c h in g game. “ T hey w a n t the p u ck badly. M on trea l, at tim es, d id n ’t seem to w a n t to have th e puck. ”

The Islanders began to tu rn a round the con fe rence fin a l w hen th e ir fo rw ards assumed c o n tro l o f the puck.

Also, they s tarted g e ttin g the firs t goal, jus t as M on tre a l had done in its tw o v ic to ries .

“ W e kn e w w e had to get on to p and make them try to com e back,” said C lark G illies , w h o has seven p la y o ff goals a fte r sco ring o n ly 12 d u rin g the regu la r season.

By ERIC SCHEUERMANNSports W rite r

E n te rin g Saturday’s doub leheade r against H u n tin g to n w ith a 20-21 reco rd , the N o tre Dam e baseball team p layed so w e ll tha t b o th games w e re c u t sho rt be fo re they had run th e ir schedu led length.

The Ir is h sw ep t the sho rtened tw in b il l at Jake K line F ield by scores o f 14-4 and 14-0. Since H u n tin g to n was w il l in g to use a 10-run lead ru le w h ic h is usua lly used o n ly in NA1A c o m p e tit io n , b o th games w ere b ro u g h t to an abbrev ia ted end in the f if th inn ing .

Yesterday, the Ir ish s p lit w ith Lew is C o llege , los ing the firs t game 4-0, w ith Joe Dobash ( 2 -7 ) ta k in g

the loss. In the n igh tcap , M ark C le m e n tz ( 5 - 5 ) p itc h e d N o tre Dame to a 6-3 w in . T h e ir re c o rd stands at23-22.

Against H u n tin g to n , sophom ore Ir ish h u r le r M ark W atzke c o n tin u e d his o u ts tan d in g season by p itc h in g a s ix h it te r in the opener. The Ir ish sluggers backed h im up w ith a ten- h it, fo u rte e n ru n p e rfo rm ance o f th e ir ow n .

N o tre Dame p u t H u n tin g to n far b e h in d r ig h t fro m th e start, as they sco red fo u r tim es in the f irs t in n in g and sent th re e m ore across the p la te in the second. A n o th e r ru n in the fo u rth sent the Ir ish o u t to a seem ing ly co m fo rta b le lead.

B u t W atzke e x p e rie n ce d a scare in the fifth , as H u n tin g to n c u t the Ir ish lead in h a lf w ith fo u r runs. The

T h e O b s e rv e r /T h o m B rad ley

J a c k M o ra n a n d the I r is h b a s e b a ll team w e n t th re e - fo r - fo u r th is weekend, m a u lin g H u n t in g to n C o lle g e a nd s p l i t in g its d o u b le h e a d e r w ith Lew is College. See E r ic S cheu e rm a n n ’s s to ry above. . . . . . . ,s

Page 17: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

N o t r e D a m e

O b s e r v e r

07251318

lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll022270

B o x : 18

Volume : 18

Issue : 142

D a y : Fri

Date : 5/18/1984 12:00:00 AM

N otes:

Issue # Missing (may not ex is t):

Issue # Missing (probably not published):

Page 18: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...
Page 19: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Top Ten - pages 5 and 9

BF R ID A Y . M A Y 18. 1984

2,870 to receive degrees at commencementsSun. at Notre Dame Sat. at Saint Mary’sBy MARC RAMIREZAssis tant Sews E d ito r

Lore t M ille r Ruppe, d ire c to r o f the Peace Corps, w i l l d e liv e r the com m encem en t address to a re co rd 2,415 g radua ting students Sunday a fte rnoon at N o tre Dam e’s 139 th com m encem en t exercises. G raduation cerem on ies w i l l beg in at 2 in the arena o f th e A th le tic and C onvoca tion Center.

Graduates in c lu d e 1,858 cand idates fo r th e bac­h e lo r ’s degree in the C olleges o f A rts and Letters, Science, Business A d m in is tra tio n and E ng ineering ; 73 students fo r Ph.D. degrees and 191 fo r m aster’s degrees in the G raduate School; 162 students fo r J.D. degrees in the Law School; and 131 fo r th e MBA degree.

T h ir ty -e ig h t MBA degree re c ip ie n ts are m em bers o f the U liv e rs ity ’s firs t g radua ting class in the C o llege o f Business A d m in is tra tio n ’s exe cu tive M BA prog ram . The class, w h ic h e n ro lle d in A ugust 1982, is com posed o f business and professional persons fro m the M ich iana area w h o co n tin ue d th e ir careers w h ile pu rsu in g studies.

In a d d itio n to Ruppe, seven o thers w i l l rece ive ho nora ry d o c to r o f laws degrees: M ons igno r John Egan, d ire c to r o f hum an re la tions and ecum en ism fo r the A rchd iocese o f Chicago; Dr. Jorge P rie to , cha irm an o f the departm en t o f fam ily p lann ing at C hicago’s C ook C o u n ty H osp ita l; C la ire Randall, genera l secre ta ry o f the N ationa l C o u n c il o f C hurches o f C hris t; and Frank Sullivan, a N o tre Dame a lum nus and trus tee w h o is p res iden t o f the M utua l B enefit L ife Insurance Com­pany in Newark, N.J.

O the rs inc lude W illl ia m W elsh, a N o tre Dame a lum nus w h o is depu ty lib ra ria n o f Congress; M arina vo n Neum ann W h itm an , v ice p res iden t and c h ie f econom is t at G eneral M otors ; and R obert W ilm o u th , a N o tre Dame a lum nus and trus tee w h o is p res iden t and and c h ie f execu tive o ff ic e r o f th e N a tiona l Futures As­socia tion , a se lf reg u la to ry g ro u p fo r the fu tu res in ­dustry.

M ich e l Boudart, K eck pro fessor o f chem ica l eng inee ring at S tanford U n ive rs ity , w i l l rece ive an honora ry d o c to r o f science degree, and V ic to r W eis skopf, pro fessor em eritus o f physics at the Massachu­setts In s titu te o f T echno logy, w i l l rece ive a d o c to r o f science degree.

The U n ive rs ity ’s h ighest honor, the Laetare Medal, w i l l be presented to John Noonan Jr., p ro fessor o f law at the U n ivers ity o f C a lifo rn ia at Berkeley.

W hether it's c h a tt in g w ith F a th e r H esburgh, e n jo y in g the sun w ith som e fr ie n d s o r p a r t ic ip a t in g in the c a n d le lig h t v ig il, S e n io r Week o ffe rs the g ra d u a te s a chance to re la x a n d e n jo y th e ir f i n a l days on cam pus.

By ANNE MONASTYRSKIS a in t M a ry ’s E d ito r

Nurses P inn ing C erem ony, Baccalaureate Mass, a p e r­fo rm ance o f “ G odspe ll” by the N o tre Dam e/Saint M ary ’s Theatre g ro u p and a c o ck ta il p a rty are among the com m encem en t a c tiv itie s w h ic h w i l l take place today, at Saint M ary ’s.

D u r in g Saint M ary 's 137 th com m encem ent ex­ercises, 455 m em bers o f the class o f 1984 w i l l rece ive th e ir bache lo r’s degrees. C erem on ies beg in at 10:30 a m. May 19 in th e C o u rt o f LeMans Hall. In case o f rain, g raduation w i l l take p lace in Angela A th le tic Facility.

Nurses P inn ing C erem ony begins th is a fte rnoon at 1 in the C hu rch o f Lo re tto . The p rocession fo r the Bac­calaureate Mass begins at 3:30 on the u p p e r leve l o f Angela. The Mass begins at 4.

N o tre Dam e/Saint M ary ’s Theatre w i l l present “ G odspe ll ” to n ig h t at 8 in O ’Laugh lin A u d ito r iu m proceeded by a c o c k ta il p a rty fro m 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. at the C en tu ry C enter. The so ft ro c k band fro m Chicago, “ T rans ition ,” w i l l p e rfo rm at the recep tion .

A b ilg a il M cC arthy — w r ite r , ecum en ist, le c tu re r and w o m en ’s r ig h ts advocate — w i l l d e live r the com m ence­m en t address d u rin g co m m encem en t exercises on May 19. She w il l rece ive an h o nora ry d o c to r o f hum ane le t­ters degree.

O th e r hon ora ry degree re c ip ien ts in c lu d e R obert Be­ck, cha irm an o f th e board and c h ie f e xe cu tive o ff ic e r o f the P rudentia l Insurance C om pany; Sister O liv ia M arie Hutcheson, S uperio r G enera l o f the C ongregation o f the H o ly Cross; and Evans W oo lle n , a rch ite c t. M ary K e l­ly M cLaugh lin w i l l rece ive the President’s Medal.

G retchen M eyer is the va le d ic to ria n fo r the class o f 1984. M eyer m a jo red in ch e m is try and hum an is tic studies and w i l l rece ive tw o degrees: a bache lo r o f science degree and a ba ch e lo r o f arts degree.

M cC arthy, co lu m n is t fo r C o m m o n w e a l magazine and a u tho r o f tw o novels is the w ife o f fo rm e r senator and one-tim e d e m o cra tic p res iden tia l candidate Eugene M cC arthy. Mrs. M cC arthy is board p res iden t o f C a rro ll P ub lica tions, s iden t o f H era ld C om m un ica ­tions, Ltd., d ire c to r o f the D re fus C o rpo ra tio n and c o o r­d in a to r o f the N a tiona l C onference on W om en, the E conom y and P ub lic Po licy.

A graduate o f the C ollege o f Saint Catherine, M cC arthy rece ived he r m aster’s degree fro m the U n i­ve rs ity o f M innesota and has done graduate w o rk at the

see SATURDAY, page 4

The missing Knute Rockne statue from the lobby o f the Rockne Memorial is resting comfortably on a Florida beach, according to a ransom note that accompanied this photograph.

Ransom message demands beer in return for stolen Rockne bustBy MARGARET FOSMOE and JEFF HARRINGTONNews E d ito rs

K nu te R ockne is a live and w e ll and basking in th e F lo rida sun­shine, a cco rd in g to a ransom no te delivered yesterday tci the Observer office.

The message w ;is th e firs t rece ived s ince the b ronze bust o f the fam ous N o tre Dam e fo o tb a ll coach d isappeared fro m its pedes­ta l in the R ockne M e m o ria l tw o w eeks ago.

The no te , w h ic h ind ica ted the bust w o u ld n o t be re tu rn e d “ t i l l the students have th e ir beer,” was addressed to “ Father Ted ” and signed “ Rock.” A pho to g ra p h ac­com pany ing the no te show ed the bust sunn ing o n a beach, su r­ro u n d e d by a keg o f beer, a p o rta b le s te reo and a frisbee.

A d m in is tra to rs say the no te is the f irs t b it o f in fo rm a tio n rece ived c o n ce rn in g th e w he reabou ts o f the p ilfe re d statue. “ You can tu rn ( th e n o te ) o ve r to S ecurity fo r m ateria l ev idence, ” ch u ck led D ire c to r o f In fo rm a tio n Services

R ichard C onk lin .A m a jo r inves tiga tion has n o t

been launched in to the case o f the k idnapped coach, a lthough Security is lo o k in g fo r leads, acco rd ing to G lenn T erry , d ire c to r o f secu rity . “ I th in k w e ’d like to get i t back since i t ’s pa rt o f the U n ive r­s ity ,” he noted.

Anne S chellinger, the se cu rity inves tiga to r assigned to the case, echoed the U n ive rs ity ’s w ish to reco ve r the bust soon. “ I ’m ho p in g i t w i l l tu rn up w h e n g radua tion tu rn s up. I t ’s go t a lo t o f sen tim en ­ta l value to the U n ive rs ity . . . I t ’s n o t so m uch the m one ta ry value. ”

The statue, a p p ro x im a te ly tw o feet ta ll and tw o feet b road at the base, was m ys te rio u s ly ho is ted fro m its p e rch in the fo ye r o f the b u ild in g on the n ig h t o f May 3

The o n ly c lu e le ft at th e scene o f the c r im e was a note: “ I ’ l l be back w h e n th e re ’s a real a dm in is tra ­t io n .”

C o n k lin said, “The ( f i r s t ) no te in d ica ted tha t is was s tudents w h o to o k i t as a p rank.”

A n o th e r c lu e to the he ist m ay be the m in ia tu re statue o f Father Ed­

w a rd Sorin loca ted in Sorin Hall, b u t he ’s n o t ta lk in g e ither.

The Sorin statue has been the v ic t im o f several abductions d u rin g the last 30 years. The Rockne statue snatchers m ay have been in sp ired by rece n t a rtic les in N o tre D a m e M ag a z in e , The O b­server and the S ou th B end T rib u n e co n c e rn in g the c o lo rfu l h is to ry o f the S orin statue, say ad­m in is tra to rs .

Several undergraduatesabsconded w ith th e Sorin statue in 1952. The students asked friends w h o w e re tra ve lin g overseas to send postcards signed “ Father S orin ” to adm in is tra to rs fro m such p laces as Rome, London and Tokyo .

The Sorin statue was re tu rn e d at the end o f tha t year, b u t rem ained the v ic t im o f freq u e n t u nau t­h o rize d ro a d tr ip s fo r ano the r decade. The statue was sto len again in the ea rly 1960s and n o t re tu rn e d u n t il 1972, w hen Father James B u rtchae ll learned o f the sta tue ’s lo c a tio n and dem anded its

see ROCKNE, page 4

Page 20: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Com mencement Issue, 1984 — page 2

In BriefThe Notre Dam e endow m ent is the largest c#

any A m erican C a th o lic in s titu t io n o f h ighe r lea rn in g and the 19th largest am ong a ll the n a tio n ’s co lleges and un ivers ities . N o tre Dam e’s e n d ow m e n t was lis te d at $279,112,000 as o f June 30, 1983, the date o f the survey by the N a tiona l A ssocia tion o f C o llege and U n ive rs ity Business O ffice rs. I t was up $75.3 m ill io n from June 30, 1982. The closest C a th o lic in s t itu t io n to N o tre Dame was Loyola U n ive rs ity , Chicago, w ith $107.9 m illio n . H arvard U n ive rs ity was firs t w ith $2.4 b illio n , w ith the U n ive rs ity o f Texas close beh ind at $2.3 b illio n . — The Obsert>er

T h irty -fo u r Notre Dam e a lu m n i are p re s i­den ts o f A m erican co lleges, u n ive rs itie s and research institu tes, a cco rd in g to a recen t survey by the A lu m n i O ffice . T w e n ty tw o men, in c lu d in g s ix p ries ts and one b ro th e r, h o ld such positions, as do tw e lv e w om en , in c lu d in g 10 sisters. A bou t five pe rce n t o f N o tre Dam e's a lum n i body, o r 3,500 persons are in vo lve d in h ig h e r educa­tion . Seventy-five are deans and 151 are heads o f academ ic d e p a rt­ments. The vast m a jo r ity in the survey he ld fa cu lty o r adm in is tra tive positions. — The O bserver

A $100,000 g ift to establish a specia l U n ive rs ity L ib ra ry c o lle c tio n o f books on in te rn a tio n a l m arke ting and finance has been rece ived by N o tre Dame. The c o lle c tio n was made possib le by Peter P illio d , p res iden t o f the P illio d C ab ine t C om pany in Swanton, O hio . P illio d is a m em ber o f N o tre Dam e’s adv iso ry c o u n c il fo r U n ive rs ity lib ra rie s A cc o rd in g to Father T he o d o re Hesburgh, u n ive rs ity p re s i­dent, "T h e P illio d fa m ily ’s generos ity w i l l enhance the q u a lity o f o u r lib ra ry and o f business educa ton at N o tre Dame. The benefits d e rive d from th is c o lle c tio n by N o tre Dame studen ts w i l l affect the fu tu re c o n d u c t o f the in te rn a tio n a l co m m e rce in m u ltifo rm and benevo len t ways w ith w h ic h the name o f the P illio d fam ily w i l l a l­ways be associated ’ The P illio d Fam ily E ndow ed C o lle c tio n in In ­te rn a tio n a l M arke ting and Finance is the seventh endow ed lib ra ry c o lle c to n at N o tre Dame. — The O bserver

D r. E lllil Hofm zill, pro fessor o f c h e m is try and dean o f the Freshman Year o f S tudies at N o tre Dame, has been nam ed one o f the n a tio n ’s to p 25 professors in a c o m p e tit io n sponsored by the C o u n c il fo r the A dvancem en t and S upport o f Education. H olm an, w h o rece ive d his Ph.D. from N o tre Dame in 1962, has taught at the U n ive rs ity since 1953, and an estim ated 26 ,000 students are a lum n i o f his freshm an general c h e m is try course. Since his ap p o in tm e n t in 1971 as dean o f the Freshman Year, H ofm an has supervised a firs t- year c u rr ic u lu m and counse ling p rogram that has kep t freshm an a t­t r i t io n to less than 2 pe rcen t - The O bserver

Engineering Dean Em eritus Dr. JosephHogan o f N o tre Dame has been e lec ted a fe llo w o f the In s titu te o f E le c tr ica l and E lec tron ics Engineers ( IEEE) fo r his c o n tr ib u tio n s to e n g in ee rin g education . Hogan was one o f 134 m em bers chosen as fe llo w s fro m the to ta l m em bersh ip o f 250,000. He spoke on b e h a lf o f the new fe llo w s Sunday d u rin g the IEEE E lec tro '84 m ee ting in Bos­ton. — The O bserver

SlStCr M arietta Starne, rec to ress o f Lyons Hall at N o tre Dame, has been app po in te d assistant d ire c to r fo r se rv ic e /le a rn in g at the C en te r fo r Social C oncerns, a cco rd ing to C e n te r D ire c to r Father D on M cN e ill. Starrie, w h o w il l beg in w o rk at the C e n te r in August, has been re c to r o f Lyons Hall since 1977. She rece ived a M aster o f D iv in ity degree fro m N o tre Dam e in 1980, and fo r the past th ree years has c o o rd in a te d the D epartm en t o f T h e o l­og y ’s T heo logy and Life C o llo q u iu m and served on the teach ing team o f tw o th e o log y departm en t courses, “T heo logy end C om ­m u n ity Service” and “ The C h u rch and Social Concerns. ” She w il l rep lace Sister J u d ith Anne Beattie, w h o is p lann ing to trave l to the H o ly Cross Sisters’ m ission in Bangladesh and becom e invo lve d in the O rd e r ’s fo rm a tio n w o rk . — The O bserver

WeatherPartly cloudy and w arm

today. H igh in the u p p e r 70s to near 80. Partly c lo u d y and m ild to n ig h t w ith a 30 pe rcen t chance fo r thundershow ers . Low in the m id and u p p e r 50s. P artly c lo u d y to m o rro w w ith a chance fo r thundershow ers . H igh in the upper 70s to a round 80.

The ObserverT h e O b s e rv e r ( I SPS 599 J «()<)()) is p ub lished M onday th ro u g h I riday and on hom e fo o tb a ll Saturdays, excep t d u r in g exam and vacation periods. T h e O b s e rv e r is pub lished by th e students o f the I 'n iv e rs ity o f N o tre Dame and Saint M ary's C o llege Subscrip tions may he purchased fo r 525 pe r year ( 515 per sem ester) by w r it in g T h e O b s e rv e r, P.O. Box Q. N o tre Dame. Indiana 46556

T h e O b s e rv e r is a m em ber o f T h e As­s o c ia te d P ress. A ll re p ro d u c tio n righ ts are reserved.

Tod ay ’s issue was p roduced by:

D e s ig n E d i t o r Thom as Robert SmallD e s ig n A s s is ta n t .. . ...........................SuzanneL a y o u t S ta ff... T o o num erous to m en tionT y p e s e tte rs ................. Kevin the GreatN e w s E d i to r .....................Dan M cC u lloug hC o p y E d i to r ......................... Sarah and TessS p o rts C o p y E d i to r ......... Jeff, Larry. DaveS p o rts S p e c ia l L a y o u t ...........................SilkyV ie w p o in t L a y o u t ............. K e ith and PaulA d D e s ig n ................................... SuzanneP h o to g ra p h e r ........................... Pete

Thank you, Mom and DadDear M om and Dad,

Four years ago, w ith teary eyes and heavy hearts, you p u t me on an a irp lane bound fo r Chicago. N one o f us rea lized it at the tim e , bu t you w ere send ing me on a fantastic jou rney , one packed w ith learn ing, g ro w th and happiness. N o w tha t the jo u rn e y is a lm ost over, i t ’s tim e fo r me to thank you fo r the w o n d e rfu l g ift you have g iven me, exp la in to you w h y I w i l l always love N o tre Dame and te ll you w h y I am b e tte r o f f n o w than I was then.

As w e w a lk a round cam pus th is weekend, the sch o o l’s aesthetic qua litie s w i l l s tr ike you. The Dom e shines b righ te s t th is tim e o f year, am id b lue skies, b lo o m in g flo w e rs (eve n th o ug h they w e re jus t p lan ted last w eek), green grass and fresh ly pa in ted s ilve r s idew a lk posts. Be lieve me, the cam pus isn’t a lways th is beautifu l. M idw est w in te rs ce rta in ly take th e ir to ll. In fact, the campus looks b e tte r r ig h t n o w than i t does all year.

Yes, the beauty o f o u r cam pus is q u ite apparent.B ut m any co lleges have b e a u tifu l campuses. No schools, how ever, have N o tre D am ejpeop le and the N o tre D a m e ihys tique .

As I have m en tio n e d to you before , I knew I was “ h om e” the firs t t im e I set fo o t on th is campus. How?G ood question. I suppose it had som eth ing to d o w ith the a n tic ip a tion o f be ing a pa rt o f the greatest s tudent b ody in the w o rld . I had heard “ N o tre Dame s to ries” w hen I was s till in h igh school. I was ve ry anx ious to becom e a part o f i t all.

And it d id n ’t take long to becom e pa rt o f i t all. From Dean H ofm an ’s w e lc o m in g speech to the last pep rally, from m y firs t d o rm pa rty to m y last B ooksto re Basket­ba ll tou rnam ent, fro m m y firs t class to m y last v is it to Senior Bar, I ’ve kn o w n the greatness that is N o tre Dame. I ’ve had m y share in m any events and s itua tions w h ich are destined to be rem em bered in “ N o tre Dame stories.” As m any be fore me have d iscovered , the g rea t­ness o f th is U n ive rs ity lies in the people.

But w h a t about the people? W h y are they so special? Are they special be fore they arrive, o r does som eth ing happen to them under the Dome?

The answer begs the question . People at N o tre Dame are special because they are N o tre Dame people. That may sound strange, b u t i t is true.

You have u n d o u b e d tly recogn ized I am a d iffe re n t person n o w than I was fo u r years ago. I hope you are pleased w ith m y g ro w th and deve lopm en t. I c e rta in ly am. 1 d o n ’t th in k anyone can spend fo u r years at N o tre

David Dziedzic1983-84 Editor-in-Chief

In s id e F r id a y

Dam e and n o t benefit.A cadem ica lly, w e c e rta in ly go t o u r m oney's w o rth .

I ’ve had the o p p o r tu n ity to s tudy under some o f the best teachers in Am erica. I ’ve been cha llenged tim e and tim e again (as m y grade p o in t average re flec ts). I ’ve d is ­cove red and deve loped m y ta len ts to the p o in t w h e re 1 am co n fid e n t o f m y a b ility to succeed in the “ real w o r ld .”

I ’ve learned h o w to liv e on m y ow n. Yes, m om , I can wash m y ow n clo thes, make m y o w n bed and clean my

o w n room . I can even cook m y o w n food, i f I have to.

Sure, I ’ve becom e som e­w ha t cyn ica l o ve r the past fo u r years. For exam ple , I som etim es w o n d e r fo r w hat reason th is U n ive rs ity exists — the good o f the students o r the g lo ry o f those w ho opera te it. Such cyn ic ism is good, how ever, because it p ro m p ts me to cons tan tly ques tion and investigate.

But perhaps the m ost im ­p o rta n t th in g I have learned d u rin g m y fo u r years at N o tre Dame is the value o f people. M ost acco m p lish ­m ents are im poss ib le w ith ­o u t the he lp o f o thers. T ha t’s w h y I can’t leave N o tre

Dame w ith o u t thank ing the lov ing , ca ring friends I ’ve made here. T he y ’ve he lped me th ro u g h d if f ic u lt tim es, and le t me he lp them th ro u g h theirs. I can’t w a it fo r you to m eet them th is weekend.

And th a t’s also w h y I can’t graduate w ith o u t thank ing you, m om and dad. W ith o u t y o u r love and generosity, m y fo u r years here w o u ld o n ly be a dream . N o w they w i l l fo re ve r be the fondest o f m y m em ories.

I hope you e n joy m y g radua tion and rea lize I am p ro u d to be y o u r son.

Love,

T h is is the last issue o f V o lu m e X V I I I o f The Observer. W e w ish the best fo r the graduates in th e ir lives beyond N o tre Dam e and Sa in t M a ry ’s.

C A L L 674-6993 To O’H are C A L L 674-6993

LEAVE LEAVE LEAVELEAVE BIG BEAR NOTRE M IC H IA NA LaPORTE

M ID W A Y LEAVE R ES TAU R A NT DAME REGIONAL S PR IN G V ILLEMOTOR LODGE OSCEOLA T O W N S C O UN TRY BUS AIRPORT T R U C K STO P ARRIVE

ELKHART OFFICE M IS H A W A K A SHELTER SOUTH BEND U S 2 0 /S R 3 9 O’HARE2:35 a.m. 2:50 a.m. 3:05 a.m. 3:20 a.m. 3:40 a.m. 4:10 a.m. 6:00 a.m.4:35 a.m. 4:50 a.m. 5:05 a.m. 5:20 a.m. 5:40 a.m. 6:10 a.m. 8:00 a.m.6:35 a.m. 6:50 a.m. 7:05 a.m. 7:20 a.m. 7:40 a.m. 8:10 a.m. 10:00 a.m.8:35 a.m. 8:50 a.m. 9:05 a.m. 9:20 a.m. 9:40 am. 10:10 a.m. 12:00 p.m.

10:35 a.m. 10:50 a.m. 11:05 a.m. 11:20 a.m. 11:40 a.m. 12:10 p.m. 2:00 p.m.12:35 p.m. 12:50 p.m. 1 05 p.m. 1:20 p.m. 1:40 p.m. 2:10 p.m. 4.00 p.m.2:35 p.m. 2:50 p.m. 3:05 p.m. 3:20 p.m. 3:40 p.m. 4:10 p.m. 6:00 p.m.4:35 p.m. 4:50 p.m. 5:05 p.m. 5:20 p.m. 5:40 p.m. 6:10 p.m. 8.00 p.m.6:35 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 7:20 p.m. 7:40 p.m. 8:10 p.m. 10:00 p.m.

F ro m O’H areARRIVE ARRIVE ARRIVE ARRIVE

LaPORTE M IC H IA N A NOTRE BIG BEAR A RRIVES PR IN G VILLE REGIONAL DAME R ES TA U R A N T ARRIVE M ID W A Y

LEAVE T R U C K STOP AIRPORT BUS TO W N 8 CTRY OSCEOLA MOTOR LODGE0 HARE U S 2 0 /S R 3 9 SOUTH BENC SHELTER M IS H A W A K A OFFICE ELKHART

8:30 a.m. 10:20 a.m. 10:50 a.m. 11:05 a.m. 11:20 a.m. 11:35 a.m. 11:50 a.m.10:30 a.m. 12:20 p.m. 12:50 p.m. 1:05 p.m. 1:20 p.m. 1:35 p.m. 1:50 p.m.12:30 p.m. 2:20 p.m. 2:50 p.m. 3:05 p.m. 3:20 p.m. 3:35 p.m. 3:50 p.m.2:30 p.m. 4:20 p.m. 4:50 p.m. 5:05 p.m. 5:20 p.m. 5:35 p.m. 5:50 p.m.4:30 p.m. 6:20 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 7:20 p.m. 7:35 p.m. 7:50 p.m.6:30 p.m. 8:20 p.m. 8:50 p.m. 9:05 p.m. 9:20 p.m. 9:35 p.m. 9:50 p.m.8:30 p.m. 10:20 p.m. 10:50 p.m. 11:05 p.m. 11:20 p.m. 11:35 p.m. 11:50 p.m.

10:30 p.m. 12:20 a.m. 12:50 a.m. 1:05 a.m. 1:20 a.m. 1:35 a.m. 1 50 a.m.12:30 a.m. 2:20 a.m. 2:50 a.m. 3:05 a.m. 3:20 a.m. 3:35 a.m. 3:50 a m.

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Page 21: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

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Valedictorians say they neve* . _ like they were missing anythingBy THERESA GUARINOAssistan t News E d ito r

The 1983-84 va le d ic to ria n s at N o tre Dame and Saint M ary ’s may have ach ieved near o r p e rfe c t 4.0s, b u t n e ith e r th in ks tha t he o r she has m issed o u t on any th ing as a result.

“ I d id n ’t g ive up an y th ing on the w eekends,” said N icho las G iam- p ie tro , N o tre D am e’s va led ic to rian . “ D u rin g the w eek, the re wasn’t m uch to do anyw ay.”

Saint M ary ’s G re tch e n M eyer feels the same way. “ I d id n ’ t set o u t to be va led ic to rian , so I neve r fe lt lik e I was m issing any th ing .”

M eyer, fro m St. Louis, Mo., w i l l graduate from Saint M ary ’s w ith tw o degrees: a bache lo r o f science in chem is try , and a ba ch e lo r o f arts in H um an is tic Studies.

G iam p ie tro , fro m G lenv iew , 111., is e n ro lle d in the C ollege o f Business A d m in is tra tio n , and w i l l rece ive his B.B.A. w ith a co n c e n tra tio n in accounting . H is grade p o in t average a fte r seven semesters was 4.0.

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d u rin g the past fo u r years. M eyer p layed va rs ity basketball freshm an and sophom ore year, and has been an R.A. in H o ly Cross fo r the past tw o years. She was also active in Campus M in is try and the A lc o h o l Education C ounc il.

G ia m p ie tro was p res iden t o f the N o tre Dame chap te r o f Beta A lpha Si, an a ccoun ting honors society, and a m em ber o f the sophom ore ad­v iso ry co u n c il. He also pa rtic ip a te d in D illo n H a ll governm ent.

N e ith e r va le d ic to ria n has a secret fo r success to o ffe r. “ Being o r ­ganized was the o n ly th in g that he lped m e,” said G iam p ie tro . “ I just

G ia m p ie tro had o n ly good th ings to say about the professors in the C ollege o f Business A d m in is tra tion . “ M y professors w e re rea lly good at be ing able to convey eve ry th in g they knew w e ll, ” he said. “ I co u ld n ’t even single o u t one tha t was b e tte r than the rest.”

As fo r s tuden t life at N o tre Dame, G ia m p ie tro feels s tudents lack o f a cause to f ig h t fo r is a real p rob lem . “ S tudents today have tro u b le try in g to make a stand. N o one is s tr iv in g fo r an y th ing in p a rticu la r. There is no real goal. ”

“ In real life , peop le are d iv id e d in ­to m any l i t t le factions,” he con-

active in academ ics

G retchen M eyer

kept to m y schedule and never b le w any th ing o f f be fore a test.”

M eyer saw ea rn ing tw o degrees as a na tura l accom plishm ent. “ I came to Saint M ary ’s as a ch e m is try m ajor, b u t d id n ’t w an t to take o n ly science classes,” she said. “ I was tak ing o th e r courses and dec ided I m ig h t as w e ll take the H um an is tic Studies m a jo r.”

N ic h o la s G ia m p ie tro

tinued. “ N o tre Dame doesn’t have as m any l i t t le g roups because everyone is so s im ila r.”

A fte r g radua tion th is weekend, G ia m p ie tro w i l l go on to Harvard Law School, and M eyer w i l l a ttend m ed ica l schoo l at Saint Louis U n ive r­sity.

Spirituality Center confronting hard timesBy TIMOTHY GIANOTTISenior S ta ff Reporter

Saint M ary ’s new C en te r fo r S p ir itu a lity is o f f to a s lo w start, b u t progress w i l l soon p ic k up pace, says Religious Studies Department Chairman Keith Egan.

The in it ia l p lans fo r the cen te r w e re passed weeks ago by Saint M ary ’s Board o f Trustees, b u t as o f ye t Egan has n o t been able to cross paths w ith President Duggan to d is ­cuss the n e x t step.

Egan, also a pro fessor at N o tre Dame, has been on the road g iv in g lec tu res on sp ir itu a lity , and Duggan has o n ly re c e n tly re tu rn e d fro m an overseas tr ip .

Egan insists they w i l l m eet soon, how ever, and p la n n in g w i l l take great s trides ove r th e sum m er.

The ne w C en te r fo r S p irtu a lity is a response to “ the search ing o f people fo r the in n e r life ,” says Egan.

Egan sees the new p ro je c t as an a id fo r b o th the Saint M ary ’s and N o tre Dame com m un ities , he lp ing in d iv id u a ls fo rm active lives b u ilt upon the fo u nd a tio n o f th is “ inne r life .”

The ce n te r also has ano the r task in m ind, says Egan: the deve lopm en t o f the w o m e n ’s m ovem en t in the C hurch .

“ W e w an t to p repare w o m en fo r fu tu re ro les o f leadersh ip in the C h u rch ,” he says.

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Page 22: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

rver Com mencement Issue, 1984 — page 4

Prize pupils honored at SMC convocationBy ANNE MONASTYRSKIS a in t M ary 's E d ito r

Several Saint M ary's s tudents and tw o fa cu lty m em bers w e re honored d u r in g the annual H onors C onvoca­tio n May 7 in O ’Laughlin A u d ito r iu m . Aw ards w e re p resented to som e sen iors and students from a ll classes w ith cons is ten t averages o f 3.8 o r be tte r.

Dr. W illia m Hawk, assistant p ro fesso r o f ph ilo so p hy , rece ived the M aria Pieta A w ard in re co g n itio n o f h is sk ill, d e d ica tion and e xce l­lence in teach ing in lo w e r d iv is io n courses. D r D ona ld H o rn ing , p ro fes­so r o f soc io logy, was g iven the Spes U nica A w ard fo r exce lle n ce in teach ing and se rv ice to the College.

Hawk, w h o jo in e d the Saint M ary ’s fa cu lty in 1978, rece ived his bac­h e lo r ’s degree at B lu ffto n C ollege in 1972 and earned a m aster’s degree fro m Eastern M en n o n ite Sem inary in 1974. He rece ive d ano th e r m aster’s degree and his Ph.D. fro m V ander­b ilt U n ive rs ity in 1978.

H o rn ing , w h o has been a Saint M ary's fa cu lty m em ber since 1970, g raduated fro m Kalam azoo in 1952. He rece ived his m aster’s degree fro m Ind iana U n ive rs ity in 1957 and c o m p le te d his Ph.D. the re in 1963

Saturdaycontinued from page 1University of Chicago. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, McCarthy has received six honorary doctorate degrees.

Beck, w h o served as the firs t Ex­e cu tive in Residence at Saint M ary ’s in 1982, w i l l rece ive an hon ora ry d o c to r o f laws degree from the C o l­lege.

H u tcheson rece ived he r bac­h e lo r ’s degree in nu rs ing fro m Saint M ary o f the W asatch C o llege in Salt Lake C ity and he r m aster’s degree in hosp ita l a d m in is tra tio n from Saint Louis U n ivers ity .

H utcheson, w h o has served tw o s ix -year te rm s as G enera l C ounse lor, w i l l rece ive an h o n o ra ry doc to ra te o f hum an ities.

W o o lle n w il l rece ive an h o nora ry d o c to ra te o f fine arts degree. A m em b e r o f the A m erican In s titu te o f A rc h ite c ts ( A IA ) C o llege o f Fellow s, W o o lle n designed the award- w in n in g C ushwa Le igh ton L ib ra ry

W o o lle n rece ived b o th his bac­h e lo r ’s and m aster’s degrees from Yale U n ivers ity .

M cLaugh lin , a res iden t o f Santa Barbara, Calif, has been in v o lv e d in several p ro fess iona l and se rv ice o r ­gan izations since he r g raduation fro m Saint M ary’s in 1942. She served as p ro je c t d ire c to r fo r the p ro m o tio n o f e d uca tion fo r pa ren ­th o o d in the C a lifo rn ia secondary schools, a p rog ram a im ed at re d u c ­ing e m o tio n a l d is a b ility c h ild abuse and teen p regnancy by re q u ir in g b o th m en and w o m en h igh school s tuden ts to take a class in e ffec tive parenting.

Rocknecontinued from page /

re tu rnThe Rockne bust was crea ted by

N ison T re g o r in 1940, th re e years a fte r the M em o ria l was com p le ted . The w e ig h t o f the statue is u n ­kn o w n , b u t S che llinge r estim ates it re q u ire d at least tw o peop le to rem ove the scu lp tu re fro m its b o lte d pedesta l and ca rry it away.

D eem ing the th e ft “ jus t th e n o r­mal s tuden t prank, ” Schell inge r said she had a fe e lin g the statue w o u ld tu rn up. "N o tre Dame is K nu te Rockne and to have his head m issing . . i t ’s a sham e," she said, shaking he r head.

J u n io r Ka th leen C urran , was aw arded the Saint C a the rine ’s Medal. The m edal is p resen ted an­n ua lly by the Kappa Gamma Pi chap­te r to a ju n io r o r sophom ore w h o has show n se rv ice and leadersh ip w h ile m a in ta in in g a h igh academ ic average.

A gove rn m e nt and h is to ry m ajor, C urran served as the Saint M ary ’s e d ito r o f the m o n th ly magazine, Scholastic. She is a m em ber o f the H all C o u n c il, Phi A lpha Theta and the N o tre Dante Pre-Law Society and serves as a res iden t adv iso r in H o ly Cross Hall.

C urran also w o rks as a v o lu n te e r at Logan C en te r and the N e ig h b o r­h ood Study H e lp Program .

O th e r awards and th e ir rec ip ien ts in c luded : M o th e r Rose A w ard in B io logy, A m y T ay lo r; G eorge and Juanda B ick N ature Aw ard, Sheila Logan; O u ts tan d in g A ch ievem ent: A cco u n tin g , Janet A lb e rti; E conom ics, E laine H o c te t; Finance, Denise E llin g to n ; M anagem ent, E lizabeth Jones; M arketing, C e lecte C u rry ; In te rn a tio n a l Business, Ann H uber; D epa rtm en t o f Business A d ­m in is tra tio n and Econom ics A ch ievem ent A w ard, Janet A lb e rti; D epa rtm en t o f Business A d m in is tra ­t io n and E conom ics Facu lty Aw ard, C eleste C u rry : W a ll S treet Jou rna l A w ard, E laine H octe r; A m erican In ­s titu te o f C hem ists A w ard, G retchen Anne M eyer.

Also the M o th e r Rose E lizabeth A w ard in C h e m is try w e n t to C arrie M. Skaw inski; F. Theresa Chisholm A ch ievem en t A w ard in the Perform h g Arts, E lizabeth Q u in n ; M cD e r­m o tt A w ard fo r E xce llence in E lem entary E ducation, Susan Anania; English Prize, Sarah W il­liams; H igh Scholastic A w ard in G overm en t, K a the rine W helahan; H igh A ch ievem en t A w ard in G ove rnm en t, Karen H o b e rt and C o l­leen Shannon; O u ts tand ing Senior H is to ry M a jo r A w ard, C lare Boesen; M ilk o Jeg lic A w ard fo r A ch ievem ent in M athem atics, Anne Mikos; A w ard fo r M usica l Exce llence , Jane Z w er- neman; Eve lyn M cG uiness A w ard fo r E xce llence in N urs ing, Elizabeth Kloska; H um an ita rian Aw ard, K ris ty Higgs; Senior S cho larsh ip A w ard in Socio logy, Theresa Coye; Senior A ch ievem ent A w ard in Socio logy, K athy D om ence tti.

Commencement Weekend ActivitiesS a in t M ary ’s

FridayNurses Pinning Ceremony, 1 p.m., Church of Loretto Procession for the Baccalaureate Mass, 3:30 p.m., Upper level

of Angela A thletic Facility Baccalaureate Mass. 4 p.m . Angela A thletic Facility "Godspell." 8 p.m., O'Laughlin Auditorium Cocktail Party, 10 p.m.-2 a.m., Century Center

SaturdayCommencement Exercises, 10:30 a.m., Court of LeMans Hall

(Angela Athletic Facility)

N o tre D am eFriday

Lawn Concert, 6:30 p.m., Adm inistration Building Mall S atu rday

Procession for Baccalaureate Mass, 4:20 p.m., ACC Baccalaureate Mass, 5 p.m., ACC, South Dome Cocktail Party and Buffet Supper, 7-8:30 p.m., ACC

SundayBrunch, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.. South Dining Hall Commencement Exercises, 2 p.m., ACC. South Dome Law School Diploma Ceremony, 5 p.m.. Sacred Heart Church

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Page 23: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Commencement Issue, 1984 — page 5

The Top Ten News Stories of 1983-84James Earl Jones - page 5

The ObserverThe party is over

Iris h F ig h tin ’ Mad About PolicyThe go lden D om e was s to rm ed by ou traged students

a fte r the release o f the C o m m itte e fo r the Responsible Use o f A lc o h o l’s re p o rt. M ore than 2 ,500 students charged the b u ild in g a fter a s tudent gove rnm ent- o r ­ganized p ro te s t ra lly. O th e r fo rm s o f s tuden t p ro tes t in ­c lu d e d a s it- in and a spontaneous n o c tu rn a l ga the ring ou ts ide C o rby Hall, the hom e o f U n ive rs ity P resident Father Theodore Hesburgh. The p o lic y re s tr ic te d the use o f a lcoho l by the students.

Committee bans private parties, sets penalties fo r drunkenness

Hi!

a

Former Radiation Lab worker threatens to sue

-=- * —

Medical plan-page 4

The ObserverUniversity orders Observer to join budget or lose funds

Audit shows deficit last year

Observer Asked To Join BudgetThe U n ive rs ity a d m in is tra tio n handed the studen t

new spaper an u ltim a tu m w hen i t asked fo r c o n tro l o f The Observer's finances in re tu rn fo r an increase in s tu ­den t fees co lle c te d fo r the paper. The U n ive rs ity made its request a fter c o n d u c tin g an aud it w h ic h found a $7,000 o p e ra tin g d e fic it fo r the 1982-83 year. The genera l board o f the paper refused to tu rn o ve r the funds because, as D avid D ziedzic , e d ito r- in -c h ie f said, "W h o e ve r c o n tro ls the m oney c o n tro ls the business.”

ND organizers decide to pay $50 for senior Bahamas trip

Senior Class trip - page 3

D in in g H a ll W orkers ClearedThe N o rth Quad came a live w ith co n tro ve rsy w hen a

p robe conduc ted by a campus se cu rity inves tiga to r found no conc re te ev idence against five N o rth D in in g Hall w o rke rs w h o w e re fire d fo r th e ir in vo lve m e n t in an alleged e x to rt io n scheme. W h ile the investiga tion c o u ld find no ev idence o f any w ro n g d o in g by the w orkers , they w ere no t reh ired . A cam pus socia l c o n ­cerns g roup p icke te d the d in in g ha ll to p ro tes t the firings.

The ObserverProbe clears fired dining hall workersFive employees terminated last November .for involvement in alleged extortion scheme

Sir Obnoxious - page 7¥

Mob admits it used other tickets'spending allotments for its own campaign expenses

The ObserverAn Toslal records being audited; results expected next week

Notre Dame AFROTCj named best in country

Five thousand dollars collected for United Way from students

An Tostal InvestigationThe to p ic o f sp ring was on eve ryb o d y ’s m in d in the

m id d le o f w in te r th is year b u t n o t necessarily the to p ic o f sp ring break. An Tostal, the annual sp ring student ce leb ra tion , ran in to a snag a fter i t was d iscove red that last year’s m anaging co m m itte e c o u ld n o t account fo r a lm ost $4,000. Some o f the co m m itte e m em bers at­tr ib u te d the ove rspend ing to the lack o f c o n tro l, waste­fulness and p o o r p lann ing. O ne m em ber questioned w h e th e r all o f the m oney was spent d ire c t ly fo r An Tos­tal.

The Observer

A lum nus In e lig ib le For AwardH aro ld Augustine, an a lum nus w h o became a campus

c e le b rity by be ing qu o te d in The O bserver as saying, "A w e t campus is a happy campus, ” was declared in e lig ib le fo r the Senior F e llow A w ard by the fou r-m em ber s tu ­den t award com m ittee . The sen io r class fa iled to cast enough votes fo r any o f the o th e r candidates and conse­q u e n tly d id no t e lec t a F e llo w th is year. Augustine was e lec ted Senior Buddy, an aw ard q u ic k ly o rgan ized after he was n o t a llow ed to rece ive the F e llow award.

Harold Augustine dropped from Senior Fellow ballot

Supporters point to Hart’s ‘beef

Maria Pieta Award nominations now open

IS # 9 #

2..—

The Observer

H all Foodsales Shut Dow nM any hungry s tudents d id n ’t kn o w w he re th e ir next

pizza was co m in g from w hen the O ffice o f S tudent A f­fa irs shut dow n the residence ha ll foodsales after several w e re found to be unsanitary by the Campus En- v iro m e n ta l H ealth and Safety D epartm ent. The student- run fcodsales w e re la te r a llo w e d to reopen after the a d m in is tra tio n p roduced san ita tion gu ide lines fo r the foodstiles to m aintain.

Food sales controversy provokes allegations

Second United Way Drive planned; i )3illy Joel lottery occurs tomorrow :

ND Chorale and Orchestra Snow Storms Cause 37 fatalities to present Handel's Messiah

Student Senate - page 3

The ObserverLast-minute appeal by students prompts reversal of housing policy

Lecture addresses pom problem

Alcohol issue kicks off S rE V S E f = = = = = =Student Union lectures .r-—.v r::z

Saint M ary’s Housing ReversalThe w om en o f Saint M ary ’s p roved tha t you rea lly can

f ig h t c ity hall w hen the schoo l's a d m in is tra tio n an­nounced that a p p ro x im a te ly 100 room s w o u ld he b locke d o f f fo r in c o m in g freshmen. C o llege President John Duggan he ld an open m ee ting w ith m ore than 300 angry students and in an e leven th h o u r decis ion reversed the po licy .

Counselor says students need to speak up about drinking

AnTostal - page 3

The Observer

Yale Recipes Q uestionedA rec ipe file bough t fro m Yale U n ive rs ity fo r $20,000

was c r it ic iz e d by some d in in g hall cooks because they c la im ed some rec ipes d id n ’t w o rk and w e re a waste o f the U n ive rs ity 's m oney. Food Services D ire c to r B ill H ickey defended the purchase saying it was the best rec ipe system in the co u n try . O th e r schoo ls w ho purchased the same file c la im ed they also had p rob lem s w ith it.

$20,000spent on Yale recipes | called waste by some cooks

Abigail McCarthy ZzT-riz to address SMC class o f *84 commencement

-- ND graduates enter Indiana state and US Congressional elections

0

1Student government - page 8

The ObserverNew exam plan allows no senior exemptions; weighting is changed

E r . - ~ S e n a t e calls for end to use o f CIA funds to bomb Nicaraguan ports

Mondiue takes Pennsylvania easily

Tanker cars fu ll o f alcohol plodc In train derailment

New F inal Exam Policy SetFinal exams became even m ore o f a headache fo r stu­

dents w hen the Academ ic C o u n c il changed the fina l e x ­ams p o lic y p ro h ib it in g exe m p tio n s fo r g raduating seniors. Exams m ust be w e ig h te d be tw een one -fifth and o ne-ha lf o f the semester grade acco rd ing to the new p o licy . A no th e r am endm ent passed by the co u n c il states that tw o -h o u r fina l exams are m andatory unless an e xce p tion is app roved by the cha irm an o f the depart­m en t and rev iew ed by the dean.

NFL Standings — page 9

The Observer

Cap n Crunch M aniaThe m o n th o f O c to b e r b ro u g h t m ore than the co ld

lake w inds to campus th is year. The Sophom ore class o ffice rs ran on a p la tfo rm w h ic h in c lu d e d a Cap n C runch party , w h ic h e ve n tu a lly led to th e ir co n tac tin g Q uaker Oats, the Cap’n ’s boss, w h o sent the breakfast cereal cha racte r to campus. The Cap’n p resided ove r a cereal eating con test and a t sh ir t h u n t am ong o th e r events. The presence o f the nationa l m edia added exc tem en t to the week.

Sophomore officers fulfill pledge: CapVn Crunch arrives in October ,

—7— ~ Transmission revised:r S warning shot was fired

Catholic church repressed In Chile

Page 24: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Viewpoint Com mencement Issue, 1984 — page 6

Campus gay community seeks acceptanceN ationa l surveys estim ate that five to 10

pe rce n t o f the U.S. p o p u la tio n is hom osexua l. At N o tre Dame and Saint M ary ’s, a p p ro x im a te ­ly tw o to th re e pe rce n t o f a ll professors and s tuden ts are gay, say m em bers o f the hom osexua l c o m m u n ity here.

Because o f U n ive rs ity and C o llege po lic ies , th e re is no recogn ized gay s tuden t organiza-

Michael SkellyNever to return

l io n on e ith e r cam pus say m em bers o f the g roup , w h o requested anonym ity .

M em bers specu la te at least 200 s tudents and pro fessors at the tw o schoo ls are p ra c tic ­in g hom osexuals.

“ T hough w e are n o t a ll fr ien d s ," says one person, m any o f us k n o w each o th e r casually and co m m u n ica te th ro u g h the g rapev ine . ”

In the past, m em bers say, they have c o n ­d u c te d open m eetings w h ic h o ften a ttrac ted 20 o r m o re people.

T he greatest p ro b le m fac ing gay students, a cco rd in g to m em bers, is hom ophob ia , o r fear o f hom osexuals. T h is fear o ften m anifests i t ­se lf in harassm ent “ People o ften m ove away fro m us w hen w e s it d o w n at m ovies, ye ll e p it­hets across the quad, o r occassiona lly g ive us obscene phone calls, ” one reports .

A n o th e r adds, “ W e used to cat to g e th e r in th e d in in g hall, bu t the harassment became unbearab le ."

A n o th e r gay says m any peop le w h o w ere o rd in a r ily h is friends “ d o n ’t say h e llo w hen they see me w ith a gay f r ie n d .”

O ne o f the m ost severe cases o f harassm ent happened several years ago to tw o a lleged ly

lesbian w o m en at N o tre Dame, a cco rd ing to one gay.

A fte r app ly ing to s w itc h d o rm ito r ie s as ju n io rs , the tw o w o m en w e re in fo rm e d by th e ir respective rectresses tha t sen io r year d o rm ito ry changes w ere n o t o n ly unusual and d e tr im e n ta l to d o rm ito ry s p ir it b u t also re ­q u ire d paren ta l perm iss ion .

The hous ing o ffice la te r to ld the tw o w o m en tha t paren ta l pe rm iss ion was n o t re ­q u ire d and transfers w e re ava ilab le to those w h o had n o t been d is c ip lin e p rob lem s. N e it­h e r o f the w o m en w e re d is c ip lin e p rob lem s, a cco rd in g to one gay.

Later th a t semester, th e w o m en e x ­p e rienced w ha t they be lieved to be foo t- d ragg ing on the pa rt o f the rectresses. A cc o rd in g to an o th e r gay, the tw o w om en be lie ve d tha t the rectresses hoped such a de lay w o u ld pressure the alleged lesbians to m ove off-cam pus.

A t the same tim e they w e re app ly in g fo r the d o rm ito ry transfer, the w o m en rece ived severe harassment fro m o th e r students, in c lu d in g damage to th e ir possessions and even m u rd e r and rape threats.

The w om en , say m em bers o f the gay co m ­m u n ity , be lieved the harassm ent was due to in d is c re tio n on the pa rt o f the rectresses w h o m ay have accused the w o m en o f be ing les­bians to o th e r w o m en in the d o rm ito ries .

The tw o also be lieved that, a fte r rece iv ing death th rea ts fro m o th e r students, they co u ld n o t tu rn to se cu rity o r to the a d m in is tra tio n fo r h e lp because they feared o n ly m ore harass­m en t fro m the U niversity.

Harassment is n o t a lways so severe, how eve r, said one hom osexua l. “ I jus t live w ith it. It doesn’t rea lly b o th e r m e," he says, add ing tha t harrassm ent “ keeps the gay c o m ­m u n ity apart ( fro m he terosexua l s tudents).

People d o n ’t approve o f be ing associated w ithus."

Lesbians run in to less harassm ent than gay men, m em bers repo rted , because “ they tend to be lo w -ke y ," and are usua lly secre tive at bo th schools. Lesbianism is also less th re a te n ­ing, especia lly to the m ale d om ina ted en­v iro n m e n t at N o tre Dame, and less lik e ly to arouse harassment, m em bers agree.

N o tre Dam e and Saint M ary’s gays, a cco rd ­in g to one m em ber, co n s id e r the negative reactions they rece ive fro m o th e r s tudents “ in d ic a tiv e o f the xe n o ph o b ia and hom o g e n e ity p reva len t at N o tre Dame. People here jus t d o n ’t like th ings tha t are d if ­fe re n t.”

M em bers add that s tuden ts fro m fo re ign co u n tr ie s and those w h o have s tud ied abroad “ te n d to be m ore a c c e p tin g "

Gays also a ttr ib u te h o m o p h o b ia at th e tw o schoo ls to s tudents ’ C a th o lic backgrounds and in se cu ritie s about th e ir o w n sexua lity .

“ C a tho lics s ta rt ( to be sexua lly a c tiv e ) late, and m any students here are unsure o f th e m ­selves," says one gay. He adds th a t a he terosexua l w ith o u t “ a sureness o f one ’s o w n se xu a lity " usua lly has d iff ic u lt ie s as­soc ia ting w ith hom osexuals. Tha t sureness about persona l se xua lity is la ck in g in m any students, m em bers agree.

Gays also co ns ide r tra d itio n a l C atholic d o c tr in e to be at the ro o t o f e ith e r schoo l's unw illingness to recogn ize a gay studen t g ro u p on campus.

Dean o f S tudents James R oem er co n firm s th is, saying tha t re c o g n itio n w o u ld be m isun ­de rs to o d by the press and “ b lo w n o u t o f p ro p o r tio n ."

R oem er adds, “ Many peop le w o u ld u n d e r­stand i t to be an approva l o f hom o se xu a lity ."

Gays here, how ever, are keep ing an eye on

c o n tin u in g e ffo rts by hom osexua ls to estab­lish an o ffic ia l gay s tu d e n t/fa c u lty g ro u p at Jesu it run G eo rge tow n U niversity.

The g roup , w h ic h had sued G eo rge tow n on the g rounds they w e re b e ing d isc rim in a te d against, lost th e ir su it last fa ll w hen a D is tr ic t o f C o lum b ia judge ru led in G eorge tow n 's favor. The ru ling , how eve r, is be ing appealed

M em bers here also say “ i t was ru m o re d that a g ro u p o f gay N o tre Dam e a lu m n i in C hicago w o u ld he lp us o u t" in fo rm in g such an o r ­gan iza tion on campus.

A cco rd in g to one m em ber o f the Gay R ights A lu m n i o f N o tre Dam e (G R A N D ), th e ir g ro u p cons is ten tly has been den ied o ffic ia l re c o g n i­tio n by the U n ive rs ity 's a lu m n i association "because w e are n o t a geograph ica l c lu b ."

P o in ting to gay s tu d en t g roups on o th e r schoo ls such as H arvard and Yale, m em bers say, “ th e y have gay dances and they pack the place '

In th e 1970s and ea rly 1980s, gays at N o tre Dame m ain ta ined a post o ffice b o x and a h o t lin e fo r th e ir in fo rm a l o rgan iza tion . M em bers la te r ran in to w h a t they te rm “ ty p ic a l o r ­gan izationa l p ro b le m s ," and the tw o services w e re d iscon tinued .

M em bers em phasize tha t “ w e d o n ’t w a n t to sound b itte r. W e ’re not. W e are an accep ting g ro u p o f peop le ."

O ne adds, “ M ost peop le on cam pus d o n ’t g ive us a chance because they d o n ’t w an t to kn o w anyone gay. Chances are yo u kn o w som ebody w h o is hom osexua l B ut you d o n ’t k n o w it, and i t doesn’t rea lly m atte r.”

D isco u n tin g th e ir sexual p re fe rence , m em ­bers say, they are ju s t lik e anyone else.

“ I ’m one 2 9 th gay," says one m em ber. “ T he re ’s a lo t m o re to m e than ju s t m y sexual pre ference. I have p o lit ic a l and re lig io us belie fs and a lo t o f o th e r in terests. W hat d if ­fe rence does it make to o th e r peop le i f I ’m gay?"

Has Our Response met nuclear war challenge?O n May 3 o f last year, the N ationa l

C on fe rence o f C a th o lic Bishops p ub lished The C h a lle n g e o f Peace: C od 's P ro m ise a n d O u r Response.

T h e ir pastora l le tte r g ives s tr ic t ly c o n d itio n e d accep tance o f d e te r­rence as a step to w a rd d isarm am ent; it ca lls fo r the ren u n c ia tio n o f the

Michael Brennan________And so it wentU n ited States' " f irs t use" strategy, opposes the d e p lo ym e n t o f " f irs t s tr ik e " weapons (M X , Pershing I I ) and ca lls fo r t ig h te r c o n tro ls on h o rizo n ta l p ro life ra tio n .

R ecogn iz ing m an's unp re ce ­den ted c a p a b ility fo r nuc lea r self- a n n ih ila tion . the b ishops stress that the e n tire hum an race is “ in a m o ­m en t o f suprem e c ris is ," and tha t a “ m ora l about-face" is u rg e n tly needed:

D ec is io n s a b o u t n u c le a r w eapons . . . in v o lv e fu n d a m e n ta l m o ra l c h o ic e s . . . g o o d ends (d e fe n d in g one 's c o u n try , p ro te c t- in g free d o m , etc.) c a n n o t ju s t i f y im m o ra l m eans ( the use o f w eapons w h ic h k i l l in d is ­c r im in a te ly a n d th re a te n w h o le socie ties).

P eacem aking is n o t a n o p t io n a l c o m m itm e n t. I t is a re q u ire m e n t o f o u r fa i th .

As a p ro m in e n t C a th o lic u n iv e r­s ity , N o tre Dam e has a specia l re s p o n s ib ility to p ro v id e C hris tian leadersh ip in c o n fro n t in g the many m ora l quagm ires p resen ted by nuc le a r w eapons and the th rea t o f n uc lea r war.

Educa tion is essential. In th is area, N o tre Dame has established the “ N uc le a r D ile m m a " course and has crea ted peace s tud ies as a second m ajor.

Beyond educa tion , the b ishops ’ le tte r is a ca ll to a c t io n fo r C atho lics. It is n o t enough to p u b lic ly denounce nuc lea r w a r w ith w ords.

W e are ca lled to in teg ra te o u r re je c ­t io n o f nuc lea r c o n flic t in to o u r p e r­sonal lives and o u r c o m m u n ity .

W e m ust take co n c re te actions tha t express o u r be lie fs — acts o f C h ris tian w itness.

It is w ith in th is c o n te x t that the issue o f N o tre Dame e n d ow m e n t ho ld ings in nuc le a r defense c o n tra c ­to rs m ust be v iew ed . H o w and w he re N o tre Dame invests its $250 m illio n d o lla rs is a s ta tem en t o f U n i­v e rs ity p r io r it ie s and values.

N o tre Dame recogn izes th is, as ev idenced by the investm en t gu ide lines established in 1979 to l im it ho ld in g s in U.S. firm s d o in g business in the U n ion o f South Africa. Five years ago trustees agreed to abide by the Su llivan P rincip les, w h ic h d iscourage investm en t in that rac is t-run nation. The trustees’ d e c i­sion was a c lea r re je c tio n o f apart­h e id on m ora l g rounds.

The question o f U n ive rs ity investm ents in nuc le a r defense in ­dustries also ca lls us to assume o u r re sp o n s ib ilitie s as C atho lics, to re ­exam ine o u r p r io r it ie s . T he e ffect o f a d o p tin g gu ide lines l im it in g such in ­vestm ents w o u ld n o t s top the arms race o r im p ro ve U n ite d States-Soviet re lations.

Such an ado p tio n w o u ld , how eve r, be a sym b o lic expression and s ta tem ent o f o u r c o lle c tiv e m ora l c o m m itm e n t to c rea tin g a safer w o r ld fo r o u r g randch ild ren .

W e w o u ld be reco g n iz in g the s im p le facts that the nuc lea r th rea t to m ank ind transcends the Soviet o r “ c o m m u n is t" th rea t to the so ve re ig n ty o f the U n ited States, and tha t in th is age o f nuc lea r o v e rk ill, m ore m issiles no lo n g e r buy m ore secu rity .

T o n o t adopt a set o f gu ide lines is to g ive tac it su p p o rt and approva l to the co n tin u e d esca la tion o f the arms race, in c lu d in g the d e ve lo p m e n t o f those weapon systems tha t o u r b is­hops have so s tro n g ly condem ned as dangerous and destab iliz ing .

Last fall, “ Students fo r Responsible

U n ive rs ity Inves tm en ts" was fo rm ed to exam ine the feasab ility o f es­tab lish ing gu ide lines fo r U n ive rs ity d ivestm en t o f indus trie s w h ic h c o n ­tr ib u te to the nuc lea r arm s race.

Early d e fin it io n a l p ro b le m s ( th a t is, w ha t co ns titu tes a nuclear w e a p o n ) w ere o ve rco m e w ith the he lp o f the Investo rs ’ R espons ib ility Research C ou n c il The p o lic y calls fo r d ives tm en t o f those firm s rec iev- ing m ore than 10 pe rce n t o f to ta l p ro f it fro m the sale o f p rim a ry nuc lea r weapons systems ( in c lu d in g w arhead and d e liv e ry system com ­

p onen ts and some su p p ort systems).T h is proposal, app roved by the

Student Senate in February, covers o n ly s ix co rpo ra tio ns : Boeing,Lockeed, G eneral Dynam ics, R ock­w e ll, E.G. & G. and M a rtin M arietta.

It appears th a t o f those six, the U n ive rs ity o n ly has ho ld in g s in B oe ing (w h ic h is d e ve lo p in g th e MX and c ru ise m issiles). D ives tm en t o f B oe ing w o u ld o n ly be o f sym bo lic s ign ificance, bu t such a m ove w o u ld be an im p o rta n t s ta tem ent about N o tre Dam e’s c o m m itm e n t to w o r ld peace.

Last w eek, the p o lic y was presented to the S tudent A ffa irs C o m m itte e o f the U n ive rs ity ’s Board o f T rustees, w h e re it was rcc ie ved favorably. But at the fu ll board m eeting, s tron g o p p o s itio n from m em bers o f the Inves tm en t C o m ­m itte e e ffe c tive ly k ille d a ttem p ts to have the gu ide lines im p lem en ted .

U n fo rtuna te ly , i t appears that N o tre Dame, fo r the tim e be ing, is u n w ill in g to pu t its m oney w h e re its m ou th and heart are T he issue has been addressed — ye t the incons is­tencies rem ain.

r foscoe £ Roscoe Jr.COMMUNISM v

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DO VOOUISM VOW COMPANY UKRt MOM DEMOCRATIC.? 61 COMMUNISM

Page 25: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Viewpoint Com m encem ent Issue, 1984 — page 7

Letting go most difficultI t w o rked . G od know s how , b u t i t w o rked .A t im id yo u n g m an w h o saw h is firs t N o tre

Dam e com m encem en t fo u r years ago as a soon-to-be freshm an, w i l l graduate Sunday, ca rry in g w ith h im th e best and th e w o rs t o f N o tre Dame.

The fo u r years w e re a co m e d y o f e rro rs , f ille d w ith w h a t he th o ug h t w ro n g tu rns, in ­d ec is ion and un rea lized dreams.

H is freshm an and sophom ore years found h im in O ld C ollege and M oreau Sem inary — firs t w ith a room m ate , then alone. As a ju n io r he searched a vast desert to f in d h im s e lf — fro m the harsh re a lity o f o ff-cam pus life , to liv in g w ith the best 48 -h o u r fr iends he's ever kn o w n , to cam pus life w ith tw o room m ates he

Keith RicherDeath of profundity

despised before lea rn in g to o v e rlo o k h is o w n pettiness, to life w ith h is room m ate fro m freshm an year w h o also had le ft th e sem inary.

He also chose to m a jo r in p h ilo so p h y and c o m p u te r app lica tions early th a t year. A fte r fa ilin g in h is tr y to becom e a res ide n t assistant, he re lu c ta n tly to o k a jo b w ith the cam pus new spaper — a jo b he rea lly d id n o t w a n t at the tim e. O n h is firs t day o f w o rk , he came w ith in inches o f te llin g h is boss he d id n ’t w an t the job.

As lu ck w o u ld have it, he n o w finds h im se lf ■ lo o k in g fo r w o rk in jo u rn a lism w ith an educa­tio n w h ic h tra ined h is m in d adm irab ly , bu t w h ic h fails to im press w o u ld -b e em ployers.

As a senior, he was so w rapped u p in h im se lf and in schoo l’s rigors, he o ften ign o re d his room m ate , h is fr iends fro m years past, and w o rs t o f all, his fam ily w h o had s trugg led fo r 22 years to teach h im to liv e life to its fu lles t and to stand up fo r w h a t he be lie ve d in.

B u t desp ite a ll h is sho rtcom ings, he w i l l leave N o tre Dam e n e x t M onday as a yo u n g m an w h o has learned h o w to love . O n ly n o w th a t he is about to leave friends, som e o f w h o m he has kn o w n fo u r years, does he beg in to app rec ia te the fee lings h is paren ts m ust have had fo u r years ago w h e n th e y kissed h im goodbye.

N o tre Dam e at tim es caused h im to despair. A t tim e s he attacked adm in is tra to rs o f the Ih i- ve rs ity w h o c la im ed to f i l l in fo r M om and Dad w ith an i n loco p a re n t is a ttitude .

He d isregarded th e ir a ttitu de s and p o lic ie s in th e same w ay he had set aside his paren ts ’ adv ice and th e ir years o f sacrifice.

As he was about to graduate, he g o t a le tte r fro m Father Ted, one w h ic h the p res id e n t had m a iled to every sen io r on cam pus to de fend h im s e lf He spoke o f “ Sarge,” n o t Sergeant S hrive r and w e n t o u t o f h is w ay to defend L o re t Ruppe, a w om an w h o deserves an ho n o ra ry degree o r the se n io r fe llo w aw ard, b u t n o t to speak at com m encem en t.

A le tte r accom pany ing H esburgh ’s send-o ff a ttacked the s tuden t new spaper fo r its hasty c o lu m n den ou n c in g Ruppe — and hasty it was, o n ly because the U n ive rs ity w o u ld n o t le t anyone k n o w w h o was speaking u n t i l the new spaper scooped the s to ry fo r th e th ird year in a row .

You see, the University does not respect protest and independence. The school wants to hang on to its children — even searching them as they enter the convocation center for commencement ceremonies with one last shot of mistrust.

H is parents were able to le t go even th o u g h i t h u r t a t tim es, w a it in g fo r his next le tte r, phone ca ll o r v is it. Because o f them , hele ft schoo l a c o n fid e n t and m atu re man. H is o n ly advice is to apprec ia te paren ts and ap­p re c ia te th e place.

Letter to a maiden auntA u th o r 's no te : I n f o u r ye a rs a t N o tre D am e,

I have received m ore th a n 150 le tte rs f r o m A u n t M ade le ine , m y m o th e r ’s m a id e n sister. The letters, w h ic h cam e in 9 b y 12 m a n ila envelopes, were typed s ing le -spaced a n d co vered the back a n d f r o n t o f one page. Each le t te r in v a r ia b ly w as a cco m p a n ie d b y 10 o r m o re c lip p in g s f r o m the N e w O rleans Times- P icayune . T hough I o c c a s io n a lly te lephoned M ad e le in e in response to h e r letters, I never w ro te he r - u n t i l n o w :

Dear M adeleine,As m y closest re la tive o th e r than m y

parents, you rem a in the adu lt m ode l w ith w h o m I m ost em path ize. Each o f us leads inde-

Paul McGinnRoper Review

penden t lives — y o u w ith o u t a spouse, me w ith o u t siblings.

Because o f o u r lik e lifesty les, I d o u b t i f ever th e re w e re a tim e yo u d id n o t understand me.

As a ch ild , I g roped fo r m y id e n tity . And you , m y fa iry godm othe r, w e re always able to p u t in to m y head dream s o f success w h ic h as a yo u n g adu lt I n o w hope to fu l f i l l

In ea rly adolescence, I was w h a t m y parents te rm e d “ rebe llious ,” b u t I was no re b e l I was s im p ly a r id ic u lo u s ly se lfish teenager in love w ith m yse lf You, eve r th e cham p ion strategist, b ro u g h t m y paren ts and m e to g e th ­e r b y tu rn in g m e fro m w ith in m yself.

As an o ld e r teenager, I began to lose self- con fidence . You, a long w ith m y parents, taugh t m e to tru s t m y ab ilities . W h e th e r I was d iscussing persona l experiences w ith you, o r ju s t m o w in g y o u r law n, you gave me the chance to recogn ize m y w o r th as an in ­

d iv id u a l w h o co u ld accept cha llenges and ac­co m p lish m ost any task I began.

T ho u g h m y parents and I have live d ne x t d o o r to you since 1968, i t was n o t u n t il I came to N o tre Dame th a t I f in a lly rea lized ho w m uch o f one m in d w e re a lly w ere. T h rough y o u r le tte rs I was able to grasp m ore in tensely o u r tw o loves: ju s tice and N e w Orleans.

For m ore than 40 years yo u have served as a legal secre ta ry and n o w em bark on a new course as a paralegal. In d e d ica tin g y o u rse lf to se rv ice and jus tice , you have opened m y eyes to see the p lig h t o f the w eak and ind igen t.

By y o u r exam p le and th ro u g h y o u r tire less encouragem ent, I hope to approach yo u r liv in g s p ir it o f noblesse o b lig e th ro u g h m y o w n w o rk as a newspaperm an.

O u r love fo r th e C rescen t C ity b inds us to a life s ty le I have y e t to exp e rie n ce anyw here else in m y travels. A n d th o ug h at tim es I c r it ic iz e the c ity ’s socia l in s titu tio n s , always rem em ber tha t I h o ld its peop le m ore dearly than any o ther.

W h ile m ost o f m y N o tre Dam e friends som eday plan to re tu rn to th e ir hom es to be c lose to fam ily and friends, I hope to re tu rn to N e w O rleans n o t o n ly because o f those I h o ld dearly , b u t also because o f the ve ry persons I c la im I detest. T ru ly , N e w O rleans makes fo r o d d bed fe llow s, and you have taught me to reve l in such paradoxes.

As I leave N o tre Dame, I hope to leave w ith those w h o rem ain here som e sem blance o f the hope in h u m a n ity and respect fo r in ­d iv idua ls yo u in s tille d w ith in me.

Love,

Education calls us to share with others our talentsN o tre Dame th is w eekend is send ing ou t

the m overs and shakers o f to m o rro w ’s w o rld . W e have many roads to trave l; th e ones w e choose are n o t as im p o rta n t as the w a y in w h ic h w e choose to trave l them .

Randy FahsLast Analysis

We can take th ings fo r ourse lves to e n rich o u r o w n lives — w e w i l l have the p o w e r, in ­fluence and m oney to do so — b u t w i l l w e dem onstra te respect fo r others? W il l w e p rove w e are tru ly th a nk fu l fo r a ll the good

th ings w h ic h have com e to us?Rose K ennedy once said that h e r fa m ily had

been blessed w ith an abundance o f life ’s good fo rtunes. In o rd e r to t ru ly dem onstra te th e ir lo ve o f G od and th e ir c o m m itm e n t to the hum an c o m m u n ity , the K ennedy ’s gave back m ore than they rece ived .

N ow , w e N o tre Dam e graduates, too , m ust re tu rn o u r ta len ts to the w o r ld .

M any peop le have invested th e ir t im e and resources in to b rin g in g us to th is p o in t in o u r lives. T o show o u r love and respect to them and to the rest o f the w o r ld , w e m ust re invest pa rt o f ourse lves in to the hum an co m m u n ity .

I am n o t re fe rr in g s im p ly to c h a rity o r p u b lic w orks. I am speaking o f an a ttitu d e and

a life s ty le w h ic h is su p p o rtive o f hum an ity , n o t paras itic o f those less fo rtu n a te than we. As hum ans w e m ust w o rk to w a rd the k in d o f peacefu l and p rosperous w o r ld in w h ic h w e a ll desire to live .

I f you lead a life w h ic h seem ing ly does no harm to others, b u t w h ic h does n o t ac tive ly p ro m o te the in te rests o f hum an ity , you are ac­tu a lly tak ing th ings fro m peop le w h o need them . T here are fe w am ong us w h o w o u ld m a lic io u s ly h u rt ano the r person, b u t as p e r­sons w h o are aware o f the rea l needs o f the p o o r and oppressed, apathy is as d e p lo rab le as ac t iv e ly pe rse cu tin g and e x p lo it in g

Y ou m ig h t ask, “ W ha t can 1 do, I am o n ly one person? ”

B obby Kennedy always be lieved tha t a l­th o ug h one person m ig h t n o t be able to change the w o r ld , one person c o u ld make a d iffe rence.

W hen you g ive o f y o u rs e lf yo u always get m ore in re tu rn , m aybe n o t in d o lla rs and cents, b u t in the kno w le d g e tha t you have m ade life a l i t t le m ore bearable fo r o thers. The persona l sa tis faction gained fro m such in te r ­ac tion is t ru ly beyond any m one ta ry gains.

Love and life are the tw o greatest g ifts w h ic h w e are endow ed w ith b y the Creator. W e have bu t one w o r ld in w h ic h to live . Let us share it so tha t one day eve ryone m igh t en joy a ll the good th ings w e ourse lves enjoy.

Letters can keep together friends far apartA fte r a ll the fun, d isappo in tm en t, stud ies

and m atura tion, th is year’s sen iors m ust leave the place that has been hom e fo r fo u r ve ry im ­p o rta n t years o f th e ir lives. U n fo rtuna te ly , they m ust also leave the friends they have made d u rin g th e ir stay u n d e r the G o lden Dome.

Michael SullivanOne more chance

I t is n o t a pleasant though t. The pe o p le w e have m et at N o tre Dame are special. They have been w ith us th ro u g h good tim es and bad. They have been th e re to ce leb ra te happy even ts like 21st b irth d a ys and m ed ica l school acceptances. And they have been the re to sup­p o rt us w hen w e have had p rob le m s w ith o u r room m ate o r had d if f ic u lty fin d in g a job.

W e have been to u ch e d in a g rea t w a y by o u r fr ien d s at N o tre Dame, m aybe even m ore than w e th in k , and it doesn’t seem fa ir tha t w e have to go o u r separate ways.

T h a t’s the ireal w o r ld , though. I f one person is o ffe red a jo b in C a lifo rn ia and h is fr ie n d gets accep ted to law schoo l in Boston, they have to assume tha t they w i l l no t be seeing m uch o f each o th e r fo r aw hile .

Just because w e graduate and go o u r separate ways, though , is no excuse fo r o u r lo s in g to u ch w ith co llege friends. U n fo r­tuna te ly , m ost o f us w i l l g radua lly lose to u ch w ith o u r fr iends u n t il one day even o u r best co llege b u d dy w i l l be jus t a name on a C hris tm as card list.

R igh t n o w i t is easy to say th a t w e ’l l keep in to u c h w ith o u r friends. A fte r all, w e p ro b a b ly w o n ’t have to o m any friends nearby w h e n w e set o u t to w a rd o u r careers. B u t w h a t happens w hen w e d o make n ew friends? D o w e jus t le t

o a r o ld friends s lide g ra ce fu lly o u t o f o u r lives?

E xam ine o u r parents. In m ost cases, they no lo n g e r com m un ica te w ith o ld friends. They m ig h t ta lk about them eve ry once in a w h ile , b u t th e ir fr iends have becom e ju s t characters fro m th e ir you th .

The m ovie, The B ig C h ill, is a good exam ple o f w h a t has becom e standard post graduate life . In the m ovie , a g ro u p o f close co llege fr iends lose to u ch w ith each o th e r u n t il they are b ro u g h t to g e th e r by the death o f one m em b e r o f the g roup. T he years in -be tw een had b ro u g h t m any changes to the g roup . The m o v ie ends as g ro u p m em bers s till w o n d e r w h y th e ir fr iend to o k h is o w n life.

I w o u ld hate to th in k th a t i t w o u ld take som e th ing like a death to re u n ite m y friends and me. I w o u ld also hate to th in k tha t the o n ly co n ta c t I w i l l have w ith them is at a fo o t­ba ll game, the tra d itio n a l N o tre Dame

reun ion . W h o w an ts to ta lk about fo o tba ll w ith som eone y o u haven’t seen fo r a year o r more?

W hat’s the re to do, then? W e ll, h o w about “ d ro p p p in g a lin e ” e ve ry n o w and then? W r it in g le tte rs , no m a tte r the length, has becom e a lost art. I t w o u ld take ju s t a few m inu tes to te ll w h a t’s ne w in o u r life . M ore im p o rta n tly , i t w o u ld encourage everyone else to re tu rn the favor.

N ob o d y said it w o u ld be easy. Few o f us w o u ld c la im tha t w e ’re good about w r it in g le tte rs , bu t unless w e change, w e p robab ly w o n ’t be hearing m uch fro m o u r fr iends in the fu tu re .

Tha t w o u ld be a shame. Personally, m y fr iends w h o are g radua ting have p layed a b ig ro le in m y life.

I s t il l have one m ore year to spend at N o tre Dame, b u t I fee l a large pa rt o f me is graduat­in g on Sunday.

The ObserverP.O. Box 0, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 239-5303

The Observer is the independent newspaper published by the students of the University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary’s College. It does not necessarily reflect the policies of the administration of either institution The news is reported as accurately and as objectively as possible. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of a majority of the Editorial Board. Commentaries, letters and the Inside Column present the views of their authors. Column space is available to all members of the community, and the free expression of varying opinions on campus, through letters, is encouraged.

Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief Bob VonderheideManaging E d ito r ..................Mark WcrschehExecutive Editor..............Margaret FosmoeNews E d ito r Sarah HamiltonNews E d ito r ....................... Dan McCulloughSaint Mary’s E d ito r Anne MonastyrskiSports Editor....................... Michael SullivanViewpoint E d ito r ......................... Dave GroteFeatures E dito r Mary Healyphoto Editor............................... Pete Laches

Department Managers

Business Manager....................Dave TaicletC ontroller............................... Maripat HorneAdvertising Manager............... Jeanie PooleCirculation Manager................... Jeff O’NeillSystems Manager Kevin Williams

Founded November 3,1966

Page 26: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Com mencement Issue, 1984 — page 8

Klaukecontinued from page 12

m ore than h a lf the season and, w hen she re tu rn e d , fo u n d tha t the five freshm en had m oved ahead o f he r in the lineup .

I t was m ore o f the same d u rin g h e r ju n io r year. A stress frac tu re o f he r fo o t a llo w e d fo u r m ore top- n o tc h re c ru its to m ove ahead, b u ry in g h e r far d o w n the bench. Even in he r fin a l year, w h ic h p roved to he the o n ly hea lthy year o f he r career, she saw ve ry l i t t le action.

"A stress frac tu re is an aw fu l e x ­pe rie n ce fo r som eone,” says DiS- tanislao. “ For a real c o m p e tit iv e k id like Jenny, i t ’s p ro b a b ly one o f the w o rs t th ings that co u ld happen. T h e re ’s no sign o f in ju ry , no cast, no d e fin ite conva lescent pe riod . She w o u ld p lay one game real hard and fo r the n ex t fo u r days she’d be dying.

“ In a lo t o f respects, i t has been a real, real d if f ic u lt fo u r years fo r Jen­ny. She’s a good, ded ica ted ath le te , and I ’m sure tha t th ings ju s t d id n ’t w o rk o u t the w ay she w an ted — the w ay a lo t o f us w an ted .”

“ I never knew w hen the in ju r ie s w o u ld s ta rt ac ting up again,” e x ­p la ins Klauke. “ T hey acted up a lo t

and I d o n 't th in k I hand led them as w e ll as I co u ld have. I ’d get to o em o­tio n a l and le t th ings get o u t o f hand. But, w hen I lo o k back, i t was rea lly n o th in g com pared to w ha t hap ppened to M ary Joan (Fo rbes). You have to ask yourse lf, w h y d id that happen to her and n o t to me? A t least I go t to p lay some.”

I t is p rec ise ly th is th in k in g that has made K lauke ’s N o tre Dame career a success.

“ These have been fo u r rea lly im ­p o rta n t years in m y life ,” she says. “ I ’ve made some rea lly good friends, and I ’ve learned that basketball is n o t the m ost im p o rta n t th in g in life . I s t ill love basketball, though. A fte r all,

I neve r w o u ld have com e here i f it wasn’t fo r basketba ll.”

Iro n ic a lly , K lauke ’s basketball ca reer is n o t over. She w il l be m ov ing to Ire la n d a fter g raduation

to p lay and coach am ateur basket­ba ll in Ire land. I t w i l l g ive h e r the chance to show the a b ility tha t she never rea lly had a chance to show at N o tre Dame.

Thanks to you... it works...

for ALL OF US 08

U nited W^y

The Observer N o trT T ja m ^ itf ic e , loca tedT iT T iu - iTnrTli<»>r7!FTa7<TtTmi" Student Center, accepts classified advertising from 9 a.m. un til 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Observer Saint Mary's office, located on the th ird flo o r o f Haggar College Center, accepts classifieds from 12:30 p.m. u n til 3 p.m.. Mon day though Friday. Deadline fo r next day classifieds is 3 p.m. All classifieds must be prepaid, e ith e r in person o r by mail. Charge is 10 cents per five charac-Classifieds

NOTICES 1 9 7 5 PORSCHE 914, 1 8 50,000 M ILES; ONE OW NER; $4700.00 CALL TOM BODNAR. 234-I596 after 6 p.m.

W O RD PR O C ESSIN G AND TYPING. RESUMES. 272-6827.

EXPERT TYPIST 277-8534 AFTER 5:30

ALA SKA SUM M ER JOBS - Good m oney$$. Parks, F isheries, w ilderness resorts, logging and m uch m ore...Sum m er Em ploym ent Guide. 1964 listings. $4.95. NorthOuest, 300 Union A vs.. Bldg. 12, Cam pbell, CA 95006.

EDUCATION It m ystifies

it has destroyed me There is no philosophy

QUESTIO N OF THE W EEK: HOW M U CH DID NOTRE DAME SPEND ON NEW SOD THIS W EEK?

LOST/FOUNDLost: N o ire Dam e's honor and prestige as a reputable institution o f higher learning. W hy? Just ask five tired d ining hall w orkers — all tired w ithout proof o l w rongdoing

CHAIN AND INTRAMURAL M EDAL LOST ON ACC RACO UETBALL CO URTS W ILL THE PERSON W HO CALLED BEFORE EASTER BREAK (DAN ?) PLEASE CALL AGAIN! ANN MARIE 2845087 O R-PAUL 2720746

FO UND burgundy um brella, the co llap ­sible kind, before E asier To cla im call 2914

LOST: SET OF KEYS ON KEY RING — P RO BABLY LOST DURING THURSDAY PICNIC AT SAINT MARY S. TW O O F THE KEYS ARE M ARKED 1124. PLEASE CALL JEFF AT 7820 SOON.

LOST(STO LEN) PUCH TEN SPEED RED.M ETEORLUXE. W ITH ALL THE EXTRAS TAKEN FROM SIDE OF THE M ATH BUILD IN G ON LAST THURSDAY BETW EEN 1 30 & 2 :30 pm ANY CLUES REPORT TO M EAKS 277-3306

FOR RENT

TW O HO M ES AVAILABLE FOR NEXT S C HO O L YEAR. W ILL ACCOM ­M O DATE FOUR AND SIX STUDENTS. C A LL A FTER FIVE. 234-9364.

RO O M M ATE(S) NEEDED FOR SUM M ER 4 bdrm hse, utilities 6 phone incl N ice yard, garage 288 8 46 1 /2 84 5128 lo r into , approx $125 /m o

G IRLS W ANNA HAVE FUN Especia lly in the summer. I have a 3brm HOUSE 3blks from cam pus on N D Ave I need two a t­tractive M or F housem ates call 233-1319

WANTED

Ride needed to BO STO N Can leave Friday 5/11 W ill share usual Call John at 1802

A UNIVERSITY W HICH RESPECTS SCHOLARSHIP

FEMALE RO O MMATE W ANTED TO SHARE 1 BEDROOM APART IN CAM PUS VIEW CALL TRACY AT 419- 229-4096

FOR SALE

BARGAIN: ENG AG EM EN T AND W ED­DING RING FOR SALE Contact Garry Rush, 239-7735

FOR SALE 2 CO UCHES. BAR STOOL. RUG, BARfREAL CHEAPI) EVERY­THING MUST GO I SOLD TO THE H IG ­HEST BIDDER, O R FIRST CO M E FIRST SERVED! C ALL JEFF AT 8854 NOW !

1969 VOLKSW AGO N BEETLE HAS TRAILO R HITCH ON IT CALL BEFORE 9:00 P M 288-8940 NEEDS BODY WO RK BUT RUNS FINE

TICKETS

HELP!! NEED GRADUATION TICKETS SO BRO THER&2 SISTERS CAN COME BEFORE GO ING TO PRISON. CALL 283-1204 MIKE. W ILL PAY MO NEY IS CLEAN

G O TTA HAVE GRAD. TIX. Need not be together. Call T om /John 6146 or 1761.

One ticket needed for G raduation. Will pay $$. Call J ill at 6293.

NEED GRADUATION TIX DESPERATE­LY! Relatives com ing! W ILL PAY $$$. Call G reg (283-) 3317.

NEED 3 GRAD TIX. CALL RICH AT 288- 7446

PERSONALS

Kevinfrom one M ichigander to another, what

can I say?? Thanks for being such a great friend - m aybe we can try wafer-skiing some time too. See you on the quad!!

suzanne

BUGS:So you say you ’re graduating and

you've never gotten a personal 11 don't know what everyone else th inks but I find It hard to believe! I m ean a guy like you wtth such a com plex personality

and anyw ay w ho's that guy JO H N???? You really shouldn’t change your nam e w hen you take off your g la s s e s . . . you m ight confuse som eone w ho isn’t as quick-w itted as m el Anyway, here It is.

Marlbeth

M ssrs C lay, Lee, Musumeci, Donovan, and Miles. Czop, Bottei, de Carvalho. Harvey, and N e w m a n . . A heartfelt thank you, a fond farewell, and a prom ise to repay all c igarettes I ever borrowed . . how does 2013 sound?

W ith much respect but little regard Joseph J. Dolan

P S Sam e to D 'Souza and M ilosavlevich.

All right, I adm it it publicly. The cape is a sym bol of revo lutionary zeal. We want the overthrow of the adm inistration and repeal o f the football ticket d istribution system . Yes, w e there are others o f us out there, and the a ll have capes and next year the final offensive. V ive le Revolu­tion! Remington Steele

ROOMMATE NEEDED New York C ity Female preferred. Want to live in M anhat­tan, Brooklyn Heights, Soho, Greenwhich Village or anywhere reasonably safe? Contact: Erin E. Ryan 56614 M eadowood / Elkhart. IN 46516 Tel: (219) 293-7475. Rewrite

DANIELLE CELESTE RICHER: THANKS FOR BEING SUCH A SOUEEG LEBO XATOO G A AND A DARN G O OD FATSO CHANG O AND PUNKY D U N K Y TO O . KEITH

Life ’s a p iece of ship, when you look at it — a lways look on the bright side o f life

To the Congregation o f H oly Cross: Thanks for two years that w ill a ffect the rest o f m y life. Special thanks to Andre (who convinced me to com e here), to Flash (who taught me how to pop pop­corn), to C laude (who convinced m e that I w asn ’t the only dum b Frenchman at N.D.), to Schneibs (who listened to my drivel and told me when to go to hell), to B.S. (a soon-to-be possessed), and to the rest of the vocation pests and Binmates.

Appreciatively, Keith Richer

MARY HEALY: I HOPE YOU REALIZE THAT SOME O F US SLAVED AW AY TO PUT O UT THIS LAST EDITION WHILE YOU HAD YOUR FUN!!!WE ARE JUST KIDDING BEAUTIFUL

We ARE Family.

Dianne,I’m glad I met you.

Mark, Bob, Dave and Jeanie - working w ith ya'II has been a lot o f fun so far. Have a great summer.

suzanne

DavidW e've done it all. W ith a little help from your friends (Orti, Skip, Cheryl, me too) I think you ’re fully prepared to face the world and com e out on top (TW SS). Good luck wherever you go - m y love goes with you

Shirley - what would we all do w ithout a friend like you. Thanks for all the chats! See you for lunches on Fridays this sum­mer and some golf!

Suzanne

HELP ME HELP ME HELP ME I'M DROW NING I'M DRO W NING I'M DROW NING I’M CRAZY I'M NUTS I’M CO NFUSED I’M LONELY I'M IN LOVE

HELVIE ROCKS

Sundry - Brooklyn Heights, huh. Looks like a lo t m ore happy kisses.S traub - N ice sheets. N ow you don 't have to k eep flipp ing the mattress. Szilvas - Eat, Alex, eat.Crim inski - Mr. a nd Mrs. Scott A.Cura - D id you bury your heat p ipe in the aquifer?G rusdis - Mr. a nd Mrs. Carrie A. Magner, Homme, Keller, A llison - Get rea l majors, how bout?Terpin, Fagan, BoBo - The b es t lookingM.E.'s.Juba - You shou ld be se lling books this summer.

I b idde th thee a ll the best o f adieus.

To the Thursday night O bserver crew- Jeff, Tess, Ed, Lisa, Dorothy, Steve, Vic, Madman, Kevin, Dave, Paul C - Thanx for a great 2nd semester. You’re the best in the business. Have a great summer! See

you in the fall. Mad C leric (a.k.a Small)

JIM SMITH GOOD LUCK W ITH THE IN­SURANCE JOB. ONLY I KNO W THAT YOU TOOK O UT A HUGE LIFE IN­SURANCE POLICY ON KAREN. PLAN­NING TO DO AW AY W ITH HER Q UICKLY HUH? W ATCH THE TIGHT PANTS, S O M EB O D Y S WATCHING YOU!! MAUREEN

TOM YOU HAVE ALREADY HAD YOUR SHARE OF PERSO NALS THIS YEAR, THE BENEFITS OF HAVING ME!!! SO I THO UG HT I’D JUST SAY THANKS! YOU KNOW W HAT I MEAN LOVE MAUREEN

DAVE BRUSCINO, W HAT CAN I SAY TO A MAN W HO IS A MANGOD.HE CAN COOK, CLEAN, ETC. I ENJOYED M EETING YOU THIS YEAR. GOOD LUCK IN EUROPE, I'LL GIVE YOU THE SCOOP ON FIRST YEAR LAW SCHOOL.MAUREEN

W illiam Mertka To a friend I will a lways respect over the next few billions and bil­lions of years. Talking with you and

playingfun. Take care.

Carl KDP Sagen

G REAT SPIRITS HAVE ALW AYS ENCO UNTERED

VIO LENT OPPO SITIO N FROM MEDIOCRE MINDS

- A lbert E instein

PaulIt's hard for me to say how glad I am that

you were around th is year (except when you ’d been drinking), but know that it’s true.

TomThe sam e goes for you. Who needs

editors anyway?

SuzanneIt’s been a hell of a year. I’m glad it’s

over, and I hope next year is an im prove­ment (whatever we m ay be doing).

Julie Farabaugh Here s to the rekindling of a good friendship-hoping for a better one! See you this sum m er (lots I hope). Good luck on finals. If you want to know who sent this, see above ad!

To Mel, Jeff, Kevin, Suzanne, and Tom on a Sunday night after driving to M ichigan (N iles):

The best w ay to avoid tem ptation is to yield to it. mp

Paul,

.................................................................................. 99 RED BALLOONS II .............................................................................

=zs=E&2 a s s e s s ss= = = -with you has been the best part o f it all. A quetba l, this sum m er. .....................................................................boss, yet a friend too. When I think o f th is Szgn That s what I like about you/A N N E X Girlsplace, I'll think of you. just wanna have fun /so com e on

Fond ly . | everybody put the w ood in theMargaret The ESOPHAGUS CO NSTRICTO RS Hreplace/we need a fourth for EU C H R E/

P.S. Incldently. I still think we m ake a pret- wish to thank Ihe c la .a o f 1984 lo r all Ho" b°„u t a "e lo re Dynastyty good team their support In the last three years. P' " k,es S " a' h° s / lt s HaPP* H™ r "™>-

where s the budweiser v a n /lt 's been as............................................................................. easy as A B C /123 living w ith all of YOU!

S tupidchick, "As the Dome G lows ’ is m y these four years, love M ICHAEL

s s s s r “ ■ — s ™ j w s - 5 5 = 5 5 = 5 5 ;HOW YOU LOO K AT OTHERS M aura Keyes

ENVIRONM ENTAL CANVASSERS IS O F GREAT CONCERN .................FIGHT HAZARDOUS W ASTES AND POLLUTION WITH THE MIDW EST'S LARGEST ENVIRONM ENTAL W AT TCHDOG GRO UP GO OO D O PPO R­TUNITY TO LEARN ABO UT ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND TO DISCUSS POLLUTION PROBLEMS WITH HOM EO W NERS EARN $6008 MO CALL CBE 874-5500

Bully

Are you still out there? Feigned hostility was the perfect ploy.Three years and no one suspected a

Kevin thing. They actually believed you were inChicago a ll those w eekends. Boy, d id we

............................................................................. fool them.Ah, a final chance at p ro fundity Love always,Follow the road while it's still lineally Margaretcoherent.

............................................................................. To The O bserver alum ni who helpedSUCK IT IN OR NAM E IT! make part of the last four years a terrific............................................................................. experience:Sarah: In just a few more days, we begin Michael Ortm an Thanks for getting meour summer under the Dome. It's going into this mess in the first place. M y mindto be great. I'm glad your here. I'm glad will never be the same.I'm here too. (With all due regrets to Ft. Skip Deajardln W SND, The O bserver,W ayne.) Bookstore, Metro, Costello 's class, The

Bottom Ten and, of course, A lbert’s Kind I D O N ’T W ANT TO BE MR. BRYCE ALL of sum s it all up. Ditto on O ilm an 's mindMY LIFE, I W ANT TO BE OMAR comment. Frank LaGrotta (A lwaysSHARIF!! SAYS MIKE SULLIVAN. follow ing Desjardin, of course): Thanks............................................................................. for teaching me how to go after a story

TOM M Y RAINEY, TOMMY TOMMY and stick by m y opinion. Lefty MullaneyTOMMY, YOU'VE BEEN A PLEASURE From assistant sports editor to edltor-in-THIS YEAR SOM EONE TO ABUSE AND chief; sound fam iliar? Thanks for all theSYM PATHIZE WITH GOOD LUCK, encouragement this past year ChrisGLAD I MET YOU SEE YOU, Needles Thanks for not standing in m y...DOT,DOT,DOT I CO ULDN'T RESIST way. Friends like you are the best part ofHOW MANY KIDS DID YOU SAY? college. Thanks.MAUREEN............................................................................. D., K. and S.,

GREG MURGIA G O OD LUCK IN NAZI I wouldn't have made it through thisLAND,BRING ALONG A COUPLE OF sem ester without your support andEXTRA RAZORS I HEAR YOUR friendship Thanks for the dinner atFRAULINE FRIENDS W ILL NEED Maori's. And thanks for believing in me.THEM. BY THE W AY DO YOU HAVE ABROTHER I COULD BORRO W SOME Dear Brian Stanley,NOTES FROM? MAUREEN Believe it or not, you are the best■............................................................................ roommate I ever had. And believe it o r not,THE BOUTIQUE EXCHANGE Con; you are not the only roommate I ever had.

signm ent shop with Fashion in mind. If Good luck in Portland and at Cascade,you are leaving for the sum m er we will W ill write and send regards from Phoenix,take in your sty lish c lothes and all ac- Rem em ber not to take yourself toocesories and mail you your cheque. Don't seriously — look what happened to Dickjust leave them behind! G ive us a call for McBrien. Anyway, m any heartfelt thanksmore inormation or to make an appoint- for your understanding and kindnessment. Have a great summer! Store hours these past four years.511 E. Jefferson Mon.-Fri. I0-5.30 Across Peace (but don't forget justice)E Bank Emporium Sat. I0-4 S. Bend 233- Paul5144

Brennan: You 'll do it, and believe it or not, God IS your father (and m ine too). Peace,

justice and understanding.Paul

MBAs of '84: ..amazing. There ’s never been an MBA class like you before (especia lly you accelera teds!"); you ’ve been fabulous! CONG RATS to all o f you!

Katie Kareer'’ (P lacem ent Bureau)

SUMM ER JO B S/B O S TO N . CAPE COD Massachusetts Fair Share, the largeststate-w ide citizens group In the A nd she sa id we m ust g e t together,country is hiring Individuals to But I knew it 'd never be a rra n g e d .develop techniques In political educa­tion, grass roots politics, and m oblliz- ~ Harry ChapinIng com m unities around econom icand ecological Issues. Join our com - .............................................................................m unlty ou tre a ch /fun d ra is in g staff and _____ , , .work to help pass our progressive . to be sa id fo r b lu e andlegislative program. S alary - (185-235) & w h ite s tr ip e d s h ir ts . Th an ks .

benefits . " .................... .......................... .Hrs. - (2-10) BRIAN: Stop, before it’s too late! Just kid-

Tel - (617) 266-7505 ding. A m illion thanks for challenging m yOffices in Boston, Cape Cod. W estern religious, political and philosophicalMassachusetts, W orcester & Fall R iver beliefs. And by the way. thanks for being a

hell of a friend too.DAVID: Is there still a fire burning in your Keithheart?

the MAD CLERIC is here MOM AND DAD: W elcome to m y home.............................................................................. away from home. Thanks for 21 years ofMad Clerics marry mad men to mad support and encouragement, especia llywomen who in turn have wolf-m an the last four. You are better parents than ach ild ren. son could ever hope for.

K. V . ^ ^ ^ . f . . . . Keith-.

Skelly — Don't fret about Marcos. He s a fine Catholic gentlem an (like me). Just remember to call everyone "sir ” (except the ladies — since they will all be calling you).

W itness is the key, Paul

P S. Don't take all Brennan s talk o f God too seriously — just rem em ber what God said about Nietzche.

Class o f '84: I salute you!, and I thank you for the year I’ve spent with you. W elcom e to the real world! ” Katie Kareer (P lacem ent Bureau).

ROPER. You were one crazy roommate in '80, and I'll never forget i t - I still bear the psychological scars. Thank you for Ihe challenge of your friendship. Wm. B uck­ley, III

HAW KEYE, CSC lost a good one when Shirley, you left. Thanks for yo u rs iip po rt when my

I neve r w o u ld have g u e sse d th a t a stable world began to crumble. Stanislausfe llo w P o llo c k w o u ld be o ne o f m y the martyr.

b e s t c o lle g e fr ie n d s . A ll o f m y N o tre ............................................. ...............................D am e fr ie n d s have le ft o r w il l even- MERTKA, Conquer the world, m y fellowtu a lly leave th is p lace . A s lo n g as you GOP, but don't sit on it. BS

and C ra ig are in S o u th Beqjcfctf*-j£ t ' " * 8 #how eve r, I 'l l a lw a y s have th e p e r fe c t ' H - Well, we've made it!!! It's

r e a s o n , o c o m e h a c K T h a p K y o u , o r

e v e ry th in g . P lease tre a t B ob at le a s t Freeway to the kennel, w a ve got a lot ofh a lf as w e ll as you tre a te d m e. time to make up. I’m sorry business kept

Love, m e away so long. I should have knownD avid that you gre m y fortune, lo v e . Mr H

To the H oly Cross Community:M any thanks for everyth ing y ’all h a v l done for me. Sorry about all the abuse i& THE OBSERVER, but I know all of you are good sports. If in the future we cross paths on less than friendly terms, please remember we re both working for th& sam e boss.

Cheers, Paul McGinn

Dear B ill Mertka,Thanks for these past four years. Please remember that even though I m ay appear to differ from you on many issues, I ea r­nestly respect and understand your posi­tions — sometimes I just like to argue. Take care of yourself and keep in touch.

Very tru ly yours, Paul McGinn

Dear Ted Hesburgh,It doesn't have to be so lone ly at the top — w hy not share som e of your duties w ith persons who really know what it is like to be real scholars, the faculty. Prove to this univers.ty you can live up to what you say you believe or someone m ay just not name Memorial L ibrary after you when you die

Sincerely, Your conscience

GOOD LUCK AND MUCH THANKS FOR ALL YOU HAVE DONE FOR NOTRE DAME: STANLEY HAUERWAS,ELISABETH FIORENZA AND G REGO RY SCHIRMER. SO MUCH FOR THIS UNIVERSITY’S SENSE O F OPEN- MINDEDNESS AND RESPECT FOR TRUE SCHOLARSHIP YOU CAN HIT YOUR HEADS AGAINST A BRICK WALL FtDR O NLY SO LONG

Thanks, especia lly for the lunches and talks we had together I'd never have given you any advice if I d idn 't care and didn't think you might be the better for it. I hope I still know you when you're done climbing. And by the way, it really is a n ice bench. .

Page 27: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Com mencement Issue, 1984 — page 9

The Top Ten Sports Stories of 1983-84S p o rts

Hurricanes Blow Away IrishThe low point of the Gerry Faust era came on a

hot Miami night in late September when the even­tual national champion Miami Hurricanes embar­rassed the Irish, 20-0, on national television. The Hurricanes physically and verbally abused the Notre Dame players, who were trying to rebound from a loss to Michigan State the week before. The Irish proceeded to win five in a row after the Miami debacle, but never beat a team with a win­ning record until the Liberty Bowl.

Harriers Pull Off UpsetWhen the teams lined up for the start of the Na­

tional Catholic Cross-Country meet on Notre Dame’s Burke Memorial Golf Course, Marquette was the odds-on favorite to repeat as champion. Notre Dame was expected to put up a challenge, but did even better than that as it upset the War­riors. Although Marquette’s top runners placed ahead of Notre Dame’s, the Irish were able to place all seven runners ahead of Marquette’s fifth man, giving them the win.

Sports

Notre Dame Plays in LibertyThe Notre Dame football team had just lost to

Air Force, bringing its record to a mediocre 6-5, when Gene Corrigan announced that the Irish were going to play in the Liberty Bowl. Th e official announcement drew criticisn from people all around the country who felt that a 6-5 record did not warrant a bowl bid. Nevertheless, the Irish played Boston College on a miserable December 29 night, winning 19-18, and shutting up most of the critics.

Irishwom en Beat UCLAThe 1983-84 women’s basketball season was

rather disappointing, as the team finished with a 14-14 record. However, there was one very bright spot, and that came on December 5 when die Irish defeated perennial power UCLA. Carrie Bates was the star as she carhe off the bench to score 18 points and pull down six rebounds before leaving with a knee injury. Mary Beth Schueth made up for her absence down the stretch, and the Irish picked up their biggest win ever, 70-61.

Maryland Falls to IrishWith 20 seconds remaining, the score read:

Maryland 45, Notre Dame 45. However, Irish cap­tain Tom Sluby drove to the basket for a layup that gave Notre Dame its biggest win in three years. Maryland came into the game ranked fifth nation­ally, but the Irish, in the midst of a streak that saw them win 12 of 14, played excellent basketball down the stretch to give them their first notable victory of the ’83-’84 season. Sluby, as usual, led the scoring with 19 points, while Ken Barlow added 16 in the winning effort.

B n m n iMary land becomes a Notre Dame moment

s losing streak

Sports

Volleyball Program UpgradedWhen it was reported that the athletic depart­

ment was upgrading the volleyball program by hiring former Stanford coach Art Lambert and increasing the number of scholarships to the NCAA maximum of 12, there was probably little reaction from those outside the department. However, the announcement was very important for the fate of Notre Dame’s minor sports, and especially the women’s sports. If any minor sport is going to make waves, volleyball is going to have to lie it. If it fails, the other minor sports may also suffer.

. - - -

Sports

Fencers Upset National ChampsWhat’s Notre Dame’s most successful sports

program? Mike DeCicco’s fencing program wins by a mile. Once again, the fencers made their an­nual run at the national championship. They fell just short again this year, finishing third in the NCAA Tournament, but made a big mark during the season by defeating eventual national cham­pion Wayne State in the Great Lakes Champion­ship. The win could be an omen for the next few years, as nearly every fencer will return next year.

SportsIrish reach N IT ChampioSluby leads team past SLU, 65-59

Irish Reach NIT ChampionshipDigger Phelps’ basketball team, rejuvenated by

the return of Tim Kempton to the lineup, surprised many people by reaching the finals of the National Invitation Tournament. The Irish lost to a red-hot Michigan team, 83-63, in the finals, but defeated four teams on the way to New York. Tom Sluby led the charge, but he received help from nearly everyone on the squad as the Irish put tilings together at the right time.

Sports.

Be okslore champions A

Macri’sW ins Bookstore AgainBookstore Basketball has become the third

major sport at Notre Dame. For the second straight year, 512 teams competed (22 more were on awaiting list). Also for the second straight year, Macri’s Deli emerged as the winner. Macri’s, com­prised of Joe Sweeney, Larry Cuculic, Steve Toohill, Bubba Cunningham, and Barry Fay, used superior teamwork and a pressure defense to beat Tequila White Lightning, 21-12, in the finals.

Sports

lacrosse Team Wins MLAIn just its fourth year as a varsity sport, the Irish

lacrosse team emerged as champion of the Mid­west Lacrosse Association. Rich O’Leary’s squad ended the season with a 8-1 league record (9-3 overall), finishing in a tie with Denison. Notre Dame was awarded the championship because it defeated Denison, 11-10, during the season. The Irish, led by Bob Trocchi’s 36 goals, won their last six games to take the title.

Page 28: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

The Observer Commencement Issue, 1984 — page 10

Irish tennis team places third in NCAA tourneyBy LARKYBURKESports W rite r

C o n tin u ed im p ro v e m e n t has been the tradem ark o f the N o tre Dame w o m e n ’s tenn is team in the course o f its seven-year h is to ry , and the 1983-84 season was ce rta in ly no e x c e p tio n to that trend .

For th e second year in a ro w , the w o m e n ’s team p laced th ird in the NCAA D iv is io n I I na tiona l cham ­p io n sh ip tou rnam en t. B ut even th o u g h they fa iled to achieve th e ir goal o f a na tiona l cham p ionsh ip , the Ir ish c o n tin u e d to b u ild con fidence as they posted th e ir best reco rd ever, f in ish in g 23-4 o ve ra ll ( .8 5 2 ). T hey posted a 13-4 m ark in the sp ring campaign.

“ T h is is the best team I ’ve eve r coached, ” said Ir ish coach Sharon Petro. "T h e p layers disp layed a supe­r io r a ttitu de , one o f hard w o rk and d e te rm in a tion . W e made a m arked im p ro ve m e n t o ve r last season, a w e had a lo t o f fun d o in g it.

“ As far as the tou rn a m en t goes, I have n o th in g bu t the h ighest praise fo r m y players. A lo t o f th ings w ere against us, b u t th ro u g h it all, w e p layed w e ll. It ju s t w asn ’t enough."

O ne fa c to r tha t w o rke d against N o tre Dame in the tou rn a m en t was the w eather. Heavy ra in caused several m atches to be delayed o r m oved Indoors. W hen it wasn’t ra in ing , the w e a th e r was e x tre m e ly h o t and h u m id , som e th ing that the

Ir is h are o b v io u s ly n o t accustom edto.

The q u a lity o f c o m p e tit io n also in ­creased the pressure on N o tre Dame. Because th e y w e re seeded th ird in the tou rnam en t, they had a d if f ic u lt road to the cham p ionsh ip , fac ing top-seeded Tennessee C hattanooga in the second round. The fact tha t the to u rn a m e n t finals w e re he ld in C hattanooga d id n ’t make th ings any easier.

The Ir ish defeated D enve r 8-1 in the firs t ro u n d o f the tou rn a m en t on M onday, May 7, b u t then fe ll to even­tua l na tiona l ch a m p io n Tennessee C hattanooga 6-3. Fatigue was u n d o u b te d ly a c o n tr ib u t in g fa c to r in N o tre Dam e’s defeat, because the tw o m atches w ere p layed back-to- back. The Ir ish opened p lay w ith D enver at 9 a.m. and d id n ’t fin ish the Tennessee-Chattanooga m atch u n t il 10 p.m.

The pressure o f fina l exams was ano the r p ro b le m fo r P e tro s squad. T h is was m ost ev iden t in Tuesday’s th ird round , w h e re N o tre Dame defeated C a lifo rn ia Davis 5-4 to cap tu re th ird place. A fte r tak ing a 5- 1 lead, th e Ir ish o p ted to fo rfe it the last th ree games in o rd e r to ca tch the last p lane o u t o f Tennessee and be back at schoo l fo r W ednesday’s exams.

N e x t year figures to be another s trong season fo r the Irish , as m ost o f th is year’s p layers w i l l be re tu rn in g

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Slubycontinued from page 12

the NBA. And Sluby has a ll th ree be­cause his m ain asset is h is s treng th .”

Sluby w i l l lik e ly p lay at the b ig guard in the pros, b u t the tran s itio n fro m co llege to the p ros w i l l t be a d if ­f ic u lt one. The consensus am ong Blake, M enendez and Suhr is tha t the ad justm ent w i l l lik e ly take Sluby one to tw o years to make. The th ree also seem to agree tha t the Ir ish star needs to w o rk on his b a ll h a nd ling and defense to be successful in thepros.

T here are o th e r in tang ib les that seem to make Sluby a ttra c tive to the p ro people.

“ W e th in k he ’s a guy w h o w ants to take the m oney shots, ” says Suhr. “ He’s been in p le n ty o f h igh pressure s itua tions at N o tre Dame, has a very good know ledge o f the game, and is rea lly a co m p e tito r. A ll in all, he’s a w in n e r.”

A fte r Sunday’s g raduation cerem onies, the n e x t s top fo r Sluby is a p re -d ra ft cam p to be he ld May 30, June 1-3 in Chicago. A cco rd in g to Blake, o n ly the to p 50 o r so c o l­lege p layers have been in v ite d to th is cam p and it w i l l be an e xce llen t chance fo r Sluby to show h is s tu ff to

the p le th o ra o f NBA brass w h o w i l l be present.

As far as w h a t’s in s tore fo r S luby n e x t year in the NBA, G ille n offers th is assessment.

“ The key fo r h im is g e ttin g w ith a team tha t needs a second guard,” he says. "W ith the r ig h t team, I th in k he c o u ld do real w e ll. He deserves it, too, because he’s w o rke d hard and is rea lly a good k id .”

S luby’s hard w o rk is n o t over, though. A fte r fo u r tough years at N o tre Dame, he n o w faces the ch a l­lenge o f su rv iv in g in the N BA — p e r­haps the biggest cha llenge o f all.

RemV

Order from E. A. Bella P.O. Box 1953 South Bend, IN 46634.

1.. .with a specially prepared memorial envelope. ^

Notre Dame postmark - March 31,1981 50th anniversary of the crash

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A rthurA n d e r s e n

We are pleased to announce the following 1984 graduates of the University of Notre Dame have recently become associated with our firm:

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Page 29: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Today Com m encem ent Issue, 1984 — page 11

Bloom County B erke B rea thed

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The M aster Dukes o f Hazzard Benson W ebste rM ov ie o f the W eek DallasMasquerade Falcon C rest M att H ouston N ew sC en te r 16 22 E yew itness New s N ew sw a tch 28 T o n ig h t Show CBS Late M ovie ABC N ew s N ig h tlin e Eye on H o lly w o o d F riday N ig h t V ideos

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JT-/1, * Chronicle Features. 1984

The Daily CrosswordACROSS 37 Foils DOWN

1 Bargain 40 Poorer than 1 Appearevent mediocre 2 Taj Mahal

5 Evergreen 41 Awkward citytree boats 3 Usurers

10 Student’s 43 Rivers: Sp. 4 Manorstranslation 44 It. food 5 Prepares

14 Conceits 46 Baby bird and serves15 By oneself 48 Military food16 Silkworm area

6 Escape17 Word in 49 USA agcy.OED 7 A beetle

18 Kind of 50 Show 8 Picnicsweater plainly pests

20 Supervised 52 Graduate’s 9 Assign to22 Establishes designation an obscure

a residence words position23 Emporiums 56 Lasts 10 Groups25 Tibetan 59 False lead of five

antelope 61 Nimble62 Arrow

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28 Raymond

’ poison63 Of ships64 Very long

times65 Musical

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on and onthe author

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expletive 66 Mode with horns35 Rail bird 67 Printer’s 24 Dickens’36 Do wrong term merchant

26 Indian or Arctic

27 — Haute29 Repulsive

old women30 Shellfish

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vine

1 2 3■

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.*@ .1984 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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Page 30: Hart opposes Reagan economics in South Bend campaign ...

Bmf t

Two seniors bring up-and-down careers to closeTom Sluby: 1984 Athlete of Year

By JEFF BLUMBA ss is tan t Sports E d ito r

He p ro b a b ly w i l l no t be rem em bered m uch, i f at all, fo r his firs t th re e years at N o tre Dame. B u t T om Sluby and his se n io r season w i l l c e rta in ly s tick o u t in the m inds o f m any fo r years to com e.

T he sen io r cap ta in to o k charge o f a s trug ­g lin g yo u n g team and n o t o n ly tu rn e d its season around, b u t led it to a 2 1 -1 2 re c o rd and a second p lace fin ish in th e N a tiona l In v ita t io n T ou rn a m e n t. In the process, the w in n e r o f the fo u rth Edw ard ‘M oose ’ Krause Award, se lected annua lly by the sports s ta ff o f The O b ­se rver to recogn ize the N o tre Dame M ale A th ­le te o f th e Year, averaged 18.7 p o in ts pe r game, the best by an Ir ish p laye r s ince A drian D a n tlcy ’s 28 .6 in ’75-’76.

A fte r s trug g lin g th ro u g h a sem ester o f academ ic in e lig ib il ity and assorted o th e r set­backs, S luby s tarted to com e on near th e end o f h is ju n io r year. Then, fo llo w in g a successful t r ip to Yugoslavia be tw e en his ju n io r and sen io r years, S luby rece ived the h o n o r o f b e ing nam ed captain.

-N ow Sluby, one year ago a lo n g shot to ever p lay in the N a tiona l Basketball Association, has a fa ir ly g ood chance o f ach ie v in g tha t h o n o r also. Those w h o k n o w in the NBA, in fact, a rc p re d ic t in g S luby to go anyw he re from the second ro u n d to the m id d le o f th e th ird in n e x t m o n th ’s dra ft.

“ He’s d e fin ite ly am ong the to p 40 o r 50 p layers in the c o u n try ,” says to p N BA scout M arty Blake o f Sluby. “ He has a ve ry good chance to p lay in th e NBA. "

“ I w o u ld say tha t he ’l l go fro m anyw here in the second ro u n d to perhaps som ew here in the m id d le o f the th ird round , ” estim ates A1 M enendez, d ire c to r o f p laye r pe rsonne l fo r the N ew Jersey Nets. “ H e ’l l d e fin ite ly get a shot to show w h a t he can do. ”

"W h ile I d o n ’t th in k tha t he’s a firs t rou n d se lec tion , ” com m en ts B rendan Suhr, an assis­tant coach w ith the A tlan ta Hawks, “ everyone know s w h o he is. H e ’s had good exposure at N o tre Dam e and has as good a chance as anyone o f m ak ing it once he gets to cam p.”

M uch o f S luby’s exposure cam e in N o tre Dame's m id-season upset o f then fifth -ranked M ary land w hen he d rove the r ig h t side w ith 18 seconds le ft to reg is te r a decis ive th ree p o in t p lay, and in th e tre k o f the Ir is h to N ew Y o rk ’s M adison Square G arden in the N IT , w h e re the W ashington, D C., na tive averaged 20.4 p o in ts in five games.

Post season accolades in c lu d e d honorab le m en tions on the a ll-A m erica teams o f The A s­s o c ia te d Press, B a s k e tb a ll W eekly, and The S p o rtin g News. In add itio n , S luby rece ived th re e awards at the team ’s annua l awards ban­que t — the N o tre Dame M onogram C lu b MVP A w ard, the C lu tch P layer o f the Year Award, and the C apta in ’s A w ard.

In a ch iev ing those d is tin c tio n s last season, S luby scored 61 6 p o in ts to rank h im 1 1th on the a ll- tim e s ing le season list. Beyond that, his 252 fie ld goals are the 10 th best eve r in one season fo r a N o tre Dame player. He scored a ca ree r-h igh 30 p o in ts against b o th M arque tte and D ayton and led the Ir ish in sco ring in 26 o f 33 games.

“ He exceeded o u r expec ta tio n s ,” says Irish assistant coach Pete G ille n o f the tu rn a ro u n d be tw een S luby’s ju n io r and se n io r years. “ The ad jus tm en t fo r h im wasn’t so m uch a physica l one as a m en ta l one.

" I t was a ll in b e lie v in g tha t he c o u ld do it. And as his co n fid en ce b u ilt , i t k in d o f steam- ro lle d .”

A lth o u g h Sluby is c e rta in ly a good shoo te r (he shot s lig h tly o v e r 50 p e rce n t last season), i t seems tha t he is like d m ore by the p ro peop le fo r so m e th in g else.

“ Besides sh o o ting the basketball rea l w e ll, he ’s re a lly a s tron g k id ,” assesses Blake. “ And he ’s q u ic k e r than m ost peop le th in k . ”

“ T h e re ’s th ree th ings y o u need to p lay in o u r league,” says M enendez, “ and those are: you m ust have streng th , you m ust be physica l and you m ust be able to take the p o u n d in g o f

see SLUBY, page 10

Jenny Klauke: Start of a ProgramB y MIKE SULLIVANSports E d ito r

Like nearly a ll the a th le tes w h o en te red N o tre Dame w ith the Class o f 1984, Jenny K lauke has fin ished h e r fo u r year s tin t and w i l l graduate on Sunday.

U n like the o th e r ath letes, though, Jenny K lauke has earned a p lace in N o tre Dam e a th ­le t ic h is to ry tha t w i l l neve r be taken away. She d id no t earn th e spot because o f some fantas­t ic a th le tic ach ievem ent, though. H e r career at N o tre Dame was m arred by in ju rie s that kep t h e r from m aking a m a jo r n ^ trk on the re c o rd books.

Jenny K lauke w il l go d o w n in h is to ry as the firs t w o m an to rece ive an a th le tic g ran t in aid to a ttend N o tre Dame. W hen she signed a le tte r o f in te n t to jo in M ary D iS tanislao ’s new w o m e n ’s basketball p rog ram , K lauke n o t o n ly jo in e d the g ro u n d f lo o r o f a b u ild in g p rogram — in fact she w as the g ro u n d f lo o r — b u t she also rep resen ted the beg in n ing o f N o tre D am e’s a ttem p t to b u ild a s tron g w o m e n ’s sports program .

The ju ry is s t i l l o u t on w h e th e r the a th le tic dep a rtm en t’s a tte m p t has b ro u g h t the resu lts th a t w e re expected , bu t, a fte r fo u r years, i t is obv ious tha t Jenny K lauke ’s career was no t q u ite as p ro d u c tiv e as she had hoped.

“ These last fo u r years have been k in d o f fru s tra tin g years fo r m e,” says th e G lenv iew , 111, native. “ W ith in ju r ie s and e ve ry th ing , I neve r rea lly fe lt 1 show ed w h a t I co u ld do.

“ I knew that they w o u ld p ro b a b ly be b r in g ­in g in a lo t o f re c ru its a fte r me. I also kn e w m ost peop le expe c te d me to get pushed in to the background. B ut I w an ted to p lay a lo t fo r fo u r years and go o u t w ith a b a n g ”

Th ings d id n o t w o rk o u t as p lanned fo r Klauke, b u t he r N o tre Dam e career was s t ill no flop . In essence, she was the s p r in te r w h o ran the firs t leg o f a relay, o n ly to pass the baton to faster teammates.

W hat a d iffe rence a few years makes. W hen K lauke appeared on the scene as a freshm an, the N o tre Dam e w o m e n ’s basketba ll p rog ram was b e g inn ing its firs t year in D iv is io n I a fte r ju m p in g fro m D iv is io n III. D iS tanislao had signed tw o re c ru its to beg in the p ro g ra m ’s c lim b up the D iv is io n I ladder, b u t no b od y kn e w w ha t to e xp e c t fro m the year.

T he o u tlo o k was even c lo u d ie r w hen one re c ru it, M ary Joan Forbes, in ju re d he r knee be fore the season started, an in ju ry tha t ef­fe c tiv e ly ended h e r N o tre Dame career be fore i t s tarted. The in ju ry le ft K lauke alone to ca rry

the w e ig h t o f b e ing th e sole scho la rsh ip p laye r on the team.

“ I d id n ’t k n o w w h a t to e xp e c t fro m Jenny in tha t firs t year,” says DiStanislao. “ In fact, I d id n ’t kn o w w h a t to expec t fro m the team go ing fro m D iv is io n I I I to D iv is io n I. O bv io u s ­ly w e had o u r eyes on the fu tu re , b u t w e d id n ’t k n o w h o w m any peop le fro m tha t team w o u ld be pa rt o f the fu tu re .

“ As far as Jenny was concerned , she had in ­ju ries th ro u g h he r firs t year, as w e ll as the rest o f h e r career. As the hea lth o f he r feet and legs was incons is ten t, so was h e r p lay.”

Despite the in ju rie s , though, K lauke show ed flashes o f b rillia n c e fro m tim e to tim e. She averaged m ore than 10 p o in ts a game w h ile p la y in g l i t t le m ore than h a lf the game, and scored 27 p o in ts in one h a lf against Ball State. She d id th is desp ite try in g to learn the new p o s itio n o f guard and fre q u e n tly t ry in g to do m ore than she was capable.

“ Coach used to y e ll at me about about try in g to d o to o m uch ,” sm iles K lauke. “ I was a guard then, and w h ile I was try in g to learn h o w to b r in g the ba ll up and p lay guard, I was go ing back to m y o ld hab its o f fo rw a rd . I d id learn to c o n tro l m yself, th o u g h ”

By the end o f h e r firs t season, K lauke looked like she w o u ld be p la y in g a m a jo r ro le in N o tre Dam e’s fu tu re — f she c o u ld avo id in ­juries. D esp ite the fact that D iS tanislao had b ro u g h t in five b lu e -ch ip recru its , K lauke ’s a b ility to play guard o r fo rw a rd w o u ld serve he r w e ll.

A stress frac tu re o f h e r leg in the preseason ru in e d he r plans again, how ever. She m issed

see KLAUKE, page 8

LFischette named 1984 Female Athlete of the YearBy LARKY BURKE and MIKE SULLIVANSports W riters

Each year, the O bserver sports s ta ff names a m ale and fem ale w in ­ne r o f the E dw ard W. “ M oose” Krause Aw ard. T he aw ard is

presented to the a th le te fro m e ith e r Saint M ary ’s o r N o tre Dame w h o is m ost va luab le to h is o r he r team.

T h is year, the ch o ice o f the m en ’s w in n e r was re la tiv e ly easy. T om Sluby led the basketball team to the N IT fina ls w ith b o th his p lay and on c o u rt leadersh ip (see re la ted s to ry ).

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He easily ou td is tanced a nu m b e r o f o th e r ve ry w o r th y pe rfo rm e rs like A llen P inke tt, Joe H ow ard , M ike M e tz le r (h o c k e y and baseball), and Bob T ro c c h i (lacrosse ).

T he w o m e n ’s ch o ice was m uch m ore d iff ic u lt. I t has been a tough year fo r w o m en ’s sports at N o tre Dam e and Saint M ary ’s, b u t one team has risen to the to p in 1983-84. The N o tre Dame w o m en ’s tenn is team, w h ic h is q u ic k ly estab lish ing its e lf as a NCAA D iv is io n II cham p ionsh ip con tende r, re c e n tly p u t the w raps on ano the r im pressive season, tak ing th ird place in th e NCAA D iv i­s ion I I tou rn a m en t to fin ish w ith a 23-4 record .

A m a jo r fa c to r in the team ’s success th is year has been the leadersh ip and cons is ten t p lay o f sen io r Pam Fischette. Because o f h e r ou ts tand ing p e rfo rm ance in 1983- 84, F ischette has been nam ed the re c ip ie n t o f the Krause Female A th ­le te o f the Year Award.

F ischette, w h o was nam ed the team ’s MVP e a rlie r th is m onth , fin ished o u t an im pressive ca ree r in last w eek ’s tou rnam en t. T he L ive r­poo l, N.Y., na tive has e tched he r name in to the Ir ish re c o rd books m ore tim es than any p laye r in N o tre Dam e w o m en ’s tenn is h is to ry .

She ho lds career marks fo r m ost v ic to rie s in doubles, best w in n in g

percentage in doub les, m ost co m b in e d v ic to rie s (s ing les and doub les), and best co m b in e d w in ­n ing percentage. She also holds s ingle season m arks fo r most doub les v ic to rie s and m ost co m b in e d v ic to ries .

Early last fa ll, F ischette b roke the career singles v ic to ry reco rd , w h ic h she added to by p o s tin g , an im ­pressive 14-5 singles re c o rd th is s p r in g

“ Pam has been a ve ry cons is tent p e rfo rm e r fo r us th is year,” said Irish

‘We d idn 't even name an M V P last year. But this year, the team real­ly wanted to recognize the contributions that Pam has made. ’

— Sharon Petrocoach Sharon Petro. “ T enn is is a ve ry in d iv id u a lize d sport, so i t ’s tough to single o u t one person w ho was rea lly the m ost valuable. In fact, w e d id n ’t even nam e an MVP last year. B ut th is year, th e team rea lly w an ted to recogn ize th e c o n tr ib u ­tio n s tha t Pam has made.

“ Pam has always been a ve ry

coachab le p layer,” added Petro. "She’s rea lly im p ro ve d h e r game since he r freshm an year, g o in g fro m a baseline game to a fu ll c o u rt game.”

“ I ’ve gained a lo t o f e xp e rience th is year and th ro u g h o u t m y career,” said Fischette. “ M y years here have been w e ll w o r th w h ile , as I ’ve en joyed a lo t o f great tim es w ith the team.

“ D u r in g m y fo u r years here, the team has im p ro ve d trem endous ly , to a p o in t w he re w e ’re r ig h t up the re w ith the to p ten (D iv is io n I I ) teams in the c o u n try .”