The Observer VOL. XXIII NO. 113 THURSDAY , MARCH 21, 1991 HHHRHfl | SUFR may demonstrate to prod administration By KATE MANUEL demonstration depends upon fairs on January 21. poor competitiveness in attract­ concerns discussed in the Board News Writer the University giving its ap­ The statement called again ing minority faculty should be of Trustees Report on Cultural proval through the Office of for “the institution of an official noted. They should compete for Diversity. The University’s continued Student Affairs. harassment and discrimination scholars like they do for ath­ “We’re experiencing deliber­ refusal to commit to cultural SUFR members said they policy.” Although there is such a letes,” said Villegas. “The few ate bureaucratic difficulties in diversity and the disrespect were unable to comment upon proposal under discussion, ethnic Americans we have hiring a needed assistant to manifested by its refusal to ad­ what other “further action ” Villegas said, “the proposal leave; there’s no excuse for minority affairs, ” Villegas said. dress minority concerns, they might take, because doing lacks specific penalties for that.” “We feel our candidate (for as­ prompted Students United for so might compromise their ef­ violations.” Collins cited the example of sistant to the Director of Mi­ Respect (SUFR) to hold a press fectiveness. Because the University was Princeton as a university which nority Affairs) was scrutinized conference on Wednesday, At the press conference, Pe­ able to get the new band and has been successful in recruit­ excessively. members said. dro Villegas read a prepared ROTC buildings constructed so ing minority faculty and said, “We (SUFR and the committee SUFR has planned “further statement, and Villegas, quickly, Villegas questioned the “ We don’t see the lack of faculty preparing the Board of Trustees action,” including a possible Azikiwe Chandler, and Corey University’s commitment to as an excuse.” report) are different. SUFR and NAACP-sponsored demonstra­ Collins answered questions. build a m ulti cultural center. SUFR members feel the need the committee are distinct tion on March 22, to encourage The statement reiterated The scarcity of minority fac­ to take “further action ” because entities that share a common the Administration’s addressing SUFR’s initial demands and ulty does not excuse the Uni­ the University has refused to goal.” he added. minority concerns and to make discussed progress in meeting versity for failing to hire minor­ address the minority concerns the student body more aware of those demands, which SUFR ity professors, said SUFR presented earlier by the BCAC Chandler said, “We realize at SUFR and its goals. presented to Patricia O’Hara, members. and other organizations and are this point that we need con­ The occurrence of Friday’s Vice President of Student Af­ “ We believe the U niversity’s addressing only those minority frontation.” Expert: pornography has negative effect on behavior

By KATE MANUEL tive behavior to normative be­ News Writer havior, ” he said. Osanka feels this Pornography negatively ef­ “masturbatory conditioning ” fects behavior, sexual and has led the subjects whom he otherwise, by causing viewer has studied into patterns of addiction and by creating a rape, murder, child abuse, and need in the viewer to imitate exploitive sexual behavior. the pornographic behavior, said He said that one should ad­ Frank Osanka, president of Be­ dress the issue of pornography havioral Consultants and au­ by asking what is right about it, thor of the Source Book on not what is wrong with it. “It’s a Pornography. shorter list,” he said. Pornography viewers experi­ At best, pornography could be ence a four-fold process of ad­ said to be free enterprise, a diction, escalation, desensitiza­ source of employment for tion, and acting out, until women, a form of entertain­ “eventually pornography be­ ment for a certain segment of I comes more important than the population, and a potential people,” he said. psychological therapy, Osanka The Observer/ J. T. Rock According to Osanka, mas­ said. Springtime sensations turbation personalizes the ex­ “At some point, really in the perience of viewing pornogra­ 60 s and 70 s, very liberal ther­ Walsh residents balance eggs Thursday night during the point of the vernal equinox, the time of the phy, “ It’s no longer an objective apists used pornography in year when the sun moves northward crossing the celestial equator, the imaginary line around the sky experience and the themes of sexual therapy, but they don’t directly above the earth's equator. Spring begins in the northern hemisphere at this time. pornography change anorma- see PORN / page 4 ND holds business DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia (AP) The American officer could be — A U.S. jet fighter Wednesday identified only by his call sign. shot down an Iraqi warplane Whiz. case competition over Saddam Hussein’s President Bush said U.S. By DAVID KINNEY Students are judged by a hometown in the first air attack forces will not hesitate to shoot News Writer prestigious panel on their since the cease-fire in the down any other Iraqi planes analytical ability, the Persian Gulf War. that fly, but added: “ I don’t Graduate students of busi­ soundness of their U.S. o fficia ls said the Ira q i think that will happen.” ness Bill Mountford, Mark recommendations, and their plane was flying in violation of “We’re not resuming hostili­ Manuel, and Pete Fitzgerald written and oral presentation the 3-week-old truce, but they OPERATION ties. We’re not re-engaging, ” represented Notre Dame in a skills. said the engagement did not White House spokesman M arlin DESERT STORM case competition held The five judges presiding signal any new round of fight­ Fitzwater said. “We’re simply between March 17-19 on the this year were Samuel Certo, ing. ■ Kuwaiti government resigns/ proceeding with the cease-fire Notre Dame campus. dean of the graduate school The incident vividly demon­ page 8 as we outlined it to the Iraqis.” Judges declared the Univer­ of business of Rollins strated the American domi­ The air engagement occurred sity of Southern California the University; John Bycraft, nance over Iraq’s skies that ■ Peter Arnett talks/ page 8 less than 100 miles from winner of the competition president and CEO of Jack- helped the allied coalition oust Kirkuk, a key northern city that ■ Fiance’s fate / page 8 ______over the ND group as well as Post Corp.; Michael Hammes, the defeated Iraqi army from Kurdish rebels claimed was be­ teams from Duke University, president and CEO of Society Kuwait. with Arab states, also reopened ing bombarded by Iraqi aircraft University of Texas, and Bank; Scott Miller, president Now, the focus of fighting has its embassy in Amman, Jordan. Wednesday. Such rebel claims University of Michigan. and CEO of Burkhart shifted inside Iraq, where The U.S. C entral Command could not be verified indepen­ In case competition, the Advertising; and John Waller, Saddam’s forces are trying to said an Air Force F-15C shot dently. teams are given 24 hours to president and CEO of Toefco suppress Kurdish and Shiite down the Iraqi Su-22 jet fighter The United States has told analyze and define the situa­ Engineering. Muslim insurgencies. over Tikrit, the hometown of Iraq not to use its warplanes tion of a real-life business This year's case, according Iraq on Wednesday accused Iraqi President Saddam. The against the insurgents. Lt. Col. facing difficulty. Each team to Fitzgerald, involved Iran — its enemy in an eight- fate of Iraqi pilot was not Virginia Pribyla, a Central must then present their Hughes Supply, Inc., a year war — of inciting the known for certain. Command spokeswoman in recommendations and building contractor that had uprisings. Iran has denied in­ But the wingman on the at­ Riyadh, the Saudi capital, said it answer the questions of a grown beyond its profitability volvement, although its presi­ tacking American plane, inter­ was the first time Iraqi fixed- panel of judges. and faced huge debt. “The dent has urged Saddam to re­ viewed when he returned to wing combat aircraft have The case competition is im ­ team had to determine how to sign. base in central Saudi Arabia, flown since the cease-fire. portant in “preparing them to save the company in a Iran and Saudi Arabia, Iraq’s said the Iraqi pilot was down to Rebel forces repeatedly have analyze and react to a declining economy.” added neighbors and the largest Per­ 100 to 150 feet when he claimed the Iraqi government business case and to prepare O’Rourke. sian Gulf states, announced ejected. "I don’t think he made was using helicopters and war­ suggestions to the directors,” The Notre Dame team Wednesday they were restoring it. The chute never blossomed. planes to attack them. said Professor Jim O’Rourke, determined that the problem diplomatic relations after a ... It crumpled as it the Kurdish rebel spokesman faculty advisor to the ND see BUSINESS / page 4 three-year rift. Iran, which has ground,” said the air force team. been moving to mend relations captain from Rockland, Mass. see GULF / page 8 page 2 The Observer Thursday, March 21, 1991

INSIDE COLUMN Forecast for noon, Thursday, March 21 FORECAST: ATHER REPORT Partly cloudy today. Highs in the mid 60s. Cloudy tonight with a Police chance of showers. Friday, highs in the incident raises . • \> V » mid 50s. racia issues TEMPERATURES: City H L Athens 64 50 Coast to coast, the hot Atlanta 74 43 seat has become hotter for Berlin 54 36 Boston 53 41 the nation’s law Chicago 61 32 enforcement figures. Dallas Ft Worth , 70 59 While the brutal beating Denver 59 45 Detroit 57 31 of a motorist by Los Honolulu 75 68 Angeles police officers has Houston 78 56 Indianapolis 64 32 captured national London 55 52 attention, another story 57 49 Monica Yant has surfaced involving an Madrid 68 46 Miami Beach 74 70 incident closer to home. News Editor Moscow 36 34 Information that an New Orleans 76 50 New York 56 43 honored Indianapolis police officer once shot Paris 59 54 and killed a robbery suspect has caused cries Philadelphia 56 43 of foul play from protestors calling for the Portland. Ore 60 32 Rome 70 39 police chief to step down and strip the officer St Louis 70 51 of the award. San Francisco 56 46 South Bend 61 32 The officer had recently received a Medal of V V Cold front Showers Thunden Snow Sunny Tokyo 72 48 Valor for risking his life to “protect and serve” 'O' Warm front Washington. D C 64 39 I Low pressure Flurries - d Ice the community. But while protecting and Static front Cloudy PL serving his community last summer, this Cloudy officer shot and killed a robbery suspect. ©1991 Accu-Wealher, Inc. It sounds like routine police work, within a line of duty that is, will continue to be filled with violence and life-threatening situations. Read on. TODAY AT A GLANCE Although both the robbery victim and police reported that the suspect was armed, no WORLD opposing the 1949 revolution that brought the weapon was found after the incident. Communists to power — is the charge most often brought This mystery has protestors up in arms, against political activists. claiming the killing of an unarmed man Triumphant revivals on fashion front ______should in no way be associated with an honor ■ PARIS (AP) — Yves Saint Laurent got a rousing of valor for the officer involved. ovation Wednesday after a triumphal show of winter NATIONAL What the chief has done is apologize. He ready-to-wear. For many, it was a perfect end to a made a public statement yesterday, saying he confusing week of variegated fashions. Skirt lengths were mainly and sanely just above the knee or a bit below — a House members urge end to policy regretted presenting the award to the officer ■WASHINGTON (AP) — Forty House members are length most women over 30 wear in the streets, and because of “the message it sent to our urging President Bush to end the policy of barring ho­ bound to please his fans. Saint Laurent dusted off some African-American community.” mosexuals and lesbians from the military. “You have of his form er ideas and gave them sparkle for the 1990s. Suddenly, the focus is not the possible praised our service personnel. ... We urge you to afford New pant lengths at Saint Laurent were cropped to mid­ wrongdoing on behalf of the police depart­ our gay and lesbian troops that same well-deserved re­ calf, or knicker style, a bit like plus-fours from the ment, but that the suspect killed in the spect and to end the military’s shameful discrimination,” Scottish golf links and worn with neatly-cut jackets, tarn shooting was African-American. But should it the lawmakers said in a letter dated last Friday. The o’shanters, long fringed tartan stoles. The few downers of be? letter was circulated by Rep. Gerry Studds, D-Mass., who the collection — camouflage-print outfits of tunics, skirts, It seems that in Indianapolis, the issue isn’t, is an acknowledged homosexual. Air National Guard Maj. pants — were obviously a nod to memories of the Gulf as it should be, that the officer may have Doug Hart, a Defense Department public affairs officer, War, lacking the usual YSL rigorous approach, though reacted inappropriately by shooting someone said that under the department policy homosexuality is perhaps appealing to casual dressers.The designer who could have been unarmed. incompatible with military service. “We are not aware of walked down the runway with his models looking fine If proper police procedures had in some any homosexuals who have served in Operation Desert fettle after several seasons of shaky health and way been violated by the officer involved, it is Shield or Operation Desert Storm,” Hart said. “If we were depression. doubtful he would have been honored in the aware, the people would be separated from the military.” first place. He would have been reprimanded. The issue is that the man he shot was Chinese court upholds Iona terms U.S. Forgives 70 percent Polish debt_____ African-American. ■WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush welcomed ■ (AP) — Beijing’s highest court has rejected Somehow, this doesn’t seem right. Polish President Lech Walesa today with the news that the appeals of three intellectuals sentenced to prison for This is made more evident by the very fact the United States w ill forgive 70 percent of the debt their roles in the 1989 pro-democracy movement, that in his apology, the police chief cited his Poland owes to the U.S. “We want your economic relatives said Wednesday. They said they were told by regret for the racial aspects of the incident, transformation to succeed and your new democracy to telephone that the Beijing Higher People’s Court upheld and not for the incident itself. flourish and we call on other nations to follow our ex­ 13-year sentences imposed on Chen Ziming and Wang If the killing was so great an issue, why ample,” Bush told Walesa in an arrival ceremony on the Juntao, convicted six weeks ago of sedition and coun­ does it only come to light when the officer is White House lawn. Walesa said Poland “is becoming a terrevolutionary propaganda and incitement. Families honored, and when the suspect’s race is country of new economic opportunity,” and invited the have yet to receive formal written notification of the revealed. United States to participate. Bush said Secretary of decision, the relatives said, speaking on condition of not Commerce Robert Mosbacher would lead an investment being further identified. The court last week rejected the It seems there are greater issues at hand mission to Poland this summer.Walesa, speaking in Polish appeal of Ren Wanding, sentenced in January to seven here, issues that cities like Indianapolis need through an interpreter, said the action reduced “a major years for counterrevolutionary propaganda and to face. part of our debt burden.” incitement, they said. Counterrevolution — the crime of What needs to be addressed is the underlying societal reasons that can explain why the suspect was African-American and OF INTEREST how he, and others, ended up in that position. ■Yearbook positions are being assigned. Pick up ■Seniors: Today is the last day to talk with Silvia And forcing the police chief to resign cer­ applications at 315 LaFortune for staff positions on the Bauza of the ND Volunteers for Puerto Rico about doing a tainly won’t address this issue. 1991-1992 Dome. Questions - call 239-7524. year of service. Stop in at the CSC today, March 21, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The opinions expressed in the Inside ■The Women’s Resource Committee of the GSU Column are those of the author and notpresents “An Evening of Poetry: By Women, For ■ Habitat for Humanity w ill be holding a House necessarily those o f the Observer. Everyone” at 7 p.m. in the 20th century gallery of the Raising this Saturday, March 23. Volunteers are needed - Suite Museum. A reception will follow. no experience necessary. Call Paula Thompson at 237- 0788.

Today’s Staff: Graphics MARKET UPDATE ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY News Pat Midden Peter Loftus Megan Junius View point Circulation ■ In 1908: Frenchman Henri Farman carried a passenger in Rich Riley Chris Hanely a biplane for the first time ever. S ports Lu Medeiros YESTERDAY’S TRADING/March 20,1991 Rich Kurz Business VOLUME IN SHARES NYSE INDEX . ■ In 1910: U.S. Senate granted ex-president Theodore Colleen Gannon 201.31 0.65 S coreboard Rich Riley 196.81 Million Roosevelt a yearly pension of $10,000. Rolando De Aguiar Mary Murphy Lab Tech S&P COMPOSITE Johm Rock ■ In 1927: Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists took the Chinese |UP| 367.92 ih 1.33 Production System s DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS city of Shanghai in a victorious march north from Canton. Melissa Cusack Cesar Capella 850 Jeanne Blasi Brian Stalter 2,872.03 04.21 ■ In 1941 : The last Italian post in East Libya fell to the Bri­ PRECIOUS METALS tish. DOWN GOLD TT $1.50 to $ 363.00/oz. ■ In 1965: In Alabama, 3,200 people began a freedom The Observer (USPS 599 2-4000) is published Monday march from Selma to Montgomery. through Friday except during exam and vacation periods. The SILVER O 8.5c to $ 3.936/oz. Observer is a member of the Associated Press. All reproduction ■ In 1985: Israelis killed 21 in Shiite villages in Lebanon, in rights are reserved. eluding two members of the CBS News Team. Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer page 3 Jesuit speaks on priests’ murders in El Salvador

BY CHRISTINE WALSH one of the witnesses, Lucia gated “half-truths” regarding sities, Tipton said. it becomes a “political crime” News writer Barrera de Cerna, who had fled the facts of the case. Other problems with adminis­ and falls back under the juris­ to the U.S. The constitutional and tradi­ tering justice in El Salvador diction of the m ilitary, said Justice will not be served in Cerna was a housekeeper at tional role of the Salvadoran persist. For example, in that Tipton. the case of the 1989 Jesuit the university who was in her military has been a factor in country, the testimonies of co­ The U.S. should do three martyrs of El Salvador, accord­ residence, approximately 50 hindering the investigation. conspirators cannot be used things with regard to El Sal­ ing to Father Paul Tipton, yards from the Jesuit’s back­ Unlike the American military, against each other. vador, according to Tipton: president of the Association of yard, when the murders took the military in El Salvador is not Additionally, members of the • Rethink its entire policy vis- Jesuit Colleges and Universities. place. Neither of the witnesses responsible to civilian authority; Salvadoran military cannot be a-vis Latin America In a lecture and discussion ti­ saw the murders, but they did members are trained in a put on trial. The military did fi­ • “Cease and desist” in its tled, “The 1989 Jesuit Martyrs hear the gunshots and the sol­ special military school and are nally surrender the members of support of the Latin American of El Salvador,” Tipton re­ diers talking— they were too responsible only for protecting the military who were allegedly military structures counted the events that tran­ afraid to look out their win­ the constitution. involved in the massacre, in • Force de militarization of spired in the Jesuit residences dows. For example, if the govern­ Jan. 1990, however, they cannot countries like El Salvador at the University of Central Tipton and others feel that the ment in power is not interpret­ be put on trial until they are re­ “The only thing we can do is America (UCA) on Nov. 16, 1989 U.S. and El Salvador have been ing the constitution consistent moved from the military. to keep the pressure on. . . not and commented on the current obstructing justice in the case. with the military’s interpreta­ “There is no possibility for to be vengeful. ” said Tipton. In status and potential outcomes In a letter to U.S. Secretary of tion, then the military has a justice in that country (El Sal­ the cases of Archbishop Romero of the case. State James Baker, Tipton duty to overthrow that gov­ vador),” said Tipton. “They op­ (martyred in San Salvador 11 According to testimony by claimed that Cerna was abused ernment. erate under a system of Ro­ years ago) and the six 1989 witnesses and the suspects, be­ and manipulated during an In the throes of the current man/Napoleonic law.” Jesuit martyrs, “there is no tween the hours of 1 a.m. and 3 exhausting four-day inter­ civil war in El Salvador, the “There is no protection within hope. . . but maybe we can a.m. on Nov. 16, 1989, members rogation by U.S. and Salvadoran military has sought to the system for judges and good cause some change in the of the Salvadoran m ilitary officials. “eliminate the intellectual au­ ones are assassinated," Tipton (Salvadoran) system of justice raided the UCA campus and Last month, a committee in thors of the revolution,” said said. “The only function of for the people of that country, ” methodically killed the six the Spanish parliament accused Tipton. Father Ignacio Ellacu- lawyers in El Salvador is to give he said. priests living in the Jesuit resi­ the armed forces of El Salvador ria, president of the UCA, was and take bribes.” The lecture was one of the dences along with two employ­ and the U.S. government of de­ one such intellectual author and Furthermore, justice cannot events commemorating the 11th ees of the university. liberately obstructing the legal threat to the military. be served when, for example, of anniversary of the martyrdom Three days after the mas­ investigation of the murders. The goal of the UCA, accord­ the 32 bullet cases found at the of Archbishop Oscar Romero of sacre, the blame was shifted Tipton said he has received ing to Tipton, in addition to scene of the crime, only one has San Salvador, sponsored by the from the military to guerillas “no satisfactory explanations” creating an intellectual envi­ been submitted as evidence. Institute for Pastoral and Social from the FMLN, a Marxist rev­ from the U.S. State Department ronment, is to be “an agent of Tipton said. Ministry, the Office of Campus olutionary group. regarding the interrogation of change with a focus on political, Currently, judges feel there is Ministry, Keenan Hall, According to Tipton, there are Cerna. “Frankly, I am shocked social and economic justice for enough evidence to bring the Pasquerilla East Hall, the only two witnesses. Tipton with the State Department and people of the area (El Sal­ case to trial. However, another Institute for International Peace became deeply involved in the the (Salvadoran) embassy,” he vador).” This “proactive” char­ problem with the system is that Studies and the Helen Kellogg case a month after the mas­ said. They have exhibited com­ ter is much more progressive if more than 20 people are in­ Institute for International sacre, when he took custody of plete “ineptitude” and propa­ than those of American univer­ volved in a crime in El Salvador Affairs. Music professors to present violin, cello recital today

Special to The Observer In addition to her faculty ap­ Viruosi, which performs exten­ University, where she studied Young Artists Competition. pointment, Plummer is violinist sively in the United States, Eu­ with Janos Starker and Fritz Violinist Carolyn Plummer for both the resident Notre rope and Mexico, in 1987. Magg. She was selected by Gre­ Buransksas has toured and cellist Karen Buranskas, Dame String Trio and the Notre This past summer she served gor Pitigorsky to attend his throughout the U.S., as w ell as both associate professors of Dame Piano Quartet. She holds as concertmaster of the Grand master class at the University of Brazil, England, Switzerland, music at the University of Notre a bachelor’s degree in music Teton Music Festival and was a Southern California. This was Japan, West Germany, and Dame, w ill present a faculty from the New England guest artist in the Steamboat succeeded by a master’s degree Canada. recital today at 8 p.m. in Conservatory, where she was a Springs Chamber Music Festival from Yale University, where Washington Hall. student of Joseph Silverstein. in Colorado and the Great Lakes Branskas studied with Aldo Her recitals with pianist Plummer and Burnaskas will From 1977 through 1986, she Festival at Notre Dame. Parisot. W illiam Cerny, professor of perform a program including held the titled position of assis­ Plummer also has performed She received many awards music at Notre Dame, were “Sonata for Violin and Cello in D tant concertmaster of the at the Aspen Music Festival and and distinctions during her ca­ highly acclaimed on major Major” by Bocccherini, “Duo for Houston Symphony Orchestra, the Atlanta Virtuosi Chamber reer, including first prize in the campuses throughout the Violin and Cello" by Martinu, w hich she joined in 1974. She Music Festival at Bates College. Aldo Parisot International Cello United States. She also has “Passacaglia for Violin and was a frequent soloist with the In 1970 she was awarded sec­ Competition in Brazil, Concert earned impressive reviews for Cello” by handel/J. halvorsen, symphony as well as an active ond place in the Coleman Artists Build in New York, the numerous performances, in­ and “Doe for Violin and Cello ” recitalist and teacher through­ Chamber Music Competition in Rossanna Enlow Young Artists cluding her debuts at both Op 7 by Kodaly. out the area. Pasadena, Calif.. Competition in Evansville, and Carnegie Hall in New York and The concert is free and open She joined the acclaimed Buransksas received her the Leta Snow String Competi­ Wigmore Hall in London. to the public. chamber ensemble Atlanta bachelor’s degree from Indiana tion and the North Carolina Beirut paper: Hostages to be released BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — A The report in the Ad-Diyar cleric. It said such a release Beirut newspaper reported newspaper came just hours would be an “ encouraging pre­ Wednesday that American and after the Islamic Jihad for the lude” to the group’s freeing its The Rites of Spring other Western hostages held by Liberation of Palestine, which captives. pro-Iranian factions in Le­ claims to hold two American Ad-Diyar, which is based in For banon would be released this hostages, demanded that Israel Christian cast Beirut, docs not week. release a pro-Iranian Shiite have a record of accurate re­ porting on the 13 Westerners missing in Lebanon, who in­ 1989 ACADEMY AWARD clude six Americans. WINNER 1989" n o m in e e CANNES FILM FESTIVAL BEST FOREIGN------Its report came two days J u n io r s SPECIAL JURY PRIZE LANGUAGE FILM after a meeting in Tehran be­ tween President Hashemi Raf- sanjani and Fathi Shaqaqi, who was described by Iran’s official “SMART, AMBITIOUS, Islamic Republic News Agency as “ an official from Islamic Ji­ Bookstore SATIRICAL” h a d .” —David Ansen, NEWSWEEK Islamic Jihad, or Islamic holy war, claims to hold American hostages Terry Anderson and Christmas In April SOARING, Thomas Sutherland. Islamic Ji­ had for the Liberation of MULTIFACETED Palestine — a different group Blue-Gold Game — claims to hold Americans DELIGHT” Alann Steen and Jesse Turner. —Sheila Benson. LOS ANGELES TIMES Anderson, 43, chief Middle East correspondent for The As­ “BRILLIANT, A 10. sociated Press, is the longest- Resume Submitted rOU'LL REMEMBER IT FOR TEiRS TO CONE: held foreign hostage. He was —Gary Franklin. KABC-TV kidnapped in west Beirut March 16, 1985. To Career and A FILM BY DENYS ARCAND Placement Office Ad-Diyar’s front-page report said the six American hostages JESUS OF MONTREAL would be released Friday at an For Resume Books : "*p An O R l o n Release unnamed hotel in Beirut in the cutssics presence of Interior Minister Sami al-Khatib and the com­ Cinema at the Snite mander of Syria’s military FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 7:15, 9:45 intelligence in Lebanon, Brig. Gen. Ghazi Kenaan. page 4 The Observer Thursday, March 21, 1991 Serbian stays on as head of Yugoslav presidency BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) The chairmanship of the publics seek a loose federation Jovic’s resignation. announced his resignation. — A Serbian leader withdrew council rotates among the rep­ of states in Yugoslavia, and his resignation Wednesday as resentatives from the six re­ have threatened to secede from Milosevic, who took over Ser­ He told Parliament on head of Yugoslavia’s presidency, publics and two autonomous the union if they fail. bia’s Communist Party in 1987 Wednesday that the presi­ in a move that could help end a provinces that make up Yu­ and was confirmed as president dency’s refusal to accept emer­ deadlock over the collective goslavia. But Serbian leaders, who are of the. republic in December gency measures “was aimed at leadership of the patchwork closely allied with some of the popular elections, has faced the paralyzing the Yugoslav army, nation. Croatian representative Stipe nation’s m ilitary chiefs, seek to biggest challenge of his career and preventing it from ensuring Borisav Jovic had announced Mesic, whose republic is bitterly maintain a strong central gov­ in a series of protests the past a peaceful settlement of the Friday he would leave the eight- at odds with Serbia, is sched­ ernment. two weeks. Yugoslav crisis and avoiding member federal presidency uled to chair the presidency civil war.” after failing to persuade other after Jovic. The Serbian Parliament is On March 9, two people died members to declare a nation­ dominated by the Socialist Party and 120 were injured in clashes He accused “ anti-Socialist wide state of emergency. “It’s for you to decide and I of Serbian ruler Slobodan between police and about forces’’ of seeking the Serbian officials and their al­ will respect any decision,” Jovic Milosevic, but recent anti-Milo­ 100,000 anti-Communist “Lebanonization” of Yugoslavia. lies pressed three other repre­ told the legislature moments sevic protests have put pressure protesters. sentatives on the council to before it voted to reject his de­ on the Parliament. Jovic also denounced the fed­ subsequently quit, which cision to step down. Army troops were called in for eral government of Premier threatened to leave the council Some members were worried about 24 hours following the Ante Markovic, a champion of w ithout a quorum. Jovic’s return to the presi­ that Jovic’s withdrawal from the unrest. After continuing market-oriented economic re­ But on Wednesday, Serbia’s dency ensures it will continue to presidency could lead to civil protests in Serbia, Jovic — a forms. Parliament refused to accept function. It is also likely to war by shutting down an close ally of Milosevic — asked Jovic’s resignation. Jovic ac­ mean the resumption of the important forum for debate the other presidency members Speaking in the federal Par­ cepted the Parliament vote and bickering among Serbia and the among the republics. to declare a state of emergency liament earlier Wednesday, said he would serve on the reform-minded republics of across the nation. Markovic had said the critics of presidency until his one-year Slovenia and Croatia. Although the opposition holds his reforms “were only inter­ term as chairm an expires May 56 of Serbian Parliament’s 250 When a m ajority of presidency ested in preserving their 15. The two westernmost re- seats, only 17 deputies voted for members refused his call, Jovic power.”

sexual dysfunction and marital on the man’s head,” he said. Osanka feels that everyone is pornography to some degree," break-up, most therapists who Pornography exhibits a fan­ experienced with pornography he said. Porn had used it now apologize for tasy. Most rape-pornography and that all who have read having done so, Osanka said. films begin with the female continued from page 1 Playboy have committed a Osanka’s lecture, “Does “Most heterosexual pornog­ struggling against her crime. Pornography Influence Behav­ use it that way now, ” he added. raphy is oriented toward what "attacker” but end with her ior?", was co-sponsored by the Because most pornography producers feel are male sexual verbally and explicitly “asking “We’re all experts on this be­ Student Union Board and the represents “forcible sex for norms ... The toilet seat is never for more," he said. cause we’ve all had exposure to Center for Social Concerns. male dominance”, and causes Business continued from page 1 was, in part, a result of the Apple Computer, Inc firm ’s role as both a producer and a supplier, according to Fitzgerald. They suggested that the company reduce their debt by selling oft the manufacturing i. Open House! part and that it utilize its com­ puter system, he said.

The team expressed satisfac­ tion with their effort and with the competition. “It helps you to learn how to present ideas," said Manuel. “It mainly teaches Come see our new printers and eniov some refreshements! you how to think on your feet,” % added Fitzgerald.

O’Rourke agreed. “It’s a real- w orld event,” he said. “ It seems artificial, ... but in the business a world, problems of a large and complex sort ... present them ­ m m selves with great regularity.” hd Mountford, a native of Kin- nelon, N.J. and a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, served almost six years aboard naval .. cruisers and destroyers. Manuel graduated from Tulane —— BH University and spent three ... years in public relations and m arketin g w ith the N.Y. Yan­ i kees. Fitzgerald, an ND alumni n S t y l e W r i t e r P ersonal LaserW riter LS from Alton, 111., has worked w ith A m e rica n C ynam id Co. cz> 360 dpi - inkjet technology 300 dpi - laser printer and Whirlpool Corp. QuickDraw/TrueType fonts QuickDraw/True Type fonts The team defeated seven other teams to win a intra-col- $380.00 $830.00 lege competition earlier this month to earn the right to % compete in the annual inter­ collegiate event this week. O’Rourke and Clay Smith, a professor of management, pro­ D a t e : Friday, March 22, 1991 vided help in preparing the team for the competition, ac­ cording to team members. T i m e : 10:00am - 2:00pm

“This is wonderful prepara­ P l a c e : tion for life in the business N O T R E D A M E world,” concluded O’Rourke. COMPUTER STORE

Offic*. of University Computing Correction Computing Center/Math Building In an article in Wednes­ P h o n e : 2 3 9 - 7 4 7 7 day’s issue, Jack Powers was incorrectly identified as I Hours: Mon. - Fri., 9 : 0 0 - 5 :0 0 a former editor-in-chief of the Chicago Tribune. Pow ers is a fo rm e r Apple representatives will be available to answer your questions! executive editor of the 5 South Bend Tribune. The Observer regrets the error. # l*T h e pow er to be your best- Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer page 5 Supreme Court bars ‘fetal protection’ practices WASHINGTON (API — The age who could not prove they “It is no more appropriate for gest a fetal protection policy Beverly LaHaye of Concerned Supreme Court said Wednesday were infertile from certain the courts than it is for in­ might be legally justified in Women for America, another that employers may not adopt hazardous but top-paying jobs. dividual employers to decide some instances. conservative group, said “fetal protection" policies that In other decisions Wednesday, whether a woman’s reproduc­ “I’m jubilant. The victory ap­ “protecting a woman’s body is a bar women of child-bearing age the court: tive role is more important to pears airtight,” said Alison far greater value" than pre­ from certain hazardous jobs, —Set aside a $44,000 award herself and her family than her Wetherfield of the National Or­ venting sex discrimination. calling such rules illegal sex won by a nursing student who economic role," he said. ganization for Women’s Legal LaHaye said she was espe­ discrimination. was kicked out of a Rhode Is­ “ Congress has left this choice to Defense Fund. “If this policy cially disappointed by the votes “Decisions about the welfare land college for being too fat. the woman as hers to make. ” had been upheld, millions of of Souter and O’Connor. of future children must be left —Barred Americans injured Blackmun was joined by two women could have suffered.” “It’s not known whether he’s a to the parents who conceive, in foreign countries from suing fellow liberals, Justices Thur- Shirley Sagawa of the Na­ good conservative justice. ” she bear, support and raise them U.S. employees based abroad. good Marshall and John Paul tional Women’s Law Center said about Souter. “ He was not rather than to the employers —Ruled that the secretary of Stevens; Justice Sandra Day called it “a landmark case for a good conservative in this who hire those parents,” the labor, not a federal safety and O’Connor, the court’s only women.” case.” court said in the decision that health review board, has the woman member; and Justice Gloyce Qualls, a Johnson Con­ will affect millions of working last word on what federal regu­ David Souter, the court’s newest trols employee in Milwaukee Eleanor Smeal of the liberal women nationwide. lations for on-the-job safety member. who underwent sterilization in Fund for a Feminist Majority The justices had been told require. Chief Justice William Rehn- 1983 to keep her job, also praised the ruling. “We hope that at least 15 major corpora­ In the fetal-protection case, quist and Justices Byron White praised the decision. the pivotal Souter and O’Connor tions — including such indus­ five of the court’s nine members and Anthony Kennedy voted to “ It took a long time," she said. votes will continue to keep a trial giants as General Motors, said Congress had banned all strike down the policy, but said “To be honest, it was a few majority for women’s votes,” Monsanto and duPont — have sex-specific fetal protection the court went too far when it people against a big corporation she said. fetal protection policies. policies. ruled that fetal protection poli­ and I didn’t think we really had The court unanimously struck “Concern for a woman’s ex­ cies never can be justified as a a chance.” Souter’s vote is considered a down a policy imposed since isting or potential offspring “bona fide occupational quali­ But Judie Brown of the con­ key for the court’s future direc­ 1982 by the Milwaukee-based historically has been the excuse fication." servative American Life League tion on legalized abortion. Johnson Controls Inc., the na­ for denying women equal em­ Justice Antonin Scalia, in a said that “far from being a vic­ Lawyers on both sides said tion's largest manufacturer of ployment opportunities,” Justice separate concurring opinion, tory for women, this decision Wednesday’s ruling offers no automobile batteries. The policy Harry Blackmun wrote for the said he generally agreed with turns women into economic firm insights into Souter’s views banned women of child-bearing majority. Blackmun but seemed to sug­ robots.” on the abortion issue. Eric Clapton’s 4-year-old son dies after fall in N.Y. NEW YORK (AP) — The 4 1/2- Condominiums on East 57th year-old son of rock guitarist Street. Eric Clapton died Wednesday Clapton, a founding member after he fell out the window of a of Cream and Derek & the 53rd-floor apartment, police Dominos, is generally consid­ said. ered to be one of the great rock Conor Clapton fell shortly guitar stylists. He also wrote after 11 a.m. and landed on the many hit songs, including roof of a four-story building “Layla” and “Let it Rain.” next door, according to Officer Clapton won a Grammy Kim Royster. Award this year as best male The boy’s mother, Italian rock vocalist for his song “ Bad television star Lori Del Santo, Love.” Clapton’s agent, tour and a housekeeper were in the manager and bodyguard were apartment when he fell, killed in a helicopter accident Royster said. last summer that also killed Eric Clapton was in New York blues guitarist Stevie Ray when the accident occurred, Vaughan. but he was not in the apartment, said his publicist, Clapton was divorced from Ronnie Lippin in Los Angeles. Patti Boyd Harrison — the ex- Clapton was examined and wife of Clapton’s friend, former released from the emergency Beatle George Harrison — in room at Lenox Hill Hospital 1988. Boyd was granted an un­ afterward, said hospital contested divorce on the spokeswoman Ann Warner. She grounds of Clapton’s adultery said his condition didn’t require w ith Del Santo. Their son was immediate medical attention born in 1986. but wouldn’t provide additional details. The housekeeper had just fin­ ished cleaning the window SECURITY BEAT pane and had left it open to air out the room when Conor ran past him and fell out the 4-by-6 MONDAY, MAR. 18 1 a.m. Security assisted a graduate foot window, police said. student to St. Joseph’s Medical Cen­ Del Santo and Conor were ter for injuries sustained in a bicycle AP Photo accident. staying in the apartment during 1:14 p.m. A University employee Iraqi soldier questioned their visit to New York from reported the theft of cash from a , Lippin said. She did not vending machine in the pit area of the American soldiers question an Iraqi soldier who was among a group of Iraqi soldiers attempting to seek Hesburgh Library. asylum across the border of the northernmost allied checkpoint above Safwan, Iraq Tuesday. U.S. know who owns the apartment 3:58 p.m. A Pangborn resident in the sleek, modern Galleria reported that Pangborn Hall Food soldiers at the checkpoint are questioning and then turning back all Iraqi military personnel. sales had been broken into and that cash and other items had been taken. The incident occurred sometime over the break. 6:40 p.m. Security assisted a Grace resident to St. Joseph's Medi­ cal Center for injuries sustained play­ The Christian Conscience: ing basketball. 8:40 p.m. An off-campus student reported the theft of his Hewlett- Ethical Perspectives on W ar and Peace Packard calculator from a classroom in Cushing Hall. 10:48 p.m. Security assisted a University employee to Memorial Hospital h r medical treatment. FORMATION OF CONSCIENCE TUESDAY, MAR. 19 12:40 p.m. A St. Edward's resi­ dent reported the theft ol his Pana­ sonic portable stereo from his dorm room. The stereo was later found. AND CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION 2:36 p.m. Security responded to an automobile accident at the corner of Old Juniper Road and Douglas Road. Both vehicles sustained prop­ erty damage. 5:02 p.m. A University employee Dr. Todd Whitmore reported the theft of speakers and tapes from his automobile while parked in the B16 lot. Assistant Professor, Theology. WED., MAR. 20 12:11 a.m. Security assisted a Grace resident to St. Joseph's Medi­ cal Center for injuries sustained while Tonight- March 21 playing basketball. 12:52 a.m. A Walsh resident re­ 7:30 p.m. ported receiving an obscene phone call. 4:39 a.m. Security Issued a cita­ LaFortune Student Center Tom Dooley Room, First Floor tion to a South Bend resident for speeding on West Edison Road. page 6 The Observer Thursday, March 21, 1991 Emory U. to review faculty discipline in light of sexual harrassment case ATLANTA (AP) — Emory most serious allegation was that trivial. He also criticized the University agreed to form a he violated a law school policy student protest. committee to review faculty that guarantees students “Students who did not prevail disciplinary procedures after a anonymity on exams. want to change by mob action professor accused of kissing Two women also alleged Or­ the legal process which they women students without their dover kissed them without their engaged in,” he said. “I think * V consent was cleared of sexual consent. that is highly inappropriate and harassment. Law Dean Howard Hunter very, very dangerous.” About 200 law students boy­ said a three-member committee Laney said the review com­ cotted class Tuesday and of professors found that Or­ mittee will include students and packed a university auditorium dover engaged in faculty and will report by the to protest the decision not to “inappropriate conduct” but did end of the semester. discipline law professor Abra­ not violate the school’s sexual ham Ordover. harassment policy. Hunter said Jeff Straus, a third-year law President James Laney told Ordover was reprimanded. school student, said he made a the students the university The reprimand bars Ordover formal complaint to the univer­ would comply with a student from touching or extending so­ sity after listening “to a number government request to form a cial invitations to students. He of women who were upset and committee to review the man­ is also barred from talking to teary-eyed as they recounted ner in which hearings of alleged women students in his office their experiences” with misconduct by faculty members with his door closed after Ordover. are conducted. school hours, and he must seek At least 13 women have filed counseling. Straus called the university’s * informal complaints with the Ordover denied the allega­ response “ totally unaccept­ university against Ordover. The tions, calling some of them able.” ■■ AP Photo ISU student killed in elevator accident Ram adan An Arab man sits at the site of the old Roman city of Philadelphia, TERRE HAUTE, Ind. — A 23- apparently used a coat hanger ton said. overlooking the Jordanian capital of Amman during midday prayers year-old Indiana State Univer­ to gain access to the top of The man was killed instantly, Tuesday. Fasting is known as one of the five pillars of Islam, and sity junior was killed early some elevators. The victim was Newton said. No one else was during the Holy month of Ramadan, which began this week, all Wednesday while riding the top evidently playing on the injured. Moslems are asked to participate in the practice. of an elevator in a m en’s dor­ elevator with three or four The body was taken to a mitory, officials said. other students, and was moving Terre Haute area hospital for Michael John Deliduka, 23, of from one elevator to another. an autopsy. Funeral arrange­ Shalimar, Fla., was killed at The elevator the victim had ments were pending. about 3:30 a.m. at Jones Hall, been moving to apparently had Newton said he’s heard re­ said ISU spokesman John New­ been stuck and he was trying to ports that riding atop elevators ton. free it. The elevator activated, is a fad going around some col­ According to Newton, the pinning him between the car­ lege campuses. iX d M O Q O U K S student was part of a group that riage and a fixed object, New­ Harvard moves forward in female hiring CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — 1990, only one less than in sees H arvard’s affirm ative ac­ Harvard University has moved 1989. But the hiring rate for tion policy. forward in hiring female junior female faculty compared to men faculty but still lags in the was down by 17.1 percent over Harvard plans to hire six new Love, Mom, number of senior women schol­ the previous year, the report senior women faculty members ars and minority appointments, said. over the next two years to make Dad, a study showed. Harvard presents the findings the arts and sciences faculty The percentage of female ju ­ to the U.S. Department of Labor reflect the larger pool of women Chris and Toby nior professors in the Faculty of as required by law. scholars available, said Joseph Arts and Sciences increased 3.3 Harvard ranks 15th in a pool McCarthy, assistant dean for percent to 33.2 percent in 1990, of 17 prestigious schools in its academic planning. the Harvard Affirmative Action percentage of female tenured Plan reported. faculty, according to the report. “Harvard has made very good Harvard also ranks ninth in the progress, ” Ronald Quincy, the ranking for percentage of university’s associate vice minority professors. president, said Wednesday. But the annual study reported Quincy said Harvard had done T HELP CELEBRATE CENTRAL AMERICA WEEK that the number of senior well in other hiring areas and women scholars and minority was committed to further appointments at all levels failed improvements. to make significant strides. Four women were granted “We are certainly not going to WEDNESDAY. MARCH 20 lifetime appointments in the remain in the middle of the *8:00 PM KEENAN / STAND FORD CHAPEL arts and sciences at Harvard in pack,” said Quincy, who over­ UPDATE: THE 1989 JESUIT MARTYRS OF EL SALVADOR - FR PAUL TIPTON SJ. ASSOCIATION OF JESUIT UNIVERSITIES

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DUE DATE: CENTRAL AMERICA WEEK IS SPONSORED BY: OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENT NETWORK. INSTITUTE FOR PASTORAL MINISTRY, CILA, WOMEN UNITED, INSTITUTE FOR PEACE Applications available and due by STUDIES, LEAGUE OF UNITED LATIN AMERICAN CITIZENS, KELLOGG INSTITUTE. PE. KEENAN, GRACE. STUDENT GOVERNMENT, CAMPUS MINISTRY, CENTER FOR SOCIAL WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27,1991 to the CONCERNS, AND MANY, MANY INDIVIDUALS IN WHOM WE WISH TO EXPRESS OUR Student Government Secretary, 2nd floor THANKS FOR THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS. LaFortune. Interviews will be scheduled. Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer page 7 Car bomb explodes in a B JL Beirut suburb; kills 8 BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — A car bomb exploded in a Chris­ Mediterranean tian suburb Wednesday as the I S e a l defense minister drove by, killing eight people and hurling the m inister’s armor-plated Antelias Mercedes upside down onto the sidewalk. A bodyguard was killed, and West East CAR BOMB at least 21 people, including the EXPLODES minister, were reported injured. A police explosives expert called the attack an “obvious attempt to assassinate” Defense Minister Michel Murr, the day before a deadline he helped set for Christian and Muslim Beirut militias to disband. A govern­ In tl. Airport ment official said later that the deadline was off. The disbanding of militias is part of the government’s plan to secure the end of a 16-year-old 2 miles 25 miles civil war that has claimed 25 km The Observer/Todd Flint 130,000 lives. The bomb seemed aimed at Warm weather - warm smiles disrupting the meeting on the Students enjoy the springtime temperatures at the Shaheen-Mestrovic Memorial near O’Shaugnessy plan by the Syrian-backed gov­ ernment of President Elias Hrawi. Antelias, 2 1/2 miles north of Murr, a Christian, suffered downtown, is within the bound­ Michael Jackson, Sony sing big bucks neck and head injuries. He was aries of the newly reunited NEW YORK (AP) — Sony which only Sony can provide.” treated and went to the meet­ capital and is policed by the Corp. demonstrated its awe­ The agreement marks the lat­ ing. In a live radio interview regular army and police. some power in the entertain­ est example of a trend reshap­ afterward, he said such attacks The car bombing, a frequent ing entertainment: the corpo­ will not hinder government ef­ phenomenon during the civil ment industry Wednesday by announcing a long-term con­ rate marriages of Japanese forts to rid the nation of lawless war, was the first this year. electronics companies that militias. tract with pop superstar Michael Jackson that could be produce the cameras, stereos, But after the five-hour meet­ It also was the first such at­ worth more than $1 billion in compact disk players and ing, Information Minister Min­ tack since the Lebanese army sales. video-cassette recorders, to the ister Albert Mansour an­ moved into the capital and its The agreement between creative forces that make the nounced the delay in the plan to immediate surroundings Dec. 3, films, records, CDs and videos disband the militias. creating a militia-free greater Jackson and the Japanese electronics giant’s U.S. played on them. Mansour said government of­ Beirut. Michael Jackson Sony, which produces some of ficials wanted more time to entertainm ent subsidiary Sony Software call for Jackson’s feel Michael Jackson is cer­ the best-known brand names in consider it. In 1990, car bomb explosions collaboration in projects tainly unique.” consumer electronics gear, was The others killed were not killed 20 people and wounded ranging from full-length feature It was one of the largest deals able to engineer the deal with immediately identified. Police 130, by police count. In 1989, films to his pwn record label. ever with a single entertainer Jackson partly because it owns said three soldiers and 17 civil­ 80 people were killed and 342 He also w ill do work for Sony in and dwarfed the $32 million the company he has recorded ian motorists were also injured wounded in nine such bomb­ television shows and possibly recording contract Michael’s with for 15 years. Sony pur­ in the morning blast in the sub­ ings. even video games. sister Janet signed earlier this chased the former CBS Records urb of Antelias. Jackson’s compensation in month with Virgin Records. Inc. for $2 billion in 1988. Lebanese soldiers searched No group has claimed re­ the agreement wasn’t “This is a great opportunity Antelias for bombers, but no sponsibility for the attacks. But disclosed, but was bound to for us to both continue and ex­ Other Japanese electronics arrests were made. Hundreds all were blamed on militiamen, vastly increase the wealth of a pand our relationship with giants have since moved to of weeping people crowded the entrenched outside the capital, modern-day legend who Michael Jackson,” Sony Soft­ match Sony’s strategy. The area seeking relatives. and some sympathizers. already is one of the best-paid ware president Michael Schul- most striking example is Mat­ recording stars in the world. hof said in a statement. sushita Industrial Electric Co., “ It is the first time that Sony “Sony and Michael Jackson maker of Panasonic, Quasar Dinner Theater has structured an agreement have had an outstanding rela­ and Technics electronic gear, presented by for an entertainer to cross from tionship in music,” he said. “We which earlier this year pur­ I he Alpha-Omega Flayers one of our mediums into look forward to expanding chased MCA Inc., owner of Uni­ another,” said Sony Software those horizons to include other versal Studios, for about $7 spokesman Robert Zito. “We entertainment opportunities. billion. Featuring an Evening of Fun, Under the terms of the Sony- Jackson arrangement disclosed Wit, and Comedy! Wednesday, Jackson will pro­ duce six albums, the first scheduled for release on Sony’s Epic label this summer. He also will work with famed directors S a m e T im e ranging from Richard Atten­ / borough to David Lynch in pro­ UTUDENT5, FACULTY, & STAFF ducing short films based on his songs. In addition, Jackson will star This Limited Edition Collectors in a full-length feature for 9 f e x t f e a r Columbia, which the Sony statement described as a Stein is now available to YOU at a “ musical action adventure” written by Caroline Thompson, GREATLY reduced p rice I I I author of “ Edward Scis- sorhands, ” and Larry Wilson, W ill make For id e a l Commencement co-author of “ Beetlejuice.” Jackson’s own record label will be known as “ Nation and parting gifts. Records, ” and he will sign new and established artists to STOP IN (MOW record on it. “Jackson’s new relationship with Sony could easily be worth United Beverage Co., __ more than $1 billion,” Sony H r 840 Prairie said in the statement. 287-1067 Zito said the $1 billion figure was a conservative estimate of retail sales derived from Jack­ $8.29 son’s work, based partly on the Monday, March 25 projected sales of the six al­ Alumni-Senior Club (Sets of 4-6 Further bums alone. Tickets: $6 at LaFortune Reduced) Bob Jones, one of Jackson’s Dinner: 6:30 pm For A ll You Do, agents at MJJ Productions in Show: 8:00 pm This Stein's Fo Los Angeles, said the contract is long-term but doesn’t specify YOU I No Age Restriction a time frame in years. Jones M l Dl N I UNION HOARD said he had no additional com­ The dinner will be catered by Classic ment beyond the Sony state­ ment. Spaghetti Works. From The King O f Beers1 page 8 Operation D esert Storm Thursday, March 21, 1991 Kuwait’s government resigns after failing to serve

KUWAIT CITY (AP) — Kuw ait’s cause of public criticism. Iraqis left, and he received only government has quit after The government’s resignation a lukewarm welcome from failing to provide basic services “ may ease the pressure that is Kuwaitis. Some believed he and reassert its authority in the building up,” al-Mutawa said. should have returned sooner. three weeks since the Persian “Let us hope it speeds up the However, pro-democracy ac­ Gulf War ended, officials said return to parliamentary elec­ tivists are not calling for the Wednesday. tions.” ouster of the emir, whose family However, there has been no The Cabinet had been sworn dominates the government and indication the ruling al-Sabah in June 20, 1990, only weeks has ruled Kuwait since 1759. family plans to give up any before the Iraqi invasion of Aug. The reformers are demanding power. 2. greater democratic freedoms, Crown Prince Saad Abdullah Kuwait’s emir. Sheik Jaber al- including elections and a al-Sabah, who dissolved the 22- Ahmed al-Sabah, was expected restoration of the Parliament. member Cabinet during a meet­ to instruct the crown prince, A Cabinet reshuffle, even if it ing Tuesday night, implied that who is also prime minister, to includes new faces from outside some former members of the fo rm a new governm ent. One the al-Sabah family, is unlikely Kuwaiti resistance might be in­ former government minister to satisfy ordinary citizens vited to join a new government, said that could take two weeks. frustrated with widespread but he made no promises. There was no word on how shortages in the emirate that He has previously promised to the government would function once flourished on oil revenue. restore the Parliament, sus­ in the interim. pended in 1986, but has never “This is the right time for a The government has so far suggested a date for elections. change,” the crown prince said been unable to restore electric­ The government’s resignation Wednesday morning at his res­ ity, water and other services. In won applause from Kuwaitis idence. many parts of Kuwait City, lines who have become increasingly He said the government had for food and water have been critical of its performance since done little planning during its growing each day. the U.S.-led forces drove Iraqi seven-month exile in Saudi AP Photo invaders from the emirate on Arabia. Its members fled Responding to the resigna­ Kuwait’s Crown Prince Saad Abdullah al-Sabah, who is also prime min­ Feb. 27. Kuwait when the Iraqis in­ tions, pro-democracy activist ister, leaves a private residence where he is staying in Kuwait City Sulayman al-Mutawa, the vaded. Eman al-Bedah said: “That’s Wednesday after he dissolved the cabinet in response to public anger planning minister, said the The emir did not return to good news. Maybe something over its inability to provide leadership and services after the Iraqi occu­ Cabinet resigned largely be­ Kuwait until 16 days after the will get done now.” pation. The prime minister offered the resignations late Tuesday night. Soldier finds fiance CNN’s Peter Arnett: I have no apologies’ WASHINGTON (AP) — Peter bombed shelter and examined it Arnett came home to a hero’s closely. dead on battlefield welcome Tuesday at the Na­ He said the only change he tional Press Club and defended made in his reports as the story BOSTON (AP) — An Army Perkins, who is from the his reporting from Baghdad as unfolded was to delete the word soldier whose job is Boston suburb of Whitman, vital to the American public. “civilian" in reference to the identifying Americans killed met Sapien while both were “ I have no apologies,” the facility and to simply call it a in the Gulf War recognized stationed in Germany. They Cable News Network corre­ shelter, he said. one as the man she planned had been engaged for eight spondent told a crowd of hun­ Iraqi censorship was a “fairly to marry next fall, her family months. dreds of journalists. tough” obstacle, said Arnett. said. Both were sent to Saudi He had been called an Iraqi But the American public Arm y Spc. Holly Perkins, 21, Arabia last fall with the 1st sympathizer by Sen. Alan Simp­ Peter Arnett learned substantial information said her fiance was killed by a Armored Division. Sapien was son, R-Wyo., and many other from his reports, despite the land mine while scavenging assigned to a combat unit, the Americans also had questioned have a long history of covering constraints, he said. for souvenirs in Kuwait, said father said, and Perkins why he had stayed behind to her foster father, Bill Norcott. worked in a casualty both sides of wars, from Viet­ report from the capital of a na­ nam to Central America to Though he wasn't scared for “She’s a basket case,” Nor­ identification center. tion with whom the United his life, it did give him pause cott told The Patriot Ledger of Afghanistan, he said. Norcott said he hadn’t met States was at war. when a U.S. cruise missile blew Quincy on Tuesday. “ They Sapien, but Perkins “talked Some of Arnett’s most con­ Arnett, the only U.S. journal­ up an auditorium 200 yards were planning to get married about him all the time in her troversial reports dealt with the ist to report from Iraq for the away. in the fall here in letters and on the phone.” U.S. bombing of what Iraq duration of the war, said he was Massachusetts.” called a civilian bomb shelter. Perkins will be home soon “amused, frankly” by Simpson’s He added that the near-misses The Army confirmed that on leave after a stopover in The Pentagon called it a com­ comments. But he added, “ I seemed to scare the ever­ Spc. Manuel Sapien Jr., 22, Germany. mand and control center for the guess the American people present Iraqi censors. “They died in a non-combat death Iraqi military. Scores of people weren’t quite clear about what didn’t have the future of Sunday. He was originally “Her captain is letting her fly were killed in the attack. we were doing.” journalistic freedom in their from Denver. out,” he said. Arnett questioned Iraqi offi­ The American news media cials repeatedly about the minds,” Arnett quipped.

“The Iraqi attempt to fly these from, where they were heading trols over Iraq since the cease­ have taken sanctuary in Iran. two fighter aircraft is a nor what their weapons or fire began, but refused to say In a second round of cease­ Gulf violation of terms agreed with ordnance were. how many planes were involved fire talks Sunday, allied military continued from page 1 Iraqi military officials during Asked whether there was a or what weapons they carry. commanders warned Iraqi m ilitary-to-m ilitary talks at warning to the Iraqi planes be­ Before the Gulf War began commanders not to move their Hoshyar Zebari said Wednesday Safwan, Iraq, on March 3,” the fore they were shot down, Jan. 17, Iraq was believed to warplanes for any reason. in London that Iraqi helicopters Central Command said. Gillett said: “No, there wasn’t, have about 700 warplanes. Last Secretary of State James and aircraft were bombarding Central Command spokesman quite frankly. The Iraqi gov­ week, Air Force Gen. Merrill Baker III has acknowledged the Kirkuk, causing hundreds of Maj. Keith Gillett said the F-15C ernment had been told very McPeak said the allies had con­ U.S. stance has a “collateral ef­ casualties. Kurdish guerrillas fired a single Sidewinder heat- clearly that such an attempt firmed the Iraqis lost 234 war­ fect” of hindering Baghdad claimed they had taken control seeking missile in the low- would lead to the shootdown of planes in the conflict and that from fighting the rebels. How­ of the city despite the Iraqi air altitude attack. aircraft.” another 141 were believed de­ ever, he has insisted the United attack, driving out the last army He said he could not say Pribyla said the United States stroyed in attacks on air shel­ States’ intent was not to help defenders in intensive street where the Iraqi planes took off has been flying combat air pa­ ters. In addition, 137 planes topple Saddam’s government. fighting. The U.S. F-15C that shot down the Iraqi jet was one of two sent by an AWACS radar plane to visually identify two Iraqi Su-22s before engaging X y E R , The Observer them. UNIVERSITY 1991 The second Iraqi warplane “landed on its own after the SUMMER SESSIONS is looking for interested and enthusiastic engagement,” the Central people to fill the following paid position: Command reported. BROCHURES N0UJ RURILRBLE

100 miles Graphics Editor Courses offered in areas of: IRAQ 100 km. •Excellent portfolio material Arts & Sciences SYRIA ^gnuR i •First hand experience with the workings of a IRAN Business Education newspaper. Professional Studies Applicants should have graphics experience on Macintosh computers. Interested people For more Information, call or write: should submit a resume and a one-page Xavier University Summer Sessions SAUDI ARABIA 3800 Victory Parkway personal statement to Lisa Eaton at the Cincinnati, Ohio 45207 Observer office by Friday, March 23 at 5pm. / o r e o ccu p ie d ' BY AW ED FORCES KUWAIT (513) 745-3601 Any questions should be directed to Lisa at

AP Xavier University is an academic community committed to equal opportunity for a l persons regardless 239-7471. ______of age, sex, race, religion, handicap, or national orgln. ______Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer page 9 Cuban pilot flies to U.S., The Black seeks political asylum Panthers KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) — A Ensign Robin Perkins of the Cuban pilot flew an unarmed naval base said the pilot re­ are back Soviet-built jet into a naval air quested political asylum in the base Wednesday and requested United States. OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — political asylum, Navy officials “ It looked like he was just Twenty years after the Black Panthers shocked some Ameri­ said. checking out Key West before Informed sources told The he decided to land,” said Fred cans with their m ilitant de­ Associated Press the pilot is Cabanas, a private flight in­ mands for equality, the radical Maj. Orestes Lorenzo Perez, 38, structor whose plane nearly group’s newspaper is making a comeback. and the je t is a MiG-27. collided with the jet as it came Most military authorities have in. “lie went right over the top “The Black Panther is Back!” said Cuba was not believed to of my head.” reads the announcement for have the MiG-27, which is a Perkins said the pilot had ra­ Wednesday's unveiling of the single-seat, single-engine, dioed his intentions and was first edition of the newspaper ground attack aircraft intro­ allowed to land without inci­ published by former party members. duced in the late 1970s. dent. U.S. State Department of­ “This is a day I’ve waited for,” A Navy statement initially ficials and Customs agents in­ identified the plane as a MiG- terviewed him before turning said Landon Williams, a former 27BN, but Pentagon officials him over to immigration au­ member of the group’s central were looking at the possibility thorities, said U.S. Customs committee. “Once again this the jet was an older MiG-23, Service spokesman Joseph vehicle is back in the hands of said Cmdr. Steve Honda, Krokos. the people.” spokesman for the Naval Air Lorenzo Perez knows little The revived newspaper, Force Atlantic fleet in Norfolk, English, but apparently has subtitled Black Community News Service, is a quarterly but Va. family in the Miami area, said The pilot was “scared to Krokos and the sources in otherwise much the same as death” when he landed at Key Washington. the old Black Panther, which West Naval Air Station in About 250 Cubans have de­ was circulated weekly under the leadership of Huey Newton. nearby Boca Chica because his fected over the past six months, The new paper also will work communications equipment had mostly crossing the 90-mile AP Photo not been functioning properly passage between Cuba and the Protection more closely with black busi­ nesses, said Sheba Haven, a and he feared being shot down Florida coast in rafts or boats, A man and a woman with face masks watch the clearance of by U.S. aircraft, said the said the Cuban-American Na­ member of the newspaper hazardous chemicals from Klong Toey, Bangkok’s main port committee. sources, who asked not to be tional Foundation, an anti­ Wednesday. Many people in Klong Toey have fallen sick after “We have a greater interest identified. communist group. inhaling toxic fumes from a major chemical fire there on March 2. in working with the black busi­ ness community in an amicable way,” she said. “We’ll be focus­ ing on programs that are exist­ ing now and trying to get peo­ ple to network.” Policy will still be guided by the party’s 10-point platform, which lists a series of goals in­ cluding decent housing and free health care. Demonstrating the party’s more radical side, the platform also says that “all black and oppressed people should be i armed for self-defense of our homes and communities against these Fascist police forces.” A/ With a headline of “The Struggle Continues," the new Black Panther contains some of the fiery rhetoric for which the old paper was known. “In the cities where we live, the (black) community is being destroyed by the plagues of drugs, unemployment ... legal­ ized police terror and murder, i and systematic and pervasive institutional racism designed to destroy our community,” said the lead editorial. Williams, who has a master’s degree in public policy and works for the city of Berkeley, said not much has changed O since the Black Panthers dis­ solved in the mid-1970s. “The issues that we ad­ dressed then are issues today. The only difference I think will be we’ve all become much more sophisticated in terms of language style," he said. At the University of Califor- # nia-Berkeley, black studies lec­ turer Roy Thomas said he was pleased to hear of the newspa­ STUDENT D per’s return. “Any time there’s another or­ gan, another voice raised that is addressing some of the issues critical to black America 1 welcome that because in the is now accepting papers that exist, you can’t get all the voices and all the applications for views," Thomas said. 1 Although there has been talk COMMISSIONER POSITIONS of reviving the party, the news­ paper is the only thing making during the 1991-92 school year. a comeback. Haven and Williams said. Applications can be picked up at the The Black Panthers were Secretary's desk on the 2nd floor of LaFortune. m founded in 1966 by Newton and Bobby Seale in Oakland. At its i peak, the Panthers were a na­ * * i tional organization that ran The deadline for submitting applications is I food programs and schools for ghetto youths, taught defense Friday, March 22. against violent attacks and I served as a counterpoint to the I pacifist side of the civil rights EEIEIEIEIEIEIEIEIElEIEIEfBPIEPIEIEIElllHEIEPIEPPIEIEIEIEIEIEIEIEIEIHE®BEfi movement. page 10 The Observer Thursday, March 21, 1991

THE RILEY GROUP will put the Macintosh within your reach at an OPEN HOUSE on March 22 at the Notre Dame Computer Store from 10 - 2.

Hello. We are The Riley Group. You We hope to expand upon that knowledge, you to take this opportunity to discover probably don't know who we are yet. but presenting the numerous ways that the variety of benefits that Macintosh over the next few weeks, we hope to Macintosh can meet your personal needs offers. This event will also demonstrate change that We are an energetic group of It is this versatility that will enable you the advantages of purchasing your own Notre Dame students working in to maximize your potential. M acintosh. conjunction with Apple Computer to put On March 22. Apple Computer will Macintosh within your reach. Many of you sponsor an open house at the Notre Dame Watch this space for upcoming details are already familiar with the word Computer Store, located on the first floor on how you could win a Macintosh SE30. processing capabilities of the Mac. of the Computer Math building. We invite to be raffled off in April. B u s in e s s Thursday, March 21, 1991 page 11 Symposium will discuss Church’s influence on social/economic issues * By SIOBHAN MCCARTHY d ecency, the problems of lower Business Writer income families,” said Houck. Other writings include the The Notre Dame Center for counciliar documents of Vati­ Ethics and Religious Values in can II in the 1960s, in which Business will host an interna­ Pope John XXIII raised the is­ tional symposium on A pril 14- sue of international responsibil­ 17 to discuss the Catholic ity and looked at areas of Church’s stance and influence poverty and underdevelopment. on social issues. Pope John XXIII said that Featured speakers include “the way to social justice was Agostino Cardinal Casaroli, through economic and political former secretary of state, Fa­ development, if rightly done,” ther Theodore Hesburgh, pres­ according to Houck. ident emeritus of the University Recent writings include re­ of Notre Dame, and Jean-Yves gional statements of South Calvez, S.J., of Paris. American Bishops and the U.S. Lottery launched APPh0,° The tradition of Catholic So­ Bishops' Economic Justice for Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar, left, Desiree Glapion Rogers, the director of the Illinois Lottery, and Stephen cial Thought as a voice of social All. Wolf, chairman and president of United Airlines, announced a new lottery game Tuesday in Chicago. assessment and leadership The optimism of the 1960s United and the Illinois lottery joined forces to create a game that rewards winners with plane tickets. began in 1891 w ith Pope Leo has turned to pessimism in the XIII’s Rerum Novarum. 1990s, Houck said. The values “The church wanted to have of successful corporations are Taster’s Choice takes unusual approach sharply opposing to those of the some say, have a voice and Pacific Bell says people leave many viewers more con­ some influence on these church and the Christian view NEW YORK (AP) — Are those of the virtuous person, ac­ flirty neighbors in the new lingered on calls after it ran a fused than amused. Moreover, issues,” said John Houck, series a few years ago that they say even those who get professor of management in the cording to an article in The Taster’s Choice ads ever going New York Times. to become more than just cof­ featured two old friends hooked on the story may forget college of business describing their exploits and to buy the coffee. administration. Houck has Yet the conference seeks to fee lovers? In their first encounter, she keeping in touch by phone. Taster’s Choice picked the played a significant role in the promote and explore a religious ran clean out of java during a Nonetheless, ad experts say soap opera approach largely organization of the symposium. vision of corporate power for dinner party but found that the Taster’s Choice is taking an ex­ because its ad agency, McCann- “The real big issue is that the the future. It also hopes to new guy next door had just pensive gamble with the ap­ Erickson Worldwide, used it church must speak to men and review the record of the 1980s, what she needed. In the second proach, which one executive successfully for another Nestle women of good will, and must Houck said. ad, he was entertaining an­ familiar with the plans said coffee in Britain for four years. speak to men and women about “ Is it a m atter of the rich get­ other woman at dinner when may involve a half-dozen more Warren won’t be specific the moral outlook that must ting richer and the poor getting his neighbor stopped by to re­ ads and spending of about $25 about what they have in mind. prevail in the business world poorer? This issue must be turn the jar. million this year. But Warren said he thinks, “ the today. Whether it is for dignity probed,” he said. “Look, I’m busy right now but The experts say people have chase has to be on forever. The and equality for women or for The conference will begin at ... perhaps?” he asks at the so many things to watch these moment they get together, it’s fair wages for its own employ­ 8 p.m. on April 14 with a doorway. “ Perhaps,” she replies days that an ad series could over." ees, it must not be h y p o criti­ concert featuring the Notre cally... it must speak with cred­ Dame Chorale and the South as she turns to leave. Nestle Beverage Co. has ibility," Houck said. Bend Symphony Orchestra made a soap opera out of the The conference will deal with performing appropriate music commercials and hopes the concerns such as “ Should the that represents the past sales message won’t get lost in church speak out in social is­ hundred years. In addition, the romantic suspense. sues?", “ Do they have any com­ there will be an art and book The episodic approach is When the Great petence or relevance in this or exhibit in the Hesburgh are they exceeding their Library. unusual, but not unprece­ bounds?", and “How can the Representatives from the dented. Southern New England Tele­ church utilize its resources in business, church, government, American Dream phone is running a campaign order to form a vision of our labor, and academic areas will that features calls between a future?" according to Houck. participate in the three day college student and her father. The academic conference will event. examine two specific questions: isn't great enough •What lasting contribution has been felt by these writings Have you considered during the last hundred years? •What is the unfinished THE HOLY CROSS CANDIDATE YEAR? agenda for both the present The Observer A one-year program at Moreau Seminary at the and future tradition of these re­ University of Notre Dame for college graduates ligious writings? After Rerum Novarum, the is looking for students interested in the interested in exploring the possibility of a lifetime writings went on to include the paid position of of service as a Holy Cross priest or brother. U.S. Bishops’ statement antici­ Scholarship assistance is available. pating the New Deal Reforms in 1919. “The Bishops took a Illustrator stance that the church needed Call or write for information: to be more involved in human Fr. John Conley.C.S.C. You must be able to work either Monday, Congregation of Holy Cross Tuesday or Wednesday evenings. If you are Box 541 interested, contact Jake Frost Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 at 283-1078. (219) 239-6385

PANAMA THE FORGOTTEN WAR? ONE YEAR AFTER. A pply for the 1991 IPmsIhmmm© STANLEY M USC HEH PRESIDENT OF UNIVERSIDAD ©®ssa New York $125 Frankfurt $305 SANTA MARIA LA ANTIGUA London $ 285 Zurich $319 Applications are available from the Paris $305 Scheduled carriers' Book anytime! (PANAMA) Fares 1/2 RT from Chicago Some re­ Student Government Secretary strictions apply On-the-spot rail- Ph. d. Candidate Univ. of Notre Dame passes. Int l. Student I D cards, youth hostel passes, work and stuoy pro­ 2nd Floor LaFortune grams. Call lor FREE Travel Catalog THURSDAY, MARCH 21 2:15-3:45 CouncilHravdin DECI0 131 Due: Friday, March 22 at 4:00pm 1153 N Dearborn St. Chicago, IL 60610 SPONSORED BY GALA Note-W e need an AHTEST! ______312-951-0585 ______page 12 Viewpoint Thursday, March 21, 1991

I VJAS BEA t e n ^Vu c k e d . to r tu r e d The Observer AND SLAPPED ABOUND

P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 (219) 239-5303 1990-91 General Board Editor-In-Chief Kelley Tuthill Managing Editor Business Manager Lisa Eaton Gilberto Gomez IT MUST h a v e b e e n News Editor ...... Monica Yant Advertising Manager Julie Sheridan TERRIBLE BEING TAKEN PRISONER IN IRAQ Viewpoint Editor Joe Moody Ad Design Manager...... Alissa Murphy Sports Editor ...... David Dieteman Production Manager...... Jay Colucci Accent Editor John O'Brien Systems M gr ...... Mark Sloan Photo Editor...... Eric Bailey OTS Director...... Dan Shinnick Saint Mary's Editor ...... Emily Willett Controller...... Thomas Thomas

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 ACTUALLY reflect the policies of the administration of either institution. The news is reported as accurately and objectively as possible. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the majority of the Editor-in-Chief, Managing Editor, Sports Editor, News Editor, Viewpoint Editor, Accent Editor, Photo Editor, and Saint Mary's Editor. Commentaries, letters and Inside Column present the views of the authors. Column space is available to all members of the community and the free expression of varying opinions on campus through letters is encouraged.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Jake Freet Layoff rumor worries ND workers Dear Editor: just cast us out in the cold. Even food service, as it would not at­ "This letter concerns the the laundry workers were given tract as many workers - for fear managers of Notre Dame Food jobs when the laundry burned of no income during the 3 Service. down. months of the year (counting We do not wish to “fly o ff the Most of the food service breaks and summer). Also, we handle” as of yet, cause we re­ workers are hard working peo­ have the worry of paying $18.75 alize a lot of what we have ple who are willing to work long into our family insurance every heard may be rumors. We do extra hours when the going gets week - money that we must know however, that a portion of rough - during special events, “come up with”, when we are it is indeed true, as many of us JPW ’s, G ra d u a tio n s, etc. We receiving no work or pay. full time workers find that we cannot draw unemployment like We beg of you- to please re­ w ill NOT be working ANY hours other laid off workers may do. consider on cutting us too during spring break. Rumor has Our bills do not stop or go away drastically - to put yourselves in it that we also won’t be during the breaks or over our shoes for a moment and receiving many (if any) hours summer vacation. We do not think of how you would react if during the entire summer. d ra w a su m m e r sa la ry , as you just heard that you would We realize that the University school teachers do. No-one not be receiving a paycheck is concerned about cutting labor wants to hire a family support­ next week. costs, etc. but for most of us, we ing adult for a couple of months Should the appeals from Our are talking about “our jobs” - in the summer, when they can Lady’s food service workers go our means of living - supporting hire teenagers at a cheaper rate unheard, our only other request Group promotes our families. We tend to think of pay. is that Father Griffin include us that this is a little more This leaves us out in the cold. in his PRAYERS when he writes important than the new $3,000 Many of us love our work in his next “letter to a lonely God! ” bench sitting out on Juniper Rd. food service, and would hate to racial harmony We are most all willing to work be forced to “ transfer” to other From the ND Dining Hall food anywhere on campus where we 12 month positions on campus, service employees Dear Editor: South Bend community, provid­ could earn our livings during just because we can’t afford not March 5,1991 The Notre Dame Enterprise ing it with a volunteer service the summer, but please don’t to. This would also h urt the ND Society is a newly founded non­ organization. We will work on political organization dedicated community projects together, to a proposition. That participate in neighborhood tu­ Observer unobservant in caption proposition is to bring blacks toring programs together and and whites at Notre Dame to­ raise funds for charitable or­ Dear Editor: Is not the statue pictured that leading Catholic university in gether. It is a proposition rooted ganizations together. Unless my religious education of Saint Bernadette kneeling in the United States! in inter racial cooperation and Additionally, we will be spon­ has failed me, and I don’t think adoration of the Virgin Mary, inter racial friendships. soring a number of recreational it has, I don’t think The rather than the Virgin Mary Lane Curtis activities which do not involve Observer “observed” in its kneeling as stated? 1 think so! (father of Steve-ND’91) A fundamental tenet of the volunteer service. edition of 8 March 1991. Quite a faux pas for the Mar. 11,1991 Notre Dame Enterprise Society is its dedication to non-political We will hold our first meeting Jcxfce Frost objectives. This means we will tonight at 7:30 in the MBA stu­ o r j i v e t h e m , not participate in political de­ dent lounge located in the bates, discussions or arguments basement of Hayes-Healy for all T h e y K w o l u n o t or sponsor political activities. students interested in becoming Members of the Enterprise members of the Enterprise w h a t th e ydo. Society will be free to Society. We encourage Notre participate in such activities on Dame students and faculty to their own, but the Enterprise attend. All are welcome. Society will neither participate in nor sponsor them. J. Patrick Brady James Burkhart The Enterprise Society will D.S. Ayers serve the Notre Dame and Mar. 21,1991 D00NESBURY GARRY TRUDEAU QUOTE OF THE DAY

HOMME TIKE GANG- I SEE YOU HAD TO. ME'RE ...AND, OF HIREP A DOING SERIOUS BESIDES, THE GUV'S COURSE, IN voupoor NEW BAR­ VOLUME NOW. A READ PRO. HE KNOWS \ A TANK.VOU KID! ‘You are today where your 9%; COVER CHARGE TENDER... ME CAN'T GET HISin v e n t o r/,a n d h e CANT SMOKE PtPNT HURTA I CAUGHT SHORT- KNOWS HOW A N AT AID! thoughts have brought you. You HANDED. will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you.”

James Allen

QUOTES, P.O. Box Q. ND. IN Thursday, Marqh 21, 1991 V ie w p o in t page 13 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR United States must support new nuclear test ban treaty Dear Editor: successful in preventing war Department of Energy (DOE) years. Private companies who The CTBT conference brought since the end of World War II. after such tests. Since testing hold co ntracts w ith the DOE no vote, and the issue is still up A nuclear bomb exploded in When confronted with the nu­ has been moved underground, carry out the creation and en­ for discussion and eventual my home town over Spring merous conflicts that have oc­ 79,300 curies have been leaked richment of plutonium and vote. Concurrent Resolutions Break; and 1 mean that quite curred in this time frame, par­ into the atmosphere; the uranium and are allowed to introduced in Congress by Sen­ literally and seriously. Over the ticularly in Asia, Africa and Chernobyl disaster released function outside of enviromen- ator Tom Harkin (K-IA) and past 45 years, more than 900 Latin America, these officals 81,000 curies. In addition, these tal laws and safety require­ Representative Wayne Ownes nuclear bombs have been deto­ hastily qualify their claim to tests threaten the goundwater ments because of their (D-UT) urge President Bush to nated there, and the bombing “preventing war in Western Eu­ supply to the Las Vegas valley “national security” status. Yet support a CTBT at the Confer­ will continue. My home town is rope.” with a population of over one the DOE Secretary H errington ence on Disarmament, and the Las Vegas, and the expolsions I The question must be asked million and growing by 6,000 in 1988 stated that the U.S. was bilateral nuclear testing nego­ speak of take place an average for what sort of nation/world people a month. The city must “awash with plutonium.” tiations. Write your senators of 12 times a year at the are we providing security? In already restrict rights to the This past January in New urging them to co-sponsor Se­ Nevada Nuclear Test Site (NTS). our own country, poverty and overtaxed water supplies. York City, an international con­ nate Concurerent Resolution #1, It is justified that these deto­ homelessness are still being Also, the NTS is directly adja­ ference was held to amend the and write to your represen­ nations are necessary for three swept under the rug. Educa­ cent to the proposed national Limited Test Ban Treaty of 1963 tative urging support of House basic reasons: weapons devel­ tion, affordable health services high-level nuclear waste dump, that banned atmospheric Resolution #16. In addition, opment, deterrence of aggres­ and alternative energy research Yucca Mountain, an area that nuclear testing and called for write to the President to call for sion and assurance that existing desperately cry out for funding. must be guaranteed stable for a an eventual end to all forms of a stop to nuclear testing and to bombs are safe (bombs are What ever happened to the minimum of 10,000 years. Are testing. The conference, held request funds for clean up of safe!). wars on drugs, AIDS and illit­ we to believe that the forces early in the month, was lost in weapons facilities and their With stockpiles sufficient to eracy? Each nuclear test costs released by nuclear explosions the spotlight of the conflict in environs rather than funding destroy the planet twelve times between $30 to $60 million. nearby are not going to affect the Gulf. The U.S. announced its new produciton plants. over, the need for development These tests are only a small the stability of the geological plan to veto many amendment We have arrived at a golden of more effective, or more lethal part of the development and strata? proposed before the conference opportunity to end the arms (more lethal?), or just plain expansion of m ilitarization. This leads to discusison of a even convened. Yet the Soviet race and the human, economic more weapons holds about as Such funds should certainly be­ final, but no less important, Union, France and England and environmental destruction much w ater as the sun-baked long to the elusive peace divi­ victim of the testing: the envi­ have all stated their intent to associated with the build-up. It ground in which the tests take dend that was so hoped for with ronment. Plutonium must be agree to a Comprehensive Test is also a now-or-never moment, place. It is analogous to owning the end of the Cold War. created and uranium must be Ban Treaty (CTBT) contingent and as the nation who can and a home with triple locks and The final justification for nu­ mined for production and test­ of the inclusion of the U.S. w ill make or break the passage deadbolts on not only the front clear weapons testing is that it ing of weapons. These materials Such a ban is verifiable be­ of a Comprehensive Test Ban and back doors, but on every is necessary to insure the effec­ are often located in protected cause testing can now be de­ Treaty, we must show the ini­ cupboard, cabinet, drawer, tiveness and safety of existing nature reserves or on Native tected with highly sensitive tiative and courage to pluck closet and bathroom, as well. bombs. Besides being an oxy­ American lands. The laws seismography and satellite re­ away the leech of nuclear The locksmith selling this moron in itself, this rational- protecting these areas and connaissance. In addition, “the weapons testing and develop­ "ammunition” is certainly not izaiton has little persuasive peoples are ignored in the name ban would not only prevent su­ ment and allow the lifeblood of going to say, “ You have enough power. A bomb detonated at the of “national security.” Even the perpowers from developing our nation and the world to locks now, I’ll stop developing site certainly can only insure land the NTS occupies belongs weapons of new design, but circulate and nourish from them, and you stop buying that that particular weapon to the Western Schoshone Na­ would serve as b a rrie r to the within. them” . operated correctly. tion by the authority of the development of nuclear war­ When considering the argu­ In discussing human safety Ruby Valley Treaty of 1963. heads by third-world countries, Amy Jenista ment concerning deterrence of issues, more attention should be Acres of this land are already so expert Leonard S. Spector of the Breen Phillips Hall aggression, NTS officials claim focused on the radiation leaks contaminated that it must be Carnegie Endowment for March 18,1991 that our arsenals have been that have been reported by the quarantined for thousands of International Peace. Time is quickly running out for the modern “Lost Generation” Dear Editor: bankrupt. Bohemian, too beatnik, too Lost are the Caution Pilgrims and we Huge brains, small We’ve disinvented all that was Generation. Oh fear not — will pay dearly for it. We not necks...and fa t wallets-these We are the Hollow men once sacred. Did we topple the we’re a lost generation all right only let Ronald Reagan legislate are the dominant physical We are the stuffed men icons of our parents or did they (hell, we can’t even find the our morality for us (most characteristics of the ’80’s...The Leaning together topple them for us. In either map) we just deny it. In fact, notable with the over-21 Generation o f Swine. Headpiece filled with straw. case, the statues lay broken on denial is the new watchword. drinking age), we’ve even -Dr. Alas! the ground and we’ve neither We deny the extent of our volunteered to do the policing. Hunter S. Thompson -T.S.Eliot, the mortar nor the original shame in much the same way Are we exhuming Jack LeLane, “The Hollow Men” blueprints... God, Money, we deny ourselves the frivolous, exhuming Prohibition or We are truly lost souls, Country, Family, Marriage, h ed o n istic jo ys o f youth. We exhuming McCarthy? I’m schooled in the credit-card, We are the scarred Honor. We’ve seen them, warts don't drink or smoke or even beginning to think they’re all shopping-mall mentality of the generation. We are the and all and we re not im­ exceed the speed lim it — those the same thing. “Gimme Decade,” when style burdened ones. We are the off­ pressed. Is all this honesty re­ things are no good for us. Well Which brings me to politics — triumphed over substance. spring of the jaded and the ally that good for us? neither are greed, self-aggran­ where we are at our most cau­ What heroes we’re left with go doomed. We live in darkening Mediablitzmadnessinstantacces dizement, unchecked vanity or tious, spineless worst. As a unappreciated, and if they are times where rain is poison and sexpose. lack of compassion, yet we whole, we are essentially apolit­ our role models, then they’ve sex is death. This is the Age of Our parents’ heroes have se­ snack on those daily. ical. When so many of our gen­ taught us one valuable lesson- Gravity and we’re feeling its crets and scars (and for that We eat rig h t, take vitam ins eration jumped on the integrity doesn’t pay. Vanilla Ice pull like no other generation matter, so do our parents), and exercise regularly, but Conservative bandwagon in the has sold 5 million records, yet before us. We bear the Greatest which is alright. Nobody walks we’re medicating the wrong mid-Eighties, they obviously the Replacements can’t even fill Weight: we hold the Promise. on water anymore. Not around thing — it’s our souls, not our bought into the myth that a a VFW hall. Perhaps better than We’ ve seen our parents lose here. But did we have to see the bodies that needs healing. Our good American is a silent one. any other pop idols, the New their jobs. We’ve seen our par­ scars; did we have to be told the exterious are pristine and oh- When we actually choose to Kids on the Block sum up the ents get divorced. And remar­ secrets? They’ve undermined so-fit, but our interiors are all support an issue, we pick only prevailing Zeitgeist of our ried. And divorced again. And our belief then chastised us for decay. We are rotting from the the safest and the most non- times-talentless, flashy, Recession. And Inflation. And losing faith. inside out. We’d rather lift controversial topics, like the technogeeks who have parleyed the break-up of the nuclear But if it’s their fault for setting weights than read a book. We’d environment. (Can anyone re­ greed and avarice into a million family. And, most recently, the up roadblocks on the avenue to rather go to a tanning bed than ally be propollution?) But even dollar marketing scheme. On horrors of war. Spiritual Fulfillment, it's ours to a m useum , o r to a to w n these receive a luke warm, top of moral bankruptcy and We are the Scarred for not taking them down (or at council meeting or to church. half-hearted reception, and in spiritual depravity, our genera­ Generation and our suffering is lest driving around them, even More denial. the nine months since Earth tion seems to have a monopoly both deep and novel. But why if it means going up on to the Day, most of us have forgotten on bad taste as well. do we have nobody to chronicle burm). If ambivalence and You’re beautiful, more beau­about he ozone layer. This is a pronouncement. This it? Where are the poets, the complacency were a com­ tiful than me Homelessness. The Deficit. is a judgement. This is not a writers and the artists? Perhaps modity, we’d be the wealthiest You’re honorable, more Education. The usual response love song. We are filthy and we they’re discouraged or even generation yet. Yes, we are as honorable than me is, “What’s in it for me?” are guilty. You, me, all of us. overwhelmed. The whole spineless as we are scarred, You’re loyal to the Bank Of We have no allegiances to We are Sinners in the Hands of experience is so amorphous and and we are terrified of making America anything, save to our own fi­ an Embarrassed God. A God layered and hard to figure out. choices. Instead of embarking We’re sharpening stones, nancial stability. We’re unsure who has been around long Technology makes it all so on the journey, we sit paralyzed w alking on coals of what we support, but enough to expect more. We are instant and at the same time, so in emotional traffic and do To improve our business adamant about what we don’t a generation of budding ac­ removed. nothing. Or worse yet, we take acumen...Look who bought thesupport. We define what we like countants, bankers and insur­ And all this disillusionment the first exit marked $. m yth! in terms of what we don't like. ance salesmen. We are gray, we for the children born during the We re anti-everything but pro­ are dull and we are Summer of Love? Born in the Our dried voices, when R.E.M. “ Exhuming McCarthy” nothing, and that requires ab­ complacent. We are wasting our Sixties, the decade of Hope with We whisper together solutely no courage. But time, we are wasting our a capital “ H ”, The Great Society, Are quiet and meaningless We want to ward off death, so courage and commitment may promise. I’m not saying that we The Brave New World. Our As w ind in dry grass we run 5 miles a day. But what be mistaken for subversion, and should “tune in, turn on and generation was lied to from the Or rats' feet over broken glass good is delaying death when we re nothing if not anti­ drop out.” All I’m saying is start. We suffer from the In our dry cellar we’re already living a Death in subversive. We live in an age WAKE THE HELL UP!!! Because Disease of Being Promised Too -T.S. Eliot, Life? What happened to where political activism is seen your youth is passing very Much. We were told that we’d “The Hollow Men” “seizing the day,” or was that as an un-American activity, quickly and... TIME... IS... inherit the Earth and now just something we saw in a Along the lines of flag-burning RUNNING... OUT! we've come to find we’ve been So how do we fill the empti­ movie once? Twenty years ago, of buying a Japanese car. cut out of the w ill. No — let me ness? W ith sex, drugs or alco­ college students said “if it feels Protesting is out, business Erik V. Huey rephrase that — we’re still in hol like those before us? No, of good do it.” Today, we just say school is in, and psuedo-patrio- Second Year Law Student the will, the estate’s just course not. That would be too no. More and more denial. We tism is all the rage! Mar. 18,1991 Ac:cent page 14 Thursday, March 21, 1991 Sounds of Spring Glee Club Concert Features the Year of Women

By ELIZABETH VIDA Accent Writer With the mercury climbing into the high fifties, even sixties on a good day, spring seems to be just around the corner. One reliable sign of warmer tem­ peratures is the annual spring Notre Dame Glee Club Concert, which will be held this Friday evening at 8:15 p.m. at Washington Hall. Doors w ill open at 7:15, with general seating. Courtesy of Notre Dame Glee Club This concert will offer some­ The annual Notre Dame Glee Club concert will be held tomorrow at 8:15 p.m. at Washington Hall. This year’s concert will feature soloist Christina thing special in addition to the Seavey - Alves as well as pieces by two contemporary women composers. Glee Club’s already top-notch performances. According to student, will perform as alto- The interesting noises that the Year of Women.” nation, and it should be a good Glee Club Publicity Manager soloist in Franz Schubert’s w ill be emitted during this The cost of commissioning evening of music,” Hoffman Kevin Hoffman, a senior from Standchen D. 920. Seavy-Alves, modern piece of work promise both pieces was offset by funds said of the performance. Planner, the Glee Club is incor­ concert-goers may remember, to make it one of the more from the Year of Women Besides a performance in porating the Year of Women performed the female alto solo memorable Glee Club committee. Ann Arbor with the Michigan theme into the concert. last fall in Mendelssohn’s performances. Glee Club over the weekend of This year’s theme celebrating oratorio “Elijah.” ‘“ Gloria/Herzliebster Jesu’ is Although the spring season April 5 and 6, the only other women’s accomplishments may a more traditional, religious isn’t nearly as busy for the Glee performance at Notre Dame seem a little difficult to tie in The two new pieces are piece, with even a few Club as fall and Christmas, after the spring concert is the with the all-male Glee Club. “Everyone Sang” by Libby Gregorian chants thrown in," there are a few other notable concert the night before com­ However, pieces by two well- Larsen and “Gloria/ Hoffman remarked. “Alice performances left on the calen­ mencement, which will take a known contemporary women Herzliebster Jesu” by Alice Parker is a very famous and dar to top off yet another suc­ considerable amount of prepa­ composers were commissioned Parker. Larsen is an up and well respected East Coast com­ cessful year. ration time. by the Club for this concert. coming composer out of poser. We’ve had a lot of suc­ This Sunday, March 24, at Be sure to catch the Glee In addition to these never- Minneapolis, and her piece cess w ith her pieces in the past, 8:00 p.m., they will be Club sometime this weekend in before performed pieces, the doesn’t contain a whole lot of and Carl Stam (Glee Club performing sacred music at the only two opportunities for concert will also feature a rare words—in fact, according to Director) thought it would be a after vespers with the Harvard undergraduates to hear the re­ treat: Christina Seavey-Alves, a Hoffman, “we make some dif­ great idea to have her compose Glee Club. “ The H arvard Glee wards of a lot of hard work and music performance graduate ferent noises during the song.” a piece just for us in honor of Club is among the best in the talent. Creator of SafeWalk earns Irish Clover Award By KELLEY TUTHILL Irish Clover Award. to the students of the Notre a better person?” walk alone at night.” Editor-in-chief It appears that her hard work Dame community.” The quest to answer these Not only does a student have While spring break may have has finally paid off—she was Since transferring to Notre two questions has guided to budget an extra 15 minutes been the most exciting part of selected by Leo Burnett ad­ Dame during her sophomore Mahony through her last two into her schedule, she also has the month for most students at vertising company after a selec­ year, Mahony has contributed years at the University. to “change her way of think­ Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s, tive interviewing process and to the community through the During the fall of her junior ing.” for ND senior Gina Mahony the will work in their client establishment of the year, she noticed that there was Despite obstacles, Mahony is fun began when she came back services department in Chicago. University’s first security escort an alarming number of attacks confident that SafeWalk is a to campus. She was also recognized by her service, SafeWalk. She also on the campus. She was su r­ permanent part of student life This week she received some peers for her work as a student chaired the recent Board of prised to learn that Notre Dame at Notre Dame. She says that news that made the end of leader. Trustees report on cultural did not have a student escort freshmen view the service as a break seem less dreadful. Not Irish Clover Award winners diversity. service like her previous normal part of campus life. only was she offered her first are selected by the Student After transferring from school. Mahony was also con­ Security issues are at the top job, she also received the 1991 Senate “for outstanding service James Madison University, cerned that many students be­ of Mahony’s and other students Mahony spent her first year at lieved the campus did not have lists of day-to-day concerns, Notre Dame acting “like a kid a need for one. she says. Students at Notre in a candy shop.” She described “ I w ro te a le tte r to The Dame are lucky, she says, be­ herself as very eager to get in­ Observer expressing the need cause “we have one of the top volved in many activities. She for a security escort service at security escort programs in the was a member of the varsity Notre Dame,” says Mahony. country.” team and the Army Reserve Next she met with then-Student Her work with SafeWalk has Officers’ Training Corps Body President Matt Breslin. led to other opportunities for (ROTC). His commitment to the idea Mahony in both Notre Dame’s At the end of her sophomore spurred Mahony to research Security/Police Department and year Mahony had to make some the idea further. Student Government—the two choices about her extracurricu­ After studying services at groups that were instrumental lar life. “The swimming was other schools, Mahony was able in assisting her with SafeWalk. taking too much time and I felt to develop a proposal which In addition to her responsibil­ that this was not the best way I was presented to the adminis­ ities with SafeWalk, Mahony could contribute to Notre tration. Her plan was approved serves as the coordinator for Dame,” says Mahony. During and received funding from the student employment at that year she also decided to University. Security. She works eight to ten switch from the College of Although many people agree hours a week in the Campus Business to the College of Arts that SafeWalk is a good idea, Security Building. and Letters. Mahony is always trying to im­ Now that Mahony has se­ At the start of her junior year prove the service’s image and cured a job she is getting ready Mahony says she experienced a make it more accessible. to move on and start making strong call to contribute to her “The biggest stumbling block contributions to the “real” school. She asked herself is that for a woman to use the world. “It’s getting more diffi­ “What can you do to make service, she has to admit she’s cult to attend classes, I’m really Observer file photo Notre Dame a better place and vulnerable,” says Mahony. “ She looking forward to starting my Gina Mahoney, winner of the 1991 Irish Clover Award, tries to get how will Notre Dame make you has to admit that she cannot future.” students to accept and use the Safe Walk program. * ' r ______Thursday, March 21,1991 The Observer page 15 Bo and doctors don’t know if he will ever play again

W ASHINGTON (AP) — A old man's a rthritic hip. " crutches since. could play only “if he blood, cartilage in the hip be­ source close to Bo Jackson says can hit home runs and then gan to die, a condition called the two-sport star's left hip is Doctors, including Jackson's The Royals released the hobble around the bases.” chondrolysis. so severely damaged it most personal physician, have dif­ former lleisman Trophy winner “There is no question: He will likely will prevent him from fered on whether Jackson on Monday because they do not not play professional sports “That’s the big problem." the ever returning to professional could ever play sports again. expect him to be able to play again,” the source was quoted source was quoted as saying. sports. The Washington Post The Kansas City Royals team this year. So far, Jackson has as saying. reported in its Thursday edi­ doctor told the team this week not been claimed for the waiver The report also said X-ray tions. Jackson should not play price of $1. According to the report, ini­ studies for the Royals in mid- baseball this season. tial X-rays of damage suffered February not only confirmed “The cartilage has sort of Los Angeles Raiders manag­ in the AFC playoff game the loss of cartilage but also wasted away” since the injury Jackson was injured in an ing partner A1 Davis has said against the Bengals showed found early signs of bone dam­ and damage is worse than ini­ NFL playoff game on Jan. 13 he expects Jackson to be ready only a small fracture not re­ age as a result of loss of blood tially thought, the source, who between the Los Angeles to play football in the fall. quiring surgery. But key blood from the injury. More X-rays in was not named, was quoted as Raiders and Cincinnati The Post quoted its source, vessels were stretched and, mid-March found continued saying. “ In reality, he has an Bengals, and has been on however, as saying Jackson without an adequate supply of damage, the source said.

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Mike Hunt "Why are y’all here instead of LaFortune Student Center 1 800 343 8373. CALL JOHN 289-9654. Embarrass your friends! One eye pasted shut! being in Florida or Embarrass yourself! Butta Bing, Butta Bang! something?" Sorin Room EARN $300/$500 PER WEEK FiLA and T-Buzz, we missed you "All present must partake of March 18-22 READING BOOKS AT HOME. $$$$$ Sumbil pictures for the boizz the swiss cake roll. Thus I 1-615-473-7440 EXT. B SENIORS biggest slide show of the Bill, the anal retentive brother decree." 10am 5pm------Need One Grad. Tlx year to THE BOX at the Miami Cheerleaders "I should've been doin' this my “ •ATTENTION JU N IO R S "" Call Kim x2669 information desk in Florida Gators whole life." Purses, hats, belts, NEED A ROOMATE FOR NEXT $$$$$ LaFortune before MARCH 28. BANGUI "I GOTTA HEAR SOME CROWESII vests, other accessories, SCHOOL YEAR AT CASTLE Include name, phone, and CRANK UP THE CROWESII" POINT!!! CALL DOUG AT X2051 address on the back. "I can't believe I got hit by a and traditional Guatemalan PERSONALS Primo- frisbee." clothing and weaving. BE A PART OF ITI I hate you moslest! "Not too damn bad for a A % of Sales goes back Needed: Ride to Fori Meyers- MODELS WANTED FOR couple of geeky math dudes." Naples, Florida area for Easter ADVANCED HAIRCUTTING "No, it's NOT a Cannondale to Guatemala to bug books break. Will help pay for gas. Call CLASS. CALL COSIMO'S 277- NEEDED: Ride from St.Louis on HELP! Need ride to/from Des — It's a KLEIN." & school supplies for Johanna,x2798. 1875. April 1 Call Theresa at x3425. Moines/KC for break $ Diane x4902 — Love, LT children. Scoreboard Thursday, March 21, 1991

NHL STANDINGS MCC STANDINGS B a se b a ll WALES CONFERENCE S o ftb a ll MCC Games O v e ra ll MCC Games O v e ra ll Patrick Division W L T PCT w L T PCT W L T PCT W L T PCT W L T Pts GF GA Hom e A w ay Div Evansville 0 0 0 .000 6 4 0 .600 Xavier 2 2 0 .500 7 8 0 .467 Pittsburgh 38 31 5 81 315 279 24-11-2 14-20-3 17-13-1 Detroit 0 0 0 .000 8 7 0 .533 Butler 2 2 0 .500 3 5 0 .375 NY Rangers 34 28 12 80 272 240 20-11-6 14-17-6 13-12-5 Butler 0 0 0 .000 2 2 0 .500 ND 0 0 0 .000 12 5 0 .706 New Jersey 31 31 12 74 258 246 22-9-7 9-22-5 13-14-5 ND 0 0 0 .000 5 12 0 .294 Evansville 0 0 0 .000 7 3 1 .682 Philadelphia 32 33 9 73 237 243 17-13-6 15-20-3 11-14-6 Loyola 0 0 0 .000 3 7 0 .300 Detroit 0 0 0 .000 4 4 0 .500 Washington 33 34 6 72 235 243 19-13-4 14-21-2 17-12-3 Dayton 0 0 0 .000 0 4 0 .000 Dayton 0 0 0 .000 4 6 1 .409 NY Islanders 23 41 10 56 210 270 14-17-6 9-24-4 11-17-4 Saint Louis 0 0 0 .000 0 5 0 .000 Saint Louis 0 0 0 .000 5 11 0 .313 Adams Division y-Boston 41 23 10 92 270 243 24-9-4 17-14-6 16-8-4 IRISH BASEBALL STATISTICS x-Montreal 37 29 10 84 262 237 21-12-4 16-17-6 13-12-4 x-Buffalo 28 29 17 73 265 257 13-13-11 15-16-6 11-11-7 Includes 17 Games (12 W, 5 L) x-Hartford 31 34 10 72 222 250 18-16-5 13-18-5 9-13-6 FIELDING STATISTICS Quebec 14 48 12 40 211 332 7-22-8 7-26-4 7-12-7 Player BA G/ AB R H 1RBI 2B 3B HR SB/ BB SO SLUG OBP Player PO A E DP PCT Danapilis 28 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE GS SBA 0 0 0 1.000 Mee 34 12 Norris Division Danapilis .348 17/17 66 17 23 15 7 1 2 7/7 10 17 .576 .519 0 1 1.000 Layson 22 39 1 5 .984 W L T Pts GF GA Hom e Aw ay Div Mee .324 14/11 37 7 12 6 2 0 0 1/2 7 4 .378 .404 Jacobs 146 6 3 4 .981 x-Chicago 45 22 6 96 257 192 25-8-3 20-14-3 17-7-3 Layson .321 17/16 53 11 17 9 3 0 1 4/6 9 8 .434 .455 Maisano 0 0 0 0 1.000 x-St. Louis 41 22 11 93 288 240 21-9-7 20-13-4 15-11-3 Jacobs .298 17/16 57 15 17 12 4 0 5 4/6 13 19 .632 .432 Counsell 12 38 7 7 .877 x-Detroit 33 34 8 74 260 274 25-12-0 8-22-8 13-13-3 Maisano .286 16/13 49 8 14 19 4 0 3 1/1 11 14 .551 .450 Leahy 6 2 0 0 1.000 x-Minnesota 26 34 14 66 239 244 18-14-6 8-20-8 9-14-5 Counsell .281 17/17 64 11 18 7 3 1 0 3/7 9 4 .359 .448 Coss 14 41 8 3 .873 Toronto 21 44 9 51 223 300 14-21-3 7-23-6 8-17-2 Leahy .250 5/3 8 0 2 1 1 0 0 0/0 3 4 .375 .545 Coss .239 17/13 46 12 11 3 4 0 0 1/1 3 6 .326 .393 Haas 59 5 1 0 .985 Bautch 42 1 1 Smythe Division Haas .233 15/10 30 5 7 6 3 0 1 0/3 6 7 .433 .405 0 .977 Smith 15 0 0 0 1.000 x-Calgary 43 24 7 93 316 238 27-8-2 16-16-5 15-8-3 Bautch .222 14/14 36 10 8 4 0 0 0 5/7 7 9 .222 .429 Krai I 13 1 0 0 1.000 x-Los Angeles 42 23 9 93 313 233 23-9-4 19-14-5 16-8-4 Smith .216 16/11 37 8 8 7 0 0 3 4/5 2 12 .459 .333 Hartwell 19 2 0 0 1.000 x- 35 34 5 75 253 251 20-13-3 15-21-2 11-13-2 Krai I .143 7/2 7 1 1 0 1 0 0 0/0 0 2 .286 .286 Binkiewicz 9 1 0 1 1.000 Vancouver 26 41 9 61 233 302 16-16-5 10-25-4 9-18-1 Hartwell .138 12/8 29 8 4 1 0 1 0 2/2 9 11 .207 .342 Rooney 0 0 0 0 .000 Winnipeg 25 40 11 61 251 276 17-18-5 8-22-6 9-13-6 Binkiewicz .111 10/3 9 0 1 0 0 0 0 0/0 8 5 .111 .556 Conway 0 0 x-clinched playoff berth Rooney .000 5/0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 1/2 0 0 .000 .000 0 0 .000 Sinnes 2 1 1 y-clinched division title Conway .000 1/0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0/1 0 0 .000 .000 0 .750 Martinez .000 1/0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/0 0 0 .000 .000 Michalak 0 6 1 0 .857 Livorsi 1 3 0 Tuesday’s Games Thursday's Games Totals .270 17/17 529 118 143 90 32 3 15 33/50 97 122 .427 .433 0 1.000 Price 0 1 0 0 Boston 1, Hartford 1, tie Quebec at Boston, 7:35 p.m. 1.000 Martinez 0 0 0 0 Edmonton 7, Quebec 6, OT Washington at N Y. Islanders, 7:35 p.m. PITCHING STATISTICS .000 St. Louis at Philadelphia, 7:35 p.m. Walania 1 6 1 0 .875 St. Louis 2, Washington 1 ERA G/GS W L PCT SY CG IP H R ER BB SO N Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 7:35 p.m. Hartvigson 0 0 0 .000 New Jersey 5, Pittsburgh 4 Hartvigson 0.00 1/0 0 0 .000 0 0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 New Jersey at Chicago, 8:35 p.m. Totals 423 165 24 9 .961 Wednesday s Games Michalak 2.70 6/3 2 0 1.00 0 1 26.7 19 13 8 13 20 Friday’s Games Late Games Not Included Price 3.00 5/2 2 1 .667 1 2 21.0 21 11 7 12 18 Toronto at Detroit, 7:35 p.m. Buffalo 3, Montreal 2, OT Leahy 3.20 4/4 3 0 1.00 0 1 25.3 16 9 9 12 16 Minnesota at Washington, 8:05 p.m. Toronto at Los Angeles, (n) Sinnes 4.85 5/5 1 0 1.00 0 0 26.0 28 18 14 15 25 Winnipeg at Vancouver, 10:35 p.m. Calgary at Vancouver, (n) Walania 5.32 7/3 3 2 .600 1 0 23.7 27 16 14 11 7 Livorsi 5.65 8/0 1 1 .500 2 0 14.3 11 9 9 15 2 NCAA BASEBALL RANKINGS Danaoilis 6,75 3/0 0 1 ,000 1 0 4.0 5 3 3 1 4 NBA STANDINGS Totals 4.09 17/17 12 5 .706 5 4 141.0 128 79 64 79 92 Baseball America’s Top 25 18 March 1991 EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division TRANSACTIONS 1 • Florida State W L Pet GB L10 S treak Home Away Conf | 2. Southern Cal x-Boston 50 18 .735 8-2 Won 1 30-5 20-13 29-12 3. Louisiana State Philadelphia 37 29 .561 12 5-5 Won 2 24-9 13-20 25-14 BASEBALL BASKETBALL 4. Stanford New York 34 33 .507 15 1/2 8-2 Won 2 17-18 17-15 23-20 COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE—Placed National Basketball Association 5. Miami (FL) Washington 23 42 .354 25 1/2 1-9 Lost 3 15-15 8-27 15-25 Philadelphia Lenny Dykstra on probation NEW JERSEY NETS—Placed Chris Dudley, 6. Texas New Jersey 22 44 .333 27 3-7 Won 1 17-17 5-27 14-26 for one year for gambling activity. center, on the Injured list. Activated Kurk Lee, for­ 7. Pepperdine Miami 20 47 .299 29 1/2 2-8 Lost 6 14-20 6-27 11-33 ward, from the injured list. 8. Creighton CALIFORNIA ANGELS—Optioned Lee Stevens, World Basketball League 9. Hawaii Central Division -outfielder; Mark Davis, outfielder; FLORIDA JADES—Acquired the rights to James 10. Ohio State x-Chicago 50 15 .769 9-1 Won 30-3 20-12 32-8 Gary DiSarclna and Chris Cron, Infielders; and Blackmon and Haywoode Workman, guards, and 11. Oklahoma State x-Detroit 26 .612 10 4-6 Lost 26-8 15-18 27-16 Mike Erb, pitcher, to Edmonton of the Pacific Coast Winston Morgan and Rick Calloway, forwards. 12. Arizona State Milwaukee 27 .597 11 5-5 Won 28-7 12-20 27-18 League. Sent Kyle Abbott, Chris Beasley, Randy YOUNGSTOWN PRIDE—Traded the rights to 13. Wichita State Atlanta 30 .552 14 5-5 Lost 25-9 12-21 20-22 Bockus, Tim Burcham and Rafael Montalvo, pitch­ Willie Bland, forward, and , guard, to 14. Georgia Tech Indiana 34 .493 18 6-4 Won 23-10 10-24 20-20 ers, and Ruben Amaro, Jr. and Dan Grunhard, out­ the Halifax Windjammers for the rights to Darryl 15. Clemson Cleveland 42 .354 27 4-6 Lost 15-17 8-25 14-25 fielders, to their minor-league camp for reassign­ Johnson, guard. 16. Long Beach State Charlotte 46 .292 31 2-8 Lost 12-20 7-26 12-30 ment. HALIFAX WINDJAMMERS—Acquired the rights 17. Texas A&M —Sent David Haas, Mike to Milt Newton, Steven Bardo, Marty Simmons, and 18. N otre Dame WESTERN CONFERENCE Munoz and Eric Stone, ; Scott Livingstone, Lenzie Howell, forwards. 19. Michigan Midwest Division infielder; and Rich Rowland, , to Toledo of 20. Cal State Northridge W L Pet GB L 10 S treak Home Away C onf the . Sent Rudy Pemberton, FOOTBALL 21. Arkansas x-Utah 43 22 .661 6-4 Won 26-5 17-17 29-12 outfielder, to London of the Eastern League. Sent National Football League 22. Tulane x-San Antonio 42 22 .656 1/2 6-4 Won 26-6 16-16 28-15 Mile Dalton, pitcher, and Johnny Paredes, infielder, DALLAS COWBOYS—Agreed to terms with 23. Texas Tech Houston 41 24 .631 2 9-1 Won 26-8 15-16 26-17 to their minor league complex for reassignment. Alfredo Roberts, tight end, and Odie Harris, defen­ 24. Oklahoma Dallas 24 41 .369 19 3-7 Lost 16-18 8-23 14-26 —Sent Narclso Elvira, sive back. 25. N.C. State Orlando 21 43 .328 21 1/2 3-7 Lost 16-16 5-27 17-27 Cal Eldred, James Austin, Jim Davins, Chris PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Signed Dennis Minnesota 21 .323 22 3-7 Lost 15-18 6-26 15-32 George, Doug Henry and Chris Johnson, pitchers, McKnight, offensive lineman Notre Dame opponents in italics Denver 18 .273 25 1/2 2-8 Lost 15-19 3-29 10-32 and , catcher, to their minor league Canadian Football League camp for reassignment. Pacific Division OTTAWA ROUGH RIDERS—Re-signed David —Sent Willie Banks and Conrad, fullback, to a three-contract. x-Portland 48 18 .727 4-6 Won 1 29-5 19-13 29-13 Park Pittman, pitchers, to Portland of the Pacific x-LA Lakers 48 19 .716 SOFTBALL BOX 1/2 6-4 Lost 1 26-6 22-13 31-12 Coast League. Sent Jack Savage, pitcher, and HOCKEY x-Phoenix 46 20 .697 2 9-1 Won 3 25-6 21-14 27-14 Danny Schaeffer, catcher, to their minor league Falcons 7, Irish 0 Golden State 35 30 .538 12 1/2 6-4 Won 1 23-10 12-20 21-23 camp for reassignment. —Sent Ross McKay, N otre Dame 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 3 Seattle 31 34 .477 16 1/2 4-6 Won 1 20-11 11-23 17-22 National League , to Springfield of the American Hockey B o w ling Green 2 5 0 0 0 0 X 7 8 0 LA Clippers 23 44 .343 25 1/2 3-7 Lost 2 16-16 7-28 19-23 CINCINNATI REDS—Sent Steve Foster. Bill League. Sacramento 18 46 Linn (LP), Alfford (2) and Folsom. Record (WP, 2-4) .281 29 3-7 Lost 2 17-14 1-32 12-26 Risley, Mo Sanford and Ross Powell, pitchers; x-clinched playoff berth and Leis Glenn Sutko and Dan Wilson, ; and Denny OLYMPICS Gonzales, infielder, to their minor league camp for Wednesday's Games United States Olympic Committee Falcons 4, Irish 2 reassignment. Boston 102, Washington 81 Chicago 129, Atlanta 107 USOC— Named Frank Zang information special­ N otre Dame 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 I South Atlantic League Indiana 117, Miami 107 Phoenix 110, Dallas 96 ist and publications manager. Bowling Green 000 1 03 X 4 I SUMTER FLYERS— Named Steve Sefoy direc­ New Jersey 118, Minnesota 111, OT Utah 106, Denver 98 Alvarez, Linn (5, LP) and Folsom. Simmons, tor of broadcasting. New York 102, Cleveland 97 Seattle 114, LA Lakers 106 Unterbrink (4), Record (5, WP 3-4) and Leis. Philadelphia 107, Detroit 103 Portland 100, LA Clippers 96 FENCING RESULTS

INDIVIDUAL MEN’S FOIL 21. Walter Flaschka, NYU (2-8) FINAL RESULTS 22. Anthony DuBose, Penn State (4-5) 23. Steve Flores, Penn State (3-6) 1. Ben Atkins, Columbia (14-4) 24. Jason Kerstein, Wisconsin (1-9) 2 Noel Young, Notre Dame (13-4) 25. Joel Robinson, Cal State Long Beach (1-9) 3. James Borin, Yale (9-9) 26. David Prather, UC-Santa Cruz (1-7) 4. Lorin Thompson, North Carolina (11-8) 27. Leroy Thompson, St. John’s (1-7) Yearbook Positions 5. Stephen Schroeder, Wayne State (14-2) 6. Chris Maggos, Yale (14-3) 7. Frank Osborn, Yale (9-7) 8. Mark Pavese, Columbia (10-8) 9. Ed Mufel, Penn State (13-2) WOMEN’S TEAM QUALIFYING 10. Alan Weber, Penn (11-5) 11 Nathan Ritter, Detroit (8-6) Quarterfinal team matches Now Available 12. Mark Ellingson, Columbia (7-8) (number in parentheses indicates seed) 13. Phil Leary, Notre Dame (7-8) Notre Dame (1) vs. Penn (8) 14. Art Glasgow, Navy (5-10) Columbia (4) vs. Fairleigh Dickinson (5) 15. Glenn Schicker, Rutgers (4-10) Temple (3) vs. Yale (6) 16. Jeff Piper, Notre Dame (8-8) Penn State (2) vs. Wayne State (7) 17. Randall Skrabonja, Duke (7-6) Positions for the 1991-1992 Dome Staff are now being accepted. 18. Razmig Boghikian, Detroit (3-9) Semlflna team matches 19. Brian Slebenist, Penn (4-9) ND-Penn winner vs. Columbia-FDU winner 20. Jason Narkiewicz, NYU (4-8) Temple-Yale winner vs. PSU-WSU winner Open Positions include:

tfnrPWCNC Editor-in-Chief, A ll Section Editors, Photographers and Section Staff Members

We re Having a Most Excellent Party For all Off-campus Students Get involved in the Dome during the Sesquicentennial Year! "DEAN & EDDIE'S # e OFF-CAMPUS ADVENTURE" # # Saturday, March 23,9:30 pm # Ticket Sales: $2 In advance and $3 at the door Tickets will be sold in the OC lounge In Madeleva Hall ApplicationsAppli available at the Student Activities e or Contact Tiffany @ 277-8882 for tickets • Brought to you by Saint Mary's oJJ-compus committeeOffice,315 LaFortune, are due by Friday March 22, • Located next door to Senor Kelly’s 1991. ! ...... Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer page 17 Commissioner ###**########## ############ puts Dykstra on 1 -year probation NEW YORK (AP) — FRIDAY APRIL 19 Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Lenny Dykstra was placed on one year’s probation NOTRE PAME STEPAN CENTER Wednesday by commissioner Fay Vincent because of his gambling activities. Dykstra, who last week testi­ fied to losing $78,000 during poker games in Mississippi, must report to the commis­ sioner’s office on a regular ba­ sis during the probationary pe­ riod. Further gambling activity 0 will result in more severe disci­ pline, the commissioner said. “ Mr. Dykstra fully cooperated with representatives of the commissioner’s office,” Vincent said in a statement released by his office. “ He exhibited re­ morse and acknowledged that he had injured baseball and damaged his own reputation. * * * STARRING * * - * He gave me his full assurance he would not engage in such o m v p ; / conduct again.” Dykstra, 28, refused to dis­ cuss the matter before and after the Phillies exhibition game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Vero Beach, Fla. “ It’s over w ith" he said before leaving the clubhouse. Dykstra received a letter from 8 the commissioner’s office outlining the probation and on Wednesday signed an agree­ A ment accepting the penalty. He could have filed a grievance, W forcing the matter before arbi­ $ trator George Nicolau. “I find the letter to be very ambiguous,” said Dykstra’s agent, Alan Meersand. “ It is not t clear in its content and there seems to be a number of things to be worked out before it's Doing Reggae Anthems like: clear what it means. That will Q be done in the next few weeks.” "NO WOMAN, NO CRY" Meersand and Dysktra’s lawyer, Stephen Solomon, con­ "RASTAMAN VIBRATION" ferred with the outfielder and "EXODUS" and more! Eugene Orza, the associate general counsel of the Players "Few groups in the history of Association, before deciding to popular music have been able accept the penalty. to project and dominate a “Dykstra has signed the music form as fully as the now agreement with the commis­ sioner’s office and as far as he's legendary Wallers." concerned, it's over, ” Solomon Reggae World Magazine said later. In Clearwater, the Phillies is­ sued a statement in which Dykstra was quoted as saying: “ I’m sorry it happened. I'm sorry if any fans got hurt. 1 learned my lesson." Phillies owner Bill Giles said Plus Special Guests... 1 the team would not protest Also from Jamaica, also Jammin' Wednesday’s action. B « “ I respect the commissioner’s decision," Giles said. “ I'm happy the case is closed. ” KKxi k / Phillies manager Nick Leyva had a similar reaction. ■ M l S w fK ' "ml “ I guess we can live with that if that ends it,” he said. “Lenny knows what he has to do now and he’ll abide by it. ”

Vincent said other cases of personnel other than players AND involved in gambling have come before him in the past year. In each instance, the commissioner said, the Special Notre Dame / St. Mary's individual was cooperative and remorseful and placed on STUDENT DISCOUNT probation for one year. Those people have not been identified by the commis­ sioner's office. Baseball officials TICKETS ONLY $10.00 said they made the Dykstra decision public only because of Public Ticket Price: $14.00 his testimony in the Oxford, Miss, trial. Doors Open 7:00 pm ~ Music starts 8:00 pm Herbert Kelso, the alleged organizer of the poker games, TICKETS ON SALE TODAY AT THESE LOCATIONS: was found not guilty by a U.S. Notre Dame St. Mary's Track's Records l a s t e d District Court jury.

LaFortune Student Center O'Laughlin Auditorium 1931 Edison Road Including Karma Records A Select LS. Ayres Box Office & Info Desk Box Office South Bend (219 )424-1811 page 18 The Observer Thursday, March 21,1991 Softball loses two games Fencers doing well at NCAA’s: Young Observer Staff Report with the help of two Notre Dame errors, scored five sec­ finishes 2nd, women earn top spot BOWLING GREEN, ond inning runs on three hits. Ohio—The Bowling Green Becky Bailey and Karen Special to The Observer tional championship with an State University women’s Appelbaum had two hits «• impressive performance yester­ softball team ran its winning apiece for the Falcons. The first day of the NCAA day. They defeated Stanford 9-3 streak to three games with a The Falcons came back from fencing championships began and Yale 9-5 to earn the top doubleheader sweep of Notre a 2-1 deficit inthe second game on a good note for Notre Dame, seed going into the final rounds. Dame Wednesday at the BGSU with a three-run sixth inning with the men foilists placing Softball Field. to capture the victory. fairly well in the individual Senior Anne Barreda and ju­ The Falcons, who took the Leftfielder Kim Snyder doubled competition, while the women nior Heidi Piper were perfect in first game by a 7-0 count and home Bowling Green’s final earned the top seed in the yesterday’s action, both compil­ came back to post a 4-2 win in run of the inning after an Irish round of eight. ing 6-0 records in the two vic­ the nightcap, improved to 5-7 error led to the first two runs tories. The women will continue on the season, while the in the frame. Julie Moss had Sophomore Noel Young, who the team matches today. Fighting Irish slipped to 5-12. two hits for the Falcons. won the Australian National Junior hurler Jody Record Record picked up the win in Fencing Championships in The day’s action for the men went the distance in the first relief for Bowling Green as she 1988, fenced well en route to a ■ k jm K m w ill consist of the individual game, striking out four while pitched the final 2 2/3 innings second-place finish in the sabre competition. not walking a batter. Only one and retiring the last six batters NCAA’s. The finish, in addition Noel Young Notre Dame runner advanced she faced. to being a spot higher than last Piper repeated his 16th-place THE AMERICAN HEART past second base in the year, earns All-American finish from last season. The ASSOCIATION contest. Notre Dame had beaten the honors for Young. male foilists will continue fenc­ MEMORIAL PROGRAM* The Falcons scored all seven Falcons 4-2 last Friday in the ing on Friday in the team com­ of their runs in the first two in­ Indiana State tournament. The Senior captain Phil Leary also petition. nings. Catcher Jeni Leis drove Irish host their season home improved on last year’s per­ in one run on a first inning opener this Friday at 3:30 p.m. formance, placing 13th in the The Irish women foilists American Heart Association double, while Bowling Green, against Loyola. field, while sophomore Jeff moved a step closer to the na­

over nine points per game. time MCC Player of the Year • HOUSTON (19-10)—Four Karen Robinson (16.4 ppg, 5.1 NIT starters average in double fig­ apg), All-MCC performer Davis SENIOR FORMAl ures for the sixth-seeded Cou­ (13.8 ppg, 6.2 rpg, 59.4 FG%) continued from page 24 gars. 5-7 junior LaShawn John­ and junior Margaret Nowlin 1 9 9 1 • third-place team in the Metro son (14.6 ppg) leads a balanced (10.4, 7.5). Conference is the fourth seed in attack which had nine players Sophomore Coquese Wash­ the NIT. 6-0 freshman Gwen playing at least 15 minutes a ington (8.9 ppg, 5.2 apg, 2.7 Sign up for Doyle (17.3, 8.5), the Metro’s game. steals), a second-team All-MCC 0 Freshman of the Year and a •INDIANA (16-12)—The sev­ member, and senior Sara rooms, tables, first-team All-Metro selection, enth-seeded Hoosiers are the Liebscher (8.6 ppg) rounds out and 6-0 Nell Knox (12.6, 5.6) only NIT participant Notre the starting lineup. Freshmen flowers, and + are the Cardinals’ key players. Dame faced in the regular sea­ Kristin Knapp (6.9, 3.8) and •KANSAS (18-12)—The fifth- son, losing to Indiana 79-76 at Sherri Orlosky (3.2 ppg) are the activities: seeded Jay hawks almost snuck the Joyce ACC. Pam Owens first players off the bench for into the NCAA tournament, (13.8, 7.9) and Zan Jeffries Notre Dame. March 25 making the championship game (13.2, 8.0), both 5-11 seniors, of the Big Eight tournament form a formidable one-two from 6-9 before losing to Oklahoma punch inside. State. Four players, led by Stacy American Heart in the For the Irish, three starters Association Truitt (10.3 ppg) and Terrilyn average in double figures: two- Johnson (10.0, 9.6), average LeMans Lobby and March 26

SENIOR from 6-9 % at Theodore's ECLUB O Alumni Senior Club G BARTENDER Applications and Job Descriptions are now available at the INFORMATION DESK CULTURAL CALENDAR LAFORTUNE STUDENT CENTER 1990*199 1 * Deadline for applications is March 29* SAINT SENIOR FORMAL MARY'S TUXEDO RENTALS FROM COLLEGE LOUIE'S TUX SHOP PRICES: TOMORROW, 8 P.M., CHURCH OF OUR LADY OF LORETTO Black Classic* ...... $39.95+ tax The South Bend Chamber Singers Designer Tuxedos* ...... $ 5 2 . 5 0 + t a x Nancy Menk, music director Shoes ...... $ 8 . 5 0 + t a x *Includes coat, trousers, shirt, tie, A Concert of Sacred Music cummerbund, jewelry and suspenders. ADMISSION FREE-DONATION REQUESTED PAYMENT: THIS SATURDAY, 8 P.M., MOREAU HALL LITTLE THEATRE Partial orfull payment may be made. In Concert (A $15.00 minimum deposit is required Loretta Robinson, soprano at the time of fitting). We accept cash, VISA, MasterCard, American Express, Jeffrey Jacob, piano Discover and personal checks. SPECIAL $2 "RUSH" TICKETS FOR SM'S-ND COMMUNITY MEMBERS WHEN: MON., MARCH 25, 7:30 P.M., NATIONAL TOURING PRODUCTION Tuesday, March 26 Forbidden Broadway 6:00 - 9:00 pm A hilarious spoof of the stage’s biggest shows and stars TICKETS: $13/$11 WHERE: All performances in O'Laughlin Auditorium LaFortune Student Center unless noted. Tickets on sale at the Saint Mary's in Theodore’s box office, in O'Laughlin, Mon.-Fri., 10-4. Visa/MasterCard: 284-4626. For updated program information, call the Saint Mary's Campus Events Hotline: 674-0900, category 1740.

'WErw“ Srr / Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer page 19 SPORTS BRIEFS No holiday for MLK, no Super Bowl, NFL ■Navy, Air Force, and Army ROTC will sponsor a 5K run on March 24 at Stepan Center at noon. Registration is at 11 a.m., and the entry donation is $3.00. All proceeds go to financially tells Arizona; fans and officials react troubled families of servicemen in the gulf. PHOENIX (AP) — Government “Those who throw rocks in But it will mean that many officials and fans expressed glass houses had better look at individuals who otherwise ■The Irish Heartlites fun runs are coming up A pril 11th. There their displeasure and disap­ yourself. ” DeConcini said. would have seen Arizona now will be a 3 & 6 mile run. Students and staff should start training pointment with the NFL own­ He added, “I was disap­ won’t, and that represents a now. ers’ decision to move the 1993 pointed, of course, that a dou­ loss “ that can’t be quantified in Super Bowl from Sun Devil ble standard has been applied. dollars,” he said. ■Notre Dame/Saint Mary’s sailing team: We w ill be starting Stadium to the Rose Bowl. It’s all right for the NFL not to Newly elected Gov. Fife mandatory practices Monday, March 18, for all members who Late Tuesday, NFL owners honor Dr. King, but it ’s not all Symington said, “It’s an unfor­ would like to participate in the Freshman Ice Breakers. decided at their meeting in right for Arizona. They say it’s tunate happenstance. I thought Practices will be held every day at 2:30 p.m., rain or shine. For Hawaii to pull the 1993 game not linked, but it’s pretty clear it was a great mistake to tie it more information, call Julie Garden at 284-5197. from suburban Tempe because to me that it’s linked — they to the Martin Luther King holi­ Arizona does not have a paid didn’t give it to us. ” day. But that happened before I ■Any teams interested in playing in the Bookstore Basketball holiday honoring slain civil DeConcini, who had sent a was on the scene, so we’ll just Hall of Fame game should submit their applications to the S U B. rights leader Martin Luther sharply worded letter to NFL have to live with the result. ” secretary by Friday, March 22. King. The owners later commissioner Paul Tagliabue, Reportedly, it was awarded the game to Pasadena, said the issue may have an ef­ Symington’s discussion with ■ Night owls take a study break with NVA aerobics, every Calif. fect on the league. Tagliabue that led to the Sunday in room 219 of the Rockne Memorial. Sign up in the NVA “It is regrettable that, in not “ The NFL hasn’t been any “preliminary” selection of office now. showing restraint earlier, the leader in civil rights and Phoenix as a site for the 1996 league contributed to the con­ honoring Martin Luther King, ” game. ■ Scorekeepers are needed for the Bookstore Basketball troversy in the state rather than he said. Form er Gov. Evan Mecham, Tournament. Anyone who is interested should contact Shelley aiding the effort to bring it to an DeConcini said it appeared who revoked a King holiday, Guilbaut at x2549. end,” Sen. John McCain, R- the NFL was being hypocritical. said the NFL is continuing to Ariz., said from Washington. “ 1 don’t know why the NFL is play politics in Arizona. ■The Fellowship of Christian Athletes will meet tonight at 7:00 “ By injecting itself into the telling us how to run our house “The conditions are that we pm in the basement of Pangborn. Newcomers welcome! For state’s effort to resolve the when they don’t even have their pass a paid M artin Luther King more information call Mark xl606. Martin Luther King holiday is­ own house in order. They ought state holiday, ” Mecham said. sue, the NFL has muddled an to apply the same rules to “They’re still involved in ■Women’s Bookstore basketball will have sign-ups on effort that is Arizona’s to re­ themselves.” Arizona politics. They have no Tuesday, March 26th from 6-9pm at the Sorin Room of La solve alone, without outside in­ Yogi Hutsen, president of the class at all. ” Fortune and the lobby of Haggar at St. Mary’s. terference.” Arizona Hotel and Motel Sen. Dennis DeConcini, Association, called it “a The loss of the game was not ■ Free Aerobics classes are offered in Stepan Center every Arizona’s other senator, said he tremendous loss. ” a surprise to Lamar Whitmer, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 12:15-1:15 pm. Classes was very disappointed in the “ It won’t ruin us,” Hutsen chairman of the Maricopa begin 3/20. NFL. said. County Sports Authority. Alabama’s rolling Tide hopes to drown the Razorbacks CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — The Sanderson said Wednesday as Thursday before second-seeded Arkansas center Oliver Miller thinks Alabama will try to slow Southeast Regional has its top the media began asking about Indiana (29-4) meets Kansas injured himself slightly the tempo. four seeds still playing, but one the inability to reach the re­ (24-7). Wednesday, aggravating a groin “I believe Wimp will do what­ may just have a little more on gional finals. “I’m very proud The Razorbacks have man­ muscle, but Razorbacks officials ever it takes and we have to an­ the line for program pride. the basketball program at aged to score at a 100 points- said he would play. Sanderson ticipate they will back it out if Arkansas, Indiana and Alabama has reached the final per-game clip this season and could face a problem with the they feel they can’t run,” he Kansas have all tasted Final 16 five times but you’re all Nolan Richardson’s team has uncertain status of Robert said. “ We played some teams in Four success in the last four anxious for the story of why we done it with the fullcourt pres­ Horry and James Robinson due the conference this season seasons with the latter two haven’t gone any farther. Well, sure defense. to nagging injuries. which put the ball in the deep leaving with championship tro­ we just have never been able to “The main thing for us is to “James hasn’t been allowed freeze, but I don’t think they’ll phies in 1987 and 1988. pull the surprise or the upset beat the pressure, ” Sanderson to practice very much the last do that. That’s why you always Alabama has been different. and most of the teams we have said. “They forced 813 three games since he injured prepare your team for what it The Crimson Tide has been suc­ played have been one or two turnovers this season and only his knee and Robert has been does best.” cessful reaching this round of seeds and they’ve won.” committed 500 themselves and bothered by a groin pull all Indiana and Kansas each 16 for the fifth time in the last It w ill be the same for the that tells you a whole lot right season, ” Sanderson said. “ I’m know what the other does best seven years. Crimson Tide (23-9) this year as there. They are a seasoned concerned about whether they because the teams m irro r each “I’d thought you’d never ask,” the No. 4 seed will face top- team and you don’t win 33 will be able to play.” other. Alabama coach Wimp seeded Arkansas (33-3) on games unless you are.” Robinson leads the Crimson Tide with 16.7 points per game Both teams score in the mid- r in a reserve role and Horry, 80s and feature tough aggres­ The Student Union Board & suspended for the opening sive defenses which kept oppo­ game of the SEC tournament nents under 70 points per for an “attitude problem,” is the game. The Graduate Student Union top rebounder at eight per Intellectual Life Committee game and will also be the in­ “In basketball there is only so bounder against the Arkansas much you can do,” Indiana pressure. coach said. “ I’ve present “ If they put on their shoes enjoyed watching Kansas play and come out. I’m not going to and I don’t enjoy watching consider them injured, ” many teams play because of my Richardson said, adding he scope of vision. Dr. Celeste Colgan Interested in staying and Deputy Chairman of the working Senior week: National Endowment for the Humanities May 13 thru May 19. Work for catering- get paid An Adequate Core Curriculum & plus room and board. the Future of American Democracy

Sign up by March 27 in order to stay in your own room. 7:00 PM Thursday, March 21 Annenburg Auditorium (Suite) Sign up in the Catering Employment Office in the basement of South Dining Hall.

graduate student union Questions call 239-5449 ST' P E N T U N IO N BOARD V- page 20 The Observer Thursday, March 21, 1991 Notre Dame lacrosse team goes 1 -2 on East Coast trip By MARK McGRATH Another freshman, Domenic ing their talent and that it was Sports Writer DiNardo, netted two of his three their season opener,” said goals during this spurt. Parent. “I thought that fresh­ “We played a few bad min­ man Bill Ahm uty was a key to The Notre Dame men’s utes,” said Mayglothing. “Our keeping us in the game defen­ lacrosse team went on the road mental breakdowns were the sively.” for spring break but didn’t have reason they (Hofstra) were able The Irish then went on the quite the success it expected. to score. They are a real disci­ road again to Radford. The re­ The Irish managed a 13-7 plined team and took advantage sult was a Notre Dame victory victory against Radford, but lost of the errors. ” 13-7. 10-5 to Hofstra and 12-9 “We were never really able to The Irish opened the first half against Mt. St. M ary’s. recover from the run," said very strongly and ended the The first obstacle for the Irish Irish goaltender Chris Parent. first half w ith a 9-1 lead. was Hofstra. The Flying Hofstra opened the second “We controlled the ball, ” said Dutchman were ranked 16th in half where it left off. They ex­ Mayglothing. “We were able to the USILA preseason poll. tended the lead to 8-1 before take advantage of our scoring Hofstra was looking to extend Mayglothing scored his second opportunities.” its streak of six straight season goal of the game at 7:03. The However, the Irish played opening victories. Flying Dutchman added one down to the Radford’s level The Irish opened the game more to end the third quarter during the second half. strong. The first quarter was a with a 9-2 lead and the game in “We never came out of the display of transitional lacrosse. control. locker room,” said Mayglothing. The Irish were able to control The Irish went back to the “I was not pleased with our the high-powered attack of form they had in the first quar­ effort.” Hofstra. ter when they opened the “I thought we showed a lack Hofstra struck first when All- fourth quarter with a quick goal of consistency,” said Parent. American midfielder Mike from Mike Sullivan. The two “Maybe it was a result of our Lausenslager tallied an unas­ teams battled for the next nine lead, but we must improve our sisted goal at 5:34 of the first minutes until Carlson added his play if we want to win the quarter. The Irish were able to third goal for Hofstra to make tougher games like Loyola.” continue their strong play and the score 10-3. Sullivan re­ The final game of the road Brian Mayglothing scored his sponded with his second goal trip pitted the Irish against Mt. third goal of the season to end and Brian Schirf added a goal St. Mary’s. The Irish struggled the first quarter. to end the game. throughout and ended up losing The Observer / John Studebaker Hofstra exploded in the sec­ “We played well except for 12-9. Brian Schirf and the Notre Dame lacrosse team came back with a 1-2 ond quarter to make the score the mental errors in the second “We didn’t know anything record from their East Coast trip over break. 5-1 at the half. The spurt quarter,” said Mayglothing. “I about them,” said Mayglothing. started when Hofstra cleared thought it was our best game of “We didn’t come to play and we “Our lack of consistency was The Irish (2-2) will be home the ball on a beautiful play, and the road trip even though we can’t expect to win with that our main problem,” said this weekend when they meet Andrew Carlson took advantage lost." attitude. Again, our mental er­ Parent. “The fans were very vo­ Loyola of Maryland. A preview of the play by netting the first of “I thought our performance rors were a problem and we ciferous. We appeared too re ­ w ill be in Friday’s Observer. three goals in his college debut. was fairly impressive consider­ became frustrated.” laxed at times.” University of Tulsa fires head basketball coach

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Tulsa and two National Invitation of Tulsa and the players who of Tulsa basketball program has except to say no settlement has coach J.D. Barnett was fired Tournament games. played for me.” really failed to realize the type been reached. Barnett has Wednesday by an athletic direc­ “This has been a very devas­ Dickson said the program of revenues that we not only three years left on the contract. tor who cited declining fan tating forty-eight hours for me failed to garner the money projected but must have within Barnett’s record at Tulsa is support and drops in revenue and my family, there is no ques­ needed by a school Tulsa’s size, our athletic department.” the third best in school history, from home games. tion about that, ” Barnett said. ever since Barnett’s hiring in Dickson said he, university but he has been compared to “Over the past six years, a “No one ever wants to see their 1985. president Robert Donaldson Richardson since the day he number of challenges have career end like this. But if this “Obviously there were many and Barnett met Tuesday in a started. been presented to our Division I is the way it’s to be, it’s the way considerations beside the won- tempered conference, during athletic programs,” athletic it’s to be and I can’t change loss column and the financial which he asked Barnett to re­ Richardson used an uptempo, director Rick Dickson said. other peoples thinking. I can coffers of the athletic depart­ sign. Dickson declined to dis­ free-wheeling style in his five “Among those, in particular just control mine the best way I ment,” he said. “The University cuss Barnett’s existing contract years. with basketball, we’ve been can.” challenged with declining fan Barnett, whose voice cracked participation, declining with emotion at times, thanked community support, a high the fans who had supported Concentration in turnover rate of student- him. athletes and a constant “I’m very proud of my pro­ turnover among assistant gram at TU,” he said. “I have coaches.” nothing to be ashamed of. I run Philosophy, Politics and Economics Barnett, who took over when an honest program. I run a Nolan Richardson left for program with integrity and I Arkansas, had a 106-75 record tried to give every day of my life in six years at Tulsa. But the for the past six years everything Hurricane failed to win a game I have physically, emotionally PPE is an interdisciplinary concentration for students in two NCAA tournament trips and mentally to the University majoring in the Philosophy, Government or Economics departments. The concentration consists of a core seminar NEED A CHALLENGING, YET FUN entitled JUSTICE SEMINAR, three one credit colloquia JOB FOR NEXT YEAR?? taken over three semesters, and three other courses Apply for a position working for the Student chosen from a concentration list. Limited to 25 students per Activities Office year, PPE stresses careful reading, discussion and writing. Positions available for; PPE is concerned with exploring the theoretical issues LaFortune Bulling Managers Stepan Building Managers which connect these three disciplines. Games Room Attendants Information Desk Attendants Sound Technicians PPE Committee Office Assistants 24 Hour Lounge Monitors Neil Delany- Dept, of Philosophy Theodore’s Room Monitors E.A. Goerner- Dept, of Government Theodore’s DJ David O’Connor- Dept, of Philosophy Stop by the DOOLEY ROOM on John Roos- Dept, of Government THURSDAY, MARCH 21 for job Charles Wilber- Dept, of Economics descriptions, information,and applications from 5pm-7pm. Applications are also available to be picked up at the LaFortune Students interested in the program should see Information Desk through March 25. Professor Roos prior to the beginning of the All applications should be submitted to DART period. 424 Decio. 239-7556 Student Activities by Wednesday, March 27. Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer page 21 Jordan, Grant lead Bulls to 25th consecutive home win CHICAGO (AP) — Michael seventh consecutive road They last bettered .500 on Nov. Rickey Green made two foul Jordan scored 22 points and victory by beating Dallas. 24 at 6-5. shots for the 76ers to secure the Nets 118, Timberwolves 111, Horace Grant added 20 as Jeff Hornacek contributed 20 Reserve guard Gerald Paddio win. OT Chicago won its 25th consecu­ points and Kevin Johnson had led the Cavaliers with a career- Mookie Blaylock’s desperation tive home game with an easy 15 points and 12 assists as the high 24 points, and Brad Celtics 102, Bullets 81 3-pointer sent the game into victory over Atlanta. Suns won for the 10th time in Daugherty scored 21. John Reggie Lewis scored 22 of his overtime and Sam Bowie scored The triumph was the Bulls’ their last 11 games. Starks had 13 points for New 28 points in the first half, and six of his career-high 38 points ninth straight overall and 20th Dallas went 3:46 without York, while Trent Tucker re­ Kevin Gamble added 20 as in OT to lift New Jersey over in their last 21 games. They are scoring down the stretch until placed Gerald Wilkins, out with Boston beat Washington. Minnesota. 30-3 in the Chicago Stadium Derek Harper’s basket with an injured thigh, and scored 12. Lewis hit 9 of his 10 shots The Nets, who have won three and a league-leading 50-15 2:34 to play narrowed Phoenix’s from the field in the first half of their last four games, trailed overall. lead to 101-92. But Hornacek’s 76ers 107, Pistons 103 and scored 12 points in the through most of the second half Atlanta trimmed a 16-point three-pointer on the Suns’ next Charles Barkley scored 32 second quarter, including eight but sent the game into overtime deficit to 10 late in the third possession ended the hopes of points and Ilersey Hawkins had of Boston’s last 10. Gamble had when Blaylock banked in a 28- q u a rte r as Dom inque W ilkins the Mavericks, now 2-6 in their nine of his 20 points in the 8 points in each of the first two foot 3-point shot at the buzzer hit a pair of free throws with last eight games. fourth quarter as Philadelphia quarters as Boston led 56-46 at to tie the game at 102-102. 1:28 remaining. But Chicago handed Detroit its ninth loss in the half. After each team hit two shots, went on a 7-2 run and led 90- Knicks 102, Cavaliers 97 13 games. the Nets’ Chris Morris ignited a 75 after three quarters. The Patrick Ewing scored 22 of his Detroit never led in the game, The Bullets fought back from six-point spurt that iced the Hawks got no closer than 14 32 points in the second half and but closed to 82-81 on a three- a 69-56 lead with 2:54 remain­ victory by taking a pass from points in the fourth quarter, the climbed point play by James Edwards ing in the third quarter with an Derrick Coleman and dunking even though Jordan sat out the over the .500 mark for the first with 11:32 remaining. 8-2 run and trailed 71-64 after with 1:30 remaining. final period for the second time in four months by defeat­ Philadelphia then went on a 10- John Williams converted a straight game. ing the 102- 2 run, with six by Hawkins, to three-point play. But Dee Brown 97 on Wednesday night. take a 92-83 lead. hit the last two baskets of the Pacers 117, Heat 107 Suns 110, Mavericks 96 Ewing scored 12 points in the Philadelphia led 98-89 with quarter, including a jump shot Reggie Miller scored 27 Xavier McDaniel scored 24 third quarter and 10 more in 4:03 to go, but the Pistons ra l­ at the buzzer, to rebuild points, including 8 in a row points and Tom Chambers the fourth as the Knicks im­ lied and trailed by 103-99 on Boston’s lead to 75-64 and the during a crucial fourth-quarter added 22 Wednesday night as proved to 34-33 with their sev­ two free throws by John Salley Celtics pulled away in the final stretch, as Indiana defeated Phoenix rolled to its club-record enth victory in eight games. with 1:04 to go. However, quarter. Miami.

King’s next match, knocking the In his next match, however, for King and McGrow,” sur­ mostly redshirted guys. We Irish 190-pounder into the King fell 9-2 to Northwestern’s mised McCann, “they have to faced lots of fifth-year kids. We NCAA’s consolation bracket. King won Mike Funk, who had been realize that they have to do cer­ were really a lot smaller than his next two consolation seeded fifth at 190 pounds. tain things to be able to com­ these guys, and we need bulk continued from page 24 matches, however, as he Funk then won the seventh pete at that level. They were in power. Hopefully the team will Bucknell’s Bryan Burns de­ thumped Dan Richie of Ohio place match (over Burns) to an arena packed with fans, and realize that we have to live in feated King by technical fall State 3-2 and Dan Sanchez of finish seventh. it was easy to be a little the weight room in the spring, (21-5) at the 6:08 mark of Wagner 6-4. “This tournament was good starstruck. It was a new expe­ summer and fall. ” rience, but they must really The team’s performance at work on their strength and the NCAA’s, though, did not power.” color McCann’s assessment of Curt Engler, who, at heavy­ the year in review. weight, was Notre Dame’s “We felt that going in with our YES, HE’S BACK fourth championship partici­ schedule, we would need a total pant, lost a cliff-hanging, 7-4 team effort to win all of our first-round decision to Kevin matches,” stated McCann. Marriner of Central “With the exception of Iowa and Connecticut. maybe Nebraska, we could “Curt wrestled pretty well,” have beaten them all. Plenty of said McCann, “ only to lose on a teams would have taken a one- Cliff Erickson penalty point at the end. It was hundred percent effort to beat, a pretty good match, but even if but we had the people to do the he had won, he would have had job. a difficult draw, because he “I am a re a lis t, and I don’t I I I I X ' = = would have had to face the top pretend we can beat someone if seed in his next match. we can’t. We have quite a bit of “The NCAA Tournament is experience returning for next tough, especially for our young year. Wrestling is a tough sport, ECLUB kids who were taking on older, and we have a lot of work to stronger, more matured and do— starting now."

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He’s out about really sharp kids. They should Manager of the Year award, it figured Jim Leyland of the needed an edge against a Utah 10 minutes." have been applauded for it. It Pittsburgh Pirates would be in demand. But by a convenience team whose coach is worried Maybe Anthony, a 6-foot-2, was ridiculous.” store chain? Leyland received a letter Tuesday from Herb about "a bloodbath," a few 190-pounder, has some notion For the moment, Anthony Chavanne, president and CEO of Handee Marts, which operates Runnin’ Rebels psyched them­ of challenging Tyson one day. says the only business he’s 7-Eleven franchises in western Pennsylvania. Leyland was selves up by sitting ringside at The other teams in the NCAA thinking about is beating Utah, invited to apply for work with 7-Eleven. The letter came with a the Mike Tyson-Razor Ruddock tournament wouldn’t mind if then the winner of the Arizona- standard application form. It stems from Leyland s March 4 brawl. Anthony switched careers im­ Seton Hall game before going to shouting match with outfielder Barry Bonds. Afterward, Leyland , the point mediately. the Final Four. said if he hadn’t asserted his authority, he’d wind up managing a guard who keeps the Rebels “Stacey’s one of the best de­ He and the rest of the Rebels 7-Eleven someplace instead of a baseball team. “I’m going to runnin’, rushed through the fensive forwards I’ve ever seen, are confident they can win it all call this guy, just in case,” Leyland said. “ I like this. Who knows, dapper fight crowd as if he but my favorite defender on again, despite a shaky showing if I get out of baseball, I might want to do something part-time. were breaking a fullcourt Vegas is Greg Anthony, ” said against Georgetown in the sec­ I’m going to send this application in.” press. Sporting his red UNLV Seton Hall coach P.J. Carlesimo, ond round. Ackles, UNLV’s cen­ warmup jacket, Anthony who takes his team Thursday ter, had a sprained foot and snaked past the silk tuxedos against Arizona in the other played only 17 minutes in that Ruddock’s mom couldn't bear to watch and full-length sables to get West Regional semifinal. “ I 8-point victory Sunday in ■ TORONTO (AP) — Donovan “ Razor” Ruddock’s mother. close to the action. think he’s the best fullcourt, Tucson, but should be fine for Louise, was fighting mad. She didn’t go to her son's fight against “ We need some inspiration. man-to-man defensive guard Utah. Mike Tyson in Las Vegas on Monday, or even watch it on closed- We have to keep our intensity I’ve ever seen. Utah coach Rick Majerus says circuit televison, because “every time he is going to fight I get up,” said Anthony, who will Anthony knows where every­ his 30-3 Utes may be in for “a nervous, I feel too nervous to watch. I don’t like fighting too lead the undefeated, defending one is on the court, but he’s not bloodbath” against UNLV, but much at all." But she knows “ Donovan was cheated,” and she national champions Thursday sure where’s he’s going in life. nobody thinks the Rebels are knows it was "the Americans.” Specifically, she blamed night against Utah in the NCAA The problem, perhaps, is too unbeatable. promoter Don King and referee Richard Steele, who stopped the West Regionals semifinals. many good choices. “We believe we can win, but fight in the seventh round, giving Tyson a technical knockout. “If UNLV’s intensity has never An NBA team w ill calling I’m sure Duke felt they could Tyson knocked Donovan down and counted him out. I’d say, been questioned during its 43- soon, perhaps making him a win last year, too,” Majerus well, all right, someone has to win and someone lose,” Louise game winning streak. If any­ first-round draft choice. But said, referring to UNLV’s 30- Ruddock said. “But a fight like that ... there is no way I’m going thing the Rebels have been too there are other ideas floating point destruction of Duke in the to appreciate that kind of fight.” And Louise Ruddock doesn’t intense, winning this year by an through Anthony’s mind. final a year ago. If Tark loses want her son in a rematch with Tyson. “I don’t want him to fight average of 29 points a game. A political science major, he is this game, they’ll probably tak­ any more Americans because they’d just do the same thing They are the KO Kids of col­ lured by politics, spending one ing away his gaming license.” again." lege basketball, finishing off summer as a congressional “If they play as well as their opponents with the same fury intern in Washington, another capable, nobody is going to beat that Tyson usually shows as an aide at the World them,” Carlesimo said. “But Iowa State’s Orr suspended for a game ______against his victims. UNLV Economic Summit in Houston, Utah is capable of beating ■ KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A 12-19 season wasn’t punishment doesn’t just win, it intimidates. and serving as vice chairman of them. Vegas can be beat. 1 think enough for Iowa State coach Johnny Orr. Now, he’ll miss the Larry Johnson has the mus­ the Nevada Young Republicans. there’s a better chance for them opening game of next season after being suspended by the Big cle, the acro­ He dreams of someday running to be beaten in the Regional Eight for comments about the officiating of this year’s batic moves, Anderson Hunt for the Senate. than in the final. When you try conference tournament. League commissioner Carl James said the deadly eye from the He also caught the en­ to string six wins in a row, the action was in response to Orr’s remarks about the officiating outside, and George Ackles the trepreneurial bug, helping to somewhere you can slip." in the Cyclones opening-round loss to Missouri. The coaches rapid-fire jams. But Anthony launch a T-shirt business until Arizona coach Lute Olson receiving reprimands were Kansas coach Roy Williams, Missouri has the brains, sweet passes the NCAA forced him to give it watched UNLV and Utah play in coach Norm Stewart, Colorado coach Joe Harrington and and flypaper defense that keep up because of a rule intended to Tucson and came away thinking Nebraska coach Danny Nee. Orr also received a reprimand Feb. everyone happy and working prevent players from taking that Utah has a chance. 27 for his comments about officiating in the Iowa State-Missouri together. phony jobs from boosters. “Utah is a team that is well- game three days earlier. “The Big Eight Conduct Code and the UNLV coach “It seemed to be really hypo­ suited to playing the tempo that National Association of Basketball Coaches Code of Ethics is so impressed with Anthony, critical,” said Anthony, who is not the tempo UNLV wants,” include the principles of honoring all professional relationships he thinks the 23-year-old could gave up his scholarship at the Olson said. with athletes, colleagues, officials, media and the public by be a success in anything he start of the season so he could If Utah can control the pace of basketball coaches,” James said in a statement. “These codes chooses — the NBA, politics, pursue the business. “I like to the game, keep UNLV from request that coaches model common courtesy, fair play and business, even boxing. consider myself an example of racing up and down the court, sportsmanship while treating all persons with dignity and “Greg’s probably too intelli­ what the NCAA is striving to the Utes could pull an upset, respect.” gent for it,” Tarkanian said. have its student-athletes be­ Olson said. “ But he would be a world- come.” champion fighter. He’s so intel­ UNLV coach Jerry Tarkanian, But if the Utes let up a little, ligent (and) he’s got the quick­ the NCAA’s favorite target, has Anthony and the Rebels proba­ est reflexes. been vocal on the ruling against bly will knock them out. Maybe “He’s got an incredible toler­ Anthony. Tyson should come up here to ance to pain. He hurts his hand “It wasn’t like some booster and watch from courtside. so bad our trainer tells us, if it’s said, ‘Hey, I’m going to give you Anthony would happily give him CAUGHT anybody else he’d be out a this company.' These are three a seat on the UNLV bench. avinc^another. “In the grasp” Fr. Regis Duffy rules relaxed by appy Birthday NFL owners will speak in the Hesburgh Library Lounge KOHALA, Hawaii (AP) — NFL at 6:30 PM owners modified the controver­ F sial “in the grasp” rule Friday March 22, 1991. Wednesday in a way that Feb. 19 should give quarterbacks such as John Elway and Randall March 21 Cunningham more leeway to sponsored by: ICHTHUS scramble. The proposal by Jerry Seeman, the league’s new su­ Questions? Call Chris Greiveldinger x-1743 pervisor of officials, clarifies a rule that has been one of the Kris Hughes x-3525 NFL’s most controversial since Robert Benedetto x-3022 it took effect in 1978. CALL FOR NOMINATIONS “If a quarterback is scram­ bling from the pocket and one man gets his hand on him, he’s The University of Notre Dame has announced the not down,” Seeman said. “It 'KARENA. LACERTE establishment of the Rev. Paul J. Foik, C.S.C., Award to be takes effect only when the man given annually to a faculty member who has contributed is being held up and there are other defenders around to grab From 2 to 22: significantly to library service to the Notre Dame community or him .” Hope you got a lot of to the library profession through personal scholarship or Seeman said the competition committee, which proposes the Birthday kisses!!!! involvement in professional associations. Professor Frederick rules, reviewed the tapes from J. Crosson is serving as chair of the initial selection committee, 31 “in the grasp” situations which is composed of representatives from the teaching and during the 1990 season. Of those, he said 20 were plays on research faculty, the library faculty, the graduate student union which the quarterback would and the undergraduate student body. By this notice, the have been called down under committee is soliciting nominations for this award. the old rules. But only eight, he !□□□□ said, would be whistled dead ove under the new one. Nominations, along with appropriate justification, should be “We don’t want to see the Mai, Tort, play stopped when a guy is in submitted to Professor Crosson at 350 Deck). They must be the hands of a defender and Tracy received by April 5 for consideration for this year's award, which still can throw the ball 40 yards + Mikster will be presented at the President’s Faculty Dinner in May. downfield, ” said Seeman. Thursday, March 21, 1991 The Observer

CAMPUS CROSSWORD

7 p.m. Lecture: “Juniors: Preparing & Planning for ACROSS 29 Winter pear 48 Half brother of FTT3 Your Job Search" Room 127 Nieuwland Science Hall. W illiam I i Bric-a------30 G orge Sponsored by Career and Placement. 31 D e rn ie r ------49 M oney 5 Wane 55 Buddhist sect 34 Type of chair 7:30 p.m. Opening Reception with Slides and Lecture. lOTennyson 56 H appily 35 A 1929 event crossed it: 1892 57 American Ron Kovatch, Ceramics. Room 200, Riley Hall. involving 13 Injury, to Revolutionary Caesar m oney 8 p.m. Concert: Faculty Recital, Carolyn Plummer, vio­ patriot is Le Louvre, e.g. 36 Comestibles linist and Karen Buranskas, cellist. Washington Hall. 58 A bstract being 16 Raul Julia TV 37 Line on an 59 Liturgies 27 28 role A.A.A. m ap 60 One-horse LECTURES i? M oney 38 Soothing word carriage 19 She wrote 39 York river Thursday “Solar Barque” 40 Tirade DOWN 20 R idicule 42 Pulitzer Prize 1 Yuppie’s auto 21 Aroused novelist: 1931 2:15 p.m. Stanley Muschett, Universidad Santa Maria. 2 Fall call 23 One does this 44 “ in the “ Panama: One Year after the Forgotten W ar?” 131 De- 3 Pub potable do. w ith m oney Dark," 1964 film 4 M oney 25 Fossil resin 45 Singers Bonnie 5 W rong 26 Makes and John 4:15 p.m. Fred Suppe, visiting scholar in Center for 6 Target Philosophy of Religion. “Credentialing Scientific Claims” reparation 46 M irador 27 Visigoth king 47 Doughboy's ally 7 Tree of the olive Library Lounge. fam ily 8 Type of bag 7:30 p.m. Dr. Todd Whitmore, assistant professor, ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 9 A nem atode I heology. “Formation of Conscience and Conscientious 10 M oney Objection." Tom Dooley Room, LaFortune. 11 A satellite of Uranus 28 Emit amplified 41 Role in "Evita" 47 Ceramist's 8 p.m. Prof. Philip Gleason, history professor at ND. 12 Peel paste light 42 Lure “The Historical Context of Liberal Education at Notre 14 "G iv e ------50 Samuel's 30 Canadian Dame.” 8 p.m. Library Auditorium. H our ": Friml 43 Had the flu m entor Indian 18 Large sums of 44 She was Miss 51 Ship's channel 8 p.m. Terry Lynn Karl, Stanford University. m oney 32 G ilroy's B rooks 52 Burmese knife 22 Bee: Comb, "S ubject" 53 Queen before “Contemporary Implications of the Life and Death of 45 Romeo and form Sophia Archbishop Romero." CSC. 33 Fishy date? Juliet, e.g. 23 Erm ine in 54 Juan Carlos I, 35 Lemon Friday sum m er 46 Seep eg 24 Money, etc. operating in Detroit 25 M oney Answers to any three clues in this 12:15 p.m. Prof. Jim Collins. “Feminist Theory and the 36 Masses of 26 But, in Bonn puzzle are available by touch-tone Media" Friday Forum at the CSC. m oney 27 B e a tie s '" ------phone: 1 -900-420-5656 (75c each Day’s Night” 38 Piscatory rover m inute). MENU Notre Dame

Pasta Faziole Chicken Acropolis Meat Ravioli Cod cakes w/Newburg Sauce

CALVIN AND HOBBES BILL WATTERSON THE FAR SIDE GARY LARSON SPELUNKER JAY HOSIER I MADE MY BED AND [ HAVE A THANK 'tOO © 1991 Universal Press Syndicate I PUT MY BREAKFAST DISHES GOOD DAY I'LL STUDY AWAY! I'M OFF TO HARD. A GOOD SCHOOL NOW' EDUCATION IS a M T T m ’TMimruirs o f^ rls ? INVALUABLE WOW, THAT SOUNDS TEMPTlUfri BUT i ' l l HflVe to pass, i justaot A NEvJ BmSHSLf AND I'M OVST DY/N' TO TRY IT OUT.

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u iw w fi .EAPREV, THIS IS X I CANT WORKING 1 BELIEVE YOUR OUT GREAT.' I MOM THINKS THAIS YOU

How NERD SteReoTypES

We’re in luck, Zorko!”

lliui sda >, March 21st #

The SHAMROCK SHUFFLE III

♦ Pace begin* al Stepan Center, 5 p.m. ♦ there It a SC registration fee, which Includes a commemorative I shirt. ♦Register Match 19 V 20 at dinner or In SllB office or 1/2 hour before the run. ♦Cain date set for April 4 th .

The W all 8:00p.m. and 10:30p.m. $2 Cushing Auditorium Thursday STUDENT UNION BOARD Sports page 24 Thursday, March 21, 1991 Women’s hoops travels to Texas for NIT Tourney By RENEFERRAN “After a day or two, I was three-point threat (40.8 per­ Associate Sports Editor ready to get back going,” Davis cent). On the inside, 6-0 junior said. “I’m looking forward to Laura Hughes (9.1 ppg, 6.8 rpg) A m a rillo , Texas may not be going back and doing better made a smooth transition from on everyone’s top 10 list of than sophomore season. It’s the junior college ranks to places to be in March, but for nice to have one more week of become the Broncos’ main in­ the eight women’s basketball playing, one more week of bas­ side force. teams at the 23rd annual ketball before hanging up the “They’re a well-balanced National Invitational Tour­ shoes.” team,” Glass said. “Their two nament, this weekend is an op­ Notre Dame’s first-round op­ guards are their two leading portunity to make a statement. ponent tonight is eighth-seed scorers, but they get scoring “It’s a chance to show the Santa Clara (25-3), West Coast from all positions, and they get (NCAA selection) committee, if Conference champions. The a lot of points in transition.” we can go down and win (the Broncos improved dramatically The main points of the other NIT), that they messed up when from their 9-17 record last six teams in the tournament: they didn't pick us," senior season largely due to the efforts •ALABAMA-BIRMINGHAM Krissi Davis said. “That defi­ of transfer guard Melissa King. (22-7)—The second seed was nitely is a motivation to do well. The 5-7 sophomore sat out the runner-up in the Sun Belt “But if you look at the other last season after leaving Fresno Conference tournam ent and is teams, they’re also mad that State, but she was well worth making its first-ever postseason they didn’t make the tourney, the wait. The WCC Player of the appearance. The Lady Blazers and they all want to show the Year averaged 19.6 points, 5.1 are led by Sun Belt Player of the NCAA their stuff. We can’t take rebounds, 5.5 assists and 3.6 Year Jacque Nero, a 5-11 junior anyone lightly. ” steals, was a starter for Santa who led the league in both Notre Dame (23-6) goes into Clara’s Final Four soccer team, scoring and rebounding (21.2, the NIT as the top seed in the and is easily the Broncos’ 11.2). eight-team tourney. This is the biggest weapon on the basket­ •NORTHERN ILLINOIS (24- third time in Irish history that ball court. 8)—The Huskies finished sec­ they have gone to Texas, finish­ “She’s a lot like Karen ond in the North Star Confer­ ing third in 1986 and seventh in Robinson," said assistant coach ence and come into the NIT as 1989. Dave Glass. “ She’s very athletic, the th ird seed. 5-7 senior Lisa While at first Davis was un­ quick and extrem ely fast. She Foss (24.9 ppg), the North Star sure whether she wanted to looks to penetrate more; she’s Player of the Year, and 6-0 compete at the NIT, as the ini­ not the shooter that Karen is.” sophomore Cindy Conner (12.6, tial disappointment of not King’s backcourt mate, All- 6.8) are NIU’s top players. making the NCAAs faded away, WCC senior Julie Lienert (15.1 •LOUISVILLE (23-9)—The The Observer / David Lee her enthusiasm for this week­ ppg), is Santa Clara’s second- Senior guard Sara Liebscher will lead the Irish into the women’s NIT end grew. leading scorer and primary see NIT / page 18 Tourmament as the number-one seeded team . Men’s tennis faces top teams at Blue-Gray Invitational By DAVE McMAHON cannot accept and the remain­ man, was ranked 240th in the and have almost all foreign Associate Sports Editor der are chosen from the 17th- world before the setback to players,” said Bayliss. “ We ranked team down. Coleman. haven’t played a whole lot of “This is like getting into the “ I would think this is the shot the teams that they’ve played, The Notre Dame men’s tennis Sweet 16 of the NCAAs,” said in the arm that he needs,” said so it’ll be test for us.” team, coming off a 1-3 record coach Bob Bayliss. “It’s first- Bayliss. Facing such stellar opponents over spring break, continues its class tournament and it has Perhaps playing the most is beginning to take its toll on relentless schedule today as it another first class field.” consistent tennis for the Irish, the Irish, who have already begins play in the Blue-Gray Unfortunately for Notre besides DiLucia, is sophomore played ten of the 25 teams Invitational at Montgomery, Ala. Dame, they may be w ithout the Mark Schmidt, who lost some ranked in this weeks Volvo The 14th-ranked Irish (10-8) services of junior All-American MM# tough matches over break but Tennis poll. Seven of the eight face Mississippi State in the David DiLucia, who suffered has had a tendency to recover Notre Dame losses have been to opening round of the outdoor back spasms in the UCLA match quickly from such setbacks. the numbers one, three, four, event. A win over the Bulldogs and will be tested on a day-by- I Doubles play has been five, six, twelve, and thirteen would pit Notre Dame against day basis. A cold, overcast day Mark Schmidt boosted by sophomore Andy teams in the nation. either 1 lth-ranked South in Los Angeles aggravated the to make some waves. Zurcher, who has teamed with “There’s no question we re a Carolina or 24th-ranked injury, but the Norristown, “If Dave’s injured, this will be primarily with junior Will little battle weary,” said Bayliss. Minnesota in the second round. Penn., native was still able to the time for the sophomores to Forsyth to bolster the number- “Hopefully we’ll be able to start The competition doesn’t let up dispose of 26th-ranked Jason come in and play like they did two doubles position. winning a few of the close for the Irish, as 15 of the Netter, 6-4, 6-3. It was last year,” said Bayliss. The opener with Mississippi matches that have been getting tournament’s 16 teams are DiLucia’s 16th straight win and Chuck Coleman, coming off a State will present the Irish with away from us lately.” ranked among the top 35 in the raised his singles record to 35- confidence-building win over a common commodity among nation. The top 16 teams, as of 4. UCLA’s David Nainkin, 6-7, 6-2, an ever-increasing amount of W ith a possible NCAA bid on last season’s final Volvo If DiLucia’s injury makes his 6-3, should provide a boost for college tennis teams — that is, the horizon, the Irish could only Tennis/Collegiate Rankings, are status questionable, a strong the sophomore-laden squad. foreign players. improve their chances with a invited to the event, but some sophomore class w ill be forced Nainkin, a 22-year old fresh­ “They’re a very young team few wins this weekend. Irish wrestlers finish season placing 35th in NCAA Championships at Iowa By DAVE DIETEMAN McGrew won, and Curt Engler of Gowens. Sports Editor lost a close one.” In his first match, McGrew “But King fell in the next registered a fall over Steve round, Gowens and McGrew Williams of North Carolina The Notre Dame wrestling lost to the top seeds in their di­ State at the 5:46 mark, only to team capped off a roller-coaster visions. King won his next two lose 18-7 to top-ranked Marty season by placing 35th at the matches, but he lost his next Morgan of Minnesota in his next NCAA Championships in Iowa one, which would have placed match. McGrew was then City, Iowa. him in the top eight. Also, caught and pinned by The Iowa Hawkeyes, mean­ McGrew got pinned in his con­ Oklahoma State’s Robby while, who manhandled the solation match.” Hadden while attempting a leg Irish 51-0 in a late-season dual Marcus Gowens, a 126-pound shot in his consolation match. meet, ran away with the na­ jun ior from Del City, Okla., won Ironically, Hadden had been tional championship by scoring his first match, 6-3, over Danny beaten by Morgan the match 157 team points. Iowa matmen Smith of Lock Haven University. before Morgan defeated captured two first-places, four Gowens, however, was pinned McGrew. second-places, two third-places, by top seed Terry Brands of Sophomore Steve King, how­ and one sixth-place. Iowa at the 6:04 mark of his ever, was the Irish wrestler Yet the Irish did not suffer next match. Gowens then fell 8- closest to placing in the top from lack of trying. 6 to Nick Pendolino of Clarion eight and gaining All-American “We didn’t have the best draw in a consolation match. status. in the world, ” reflected Notre “Marcus has got to work on King, who is from Janesville, Dame coach Fran McCann, who his strength,” prescribed Minn., opened the tournament saw two of his McCann. “ He also has to relax. with a 17-14 upset of Syracuse’s wrestlers—Marcus Gowens and He gets into situations where he Mark Kerr, ranked sixth at 190 Steve King—make return trips needs more power and he just pounds. Kerr, oddly enough, The Observer / Macy Hueckel to the tournament. “We had a doesn’t have any more.” had beaten King in an early- The Notre Dame wrestling team ended the season with a 35th-place good first round. Steve King J.J. McGrew, a freshman 177- season dual meet. finish at the NCAA Championships. beat the sixth seed in his weight pounder from Cleveland, Okla., see NCAA’S / page 21 class, Gowens won, J.J. met with a fate similar to that