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e - SaintMaryls College The Observer NOTRE DAME-IKDIANA VOL XXIV NO MONDAY , November 25, 1991

THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SERVING NOTRE DAME AND SAINT MARY’S New St. Michael’s to open in January By TIM CALLAHAN during the semester. Each a r­ News Writer ticle of clothing that a person sends to be washed costs he or she a set charge, which w ill Laundry options for Notre be deducted from their $92 Dame students will expand in balance. For example, shorts January as St. Michael’s may be washed for $0.35 a Laundry, which burned down in pair and underwear for $0.15. November 1989, re-opens its Students may also choose doors. not to sign a contract. Those St. M ic h a e l’s, now w ith a not under contract will pay for larger and updated facility be­ each load that he or she sends hind the ND Credit Union on to the laundry. The price for Douglas Rd., has the capacity each individual load will be to offer laundry service to determined by the set price every Notre Dame student. for each item. “The main difference between Refunds are also available the old and new services is for lost or damaged clothing. that before laundry service St. M ich ae l’s has set ce iling was mandatory for all Notre prices for every different gar­ Dame males excluding o f ment. The service reimburses females, while this new up to 60 percent of the ceiling service will be optional for all price. The set prices range Notre Dame males and from $50 for sweaters and females,” said James Lyphout, jean jackets to $4 for socks. associate vice president for Every student that uses St. The Observer/Andrew McCloskey business affairs. The tradition continues Michael’s, whether under con­ Laundry contracts will be tract or not, must purchase offered to Notre Dame stu­ Notre Dame students covertly gather across campus for the annual campus snowball fight. The incident laundry bags and labels, traditionally takes place after the first substantial snowfall of the year. See story below. dents. For $75, St. Michael's will provide $92 in services see LAUNDRY / page 4 FAF’s to be sent to Notre Dame students next week By BECKY BARNES students to file the form as soon The FAF is sent to the College Notre Dame and the family’s most important aspects, said News Writer as possible because “there is Scholarship Service, an agency estimated ability to pay, then Russo. He added that what may not an unlimited number of affiliated with the College the student is eligible for finan­ be a la rg e need at a sta te All Notre Dame students who dollars.” Board, which determines how cial aid, said Russo. He added university may be only a modest have previously applied for fi­ “Often we can’t help students much the student’s family is that a student eligible for aid need here. nancial aid will be receiving because there’s no money left,” able to contribute toward the does not necessarily receive it. For example, an $18,000 Financial aid forms (FAF) for he said. cost of education, said Russo. need is considered a large need, the 1992-93 school year in the Russo said that Notre Dame but an $8,000 need, which may mail next week, and the ND of­ Russo said that students The College Scholarship uses five standards to deter­ cover the entire cost of a state fice of financial aid urges stu­ should file the FAF shortly after Service then sends the estimate mine financial assistance: the university, is here considered dents to re tu rn the form s as January 1 even if not all tax to the financial aid office at level of need, government regu­ only a modest need. soon as possible, said Joe information is available. Notre Dame which determines lations, university policy, stu­ In distributing scarce re­ Russo, director of financial aid. Families should estimate tax the student’s eligibility for as­ dent credentials, and the avail­ sources, Russo said that the fi­ Although the deadline for FAF information and send more ac­ sistance. ability of resources—not neces­ nancial aid office often must return is not until February 28, curate information later if there If there is a difference be­ sarily in that order. target funds towards meeting 1992, Russo encouraged is a large discrepancy, he said. tween the cost of attending The level of need is one of the see F.A.F./ page 4 ND junior wins honors ND students mugged off-campus By MICHAEL SCHOLL at national conference News Writer By RYAN KERRIGAN was “the most capable speaker News Writer and the most able diplomat, ” Two Stanford Hall residents Certo said. “The competition were robbed at gunpoint at the i i was between the head corner of Eddy and St. Vincent Vaness Notre Dame jun ior Dave Certo delegates of each school.” streets early Saturday morning, Notre Dame won national honors at the Over 400 delegates competed according to Chuck Hurley, as­ Golf Course Model Organization of at the conference, with each sistant director of Security. 5? American States (MOAS) recent college’s team representing an The robbery occurred at conference in Washington D C. OAS nation. The Notre Dame around 2:30 a.m., Hurley said. Edison Certo was the head delegate delegation represented the Neither student was injured. Cemetary for Notre Dame’s Model United Caribbean nation Barbados. One of the victims, who Nations Club at the Nov. 10-15 The ND delegation was made wished to remain unidentified, Angela' conference. He was named up by Certo, Adeline Cassin, said that he and his friend were Peashwav-, Outstanding Delegate over stu­ Rick Conners, John Donlan, walking back to campus from r Napoleon dents from 41 U.S. and Anthony Garces, Dan Hoffman, Lafayette Square apartments SITE OF ROBBERY Canadian colleges. on Eddy St. when they were ap­ r-fjuincent i The criteria for the award see OAS / page 6 proached by man carrying a small revolver. Snowball fight causes little damage The victims described the suspect as an 18-to-20 year old Observer Staff Report The battle lasted from ap­ b la ck m ale, about 5 feet 11 proximately 11:40 p.m. until 1 inches and approximately 155 Approximately 300 Notre a.m., with minor skirmishes lbs. He was wearing a baseball Dame students were involved in still going on at 1:30 a.m., said cap, a full-length black coat, a campus-wide snowball fight Hurley. The battle site moved and wire-rim m ed eyeglasses. late Sunday and early Monday, from North Quad to South Quad The gunman demanded according to Chuck Hurley, as­ as the night progressed, money from the students. One sistant director of ND Security. according to a student who es­ of the students surrendered his order, while the attacker ran in patrol. The officer proceeded The only damage rendered by timated the number of belliger­ wallet, while the other insisted the other direction. to investigate the crime scene, stray snowballs was a broken ents at 900. that he had no money. The students reached the but found no sign of the window in the Rockne Campus-wide snowball fights The assailant took the wallet parking lot of the Alumni/Senior gunman. Memorial on South Quad, said have traditionally occurred on and ordered the students to run Club at approximately 2:45 am, Anyone with information Hurley. No injuries were the night of the first substantial towards campus. The victim when they reported the robbery about this crime can contact ND reported. snowfall of each academic year. said they complied with the to a ND Security officer on Security at 239-5555. I -Olp h r-v :•. ■■ • >I ■" page 2 The Observer Monday, November, 1991

INSIDE COLUMN FORECAST: Cloudy today and To believe in Lines separate high temperature zones for the day. cold with flurries. High around 30. I y/>\x\\\N /RV" Clearing tonight and God is death to very cold. Low around 15.

life TEMPERATURES:

Why mourn when people City H Athens 68 die? Why do people Atlanta 45 continue to constantly Berlin 39 dwell in another person’s Boston 48 Chicago 28 loss, putting themselves Dallas-Ft.Wofth 59 through more pain Denver 50 Detroit 30 through the constant Honolulu 86 reminders. I understand Houston 60 if the loss of a person is r Schwartz Indianapolis 27 London 52 very close but what does Sports Photo Editor Los Angeles 84 it mean to go and pay r Miami Beach 77 New Orleans 56 respect to a lifeless body? New York 58 I had two friends die this summer within a Paris 41 matter of two weeks. At first I was kind of sad, Philadelphia 62 Rome 63 but realistically their presence or significance in San Diego 76 my life w ill be replaced by someone else. San Francisco 67 I find it kind of humorous that I always hear Seattle 50 South Bend 26 the same quote every time I go to a funeral or Tokyo 63 Pressure ^ memorial service, “I’m sure he is much happier Washington, D C 53 now that he is in heaven.” What is that H L E3 E33 G3 EZ3 E3 E33 & £2, supposed to mean? People are always assumed HIGH LOW SHOWERS RAIN T-STORMS FLURRIES SNOW ICE' SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY off to heaven no m atter what. Nobody ever says, Via Associated Press “ Gosh I hope hell doesn’t suck too bad.” All this furthers my belief that religion is dangerous. The Bible says something to the extent, “Blessed are those who have not seen, TODAY AT A GLANCE but still believe.” All this quote means to me is believe and do not ask any questions. People are taught to accept the unexplainable WORLD Aga Khan, a U.N. envoy who had been in Baghdad to as an act of faith; life is so much easier if a negotiate an agreement allowing the United Nations to person believes in God. continue relief work inside Iraq. Richter was arrested All of the sudden, all unexplainable occur­ Honecker still a problem for Germans at Baghdad Airport in July 1986 on suspicion of rences can be attributed to God. If something ■BERLIN — German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, whose bribery. Eight months later — in a trial lasting just good happens, people thank God. If something legal and diplomatic efforts have failed to secure the over an hour — he was convicted of paying illegal bad happens, people just say, “Well, God must return of former East German leader Erich Honecker, commissions to a former Baghdad mayor and sen­ have had a reason for it.” Better yet, people tried Sunday to shame Honecker into returning to face tenced to life imprisonment. The mayor was later exe­ blame themselves for not having enough faith or trial. Kohl said if the 79-year-old Communist believes cuted for corruption. not doing enough of the “right things." his iron rule was justified, then he should have the Everybody wants to give God the credit for the “courage” to let it be judged in a court. Honecker has good things and not blame Him for the bad NATIONAL things. been in Moscow since March. German officials have I say, if there is a God, why give Him credit for been pressing Moscow for his return. German officials anything? If He did create us, then we could have implored both Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev Wilder criticizes Bush on racism ______give him credit for life, but are we not good and Russian President Boris Yeltsin to return Honecker enough for achievements to be our own? Can to face trial. Yeltsin suggested in a recent interview ■DUBUQUE, Iowa — Democratic presidential con­ we not learn from our own mistakes rather than that Honecker should be permitted to go into exile in tender L. Douglas Wilder said Sunday that President expect to have God “teach us a lesson.” Chile, where a daughter lives. Germany is firmly op­ Bush is ignoring a resurgence of racism in the United Twenty-three people from Killeen, Texas were posed. Chile has said he is not welcome without a valid States. Wilder, the only black among the six major murdered because some crazy refused to deal German passport, which he does not have. Democratic candidates, said that even though Bush last with life. People try to simplify their lives by not week signed a civil rights bill his support was less than having to deal with death. People also like to ardent. “Even the day he signs the civil rights bill, he believe in heaven because it simplifies their British prisoner returns from Iraq ______argues against what the Congress intended, ” Wilder lives. As long as a person decides that there is a ■LONDON — Businessman Ian Richter returned to God, and that there is a heaven, death is said, blaming the Republicans and former President insignificant. Death just takes a person to a Britain on Sunday after 5 1/2 years in an Iraqi prison Reagan for fostering racial divisiveness. “The climate “better place.” To me it is all a big joke. for a bribery conviction. After Richter was freed, that’s being created in America is quota, which sug­ Following the Christian beliefs, it seems that Britain unfroze $125 m illion in Iraqi assets to be used gests that somebody’s after someone’s job. Region there is really no reason to live or to hope that for humanitarian purposes and relief supplies. The as­ against region,” Wilder said. “It started way back another person does not die. Logically I should sets were frozen as part of U.N. sanctions against Iraq down the line with Reagan using ‘welfare queen’ with­ hope the world ends in a nuclear holocaust following its Aug. 2, 1990, invasion of Kuwait. Iraq out documenting anything. Then you have Bush coming tomorrow. Then we would all be “much better broke diplomatic relations with Britain on Feb. 6 and up with Willie Horton. Even Lee Atwater denounced off.” withdrew all but one diplomat. The 45-year-old chemi­ that,” he said, referring to the late chairman of the I am unable to believe that there is anyplace cal engineer was accompanied by Prince Sadruddin GOP. “Bush has yet to denounce it.” better than earth because I do not w ant to die. I want life NOW. I want happiness NOW. I enjoy experiencing what I have been told to deny. Who wants to count on death to fulfill their earthly desires? The only fulfillment is that there are no longer any desires. I want to be satisfied when I OF INTEREST die; satisfied that I became life in itself, not just lived it. Anyone interested in November 27. Applications should be turned in to room When I die, throw my body in a fire and burn ■Thanksgiving Basket Delivery helping put together or deliver Thanksgiving Baskets to 371 Fitzpatrick. me. Have a party and celebrate YOUR life. South Bend families in need on Tuesday, Nov. 26, please Because regardless of your feelings towards me, call Kathy at 283-3429. We are especially in need of there w ill be others to be what I am no more. ■Thanksgiving service opportunities Trips to the drivers, but all volunteers are welcome. L’Arche Community at Daybreak in Toronto and Saint These views are those o f the author and not Martin Porres House of Hope on Chicago, both necessarily those o f The Observer.______Wednesday afternoon through Sunday morning. Contact ■The application deadline for the College of Br. Bonaventure Scully (239-7353 L’Arche) or Jim Today's Staff Engineering summer program in London is Wednesday, DeMarco (283-1149 St. M artin de Porres). Production News Lisa Bourdon Peter Loftus Michelle Wood Kelly Lynch MARKET UPDATE ON IMS DAY IN HISTORY

Business Accent In1920: Noted auto-racing driver Gaston Chevrolet died in Rich Riley Paige Smoron YESTERDAY’S TRADING/ November 22 a crash on the Los Angeles Speedway. Peter Loftus VOLUME IN SHARES NYSE INDEX In 1947: The Motion Picture Association and other Andy Runkle Sports 228,781,410 208.17 ▼ 2.04 societies voted to bar ten professionals, the “Hollywood Ten," Rich Szabo S&P COMPOSITE from the industry, and resolved to refuse jobs to Communists. Viewpoint 376.14 3.92 In 1965: Joseph Mobutu, army chief in the Congo, deposed President Joseph Kasavubu and installed himself as Rich Riley Graphics DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS Brendan Regan head of the government. 2,902.73 + 29.96 ■ In 1976: O.J. Simpson, playing for the Buffalo Bills, broke Lab Tech his own one-game record of 250 yards by running 273 yards R. Garr Schwartz DOWN PRECIOUS METALS 1149 against the Detroit Lions, who still won the game. The Observer (USPS 599 2-4000) is published Monday GOLD ^ $ l.OOto $369.60/oz. ■ In 1984: Surgeons at Humana Heart Institute in Louiseville through Friday except during exam and vacation periods. The performed the world's second permanent artificial heart SILVER ^ 10 to $4.135/oz. Observer is a member of the Associated Press. All reproduction implant, removing the heart of 52-year-old William Schroeder rights are reserved. and replacing it with an 11 -ounce plastic and metal device. Monday, November 25, 1991 The Observer page 3 Repair of nuclear plant planned COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — ment went from measuring cooled to water. Nuclear plant workers planned pressure to measuring zero.” The plant remained on alert to release radioactive gases into The building had to be vented for more than 15 hours until the air Sunday after 50,000 to clear the radioactive gases so the reactor was cooled to below gallons of contaminated water workers could enter Monday, 200 degrees. Alert status is the leaked into a containment Clark said. second highest of four NRC building the day before. classifications. The fourth, and “I want to emphasize that most serious, is a general Freeing the radioactive gases what is released is not anymore emergency. from from the building posed no than what the plant normally Clark said the tainted water health threat to the public or releases during routine opera­ on the floor of the containment workers, according to Ken tion," Clark said. “An NRC spe­ building would be purged of Clark, a spokesman for the cialist will be there to see that radioactivity. Officials did not N u c le a r R e g u la to ry (the plant) adheres to the re­ know how long repairs might Commission. quirements.” take. The cause of the leak early Sandra Threatt, emergency Saturday at Duke Power Co.’s planning coordinator for the “It’s my information that they Oconee nuclear plant remained state Department of Health and w ill begin to process a small unknown because inspectors Environmental Control, said an amount of that water (Sunday) could not safely enter the af­ inspection team that arrived through the radioactive fected area, but officials soon after the spill found no treatment system,” he said. thought they had isolated the unusual radiation levels. “Some of the w ater can eventu­ most likely cause. ally be pumped back into the Duke Power reported an alert system or treated so that it is “The suspicion is that the to the NRC at 2:14 a.m. safely released back into the problem is with a line that’s Saturday after discovering a environment." used to measure pressure in the leak in the plant’s 17-year-old system,” said Joe Maher, Unit 3 reactor. Thousands of The accident at the plant near spokesman for Duke Power in gallons of radioactive steam Seneca, about 120 miles north­ Charlotte. N.C. “ When we dis­ gushed into the reactor’s con­ west of Columbia, caused no in­ covered the leak, this instru­ tainment building. The steam terruption to electrical service. College nuclear reactor shutdown PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — High equipment and the emergency The incident began at 3:15 radiation levels in a building procedures were more than p.m. Saturday when monitors housing Reed College’s small sufficient to protect the public," detected above-normal airborne nuclear reactor prompted a stud Greg Cook, spokesman for radiation levels in the reactor shutdown, but no radiation the Nuclear Regulatory building. Two staff members The Observer/Andrew McCloskey escaped the building, a Commission. shut down the reactor and the When in Rome spokeswoman said Sunday. The leak allowed radioactive building’s ventilation system Radiation levels dropped gases to escape into the pool of Seniors Dan Laboe, Mike Sullivan (seated), and Shannon Poley automatically sealed the steadily after the reactor was water that covers the reactor to mimic the Romans of ancient times at an off-campus party last building. turned off Saturday afternoon, help cool it. When those gases weekend. Togas were a required for admittance. Cook said the ventilation sys­ said Harriet Watson, a college started bubbling out of the tem has filters to prevent the spokeswoman. The cause of the water, they triggered the escape of any radioactive parti­ problem was blamed on reactor room ventilation system cles but some radioactive gases “pinhole" leaks in one of its fuel and alerted operators to higher did escape. rods. levels of radiation, Cook said. Club Column “The situation never posed The college will submit a plan However, the maximum radi­ NOVEMBER 25,1991 any environmental threat be­ to the NRC for repairs before it ation level in the reactor room yond the reactor room itself, ” restarts the reactor, probably after the reactor was shut down Watson said. not until early next year, he was only about a tenth of a 1)The Club Coordination Council would like to remind all presidents of The incident prompted decla­ said. m illirem , he said. graduate and undergraduate clubs to check their mailboxes on the second ration of an “unusual event,” Reed is the only undergradu­ “A typical cross-country flight which is a low-level emergency floor of LaFortune. ate college in the country with w ill expose an individual to requiring people to leave por­ its own reactor. Known as a about three millirems of ra­ 2) World Peace Action Group will meet Wednesdays at 7 pm in the CSC tions of the reactor building. TRIGA Mark I, the washing- diation," Cook said. Coffeehouse. Everyone is welcome! “These very small leaks in machine size reactor is used for Watson said classes at the fuel elements are not uncom­ 3) Amnesty International will have a meeting and a letter writing session research and educational pur­ college will continue on sched­ mon, and it appears that the poses. ule Monday. Nov. 25 from 7:30-8:30 in the Dooley Room of LaFortune. Any club wishing to place an entry in the Club Column must do so by 4 pm Thursday each week. All entries appear in the following Monday's edition Please Recycle Queen’s lead singer of The Observer. Please drop off entries to the Club Coordination Council Thank You. office in 206 LaFortune. Mercury dies of AIDS LONDON (AP) — Rock made the group one of the musician Freddie Mercury, favorites of the 1970s. THE BECKER CPA REVIEW COURSE FOR THE whose dramatic vocals helped Their hits included make Queen one of the top pop “ Bohemian Rhapsody," “We Are MAY 1992 CPA EXAM WILL BE CONVENIENTLY music groups of the 1970s, died The Champions” and “Crazy Sunday night of pneumonia Little Thing Called Love.” LOCATED AT SAINT MARY’S COLLEGE SCIENCE brought on by AIDS, his Mercury later released solo publicist said. such as “ The Great HALL - LOWER LEVEL Only a day earlier, the 45- Pretender," which also sold year-old Mercury had ended well. intense media speculation In recent years, he had lived a about his health by issuing a secluded life and resisted • 17 WEEK MONDAY WEDNESDAY COURSE statement that he was stricken responding to persistent rumors w ith the disease. that he had contracted AIDS. BEGINNING WITH SPECIAL EARLY CLASSES Mercury died peacefully at his After speculating for weeks home in Kensington, west that Mercury might have AIDS, 12/2 & 12/4 London, said his spokeswoman, British tabloids gave his Roxy Meade. “ His death was confirmation big play. “Freddie: the result of broncho-pneu- I’ve Got AIDS," News of the • FIRST 6 LECTURES FREE monia brought on by AIDS.” World screamed in 2-inch type. said a statement from his Photos published Sunday publicity company. show that the disease, which • EARN TUITION FREE CONTINUING HELP IN In his disclosure Saturday, attacks the body’s immune Mercury said: system, had left him looking OVER 125 LOCATIONS “I felt it correct to keep this frail and gaunt. information private to date in After Mercury’s family order to protect the privacy of returned to England, he at­ • SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT those around me. tended Ealing College of Art, “The time has now come for then joined Brian May, John my friends and fans around the Deacon and Roger Taylor to • 30% FREE REPEAT TO ALL FORMER world to know the truth and I form Queen in 1971. hope that everyone w ill join Their debut was STUDENTS with me, my doctors and all “Queen ” in 1973, followed by those worldwide in the fight “ Queen II" a year later w ith the against this terrible disease.” single “ Seven Seas of Rhye, ” • SCHEDULE INFORMATION FOR ALL 125 Born Frederick Bulsara in which made the British charts. Zanzibar, the son of a The “Sheer Heart Attack” LOCATIONS government accountant, album gave them a big hit with Mercury rose to fame as the “Killer Queen, ” but it was "A bravura singer for Queen, Night At The Opera” which whose elaborate and gave them a No. 1 with CALL 277 4366 FOR MORE INFORMATION occasionally bombastic songs “Bohemian Rhapsody." page 4 The Observer Monday, November 25,1991 Laundry F.A.F. continued from page 1 continued from page 1

which w ill have his or her university objectives. laundry identification number It is university policy to ■ and names. Laundry bags “enroll and graduate the best cost $2.50 and labels are students from the most diverse $0.10 each. background,” he said, and funds are targeted to those St. Michael’s posts a time students. schedule in each dorm to indi­ cate pick up and delivery Russo anticipates another in ­ times. The laundry is picked crease in costs next year up at each dorm, while although the figures will not be students will claim their clean determined by the budget clothes at a Student Bundle committee until early in the Distribution Center, located spring semester, he said. behind the Administration As a reflection of the increas­ building. ing costs and the present state In addition to regular bundle of the economy in general, service, St. M ich ae l’s offers Russo said that the university dry cleaning and express has had more applications for laundry. financial aid this year than in “We have already received any past year. our first batch of signed con­ He expects this increase in W Ts." 4" ' «anmn '• - ,%»- 'i iHiiitW . Iter ^w. $68 IMBnW#. . ■ ak 8 . .» tacts, and all signs are The Observer/Elisa Klosterman applications to continue, and In January, a newly located St. Michael's Laundry is slated to re-open its doors behind the Notre Dame Credit positive that St. Michael’s concluded, “We very much en­ Union. A fire in November 1989 destroyed the old building. Updated facilities will offer services to both male laundry service w ill be a courage students to get the FAF and female students. Dry cleaning opportunities are also available through St. Michael’s. success,” said Lyphout. filed on time.” Fighting continues in Croatia before accord ZAGREB, Yugoslavia (AP) — diplomatic negotiations, Croatia the conflict, which began after months. Zagreb and Belgrade, the fed­ Fighting continued in Croatia has managed to internationalize Croatia declared independence The Osijek hospital reported eral and Serbian capital. Sunday even though a new the war," said Tudjman. in June. nine people were killed and 46 Vance said it was “very im­ cease-fire was to take effect in Serbian President Slobodan “The simple drawing of a line wounded over the previous 24 portant” that the cease-fire ac­ the secessionist republic and Milosevic indicated it might and putting troops along that hours. cord requires Croatian forces to pave the way for the deploy­ take some time for the truce to line has not proved over the Laslovo, a strategically im ­ lift their blockade of Yugoslav ment of U.N. peacekeepers. take firm hold. years a very practical way” to portant village south of Osijek, army barracks in the republic. Thirteen previous truce “It has to be taken into preserve peace, Vance said was captured Sunday, said the “One of the big problems that agreements mediated by the account that the road from after briefing Perez de Cuellar Yugoslav news agency Tanjug has led to the continuation of European Community all failed ideas and proposals to their about the truce accord. and Croatian sources. the fighting has been the to halt the fighting in the 5- implementation is neither easy Vance said he hoped an Refugees continued to flee blockading of those barracks,” month-old civil war, and the nor simple,” he told the agreement on peacekeeping Osijek, a city of 140,000 people said Vance, who was U.S. sec­ United Nations says it will not Belgrade daily Politika. forces could be worked out and surrounding villages. retary of state under President send peacekeepers unless a Cyrus Vance, the U.N. envoy w ithin a week. Hungarian state radio said Carter. cease-fire holds. who mediated the latest agree­ Thousands of people have 1,500 refugees, including six On Sunday, about 200 federal In Rome, U.N. Secretary- ment on Saturday, said both been killed in the civil war. busloads of school children, soldiers began withdrawing General Javier Perez de Cuellar sides seemed to sincerely want Croat officials said fighting crossed into Hungary at one from the Pleso barracks at said he was “hopeful" about the peacekeepers and he hinted at continued Sunday, mostly border point alone by midday. Zagreb airport, Croatian radio latest truce. a possible compromise on how around Osijek, capital of the More than 2,300 crossed into reported. No specific time was set for such a force would be deployed. Slavonia region in eastern Hungary on Saturday. That was in accordance with the cease-fire to take effect, and Serbia has called for peace­ Croatia. Attacks were reported by lo­ an agreement reached Friday there were no signs that the keepers to separate ethnic Attacks on the Croat cal Croat officials on and for the army to leave barracks warring sides were complying. groups on Croatian territory. stronghold intensified last week around Karlovac, a federal around Zagreb within 15 days. Croatian President Franjo Croatia, which fears that would after Vukovar, a town 20 miles army garrison town 30 miles Croatia declared indepen­ Tudjman, in a televised address legitimize the seizure of about a away on the Danube River bor­ southwest of Zagreb, Croatia’s dence on June 25 along with Sunday, told Croatians their third of Croatian territory by der with Serbia, fell to the Serb- capital. Croat officials said Slovenia. After several days of fight for independence from Serb forces, wants the peace­ dominated federal army. Nearly there also was an artillery at­ fierce fighting in Slovenia, the Yugoslavia had “ reached its keepers on the official border encircled by the army and tack on Nova Gadiska, 80 miles Serb-dominated federal gov­ culmination” and “the aggres­ between the republics. fighters from Croatia’s Serb southeast of Zagreb. ernment dropped its opposition sor has not achieved his goals.” But Vance said U.N. troops minority, Osijek has been Fighting also was reported on to independence for the ethni­ “ By successful defense and might be sent to “flashpoints” in shelled almost daily for several the main highway between cally homogeneous republic. Democrats divided over party direction [Philadelphia South Jersey Club DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Missing from the pack was “Americans increasingly are The major Democratic presi­ New York Gov. M ario Cuomo, saying it is a possibility that dential candidates deepened who said Sunday on ABC’s George Bush will be a one-term Christmas Bus their divisions over the party’s “This Week with David president,” Kerrey said. direction and began to jab at Brinkley” that he’s not running Leaving Friday 12/20 each other as they slogged for president “at this moment.” For his part, Brown dismissed through a snow-packed the incident involving Kerrey Returning 1/13 Midwestern weekend. Cuomo says his immediate and the joke. “The weather is bad but the problem is working with the “ I’ve been called a lot of Cost $140 Round Trip politics is hot,” Iowa legislature to devise a multiyear things,” Brown said. “Governor Sign up at LaFortune Info Desk Democratic Party spokesman budget to deal with New York’s Moonbeam, it’s better than Joe Shannahan said as the can­ persistent budget problems. some of the jokes I’ve been Monday 3:00 - 5:00 or didates spelled out their differ­ He said he’d make his deci­ hearing lately.” ences to about 1,000 Iowa sion on a presidential run Brown was critical of prob­ 11/25 7:00 - 9:00 Democratic activists. “when I am convinced it’s bad lems caused by special-interest Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton for the Democrats for me to campaign money. Any Questions contact Mike complained about those who delay them any longer. ... I am “You can’t do a lot of govern­ doubt he’s “ a real Dem ocrat,” not yet out of time.” ing if every day you have to Folgia 273-2103 while former Massachusetts Harkin, meanwhile, cheered raise $10,000 or $20,000, ” he Sen. Paul Tsongas worried labor activists when he told said. “We’re caught in a stran­ about the “class warfare” them he didn’t mind being la­ glehold.” theme being sounded by some beled a protectionist. Wilder, the only black candi­ of his rivals. “My goodness, what a horri­ date in the field, met with vic­ Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin said ble accusation, ” he said. “That tims of a cross-burning incident there had been class warfare someone who would want to be in Dubuque, then hinted he may 'S in t A d a y , for 10 years. “And guess president of the challenge Harkin on his home what?,” he asked. “We lost. It’s would want to defend our jobs turf. time to turn the tables.” and our workers.” “I think Iowa is perfectly sit­ But Nebraska Sen. Bob But Tsongas said Democrats uated for the message I bring Kerrey countered: “We need to “cannot be protectionist, we and I don’t concede Iowa to do much more than redistribute cannot engage in class warfare. anyone,” said Wilder, while the income.” Our obligation is not to the other Democrats took pains to Virginia Gov. Doug Wilder Democratic Party. Our obliga­ avoid appearing as if they were hinted he would challenge tion is to the country." challenging Harkin at home. Harkin on his home turf before Kerrey, who recently got into the Feb. 10 precinct caucuses, hot water by repeating an off­ The candidates earlier and former California Gov. color joke about rival Brown, courted party leaders in Jerry Brown attacked the stuck to his campaign theme Chicago. After a fund-raising “ corrupt private and public that Democrats must focus on dinner here, there were hand­ power” caused by special-inter- health care, and insisted the shakes and barn dancing in est campaign money. party’s chances are improving. South Dakota. Monday, November 25, 1991 The Observer page 5 Congress agrees on sweeping crime bill WASHINGTON (AP) — House noting strong opposition on the and Senate conferees agreed House floor to a broader pro­ Sunday to a sweeping crime bill hibition. The House rejected a that would apply the death proposal by Rep. Charles penalty to some 50 federal of­ Schumer, D-N.Y., to ban more fenses and req uire a five-day than 20 assault-style weapons waiting period for handgun when it passed crime legislation purchases. last month. House Democrats said they Conferees rejected a Senate planned to bring the $3.1 bil­ provision imposing sharp new lion anti-crime package to a limits on appeals that state vote Monday while Senate prisoners — particularly Republicans vowed to fight awaiting execution — can file in passage and predicted a veto by federal court in favor of a tough President Bush if they failed. but less restrictive version Throughout the stormy, three- passed by the House. hour conference. Democrats Bush had made reform of so- accused Republicans of trying called habeas corpus petitions a to stall enactment of the hallmark of his anti-crime package before Congress proposal. adjourns this week to give Bush The b ill also would apply the a political issue. death penalty to about 50 fed­ Meanwhile, a Senate-House eral crimes, including terror­ conference met informally for ism, political assassinations and several hours Sunday to discuss drug trafficking on a large scale a transportation bill. The dual even if it doesn’t result in a question before House and murder. Senate negotiators is how best Democrats called it a tough The Observer/Marguerite Schropp to spend $151 billion in federal crime bill, civil libertarians said aid to create a surface trans­ it was draconian and The solution is... portation system for the 21st Republicans said it would make Dan White, a civil engineering graduate student, works on a solution to the Streeter-Phelps Equation. Century, while at the same time it harder to convict wrongdoers. dividing that money among a host of competing interests. “This is not a crime bill, it’s a Bush had threatened to veto pro-criminal bill," said Sen. Number of criminals on parole gun-control legislation if Strom Thurm ond, R-S.C., who Congress failed to pass the anti­ repeatedly objected during the and probation increased in 1990 crime provisions he sought. three-hour conference to pro­ But the Democratic-controlled cedures Democrats used for WASHINGTON (AP) — The on probation parallels the crowded prisons,” he said. conference raised the ante in considering various provisions. number of convicted criminals growth in the nation’s prison* Overcrowding in many states the political battle over crime Thurmond raised the possibil­ on parole increased 16.3 population in the last decade, has reduced the amount of time by rejecting several items ity of a Republican filibuster to percent last year and those the department said. inmates serve in prison. sought by Bush that were con­ stop passage in the Senate be­ placed on probation went up “Since 1980, prison and jail The increase in people being tained in one but not both of the fore Congress adjourns this 5.9 percent to new record populations have grown by 128 supervised by parole or competing bills. week. totals, the Justice Department percent, while probation and probation officers has put a “The administration will not “Every avenue will be taken said Sunday. parole counts have increased by strain on the system’s ability to accept a bill that guts the tough to stop this bill and if that fails, There were 2.6 million adults 139 percent,” said Steven keep track of offenders who are provisions passed by the House I think the president will veto on probation at the end of 1990 Dillingham, the bureau’s not incarcerated, M orris said. and the Senate," said Paul it,” Thurmopd said. and 531,407 on parole, said the director. “Everyone talks about McNulty, a Justice Department “I just can’t believe survey by the Bureau of Justice The survey did not explain the crowded prisons and there are spokesman said Sunday night. Republicans would kill a death- Statistics. 16.3 percent increase in genuine problems but what penalty b ill," said Sen. Joseph The overall total of 3.2 million parolees, but University of they fail to see is probation and The House, which had passed Biden Jr., D-Del., chairman of represented a 7.5 percent Chicago criminologist Norvall parole services are equally a seven-day waiting period for the Senate Judiciary increase from the previous year, Morris said it reflects efforts by overcrowded,” he said. In some handgun purchases last May, Committee. “For the the department said. states to reduce prison cities, caseloads for each parole accepted the Senate’s five-day Republicans to vote against The growth in the number of overcrowding. officer reaches 200 adults. “We version, which requires police capital punishment — I’d like to convicted criminals paroled “More people are being are making probation and to conduct background checks see it.” from prison and those placed pushed out the other end of parole mere tokenism." of would-be buyers. Biden and other Democrats House conferees, however, accused Republicans of trying refused to accept a Senate- to stop enactment of the crime Bush considers Saddam overthrow passed ban on 14 types of semi­ package this fall to give Bush WASHINGTON (AP) — The Saddam’s continued hold on ported. automatic assault weapons. an election-year issue in 1992. Bush administration is review­ power to minimize the gulf vic­ The Post said there are. how­ ing proposals to overthrow Iraqi tory. ever, differing views among of­ COMF. LIVE IN STYLE AT President Saddam Hussein as a White House spokesman Doug ficials and participating de­ way to stem criticisms about Davidson refused to comment partments about whether any RIVERSIDE NORTH the inconclusive end of the on the report. plan to oust Saddam is worth Persian Gulf War, according to a An interagency committee the effort. The main problem, APARTMENTS published report. under the direction of the White the newspaper said, is that the The Washington Post in House is reviewing proposals U.S. plan would depend on Monday’s editions quoted un­ that include providing Iraqi some degree o f U.S. leverage *1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments named Republican sources as rebels with such overt or covert over internal Iraqi politics and *Also, fully complemented Executive Suites saying President Bush is in­ assistance as military training some degree of cooperation creasingly concerned that and spare parts or helping to among Iraqi rebel groups. and Furnished Apartments Available Democratic lawmakers and protect a provisional, alterna­ Both are virtually nonexistent, presidential candidates will use tive government, the Post re­ said the Post.

Beautifully located on the St. Joseph River ‘Gonzo’ Thompson turns to violent art 5 minutes from Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s ASPEN, Colo. (AP) — “ Gonzo" “The Director” is adorned “ He shot out the eyes and journalist Hunter S. Thompson with gold leaf, splattered with mouth, ” she said. “ It’s violent; 1671 Riverside Drive traded his pen for a paintbrush red paint and mounted on a it's scary." — as well as firearms and background of barn wood and Other subjects include Ernest 233-2212 explosives — to create a 12- mirror. Bullet holes are figured Hemingway, Jane Fonda, piece series of artworks prominently on Hoover’s head, Brigitte Bardot and Ronald including a poster of former FBI between his eyes and under his Reagan. Three pieces have sold Director J. Edgar Hoover nose. for nearly $10,000 each, Grasso riddled with bullets and “ It’s very artistic,” Grasso said. 19 Again! splashed with red paint. said. “ He uses paints and a va­ Thompson gained fame in the Titled “ The Director,” the riety of guns and explosives." 1960s and 1970s with his irrev­ poster is among several doc­ erent reporting style dubbed Hannv Birthday Banal tored depictions of well-known She described Thompson’s “ gonzo” journalism. He has personalities Thompson has on representation of arch-conser­ written books, syndicated exhibit at the Aspen Art Gallery, vative Barry Goldwater as “the newspaper columns and arti­ said gallery owner Mary most gruesome thing you’ve cles that appeared in Rolling Grasso. ever seen." Stone and other publications. If you see news happening, We love you! call us at 239-5303 and let us know. Mom; Dad, Bill\ and Kathleen Cecilia The Observer page 6 The Observer Monday, November 25,1991 Condom targets young buyers SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) — The free condom key chains or rub- tics long cried out for a condom nation’s first youth brand con­ off tattoo kits inside and adver­ aimed at teen-agers. dom hits stores next year, tar­ tising on MTV. M iller said a A recent study by the federal geting buyers as young as 14 main focus is protection against Centers for Disease Control re­ years old. Critics say the Safe AIDS. ported that 57 percent of all Play Condoms for Young Lovers “ Everything we do is geared high school students in the na­ could encourage teens to have toward the sexually active teen tion said they have had sexual sex. — not the teen who is not hav­ intercourse. “ It’s almost like putting a ing sex, ” M iller said. “Our mes­ There are about 670 cases of loaded gun in a child’s hand, ” sage is: If you do choose to have adolescent AIDS, with the num­ said Wendy Flint of the sex — w ear a condom. ... It ’s ber logged annually rising from American Parents Association. about saving lives.” 36 in 1985 to 160 in 1990. "It’s says to them, T might as There are an estimated 1 mil­ well do it, it’s something I Critics say youth-oriented lion pregnancies and 2.5 million should be doing by this age condoms aren’t the answer to cases of sexually transmitted anyway.”’ pregnancies and the spread of diseases occurring among teen­ But Barry Miller, vice presi­ AIDS among teens. agers every year. dent of marketing for Schmid “ Despite all the talk about Safe Play packages w arn that Laboratories, which makes the abstaining, those who do condoms aren’t absolute pro­ condoms, said they only target choose to abstain are made to tection against AIDS or preg­ sexually active teens. feel like fools because they nancy. A Consumer Reports “We’re not promoting aren’t practicing safe sex,” said study found that about one la­ promiscuity among young peo­ Gary Bauer, president of the tex condom in 140 breaks. ple, but we recognize it takes Family Research Council, a place — we can’t just stick our conservative Washington, D C., Schmid, which M iller said heads in the sand, ” Miller said. think tank. targets condom buyers as Schmid introduced Safe Play young as 14, is the second- The condoms, billed as the Condoms for Young Lovers in ranked manufacturer in the na­ nation’s first to specifically England last year and already tion’s $350 m illion condom target youths, aren’t different has a 3 percent market share market. from the Ramses and Sheik there. The company unveiled Carter-Wallace Inc., which brands the company also plans for the product in the dominates 50 percent of the makes. United States just three days market with its Trojan brand,

What’s different about Safe before Magic Johnson an­ has taken recently to advertis­ The Observer/Marguerite Schropp Play is a planned marketing mix nounced he has the AIDS virus. ing its condoms using a comic- Blow your horn aimed at teens — a $3 price While company marketers strip character. But a company tag, compact six-condom hope to capitalize on that good spokeswoman said it doesn’t Sophomore Jacob Roberts practices for the concert band try-outs. package with neon graphics, timing, they contend the statis­ have a youth-oriented condom. These auditions run through Tuesday. Indiana inmates with AIDS released VALPARAISO, Ind. (AP) — has had more than 100 AIDS- Buis said. Some inmates being held for nr HIV-infected defendants in Individuals convicted of more minor offenses have been re­ her court, mostly charged with serious crimes such as rape and leased from the Porter County misdemeanor offenses. murder are sentenced to the N o w Open Jail because they have AIDS or One reason for the early re ­ state prison system run by the the HIV virus which causes the lease is the high cost of medical Indiana Department of deadly disease. treatment for those inmates. Correction. Generally, those Porter Superior Court Judges The judges also said they had cases in Porter County are Little Professor Norman Buis and Mary Harper concerns for the health and heard by judges other than Buis have confirmed that they have well-being of the offender and and Harper. Book Center released inmates who were in­ the potential health risks to Harper said she has serious fected. None of the inmates had other inmates. concerns when she sentences a In its N ew Location been charged with or convicted “ On the local level i t ’s even healthy man to prison because of a serious crime, they said. more of a problem because we of the possibility of sex among “There have been more than don’t have the money to put to­ inmates. Homosexual sex acts a few people in the last few gether a treatment program, in the jail, either consensual or months who have passed and I’m not sure that’s the way forced, happen, Harper said. through here with AIDS who to go,” Buis said. “We tend to be sensitive to have been released,” said Buis, If the inmate cannot afford people’s medical problems who added that he could not es­ medical care, the county must overall, but AIDS seems to be a timate their number. pick up the tab, Buis said. predominant concern,” she “ They pose a tremendous The Porter County Jail does said. “We really do try to be problem for our system,” he not have an AIDS treatment sensitive to these problems, said. program. especially when the offenses Harper estimated that over “We’re not running a hospital with which they’re charged are the last three to four years, she here. We’re running a ja il,” not heinous.” Rochester school clarifies its CIA ties ROCHESTER, N Y. (AP) — The accepting a recommendation agreement with what the CIA • Discounted Bestsellers • Special Orders • trustees of a college under fire from a review panel it ap­ does and don’t care to examine • Telephone Orders • Free Gift Wrapping • for ties to the CIA reaffirmed pointed that all CIA research be a change in policy,” Judd said. the relationship, but promised suspended p e n d in g For decades, the CIA has had • Book Mailing Service • Gift Certificates • to monitor more closely school development of an oversight ties to the university, which activities related to the agency. structure. specializes in photography and • Bonus Book Club • The board of Rochester “ It ’s a complete rejection o f the evolving field of imaging Institute of Technology ac­ the panel findings by the same science. Imaging science com­ | * 1 knowledged responsibility for board that expressed its ap­ bines photography and elec­ Exchange this coupon for allowing the relationship to de­ proval and support of the CIA,” tronics. velop without sufficient review, said Stephen Judd, spokesman In April, a furious debate over but stressed at a meeting for the CIA Off Campus the relationship erupted when 25% O FF | Saturday there is “nothing in­ Coalition. the school’s president, M. your next purchase at your herently inconsistent” between “It shows that the trustees are Richard Rose, disclosed he was the school’s academic mission either very naive about their spending a four-month sabbat­ Little Professor Book Center and its CIA association. ability to control the CIA, or ical at CIA headquarters in in South Bend The board stopped short of that they are very much in Langley, Va. Offer good through November 30,1991 The Notre Dame delegation against students competing for OAS participated as an extracurric­ grades,” he said. •O ffer not valid on newspapers, magazines, ular activity and is not receiving Certo has participated in L. special orders, or with other discounts. J continued from page 1 credit for the conference. many similar conferences in Participants served on four high school and college, such as Ryan Kerrigan, Rosie Riordan, Iron wood Plaza North (near the new Martin's) subcommittees and one Model Congress, Model Indiana and Kathy Rutkowski. Highway 23 at Iron wood General Committee. Issues that State Legislature, Model United South Bend, IN46637 The format of the conference, were discussed include human Nations in Chicago, and a pre­ according to Certo, “is set up to Telephone: (219)277-4488 rights, refugee assistance, the vious MOAS convention. Certo Mon-Sat.: 10:00-9:00 be competitive, yet also educa­ U.S.-proposed “Initiative for the also won an Outstanding Sunday: 10:00-5:00 tional, because you are able to Americas,” economic inte­ Delegate award at a conference meet with the ambassadors of gration, the political situation in in Chicago last year. the countries you represent and Haiti, and illicit drug en­ He is a government/theology the OAS staff.” forcement in this hemisphere. major with a concentration in Despite the educational the Hesburgh Program in Public aspect, Certo stated that com­ The ND delegation did Service, and is active with the T " \ L ITTLE PROFESSOR petitiveness remains strong, “exceptionally, especially con­ ND Speech Team and Iceberg because “most institutions are sidering only one delegate other Debates. He plans to attend the represented by graduate and B o o k c e n t e r than myself had attended MOAS Model UN conference in New undergraduate students who before, and especially York this spring and the MOAS We help you find books you’ll love. are being graded on their per­ considering we were competing Conference again next fall. formance and receiving credit.” Monday, November 25,1991 The Observer page 7 Anti-immigrant party posts gains in Belgium BRUSSELS, Belgium (APb— To do so, it needs a two-thirds Ecologists and anti-immigrant parliamentary majority. rightists posted major gains in Forming such a majority “is Sunday’s elections, dealing a going to be a very difficult,” strong setback to Prime Martens said. Minister Wilfried Martens’ cen­ The other big winner was ter-left coalition government. Wallonia’s environmental Ecolo With about 70 percent of the party, which forecasts said votes counted, computer fore­ would add seven seats to its casts showed the ruling current three. Its counterpart in Christian Democrats and Flanders, Agalev, will retain its Socialists winning 120 of the six seats. 212 parliam entary seats, down The opposition Conservatives from 134 in the previous par­ lost two of their 48 seats. liament. The extreme right-wing anti- Underscoring the shift away immigrant Vlaams Blok party in from mainstream parties was Flanders, Belgium’s Dutch­ the rise in Flanders of ROSSEM, speaking northern half, was the libertarian party of Jean- forecast to win 13 seats, a gain Pierre van Rossem, a failed of 11. businessman who was arrested “It is an extreme shift to the on fraud charges four days right,” Martens said on the BBT before Sunday’s voting. television network. His year-old party lacks a The next government is ex­ formal platform — the acronym pected to amend the constitu­ roughly stands for Radical The Observer/ Jon Novak tion to grant more autonomy to Reformers, Fighters and Thirsty anyone? Flanders and Wallonia, Troublemakers for a Just Belgium’s French-speaking Society — yet is expected to en­ A variety of empty beverage cans comprise window decorations for a classroom in Nieuwland Science Hall. southern half. ter parliament w ith three seats. Atlantis lifts off, carries new defense satellite CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) p.m. EST. The shuttle lit up the “You all certainly earned your 224 miles above Earth is NASA’s tional unit that was removed — Atlantis pierced the night sky sky for hundreds of miles as it Thanksgiving, ” launch director sixth and final shuttle flight of last week from the satellite's and roared into orbit Sunday headed eastward over the Bob Sieck told workers at the year. It was only the seventh attached rocket. But program with six astronauts and a mili­ Atlantic Ocean and was swal­ launch control. time in 44 launches that a managers were confident the tary satellite that will scout for lowed up by the night. An oxygen fuel leak on the shuttle has blasted off in trouble was isolated to that missile launches from a perch It was a spectacular, and launch platform forced a 13- darkness. component. thousands of miles high. rare, after-hours show. The last minute delay. Three workers Atlantis’ twin solid rocket "We were extremely lucky,” The 100-ton spaceship rum­ shuttle departure in darkness tightened a leaky valve, but the boosters dropped empty into said Air Force Lt. Col. Ernie bled off its seaside pad at 6:44 was a year ago. job put crews behind in their the ocean two minutes into the Jaskolski, chief engineer for the work to replenish the fuel sup­ flight. The shuttle reached orbit satellite booster. “We were able ply. NASA also had to w ait for 6 1/2 minutes later on the to demonstrate that if we did ND professor wins Fulbright grant an orbiting spacecraft to pass thrust of three main engines. encounter this problem during Special to The Observer duced by former Senator J. out of the way of the shuttle. Gregory said he noticed an flight that we would still make Fred Dallmayr, Notre Dame William Fulbright of Arkansas. unusual flickering on the nose our mission goal.” Packey J. Dee professor of gov­ Under the Fulbright program, The astronauts were eager to during ascent. “It was a very Gregory and his crew planned ernment and international approximately 5,000 grants are get going. “Atlantis is ready. interesting light show coming to release the $300 m illion studies, has received a awarded each year to American We’re ready to burn paint, ” said up,” he said. Defense Support Program Fulbright grant for research at students, teachers and scholars Air Force Col. Frederick NASA’s first countdown for satellite six hours into the flight. the M.S. University of Baroda in to study, teach and conduct re­ Gregory, the shuttle comman­ the 10-day m ilitary mission The 5,200-pound satellite India, according to the Board of search in more than 130 coun­ der. He was referring to the ended abruptly Tuesday, just quickly was to be propelled Foreign Scholarships and the tries around the world. Foreign freshly painted launch pad before fueling, when the steer­ 22,300 miles above the equator. United States Information nationals also receive grants to tower. ing system of the satellite There, it would join other Agency. engage in similar activities in Earlier in the day, the launch booster malfunctioned. Defense Support Program craft Dallmayr is one of approxi­ the U.S. team had feared that strong All that was put behind in alerting the Pentagon to mis­ mately 1,500 U.S. grantees who Individuals are selected on wind and low clouds might Sunday with final testing of the sile and rocket launchings as will travel abroad for the 1991- the basis of academic and pro­ thwart its second attempt to newly installed guidance unit. well as nuclear detonations. 92 academic years under the fessional qualifications as well send up Atlantis. But the The system passed a critical Fulbright program. as their ability and willingness weather proved perfect for three-hour calibration and was A large infrared telescope on The program was established to share ideas and experiences liftoff, with only a thin patch of cleared for flight. the satellite has 6,000 sensors in 1946 under U.S. with peoples of diverse cul­ clouds visible. Engineers still had not identi­ to detect heat from missile Congressional legislation intro­ tures. ______The spacecraft’s long journey fied the problem in the naviga­ plumes. Hey Barney! I knew you were Fansa celebrate D.B. Cooper’s great crime SEATTLE (AP) — Sunday was Two decades after the unique ing a brief stop at Seattle- stud, even way D.B. Cooper’s 20th anniversary. exploit, which a retired FBI Tacoma International Airport, But was it the 20th year of the agent calls stupid and almost where the 36 passengers were back then. legendary skyjacker’s death or certainly fatal, Cooper’s real released and the four crew 20 years since he began a new identity is still a mystery. members were kept aboard. life with a bagful of stolen Nobody knows if he’s a pile of Airborne again, Cooper Happy 21st. greenbacks? bleached bones in the moun­ parachuted into a freezing As is their annual custom, tains of Washington or the guy rainstorm at 10,000 feet near You’ve Cooper fans from Seattle to San next door. tiny Ariel in southwestern Jose to Salt Lake City organized Cooper’s crime, in which no­ Washington, wearing only a FINALLY celebrations to honor their body was hurt, seems almost business suit and loafers. The hero, who they believe melted quaint in today’s violent world. temperature was 7 below zero, into society after committing And his $200,000 in marked not counting the wind chill fac­ caught up the perfect crime — money — its value ravaged by tor at the plane’s speed of 200 parachuting from an airliner an inflation rate of 337 percent mph. over Washington state with over 20 years — would hardly “It was obviously not well- with me! $200,000 in ransom money on make him a rich man. thought-out. You don’t think his Nov. 24, 1971. The story began Thanksgiving loafers blew off in the wind, for eve, when a man wearing dark instance? It was stupid, ” said glasses boarded a Northwest- Ralph Himmelsbach, the retired Orient Airlines Boeing 727 at FBI agent who spent nearly a Portland International Airport. decade investigating the crime. Class of 93: He used the name Dan Cooper to purchase his plane ticket. If Cooper didn’t freeze to Interested in getting involved in the The name became popularized death on his way down, he as D.B. Cooper after a law en­ probably died when he hit the forcement official erroneously ground wearing an “extremely referred to him that way. fast” parachute provided by Junior Class Play? authorities in Seattle, said Once airborne, “Cooper” Himmelsbach, reached at his Those interested in directing, stage managing handed the stewardess a note home in Redmond, Ore. saying he had a dynamite bomb “And he came down right in his attache case. The man, smack dab in the middle of the or publicity, please contact Sonia Miller X 4704. who chain-smoked Raleigh fil­ woods in really rugged coun­ ter-tipped cigarettes and who try,” he said. “There are steep, Any suggestions welcome. appeared to be in his middle to up and down ravines in really late 40s, demanded $200,000 in heavily wooded country. It was Acting auditions will be held at the beginning used $20 bills. a bad place to land, and it is He collected the money — doubtful we would ever find the of second semester. WatchTorvsigns. ____ provided by the airline — dur­ body.” Business Monday, November 25, 1991 House GOP counterattacks on U.S. economy WASHINGTON (AP) — When prospects, saw political the economy,” said Rep. Willis House Republican Whip Newt advantage in pressing for pas­ Gradison, R-Ohio. “This Gingrich outlined a year-end sage of their plan in the session initiative is as much seeking tax package that blends capital expected to end Tuesday or political stimulus as it is seeking gains reductions with expanded Wednesday. economic stimulus,” he added. Individual Retirement Accounts Gingrich said Friday that if Democrats reply that the (IRAs), congressional the Democrats who control flurry of GOP activity will do lit­ Democrats responded pre­ Congress let lawmakers dis­ tle to distract voters from dictably. band for the year without en­ Bush’s seeming confusion about “It has no shred of sincerity acting anti-recession legislation, what to do about the economy. about it,” House Speaker as seems likely, “All their Thomas Foley said at a week­ yelling and yapping about the “The economy can’t be ad­ end breakfast meeting with re­ domestic agenda w ill be ex­ dressed until we have the at­ porters. “It’s a flat-out public posed as pure demagoguery.” tention of the president, and the plot ... cooked up by a group of But there was another motive, president denies the problem,” Republicans not to do a thing as well. said Rep. David Obey, D-Wis. for the economy, nor help any “It will let Republicans say “ Until we get his attention, American.” very honestly that the everything his little leaguers do With that statement, the con­ Democrats defeated the only in the House is just window- gressional tax debate of the true pro-growth initiative this dressing.” 1992 election year was officially Congress debated before leav­ That didn’t stop House M ajor­ inaugurated in the waning days in g ,” said Rep. Vin Weber, R- ity Whip Richard Gephardt from of the 1991 session. Minn. contending that the GOP plan President Bush prefers to wait “ There’s a sense that a sound would require deep cuts in AP Photo until January to outline his own economy is a lynch pin to the Medicare under the terms of House Minority Whip Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., described a year-end tax economic program. But many re-election next year of the Congress’ year-old budget package Friday which has sparked a congressional tax debate. The House Republicans, nervous president, and we as Republi­ agreement with the White package blends capital gains reductions with expanded IRA's. about their own re-election cans rise or fall with the state of House. Oil, auto industries try to avoid emissions control costs WASHINGTON (AP) — There’s jor automakers. Neither wants cities already require gasoline for the filtering system to have tions “represent a more timely, no dispute that toxic and smog- to pay for any new controls to pumps to be equipped w ith spe­ a widespread impact because of efficient and less expensive causing fumes spew out of stop the emissions. cial devices, called “Stage II” the slow turnover of the auto­ method of meeting the nation’s automobile engines with every The Environmental Protection controls, which capture the mobile fleet. clean air goals,” argues Thomas fill-up. Unfortunately, there is Agency (EPA), spurred on by fumes. Hanna, president of the Motor still no agreement on how to last year’s clean air law, is ex­ The auto industry, battling Vehicle Manufacturers control them. pected to decide soon on how to Environmentalists say these hard economic times, is fighting Association. capture the gasoline fumes. devices are not enough. They hard against installing yet Technology isn’t the issue; These fumes are a major con­ want the pump nozzle devices another pollution control device Cost estimates for the so- there already are two proven tributor to smog in hundreds of to be mandatory in more states in new cars. It says the oil in­ called “on-board vapor recov­ methods for stopping the emis­ urban communities. and a filtering system to be in ­ dustry ought to pay this time by ery canisters” have ranged from sions. stalled on automobiles. Both capturing the releases at the $19, according to the EPA, to as The current debate has pitted Several states, including Cali­ are needed, they say, because it pump. much as $40 per car, according the oil industry against the ma­ fornia, and a half dozen large would take a decade or more The controls at service sta­ to the automakers.

CLOSED COURSES BA 230 06 0718 ENGL 328A 01 0012 GOVT 343T 07 3592 MGT 231 01 1856 PSY 462 01 0157 THEO 244 01 3835 BA 362 01 0838 ENGL 333 01 3857 GOVT 343T 08 3593 MGT 231 05 1861 PSY 475 01 3608 THEO 2 50 01 3291 ACCT 231 01 0575 BA 363 02 0841 ENGL 340 01 1369 GOVT 407 01 0677 MGT 240 02 1864 RLST 213 15 9515 THEO 251 01 0053 ACCT 231 02 0576 BA 363 04 0843 ENGL 340T 01 3858 GOVT 408 01 3595 MGT 240 03 1865 RLST 213 17 9517 THEO 251 02 0052 ACCT 231 03 0577 BA 391 01 0264 ENGL 340T 02 3859 GOVT 413 01 1518 MGT 240 05 1867 RLST 235 19 9519 THEO 254 01 0190 ACCT 231 04 0578 BA 391 02 2736 ENGL 340T 03 3860 GOVT 422 01 3602 MGT 472 01 1873 RLST 240 21 9521 THEO 2 56 01 3836 ACCT 232 02 0581 BA 391 03 2735 ENGL 340T 04 3861 GOVT 424 01 2859 MGT 482 01 1875 RLST 240 23 9523 THEO 260 01 3837 ACCT 232 03 0582 BA 464 01 2816 ENGL 366 01 3865 GOVT 427 01 3594 MGT 488 01 3801 RLST 240 25 9525 THEO 260 02 3839 ACCT 232 04 0583 BA 465 01 3799 ENGL 394 A 01 3866 GOVT 438 01 3987 MI 309 01 2995 RLST 251 33 9533 THEO 2 62 01 0189 ACCT 232 05 0584 BA 490 01 0845 ENGL 403 01 3867 GOVT 446 01 3605 MI 333 01 3810 RLST 261 35 9535 THEO 264 01 3030 ACCT 232 06 0585 BA 490 04 0848 ENGL 413 A 01 3869 GOVT 449 01 2988 MI 398 01 3392 RLST 261 37 9537 THEO 265 01 2661 ACCT 232 09 0588 BA 490 05 0849 ENGL 415E 01 4002 GOVT 459 01 2906 MI 437 01 3944 RLST 312 43 9543 THEO 281 01 3059 ACCT 232 10 0589 BA 490 06 0850 ENGL 415Z 01 3871 GOVT 485 01 3598 MI 438 01 3264 RLST 312 45 9545 THEO 396 01 2138 ACCT 372 01 0593 BIOS 341L 01 0865 ENGL 416A 01 3872 GSC 204 01 4024 MSA 545 01 3803 RLST 380 49 9549 THEO 400 01 2143 ACCT 372 02 0594 BIOS 407L 01 0876 ENGL 416B 01 3873 GSC 219 01 3761 MSCI 212 02 1980 ROFR 102 02 1897 THEO 426 01 3293 ACCT 372 04 0596 BIOS 411L 01 0287 ENGL 416C 01 3874 GSC 234 01 3148 MUS 220 01 2016 ROFR 103 03 1907 THEO 433 01 0186 ACCT 372 05 2810 BIOS 412L 02 0882 ENGL 422 01 3876 GSC 242 01 3773 MUS 220 02 2017 ROFR 435 01 3506 THEO 442 01 2150 ACCT 380 02 0598 CAPP 243 01 0969 ENGL 423B 01 3877 GSC 346 01 3028 MUS 220 03 2018 ROFR 450 01 3505 THEO 455B 01 0185 ACCT 380 03 0599 CAPP 253 01 1629 ENGL 426B 01 3256 GSC 360 01 3764 MUS 222 01 0105 ROFR 482 01 3515 THEO 507B 01 3032 ACCT 380 04 0600 CAPP 316 01 0970 ENGL 428B 01 3878 GSC 403 01 3771 MUS 224 01 3425 ROIT 102 02 2020 ACCT 473 01 0601 CAPP 331 01 2818 ENGL 434 01 3880 GSC 423B 01 3766 MUS 225 01 0426 ROSP 102 02 1945 ACCT 473 02 2812 CAPP 361 01 0343 ENGL 440A 01 1377 GSC 425 01 3760 MUS 226 01 2024 ROSP 102 03 1946 ACCT 473 03 3809 CAPP 375 01 0971 ENGL 451A 01 3882 GSC 446 01 3772 MUS 234 01 2028 ROSP 102 06 1949 ACCT 476 01 2814 CAPP 388 01 3431 ENGL 453 01 3883 GSC 472S 01 3265 PHIL 201 06 2124 ROSP 102A 01 3502 ACCT 476 02 0602 CE 470 01 0992 ENGL 463Z 01 3884 GSC 482 01 3763 PHIL 201 07 0006 ROSP 103 02 1960 ACCT 477 02 0604 CHEM 334L 02 1061 ENGL 471 01 3885 GSC 493A 01 3769 PHIL 201 09 1908 ROSP 103 03 1959 COURSES THAT WILL ACCT 479 01 0605 CLAS 360 01 3233 ENGL 472Z 01 3886 GSC 493C 01 2980 PHIL 203 01 2126 ROSP 103 04 1958 REOPEN AT 7:00 P.M. AERO 01 ENGL 473 01 3887 HIST 116T 01 3450 PHIL 222 01 ROSP 103 06 1956 441L 0614 CLAS 423 01 3203 2130 (IT MAY BE ONLY ONE 3491 ROSP 103 07 1955 AERO 441L 02 0615 CLAS 427 01 3427 ENGL 479 01 3888 HIST 208 01 PHIL 225 01 3145 SPOT1 AERO 441L 03 3648 ENGL 483 01 3044 HIST 225 01 0135 PHIL 226 01 ROSP 201 02 1963 CLAS 442 01 1084 0738 ACCT 372 04 0596 AFAM 359 01 3445 ENGL 484 01 3889 HIST 309 01 2994 239 ROSP 231 01 1385 COTH 201 01 2959 PHIL 01 3714 ACCT 4 77 02 0604 AFAM 372 01 3048 ENGL 490Z 01 3890 HIST 342A 01 3480 240 ROSP 319 01 1395 COTH 204 01 2961 PHIL 01 3715 AFAM 4 54 01 2997 AFAM 389 01 3446 3891 HIST 348A 01 3482 241 ROSP 329 01 1394 COTH 205 02 3972 ENGL 493A 01 PHIL 01 4026 AFAM 479 01 3448 AFAM 420 01 3447 493C 01 2979 HIST 414A 01 3476 PHIL 241 ROSP 415 01 3495 COTH 410 01 3103 ENGL 02 4027 AMST 326 01 0466 AFAM 451 01 3368 HIST 454 01 2996 ROSP 499 01 1393 COTH 416 01 3977 ENGL 497B 01 0705 PHIL 242 01 3716 AMST 334 01 0465 AFAM 454 01 2997 ENGL 512 01 2719 HIST 466A 01 3474 PHIL 244 SOC 202 01 2582 COTH 435 01 3978 01 0318 ANTH 388 01 3154 AFAM 479 01 3448 ENGL 544 01 3895 HIST 473 01 3399 0114 SOC 214 01 3538 CSE 231 01 3952 PHIL 244 02 ARST 242S 01 0762 AMST 326 01 0466 ENGL 562 01 3897 UPS 446 01 3941 3717 SOC 220 01 0333 CSE 322L 01 3962 PHIL 244 03 ARST 310S 01 0768 AMST 334 01 0465 ECON 302 02 ENGL 585 01 3899 UPS 475 01 3398 PHIL 245 01 3012 SOC 242 01 3537 1163 BA 464 01 2816 AMST 338 01 4051 ENGL 592B 01 3900 UPS 515E 01 3950 PHIL 246 01 SOC 242 02 3536 ECON 303 01 1095 2135 ECON 380 01 2969 AMST 01 FIN 231 01 1404 UPS 559 01 3932 PHIL 246 02 2136 SOC 300 01 2583 390 3576 ECON 315 01 3141 ENGL 317B 01 1971 FIN 231 02 1405 UPS 565 01 2903 PHIL 246 03 2137 SOC 303 01 3099 AMST 425 01 3579 ECON 330 01 3746 ENGL 325 01 3856 FIN 231 03 1406 UPS 586 01 3938 PHIL 246 04 0854 SOC 310 01 3539 AMST 459 01 3042 ECON 350 01 1164 ENGL 479 01 3888 ANTH 324 01 FIN 231 06 1408 UPS 664 01 3377 PHIL 246 05 3718 SOC 324 01 3544 3434 ECON 350 02 3747 FIN 231 01 1404 ANTH 328 01 0212 380 01 FIN 231 09 1410 LAW 605 01 1659 PHIL 248 01 3719 SOC 346 01 3027 ECON 2969 FIN 370 03 1433 ANTH 328A 01 FIN 360 03 1419 LAW 629B 01 3921 PHlL 257 01 3720 SOC 373 01 0328 3433 ECON 417 01 2905 FIN 473 01 1439 ANTH 330 01 FIN 360 04 1421 LAW 63 IF 01 1670 2139 SOC 411 01 2908 0210 ECON 421 01 1168 PHIL 261 01 GOVT 343T 02 3587 ANTH 359 01 3436 FIN 361 01 1424 LAW 631G 01 1671 2140 SOC 419 01 3340 ECON 451 01 1363 PHIL 261 02 GOVT 343T 04 3589 ANTH 365 01 2901 ECON 471 01 2971 FIN 361 02 1425 LAW 695 01 1688 PHIL 263 01 3721 SOC 420 01 3542 GOVT 438 01 3987 ANTH 388 01 3154 FIN 361 05 1429 LAW 695 03 1690 PHIL 264 01 0317 SOC 421 01 3545 ECON 498 01 1173 GOVT 446 01 3605 ANTH 389 FIN 361 06 1430 LAW 695 05 1692 265 01 0 0 3 0 SOC 426 01 3553 01 3438 EE 2 4 2 02 1191 PHIL HIST 466A 01 3474 FIN 361 P7 3923 LLRO 331 01 3513 SOC 451 01 3547 ANTH 389A 01 3439 EE 2 4 2 L 01 1192 PHIL 265 02 3722 MBA 623 01 1788 370 01 1431 MARK 01 STV 204 01 3019 ANTH 431 01 3442 EE 3 4 0 L 02 1200 FIN 231 1694 PHIL 265 03 3723 MBA 627 1789 FIN 370 02 1432 MARK 231 02 1695 STV 206 01 2953 ANTH 4 31A 01 3443 EE 354 02 1205 PHIL 268 01 2857 MBA 628 01 1790 ANTH 454 01 2912 01 FIN 370 03 1433 MARK 231 03 1696 PHIL 402 01 1531 STV 225 01 3146 EE 361 2825 MBA 629 02 1792 ARHI 169 01 0735 FIN 473 01 1439 MARK 231 06 1700 01 STV 245 01 3013 EE 3 6 1 L 02 2829 PHIL 572 3735 MBA 631 01 1794 ARHI 403 01 3518 FIN 475 01 1440 MARK 374 01 3003 686 01 3743 STV 263 01 3562 EE 3 6 1 L 04 2833 PHIL MBA 646 01 1801 ARHI 452 01 3210 FIN 476 01 MARK 381 01 1704 STV 303 01 3563 EE 3 6 1 L 05 2865 2853 PHYS 210 01 3793 MGT 488 01 3801 ARHI 459 01 2916 FIN 478 01 1442 MARK 382 01 1705 PHYS 2 2 1 L 02 3794 STV 399 01 3565 ENGL 204 01 3850 MI 398 01 3392 ARHI 462 01 3118 ENGL 300A 01 GE 313 01 1921 MARK 484 01 1706 PHYS 2 2 2 02 2195 STV 453 01 3566 3851 PHIL 244 02 0114 ARHI 481 01 3521 ENGL 300B 01 3852 GE 410 01 3043 MARK 492 01 3007 PHYS 222L 02 2197 STV 487 01 3568 PHIL 245 01 3012 ARHI 496 01 3124 ENGL 300C 01 3853 GOVT 340 01 1505 MARK 495 01 3312 PHYS 222L 04 2198 THEO 100 11 2729 PHIL 248 01 3719 ARST 134S 01 0754 ENGL 301C 01 3180 GOVT 340 02 0032 MATH 336 02 0228 PHYS 309 01 3200 THEO 200 01 2646 PHIL 268 01 2857 ARST 150K 01 3528 ENGL 312 01 1361 GOVT 342 01 1507 MBA 623 01 1788 PLS 462 05 2320 THEO 200 11 0198 PSY 342 01 2332 ARST 232S 01 0761 ENGL 314B 01 4022 GOVT 342T 01 0380 MBA 624 01 1805 PLS 482 01 2322 THEO 227 02 0015 ROSP 102 03 1946 ARST 242S 01 0762 ENGL 315C 01 3854 GOVT 342T 02 0379 MBA 625 01 2852 PSY 211 01 2328 THEO 234 01 1829 SOC 373 01 0328 ARST 246S 01 2922 ENGL 317B 01 1971 GOVT 343 01 1508 MBA 627 01 1789 PSY 342 01 2332 THEO 235 01 2653 THEO 241 02 3834 ARST 292S 01 0766 ENGL 317C 01 3204 GOVT 343 02 0382 MBA 628 01 1790 PSY 342 03 0167 THEO 235 02 1820 THEO 281 01 3059 ARST 310S 01 0768 ENGL 318B 01 3855 GOVT 343T 02 3587 MBA 629 02 1792 PSY 342L 01 2333 THEO 237 01 0193 ARST 326S 01 0769 ENGL 319B 01 1364 GOVT 343T 03 3588 MBA 631 01 1794 PSY 373 01 2339 THEO 241 01 3833 BA 230 01 0834 ENGL 32 IB 01 0452 GOVT 343T 04 3589 MBA 646 01 1801 PSY 396A 01 3151 THEO 241 02 3834 BA 230 02 0835 ENGL 325 01 3856 GOVT 343T 06 3591 MBA 682 03 0351 PSY 425 01 1256 THEO 243 01 2657 Viewpoint Monday, November 25, 1991

The .Observer

P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 (219) 239-5303 1991-92 General Board Editor-In-Chief Kelley Tuthill Managing Editor Business Manager Lisa Eaton Gilbert Gomez

News Editor ...... Monica Yant Advertising M an ag er Julie Sheridan Viewpoint Editor Joe Moody Ad Design Manager ...... Alissa Murphy Sports Editor ...... David Dieteman Production Manager Jay Colucci Accent Editor ...... John O'Brien Systems M anager ...... Mark Sloan Photo Editor Andrew McCloskey 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 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, News Editor, Viewpoint Editor, Accent Editor. Photo Editor, Sports 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 ND should consider student input New lyrics would Dear Editor: Our concern is that while stu­ University on a regular basis We, the Sophomore Class dents are expected to obey throughout the school year to Council, feel compelled to ad­ these behavioral standards, we present the ideas and opinion of degrade fight song dress the lack of student input have not been involved in defin­ the student body and to have a in past du Lac revisions. We ing them. Notre Dame is a role in the revision process. Dear Editor: future rather than trying to deeply regret the breakdown of community with a strong belief The second part of the pro­ change the past for the sake of clear communication between in the integrity and dignity of all posal is a continuation of cam- The letter by Kathleen Quinn the present. University Administration and people.” It is essential to the pus-wide forms with University of Siegfried Hall, printed in the Student Body Representatives maintenance of the Notre Dame officers and student represen­ Letters to the Editor section of I am constantly amazed at which has prevented significant community that the student tatives to du Lac on hand to the November 21 Observer, our futile and silly attempts to student representation in the du body’s integrity and dignity not answer questions and address outlined her proposal for a elevate wom en and (oth er ?) Lac revision process. be dismissed lightly. concerns voiced by the student newer, fairer, more “politically minorities by giving them spe­ correct” version of the Notre We strongly believe that stu­ The concern we feel stems not body. We feel this proposal cial treatment. Don’t give me Dame Victory March. this “Year of Women” stuff. It is dent input is necessary in any only from the lack of student would be an effective measure degrading and demeaning to be action taken concerning student representation in du Lac revi­ to better communications and This proposal is, singled out from the rest of improve relations between the life. Student input not only sions but also from the absence notwithstanding its absolute hum anity as if I am not a per­ encourages student body of an ongoing dialogue between Administration and students. absurdity, detrimental to the son but a woman. support for and adherence to student representatives and cause of women’s equality. University decisions but also University Administration about Notre Dame is a community, a Politically correct language is facilitates a better student the behavioral expectations of family of people brought to­ It is exactly this sort of re­ an absolute detriment to an /Administration relationship. the student body. In order to be gether in a quest for scholar­ sponse to traditional culture intelligent society capable of Students who gain skills in a Notre Dame, students must also ship by similar faith and ideals. that accomplishes the opposite sensing tradition and moving cooperative government with have a role in defining Notre The participation of the entire of that which it attempts to forward with some sense of the University Administration Dame. Notre Dame community is correct. We cannot deny that depth. emerge as responsible citizens essential to further define what from ancient times to the pre­ sent day our world has been a Changing “history” to of state, national, even world To address our concerns we Notre Dame is and what is ex­ male-dominate one; but by at­ “herstory” and changing “Rally political processes. propose a two-prong solution. pected of its students. We ap­ tempting to change the litera­ sons of Notre Dame ” to “Rally The first part calls for a joint preciate your time taken in In your letter prefacing du ture or other expressions of ones of Notre Dame” — is a Lac, your definition of the Hall Presidents’ Council/Student considering our proposal and that culture we do not change ridiculous attempt to do Administration’s role in student Senate Committee on du Lac to look forward to further discus­ this “domination”: we only suc­ something that is up to the life is to “...encourage, chal­ be established to meet with the sion with you in the near future. ceed in making ourselves look individual to attain. We are lenge and Academic Council, the Campus The Sophomore insecure and petty. incapable of demanding respect sometimes...discipline those Life Council, and respective Class Council as a function of our color or who fail to be Notre Dame." administrative officers of the Nov. 11,1991 We should do everything we sex. can in the present times to assert our equality, but that Political correctness is not, should not be at the expense of and should not be, retroactive. the rich traditions of the past. Although this is just as petty as the letter to which I am re­ As a classics and English ma­ sponding, the author of the let­ jor, I am exposed daily to the ter could have at least changed literature of the ancients, none the seven “ her”s in the March of which would 1 to impose as well as the two male refer­ my sensibilities on as a feminist ences if she were trying to be at reader. Not only would this all consistently “equal.” degrade the classics, it de­ means my position as a sensible Erin O’Neill reader capable of seeing the Lewis Hall past and looking forward to the Nov. 21,1991

DOONESBURY GARRY TRUDEAU QUOTE OF THE DAY

RICK, WHAT NOT SURE. I'V E WHAT? QUA/IS WEtE, TPIPNT VME W ILL GOTAN INTERVIEW ACTUALLY EXACTLY SAY OH,YEAH? HE JU ST WANTS ‘T h e humblest is the peer of the W ITH THE VICE AOREEPJV THAT THAT WHAT P IP TO TALK A B M you BE PREStPENT. TALK TO YOU W AS W H A T HOME TO- youSAY IT 8%. UJHAT IF most powerful.' N I6 H T * ABO UT K IM - THE INTERVIEW WASABM? / 1 FREEZE? BERLIN 7 WAS ABM. n c o u u ? \ B E R IS K Y !

Chief Justice John Marshall

When you 're lost in the rain, submit: QUOTES. P.O. Box Q. ND. IN 46556 page 10 Accent Monday, November 25, 1991

The Observer / Paige Smoron (Above) A stegosaurus growls threateningly at onlookers at the Studebaker Museum. (Below right) Younger visitors reenact their version of the Mesozoic Era. "Dinosaurs Alive" will be on exhibit until Feb. 23,1992. LAND of the _____ LOST

Dinosaurs at the Studebaker Museum

By PAIGE SMORON this rare chance to see an Apatosaurus “Dino Theater” and its plethora of plush as some mistakenly believe; it is only an Assistant Accent Editor (the “Deceptive Lizard”), an Allosaurus puppets. There, they engage in their area designated for tracing pictures of (the “Different Lizard”), and a own interpretation of the day-to-day life dinosaurs with crayons. “No! NOOOOOO!” Pachycephalosaurus (the “Thick-Headed of a dinosaur. Mostly, this consists of A definite highlight of the tour is a A little girl screams as her daddy lifts Lizard”) mingling over the consuming each other, beating each stop in the “Dino Staur” for any souvenir her up for a closer look. An impressive Parasaurolophus egg nest. other, and thrashing each other about in needs. Potential library additions are “A Stegosaurus from the Jurassic period Actually animated robots made of general. Family of Dinosaurs,” ready to be looms menacingly above her, swinging steel framework, covered with molded colored, and a historically accurate its tail spikes convincingly. It emits a frame and silicon skins, these dinosaurs A less popular but highly educational collection of “Playful Dinosaur Stickers,” thunderous roar. move and sound like prehistoric bullies. exhibit is the prehistoric timeline. Here depicting brightly colored dinosaurs “Hooooooooome,” she wails as her Toddlers of the faint-hearted variety is a look at the demise of the hulking riding Big Wheels, eating ice cream, and daddy carries her off to visit with the prefer advancing right to the creatures, at times quite lighthearted. taking bubble baths. less threatening Baby Parasaurolophus Paleontology Corner. 65 million years ago: “Huge Other reasonably priced items include down the hall. In this hands-on learning area, visitors extinction—dinosaurs, ammonites, and the “Primal Nite Dinosaur Night Light,” can muse on the age-old question “What others bite the dust!” “ Gooey Dino-Soap,” “ Collect-a-Saurus,” The “Dinosaurs Alive!" exhibit at the killed the dinosaurs?” Don’t expect any One area is christened “Name Your “ Gro-Beast,” and many inflatable goods. Studebaker National Museum has answers, however. “We don’t know what Own Dinosaur.” Interested parties may This is not, however, an exhibit recreated the wonder, the majesty, and killed the dinosaurs,” admits the exhibit. mix and match prefixes and suffixes to without a moral. A section entitled vyes—the terror—of the Mesozoic Era. “What do you think killed the create their own imaginary dinosaur. “What is extinction?” asks rhetorically, “Dinamation,” the first leg of the tour, dinosaurs?” it concludes. Participants come up with “Who could be extinct next?” It answers features half-scale dinosaurs. Here, “Come look at the fossils, Jason,” “Dinodermasaurus,” meaning “Terrible itself, “HUMANS HUMANS HUMANS.” viewers may enjoy a glimpse of the implores one young mother as Jason Skin Reptile,” and “Apatophilischian,” Ankylosaurus in a simulated habitat, heedlessly wanders over to handle a which translates loosely into “Deceptive The ominous message seems to be and learn that its nickname was the considerably large Tyrannosaurus Rex Loving Hip.” over the heads of the younger crowd. “Stiffened Lizard." Presumably, only his tooth. Next, he bangs on the duck-billed Those who approach the “Rub-a-Dino” One little boy, exhausted from his closest Late Cretaceous reptilian friends dinosaur hoof bone with an exhibit with inflated expectations are journey back in time, rests his head on could call him that. informational plaque. invariably disappointed. It has nothing his dad’s shoulder and notes, “It was a Dinophiles of all ages will delight in Most urchins head directly for the to do with stroking actual reptilian skin, good puppet show.” Accent Monday, November 25, 1991 page 11 Who shot JFK? Gordon presents a moment-by-moment analysis of the events leading up to Kennedy’s assassination

i i

By TONY POPANZ Gordon will also universities (NCADP), the mission of Holy Cross Accent Writer review the history of most often seek Sister Maura Brannick, and the political assassina­ his expert Alzheimer’s Association. Imagine being in Dallas, Texas, on tion in America, presentations. “I think a lot of people got involved November 22, 1963. examine medical Since this is a with public service because of what JFK evidence from university did in his term in office. Many in my Waiting in anticipation for President Kennedy’s autopsy, lecture, he generation responded to that, and today, John F. Kennedy's arrival, your heart summarize theories expects the it ’s good to see Notre Dame and Saint races as Air Force One taxis to the. and explanations of presentation to Mary’s students involved with public tarmac. The president steps out and what took place, and take some time, service also," commented Gordon, “I greets his avid spectators with heartfelt show the taped approximately enjoy giving my talent to benefit the warmth. reaction of witnesses four hours. underserved," he added. You follow him as he travels via to the assassination. Gordon said motorcade toward Dealey Plaza. Upon In the last couple that he usually Gordon founded the Society Bank reaching the site, the sound of of months there have finds his most sponsored Million Dollar Hole-in-One firecrackers ring in the distance. been striking, new captivated au­ Contest. Six golf courses, including that The moments tick by ever so slowly as developments in the diences at of Notre Dame’s, partake in this premier confusion turns into hysteria. Kennedy case, universities. A event. All proceeds from the contest go Pandemonium rages like a wildfire from according to Gordon. substantial to Holy Cross Care Services, which helps the president's Lincoln Continental However, he said he portion of the the elderly and mentally retarded. through the dazed masses. A sense of w ill not specify these presentation Gordon said that he is very proud of dread gradually overtakes you. Shock... details until his will be an his involvement with Chapin Street Disbelief... The president has been shot! lecture. informal Clinic, a free clinic for the poor. Those As the motorcade speeds away, you John Gordon question and who do not have adequate funds for wonder who could do such a thing. Photo enlargements answer session. medical costs still need medical Witnessing the senseless execution of used by Gordon make it possible to give “If there are students out there asking attention, said Gordon. Chapin Street one whom you admired greatly, the a moment-by-moment analysis of the questions, I w ill stick around,” said Clinic is a humanitarian institution memory will always remain with you. sequence of assassination events. James Gordon. which serves the basic needs of the less The day will live in infamy forever. Ward, a Notre Dame assistant professor fortunate. of accountancy, produced these This regard Gordon possesses for “I see many Notre Dame and Saint Maybe you are too young to have photographs for the lecture. questioning and argument exemplifies Mary’s students volunteering for the experienced that ill-fated day. Perhaps “I single out James Ward’s interest in his interest in teaching. In 1979, he Chapin Street and Holy Cross charities. the next closest thing to experiencing the Kennedy assassination," stated taught history courses in American This, in my opinion, is what makes this grim sequence first hand would be Gordon. “I think if students have an political assassinations at Holyoke these two student bodies so special," attending John Gordon’s lecture, “The interest, James Ward is the person on- Community College and Western New said Gordon. Men Who Killed Kennedy.” campus who has the expertise.” England College. Gordon, an expert on political Currently, he proposes a writing The Annual Sports Memorabilia assassinations, will be at Carroll Hall at Concerning the content of his lectures, course for Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s Auction raises funds for the National Saint Mary’s at 7 p.m. tonight to give a Gordon explained, “these lectures are centered on political assassination. Such Council on Alcohol and Drug Prevention chronological and detailed overview of never the same. Over time, I have added a class would stimulate deductive and (NCADP), one of Gordon’s favorite the whole occurrence. pictures and centered on different facets informative writing in a social studies charities. The NCADP helps alcoholics of the event. There are always new context, he said. and other drug abusers reform their Gordon, who issues to With the president of Western New habits, while at the same time inter­ received his — — ■ .... include." England College, Gordon established a vening with their families to prevent Doctorate in ‘I think a lot of people got involved Because he research center for political assassina­ alcohol and drug abuse in the future. Education also holds a tions. He has also been on two Gordon said that the highlight of the from Indiana with public service because of full-tim e job commissions to move the Robert fundraiser is the auctioning of a football University in what JFK did in his term of office. with Society Kennedy files from the Los Angeles autographed by seven Notre Dame Bloomington, Bank in South Police Department into the California Heisman Trophy winners. Such an has been a Many in my generation responded Bend as a State Archives and to later release said article has been sold for between 1,200 consultant for to that, and today, it’s good to see trust officer, files to public access. and 1,500 dollars. ABC’s “20/20,” Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s Gordon tends By participating in these projects as Despite all of the things he is involved NBC’s to give the well as giving lectures, Gordon shares in, Gordon said that his most proud “ Kennedy," students involved with public m ajority o f his his interest with the rest of the world. accomplishment continues to be his get­ and PBS’s service also.’ presentations “JFK’s assassination is what crystalized ting married and raising a family. “Nova.” An ------in the area. my interest in history,” commented accomplished T his is his Gordon. There are three things that he wishes historian specializing in political sixth time lecturing at Saint Mary’s. to see happen in the near future: see the assassination, the culmination of his “As long as the students (at Notre A historian, a teacher, and a trust Kennedy assassination controversy fi­ many years of painstaking research has Dame and Saint Mary’s) continue to ask officer, Gordon has another interesting nally solved, see I.U. w in a Rose Bowl produced this detailed presentation. for me, I will always give my lectures the facet to his personality— he is also a and see the Red Sox w in the Series. With Using film footage beginning from Monday before Thanksgiving break, prevalent humanitarian. the exception of his wishes for the Red JFK’s exit from the plane and finishing which coincides with the anniversary of The lecture given at Saint Mary’s will Sox, it seems that those concerning I.U. at the aftermath, Gordon w ill give a JFK’s funeral," said Gordon. raise 3,000 dollars for his favorite and the Kennedy case are altogether visual record of the tragedy. Gordon’s lectures range from thirty charities, including the National Council extremely farfetched. minutes to four hours. Civic groups and on Alcohol and Drug Prevention 4, W r . J«4 I -J { 1 smsvot; iof/ page 12 ------The Observer - — Monday, November 25,1991 Sharpton plans to lead delegation to Libya LONDON (AP) — American against Libya in consultation black activist the Rev. A1 with world powers. Military Sharpton said Sunday he wants force has not been ruled out. to lead a delegation to Libya to Sharpton met Sunday with talk with officials about ten­ Grant and said the opposition sions w ith the United States. Labor lawmaker, who recently The flamboyant and contro­ returned from Libya, would versial Sharpton, on a four-day make his Libyan contacts avail­ visit to Britain, said he and able to the delegation. British lawmaker Bernie Grant “There is nothing more im­ are concerned that there could portant in international affairs be U.S.-led m ilitary action than trying to avoid a war ... It against the north African coun­ is incumbent on moral and po­ try. litical leaders to avoid a war,” The United States and Britain said Sharpton, whose detrac­ have asked Libya to extradite tors allege that he is more in­ two men wanted for the bomb­ terested in inciting conflict than ing of Pan Am Flight 103. The in resolving tensions. bomb, hidden in unaccompa­ Sharpton said the delegation nied luggage, blew up the would be made up of U.S. and Boeing 747 killing all 259 peo­ British lawjnakers and minis­ ple on board and 11 others on ters, but he did not specify. He the ground in Lockerbie, did not say when the trip might Scotland, on Dec. 21,1988. take place. The Observer/Marguerite Schropp Libya has reportedly rejected He said they would request to Art with ink the extradition requests. meet with Libya’s highest offi­ The United States has said it cials, including the country’s Helga Watkins, a first year graduate student in painting, diligently rolls ink to create a mono-type print. is considering retaliatory action leader, Col. Moammar Gadhafi. Such activities take place in Riley Flail’s printmaking studio.

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City! 312- 951-0585 Call 1/80(11724-1555 Monday, November 25, 1991 The Observer page 13 NATIONAL COLLEGIATE SPORTSWRITERS POLL Huskies vault San Francisco halts ND over Miami to #1 By JASON KELLY volleyball’s NCAA dream Sports Writer Observer Staff Report I 11/17 11/10 Pts. Next geme It was close, but The NCAA tournament hopes 1. (2) Washington [12] 11-0 516 — Washington edged out Miami of the Notre Dame women’s 2. (D Miami [9] 10-0 510 11/30 vs. San Diego State to take over the top spot in * 3. (3) Florida State 10-1 477 11/30 at Florida volleyball team were dashed as 4. (4) Michigan 10-1 463 — the National Collegiate they split two matches with San 5. (5) Florida 9-1 445 11/30 vs. Florida State Sportswriter’s Poll. The Francisco and Hofstra in 6. (7) Penn State 9-2 390 11/28 at Pittsburgh Huskies collected 12 first- 7. (8) Alabama 9-1 387 11/30 vs. Auburn Hempstead, N.Y. this weekend. 8. (9) Iowa 10-1 349 — place votes, while the On Saturday, the Lady Dons 8. (10) Tennessee 8-2 349 11/30 vs. Vanderbilt Hurricanes could manage of San Francisco pulled out a 10. (12) Texas A&M 8-1 320 11/28 vs. Texas only nine. hard-fought victory over the 11. (11) Nebraska 8-1-1 311 11/29 vs. Oklahoma Florida State, Michigan 1 12. (13) Clemson 8-1-1 283 11/30 vs. Duke in Tokyo Irish 5-15, 2-15, 15-2, 15-11, 13. (14) East Carolina 10-1 276 — and Florida, round out the 18-16, thus ending Notre 14. California 9-2 262 — (6) top five, with Penn State, Dame’s dreams of garnering an 15. (15) Colorado 8-2-1 223 — Alabama, Iowa, Tennessee 16. (16) Syracuse 9-2 202 — NCAA tournament invitation by Chris Choquette 17. (17) Oklahoma 8-2 196 11/29 at Nebraska and Texas A&M each moving finishing the season with four 18. (19) Notre Dame 8-3 176 11/30 at Hawaii forward to complete the top 19. Stanford 8-3 166 — straight wins. Freshman Christy Peters con­ (21) ten. 20. (20) Virginia 9-2-1 117 — Senior co-captain Chris tinued to impress, landing 16 21. (22) NC State 9-2 90 — Choquette, taking over the kills and digging out a team- s 22. (18) Ohio State 8-3 59 — California plummeted 23. Tulsa 7-3 58 11/30 at SMU team’s leadership role for in­ high 22 balls. Marilyn Cragin, H eight spots to number 14 24. (-) UCLA 7-3-1 53 — jured senior co-captain Alicia a junior outside hitter, paced 41 after falling to Stanford, 25. (23) Georgia 7-3 11/30 at Georgia Tech Turner, led the Irish with 17 the Irish with 20 kills for a .432 while the Cardinal used the kills. Notre Dame also got an­ hitting percentage. upset to crack the top 20 at Others receiving votes: Brigham Young 37, Bowling Green 19, Baylor other inspiring performance Notre Dame started out im­ 17. Mississippi State 6, Indiana 5, Kansas State 5. San Diego State 4, number 19. from junior middle hitter pressively against San TCU 3. Fresno State 2, North Carolina 2. Air Force 1, Arkansas 1. Notre Dame managed to Georgia Tech 1. Jessica Fiebelkorn, who turned Francisco, winning the first two move up one place to Bold Indicates ND opponent in 14 kills and a team-high 13 games by 10 and 13 p oints, number 18 despite being idle digs. thanks to an impressive .462 Schools participating: Arizona State, Ball State, Brigham Young, on Saturday, while Tulsa and Colorado, Columbia, Cornell, Duke, Florida, Indiana, Kansas, The Irish bounced back on and .471 hitting percentage in UCLA enter the poll at 23 Kentucky, Miami, Nebraska, North Carolina State, Notre Dame, Sunday with a 15-7, 15-13, 12- the games. Then the Irish’s and 24, respectively. Oregon State, Purdue, Southern Cat, Texas, Utah, Virginia. 15, 6-15, 15-13 victory over troubles began. Brigham Young and Hofstra to win their 20th game Bowling Green each fell out The Observer/Brendan Regan of the season, an impressive They turned in only four kills of the top 25, making room feat considering last year’s 9-27 and a .095 hitting percentage for the two newcomers. slate. in losing the third game 15-2 and San Francisco continued their torrid hitting with .450 and .419 averages in the two final games compared to Notre Dame’s 300-plus average. It was the same story the next game against Hofstra(24- 13), only there was a different ending. The Irish cruised to two wins in the first two games but then faltered, hitting just .121 and 111 as Hofstra posted two successive victories. Hofstra then hit .429 to ND’s .381 in the fifth game, but the Irish came away with the 2- point win to push their record to 20-7.

On the horizon for the Irish are two games on Nov. 29 and Campus-Wide 30 in Arlington against Texas- Arlington to close out the regu- lar-season. As far as post-sea­ Christian Interfaith Prayer Service son play is concerned, the Irish will most likely have to settle for a bid to the National Volleyball Invitational Monday, November 25, 1991 Championships. They figure to be one of the top seeds in the 7:30 p.m. tournament. Members and coaches of the Sacred Heart Church team were unavailable for comment due to late travel plans. Sugar Bowl ‘92 Land Packages Participating Groups: from $269 PR d b l o c c 1(8 0 0 ) 800-1133 Black Cultural Arts Council Barker Tours Campus Bible Study TTrr»~trrirrrtnrrrB^'TTBTr Campus Fellowship I MAPLE LANE Campus Ministry Fellowship of Christian Athletes BARBER SHOP InterVarsity Christian Fellowship HOURS: MON-FRI 8:00-5:30 Master of Divinity Student Choir SAT 8:00-3:00 Moreau Seminary 2112 South Bend Avenue Notre Dame Encounter Appointments if desired 272-6722 SLDJUL AJULO-JUUL9JULIL8 J1JULMJ Guest choir:

Beauty and the Beast G Macedonia Missionary Baptist Youth Choir 5:00 7:15 9:15 Curly Sue PG 5:15 7:15 9:15 J. m People Under The Stairs R (AMUS 5:00 7:30 9:45 fvUNIHRy Black Robe R 4:45 7:15 9:30 Billy Bathgate R 4:30 7:00 9:15 page 14 The Observer Monday, November 25,1991 Redskins falter; Patriots stun Buffalo SPORTS SHORTS Cowboys 24, Redskins 21 2-yard touchdown pass to two touchdowns of the season Digger Phelps* father passed away Not even Washington could Farrell Edmunds. and New York won at home. ■Notre Dame, Ind. —Richard Bruce Phelps, father of former escape on a Sunday full of Thomas scored from the 22 upsets. Raiders 38, Bengals 14 and the 1, and gained 76 yards Notre Dame coach Digger Phelps, died Thursday at the age of 79 The Redskins, trying to Tim Brown returned a punt on 15 carries. The Jets (7-5) in Beacon, N.Y. He is survived by his wife, Margaret; two become the fourth team in NFL 75 yards for a touchdown and surpassed their victory total of daughters. Barb of Tuscon, Ariz., and Diane of Sudbury, Mass.; history to start 12-0, instead Elvis Patterson scored after a last season in Bruce Coslet’s and a son, Richard of South Bend. The funeral will be held at lost 24-21 at home to their old botched Cincinnati punt as Los first year as coach. 10:00 a.m. Monday in Beacon. nemesis, the Dallas Cowboys. Angeles tied Denver for first place in the AFC West. Packers 14, Colts 10 Ex-Irish Star Rivers back in the NBA Giants 21, Buccaneers 14 Quarterback Mike Tomczak Phil Simms, given a chance to Browns 20, Chiefs 15 went 48 yards on Green Bay’s ■Los Angeles-The Los Angeles Clippers signed guard David play after Jeff Hostetler broke Leroy Hoard caught a 71-yard longest run of the season and Rivers this weekend to a contract with undisclosed terms. Rivers, a bone in his back, threw a 30- touchdown pass and scored on the Packers stopped a former Notre Dame star, had been playing in the Continental yard touchdown pass to a 1-yard run while Cleveland Indianapolis in the fourth quar­ Basketball Association with the LaCrosse Catbirds. This season, Stephen Baker w ith 16 seconds forced five turnovers at Kansas ter to win at Milwaukee. Rivers was averaging 19.2 points, 13.4 assists, and 3.0 steals per left to lift New York. City. game. Rivers was originally a first round draft choice of the Los Simms completed seven The Chiefs got inside the Eagles 34, Cardinals 14 Angeles Lakers in 1988. stra ig h t passes as the Giants Browns’ 15 six times, but Linebacker Seth Joyner re­ went 90 yards in 85 seconds. turned that into just 13 points. turned a fumble 34 yards for a Hostetler was hit in the third Christian Okoye lost two fum­ touchdown and forced another Olajuwon placed on injured reserve quarter and left with an injury bles inside the 5. that Clyde Simmons, leading that the team described as not Philadelphia at Phoenix. ■ H o u s to n - Houston Rocket’s center Hakeem Olajuwon career-threatening. Lawrence Seahawks13, Broncos 10 hospitalized after suffering a fluttering heartbeat, was placed on Taylor and two other Giants Seattle overcame four Falcons 23, Saints 20 the injured reserve list Saturday. The 7-foot all-star won’t be were hurt. turnovers by Dave Krieg and Norm Johnson ended a long eligible to return until Dec. 5. Doctors diagnosed him with atrial stopped John Elway at the weekend for the division lead­ fibrillation, the same ailment that sent President Bush to the Patriots 16, Bills 13 Kingdome. ers, kicking a 50-yard field goal hospital this year. New England intecepted four Krieg fumbled twice and tied with 1:57 remaining in over­ of Jim Kelly’s passes and the NFL record of 106 held by time. sacked him four times to beat Dan Fouts. Krieg also threw a Michael Haynes caught an 80- Buffalo at home. 4-yard touchdown pass to Jeff yard scoring pass from Chris The Patriots had lost their Chadwick that put the Miller in the third quarter, then APT Seahawks (6-6) ahead 13-0 at caught an 18-yard pass to tie it J S f^ w previous four games, all 1991 REC. vs OPR. decided in the final minute. halftime. the score at 20 with 1:53 left in THROUGH 11/24/91 RECORD RTS. PVS. TOP 25 REC. EXTRA POINTS This time, after the Bills (10-2) the regulation. New Orleans (9- *1 Miami (37) 10-0-0 1,476.5 1 3-0-0 53-44-1 40 Ws over unrank teams Jets 24, Chargers 3 3) had led 20-10 w ith 12:43 to moved to the New England 35 2 Washington 11-0-0 1,456.5 2 2-0-0 58-49-2 Gain 8 1/2 1 st-place voles with 1:07 left, the Patriots Blair Thomas ran for his first go in regulation. 3 Florida St. 10-1-0 1,378 3 3-1-0 58-39-3 Won 4 sir over Gators sacked Kelly and then forced an incompletion. SPORTS BRIEFS 4 Michigan 10-1-0 1,318 4 4-1-0 63-46-1 Howard clinched Heisman 5 Florida 9-1-0 1,262 5 4-1-0 60-35-1 7-8 vs. FSU's Bowden Steelers 26, Oilers 14 are accepted every day except Saturday until t > Penn St. 9-2-0 1,159 7 2-1-0 58-51-1 8-1-1 last ten at Pitt Pittsburgh prevented Houston ■Sports briefs 7 Iowa 10-1-0 from clinching its first AFC 5:00 p.m. at the Observer office on the third floor of LaFortune. 1,095 9 3-1-0 52-55-3 Fry 100 wins at Iowa Central championship as Please include your name and phone number in case there are i 8 Alabama 9-1-0 1,086 8 2-1-0 48-38-0 1 -4 vs. Auburn since '86 Warren Moon threw a career- any questions concerning your brief. 9 Tennessee 8-2-0 981 10 4-2-0 59-38-0 Won 8 sir over Vandy high five interceptions and lost 1 0 Texas A&M 9-1-0 980 12 1-0-0 49-46-1 No. 1 lot. del. in nation a fiimble. ■Sugar Bowl tickets w ill be on sale Thursday, Nov. 21 through Dec. 4, from 8:30 to 5. Tickets will be $40 apiece and each Notre 1 1 Nebraska 8-1-1 937 11 1-1-1 51-46-3 2-5 vs. Okla. since '84 Lions 34, Vikings 14 Dame or St. M ary’s student may present 4 IDs. A ll tickets will, be 1 2 East Carolina 10-1-0 768 13 2-0-0 47-50-2 Have won ten straight Barry Sanders ran for Detroit issued at the ticket office on the 2nd floor of the J.A.C.C. upon 1 3 Clemson 8-1-1 756 14 2-0-0 47-40-2 Cameron 85.7 pet. vs. SC I payment. records of 220 yards and four 1 4 California 9-2-0 739 6 1-2-0 57-53-1 Brien top kicker in NCAA touchdowns as the Lions 1 5 Colorado 8-2-1 609 15 1-1-1 55-49-4 Hagan 27 career TDs romped at Minnesota. ■ND/SMC Sailing Team: The sweatshirts are in. If you are interested in buying one before break call Moira 284-5344. We 1 6 Syracuse 9-2-0 554 16 2-1-0 59-48-0 Walker 3 sir 100-yd game Dolphins 16, Bears 13 w ill also be selling them at the meeting Monday, Dec. 2, in O’Shag 1 7 Stanford 8-3-0 538 21 3-2-0 56-43-1 Have won seven straight room 204 at 7:00 p.m. Pete Stoyanovich kicked a 27- 1 8 Notre Dame 8-3-0 528 17 1-3-0 63-44-1 1st meeting with Hawaii yard field goal and Miami 1 9 Oklahoma 8-2-0 467 19 0-1-0 40-45-4 17-16-3 at Lincoln, Neb. scored on the first possession ■Football equipment return w ill be this Monday Nov. 25, from of overtime to win at snowy 7-9 p.m. at Gate 9 of the stadium. All those who have not returned 2 0 Virginia 8-2-1 429 20 1-1-1 49-47-1 Blundin 231 pass-0 int. Soldier Field. equipment must do so at this time. Bring check-out slips. 2 1 N. Carolina St. 9-2-0 198 22 2-2-0 46-47-5 Barbour 171 yards, 1 TD

The Dolphons (6-6) stopped 2 9 Tulsa 8-2-0 172 23 1-1-0 38-47-3 Best record since 1982 Chicago’s five-game winning ■Catch the John MacLeod Show Monday from 7-8 p.m. 2 3 UCLA 8-3-0 155 25 1-2-0 59-49-2 1st W over USC since '86 streak. The Bears (9-3) hurt exclusively on 640 AM, WVFI. Campus radio has the feed for the themselves w ith a bad snap on South Bend area. Call 1-800-488-4676 to ask MacLeod any 2 4 Ohio St. 8-3-0 143 18 0-3-0 52-57-1 Cpoper 3-year extension a punt in the last two minutes, questions about the team and the upcoming season. 2 5 Georgia 7-3-0 109 24 2-1-0 50-44-1 3-4 vs. Tech since 1984 leading to Dan Marino’s tying, ( ) - First-place votes 1991-92 BOWL SCHEDULE Wrestlers place well at St. Louis PINKY BUNS - B. Green vs. Fresno Q O fin c R Indiana State or San Jos6 St., 41 DO W L*^ vs. Baylor, Special to the Observer DEC. 31 California DEC- 14 C lg ? r KATHY RtE - j The Notre Dame wrestling Georgia Tech Ohio State vs. Syracuse, team began its season at the vs. Stanford, JAN. l St. Louis Open this weekend, Aloha DEC. 25, Hall of Fame with seven wrestlers placing i k .'V .'r . Clemson vs. in their respective weight Colorado or Oklahoma California, classes. vs. Alabama, JAN. 1 The Irish were led by Bit ter DEC. 28 Citrus seniors Marcus Gowens and Texas A&M vs. Curt Engler, who both Arkansas vs. Georgia, Florida State, reached the finals of their DEC. 29 classes. Gowens, ranked JAN. 1 Independence Gotten 12th at 126 pounds, and A ir Force vs. Penn State vs. Engler, a heavyweight, both Mississippi State, placed for the first time in Tennessee, DEC. 29 their careers. JAN. 1 Liberty Fiesta Also at heavyweight, junior Happy Virginia vs. Oklahoma Steve King placed second Michigan vs. or Nebraska,MphracVy and senior Chuck Weaver Birthday Washington, DEC. 29 came in fifth. Juniors Jamie Gator JAN. 1 Rose Boyd and Emil Soehnlen Jenny Ray! Brigham Young each placed fifth for the Irish M iami vs. Colorado vs. Iowa, in their respective weight or Nebraska, DEC. 30 classes, while freshman Orange JAN. 1 Jamey Downey placed fifth Chill out! You still San Diego State at 167 pounds. Florida vs. vs. Tulsa, In the None Dame, have one more year Freedom DEC. 30 freshman/sophomore JAN. 1 division, Brian Murphy Illinois finished second at 150 East Carolina vs. Love, Deno, vs. UCLA, pounds, Mike Fox was fifth North Carolina St., DEC. 31 at 142, and Harris JAN. 1 Quinn, Caron, Peach was The Observer/Brendan Regan Jules & Leroy Monday, November 25, 1991 The Observer page 15

CALVIN AND HOBBES BILL WATTERSON THE FAR SIDE GARY LARSON SPELUNKER JAY HOSLER

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CROSSWORD CAMPUS

DOWN Monday 1 1 Appetizers 2 Food 7 p.m. Film, “The Big Heat.” Annenberg Auditorium. 3 Nothing 7:30 p.m. Campus-wide Christian Interfaith Prayer Service. 4 " 1 s Iris h Rose" Sacred Heart Church. 5 Of the moon 9 p.m. Film, “Vindiana.” Annenberg Auditorium. 6 Extent of view 7 Wilander of tennis 8 Building part 9 Fatty 10 Did over 11 Mother of Ishmael 12 Miss Brewer, e t a l . 13 "110 in the ------" 14 Ex-pitcher McLain 19 G irl 22 Height LECTURES 24 Camelot notable 26 ------eyes 28 Sure thing 30 G ir l's name Monday 31 Hide's partner 33 "Leapi n' ------!" 7 p.m. “The Men Who Killed Kennedy." Dr. John Gordon. 34 Having leaves Carroll Auditorium, Saint Mary’s. 35 ------arts 36 Certain investment- Tuesday 37 Very learned 38 ■ — glass 12:30 p.m. “The Changing Political Economy of Southern 39 Boxing blows European Capitalism.” Lynne Wozniak, Department of 40 Indian craft Government and International Studies. C-103 Hesburgh Center 42 Furnace lefto v ers for International Studies. 44 Montana c ity 45 ------and Penates @ Edward Julius Collegiate CW8827 48 Certain fastener (2 wds.) 49 Blockhead 52 — — s ta n d s till ACROSS 54 Clock d ia l number 1 ------Zone 29 Verses 51 Italian gulf 6 Daub 31 Did o ffic e work 53 Part of go! f MENU 11 Food fish 32 New Mexico town 55 Law 13 Burned 33 Miss C an trell 56 Assyrians, e.g. 15 Dye ingredient 34 Lucky chance 57 T h rill 16 Washington phone 36 Deciduous trees 58 Did dangerous Notre Dame (2 wds.) 39 French riv e r work 17 Herd of whales 40 Certain relative, 18 W inter wear fo r short Baked Parmesan Chicken Breast 20 Prison 41 Gary and fam ily 21 Gibbons 43 German riv e r Beef Turnover with Gravy 23 English novel 1st 44 Commonplace Eggplant Parmesan 24 Bal1 attire 46 Twofold Baked Chicken with Herbs 25 Leases 47 "For shame!" 27 Vane d ire c tio n 48 Russian plains 28 Mr. Jones 50 Prefix for meter

0 Sophomore Parents Weekend If any sophomore did not receive information regarding Sophomore Parents Weekend please stop by the Student Activities Office or contact Jennifer Rasmusser at 284-5178. sponsored by SAB Sports page 16 Monday, November 25, 1991 Women’s hoops drops two games over weekend Penn State, Stanford prove too much for Irish to handle By RENE FERRAN tremendous job in the second Associate Sports Editor h a lf.” Phillips ended up with 19 For sure, it was the learning points, 17 in the second half. experience the Notre Dame Senior Margaret Nowlin led the women’s basketball team ex­ Irish with 19 points, while pected. Marciniak added 16. The Irish dropped close Notre Dame’s lack of an out­ games to third-ranked Penn side game also came back to State 86-70 on Friday and sev­ haunt it against PSU. The Irish enth-ranked Stanford 88-76 hit only 4-of-26 shots from the yesterday afternoon. And while perimeter—all four by it hung tough in both contests, Orlosky—for the game, while it was Notre Dame’s inexperi­ the Nittany Lions, sparked by ence down the stretch that cost Margaret Nowlin point guard Dana Eikenberg’s it wins in both games. three straight treys to start the “We played well in spurts, but with 10 minutes left, and the game, hit 15-of-30 from out­ we didn’t have the discipline at crowd of 1,766 was rattling the side. the end to get the job done rafters. “It was important to get the when we really needed to,” said Notre Dame was able to take team started, ” said Eikenberg, Irish coach Muffet McGraw two one-point leads—the last, who finished with 19 points. after the Penn State game, but 70-69, on a Marciniak layup “We needed to get an emotional it could have applied to the with 4:59 left—but each time, lift by coming in and hitting that Stanford game as well. Penn State responded with a first bucket.” In both cases, it was Notre basket of its own to retake the In the first half on Sunday, Dame’s inability to handle a lead. All-American candidate Stanford also tried a full-court pressing defense that did the Susan Robinson, battling the flu press out on the Irish. But Notre young squad in. bug, grabbed an offensive Dame, perhaps learning from The Nittany Lions clamped a rebound and put it back home Friday’s experience, handled it full-court press on the Irish in for two of her eight points to w ith ease, scoring several easy the first half Friday, and within put PSU back on top to stay, 71- baskets in transition. the next four-and-a-half min­ 70. utes, had expanded a 26-23 “We had some good Like Friday’s game, the Irish lead to a 41-25 advantage. shots—we missed a couple of were unable to generate much Notre Dame became rattled, wide-open layups—but we just of an outside attack, but they forcing up quick shots and get­ couldn’t capitalize,” said stayed within five points at ting into a run-and-gun style McGraw. “Robinson, even with halftime, 43-38. Notre Dame’s McGraw did not want to see. the flu, gives them a go-to per­ half-court defense generated “We tried to run with them, son, and that’s what we re eight steals, and senior and that wasn’t a good idea. We missing. We need to find our Margaret Nowlin, who had 19 had to slow the ball down and go-to player.” points against PSU, poured in control the tempo,” she said. From that point on, the pres­ 12 in the first h a lf Sunday. The Observer/John Bingham “We did a better job in the sure which had mounted The turning point of the game Freshman guard Audrey Gomez dribbles the ball up the court against second half, but we didn’t do it throughout the second half fi­ came with 14 minutes remain­ Stanford yesterday. Gomez scored six points, but the Irish fell 88-76. in the first.” nally wore down the young ing when the Cardinal went to a “We got flustered,” explained Irish, and the Nittany Lions half-court trap. The Irish once was as d isrup tive as it w as,” However, while starting out sophomore Sherri Orlosky, who pounced all over the weary again looked confused in the added Stanford coach Tara the season 0-2 is disappointing, had 13 points against the Lions. squad, scoring the last 17 face of pressure defense, going VanDerveer. “We were just try­ the Irish can find solace in the “We needed to calm down, look points of the game. over five-and-a-half minutes ing a little change of pace.” fact that they were competitive for the open man, and run what without scoring. As well, junior Val Whiting with top-notch opponents, a we had been working on.” “They (Penn State) didn't get At one point, they turned the stepped to the forefront in the goal McGraw stressed going Penn State built a 43-30 half- rattled, even when we took the ball over on seven consecutive second half, scoring 13 points into the weekend. With time lead, but Notre Dame lead late in the game,” said possessions as Stanford scored and putting a charge into a Marquette on tap Wednesday came out in the second half and McGraw. “We were tired at that 16 unanswered points to take a Cardinal team drained from a night, Notre Dame now must slowly chipped away at the point. We didn’t have the depth 68-51 lead—and control of the 26-point victory over fourth- show the capability to bounce margin. The Irish closed within they did." game. ranked Georgia in Athens, Ga., back. six at 58-52 when freshman “Our conditioning down the “ I think it caught us a little by Friday. And Nowlin is confident this Michelle Marciniak, who had 12 stretch enabled us to hit the surprise,” said Nowlin, who led “I think Val understands what team wifi do just that. second-half points, went down shots when we needed to,” all scorers with 24 points and she has to do for our team. “We proved that we can def­ w ith what appeared to be a se­ added Lions coach Rene added 10 rebounds. “We She’s not only our physical, but initely play with nationally- rious ankle injury. Portland. “Our kids were able worked on it in practice yester­ our emotional leader,” said ranked teams,” the the Irish co­ But when Marciniak returned to keep their composure, and day, but we weren’t aggressive VanDerveer. “She ran the floor captain said. “We’ve got 27 to the game a minute later, the Kathy Phillips got a wake-up enough in attacking it.” better in the second half, and more games to go. We’ll be just lead was down to one, 58-57, call at halftime and did a “I was surprised that the trap she concentrated more inside.” fine.” Swim teams fall to Kansas ND Hockey sweeps past Lake Forest By ANTHONY KING the honors, as he shot one The Irish power play, which Observer Staff Report competition, Jenny Kipp took Assistant Sports Editor through the legs of Vacco for had been 0 for 3 on Friday fourth place overall. The men’s and women’s his 100th career point. night and a concern all this Colin Cooley’s second-place swim teams gained some The Irish hockey team got Before the fans could sit season, would turn out to be finish in the 100-yard breast­ valuable experience this exactly the medicine it needed down, Notre Dame struck the very thing that sparked the stroke was the best finish for weekend at the University of against Lake Forest this week­ again. At 15:04, Kevin Patrick Irish to victory in the second the men against the Illinois’ Fighting Illini end. whistled a slapshot form the left game. Jayhawks. Extravaganza. The Irish reeled off two wins point past Vacco to give the Both teams opened the meet against the Foresters, issuing a Irish a 4-0 advantage. The Irish would net four Sean Hyer finished second Friday against Kansas. The 7-0 beating on Friday and fol­ power play goals, raising their in the three meter diving Jayhawks won both meets, lowing it up with a 5-2 victory The Irish would score once man-up percentage to 27.3% competition. knocking off the women 119- in Chicago, evening their record more in the second and light for the season. Greg Cornick finished third 48 and defeating the men at (4-4-0). the lamp three more times in Winger Lou Zadra scored in the 200-yard freestyle and 127-40. Friday night’s game in the the third to make the final another goal, on the power Ed Broderick duplicated the Tanya Williams was a bright Joyce could best be described margin 7-0. Patrick would net play, to give him seven for the feat in the 200-yard spot for the women, finishing as an offense that finally ex­ the last goal, giving him two year and 11 goals in the last individual medley. first in both the 200-yard indi­ ploded. With the Irish already goals for the game. thirteen games. Jim Birmingham turned in a vidual medley and the 100- ahead 1-0, right winger Sterling Irish goaltender Brent third-place finish in the 50- yard backstroke. Black lifted a deflection of Lothrop recorded his first ca­ Notre Dame w ill head east yard freestyle and freshman Freshman Jenny Dahl took Curtis Janicke’s slapshot into reer shutout, stopping 18 shots this week, as they w ill face Andy Kiley finished third in second place in the 200-yard the upper left corner past goalie and killing six Lake Forest Merrimack on Tuesday and the 100-yard butterfly. freestyle and Becky Wood fin­ Dan Vacco. power plays. second-ranked Maine on Friday ished second in the 100-yard The loss dropped the men’s “We’re coming around as a and Saturday in what should record to 5-4. Official results breaststroke as the wom en’s Only 17 seconds later the team,” commented coach Ric prove to be some of the tough­ from Saturday’s and Sunday’s record fell to 6-2. Irish lit the lamp again. This Schafer. “In our losses we est competition for the Irish all meets were not available. In the three meter diving time left wing Lou Zadra did learned some things.” year.