<<

South Vietnam surrenders United States gave up Tuesday

SAIGON (UPI) - South Vietnam surrendered Wednesday to the Communists. The collapse came 2'z America gave up Ttiesday. President Ford okayed “Option 4” -a hours after the United States pulled down the Stars and Stripes in the country it had spent 14 years massive and swift helicopter evacuation-and scores of helicopters trying to keep out of Communist hands. swept into Saigon to pick up a ll Americans who wanted to leave, about President Duong Van Minh announced the surrender in a 60-second address to his people at 900, and transported them to ships and carriers waiting in the South precisely 10:20 a.m., 10:20 p.m. EDT Tuesday. He told his soldiers to stop fighting and said he was China Sea. ready to meet Viet Cong leaders “ to discuss the turnover of the administration, both civilian and U.S. Ambassador Graham Martin, weary and drawn, stepped from m ilita ry .” a helicopter and onto the deck of the communications ship USS Blue Minutes later, Communist tanks-one flying the Viet Cong flag-rolled into downtown Saigon. Ridge-himself the symbol of the pullout that saw the Americans leave Witnesses said the tanks were firing, but there was no return fire from government troops. with Vietnamese screams of “ Please take me! Please take me!” still In Paris, the Viet Cong said it would accept the surrender only after fulfillment of one remaining echoing in their ears. condition: that U.S. ships leave Vietnamese waters. That was expected shortly. The surrender ended As gunshots resounded in the streets, flames licked at the aban­ 35 years of fighting in Vietnam, starting with the Japanese takeover in 1940. The United States in­ doned U.S. embassy that Vietnamese set afire and mortar rounds vested 14 years, $150 billion and mre than 50,000 lives in its efforts to block the Communists. . pounded the city’s outskirts, Minh made his brief, sad announcement. “ All soldiers, be calm and remain where you are now. I also call on soldiers not to open fire so that together we can discuss ways to hand over the reins of government without bloodshed. “ In the interest of peace, national conciliation and concern of the people, to save the lives of the people, I believe deeply in in con­ ciliation among the Vietnamese people. “ Therefore I call on all the soldiers of the Republic of Vietnam to stay where you are. “ We also call on the soldiers of the Provisional Revolutionary $ T h e Government Viet Cong not to open fire because we are waiting to meet with the government of the PRG to discuss the turnover of the ad­ m inistration, both civilian and m ilita ry, without causing senseless bloodshed to the people.” It was 150 minutes after the last U.S. evacuation helicopter left. It was 13 days after nieghboring Cambodia fell to the pro-Communist Khmer Rouge. O b s e r v e r Even as Minh spoke, Communist forces founght toward the center of university of noire dam e si mory s college the city, and by mid-morning Saigon was in panic. Vietnames went on a rampage, looting homes the Americans left a few hours earlier and Vol. IX, No. 125 Wednesday^pnM0J97^^ carting off tables, desks, chairs and anything else they could carry from the U.S. embassy before putting it to the torch. Looters broke into deserted service stations and carried away helmets filled with gasoline. French businessmen who remained Academic Council passes proposal watched the Vietnamese with studied casualness. A soft drizzle of rain underscored the dreariness of the hour. Police fired tim e and again over the heads of crowds to try to control them. Instead it created more panic. On rooftops, Vietnamese waited for experimental senior seminar for rides on the helicopters that would not return. The embassy’s compound held more of them, there with the same forlorn hope. Hours Hicks suggested that the earlier, a young woman pleaded in vain, “ Please take my children.” A seminar could be taken before the well-dressed man offered $200,000 if someone would take him from by Kathy Mills second semester of the senior year, Vietnam. or that some seminars could be The Academic Council passed a centered around student rather Not publicaity released proposal to set up pilot senior than professional ethics. seminars on values in each college Thomas Wilhemy of theCollege for the 1975-76 academic year. This of Business Administration proposal was approved by a vote of maintained that senior year is not 23 to 16 in yesterday’s meeting. the time for a value seminar. He These value seminars will be offered the sophomore year as the COUL to report structured as one-semester, one- best lim e for the course. credit undergraduate courses “ Seniors are more distracted by by Mary Reher be fa ir for the Board not to see the graded on a satisfactory un­ graduate schools and jobs, and Staff Reporter report first-hand. I hope it w ill be satisfactory (S,U) basis. The they are fixed in their sense of made available to the students courses w ill be reviewed by the values."he explained. The C om m ittee on Un­ after the m eeting.” respective College Councils before Wilhemy anticipated seniors dergraduate L ife is scheduled to “ The Board w ill review the being made a University being apathetic toward the value present its report to the Board of report and hopefully implement requirement. seminars. Trustees at their meeting on the items in the report that they The dean of each college w ill be The Council also approved by campus May 8, 1975. feel are sound,” Keenan observed. responsible for course voice vote a mini-course option for The committee’s findings will “ In O ctober, 1974, student organization and logistics. He will departments and programs not be released to the public before leaders had made a presentation to appoint a college co-ordinators to Dean Frederick Crosson allowing a basic one-half semester the meeting, Dr. Robert Acker­ the Board of Trustees asking them "supervise intramural planning (urricularunit carrying 1.5 credits. man, member of the residentiality to form a committee to look at the and meet with coordinators from social science or history, two The first mini-course could be subcommittee said. “ It will be up various aspects of student life,” the other colleges for University- semesters of philosophy, two of given in the spring semester, 1976. to the trustees to decide how they Ackerman recounted. “ The wide planning.” theology, and one semester of a The effectiveness of the mini­ will release the contents of the Committee on Undergraduate Life Dean Frederick Crosson of Arts senior seminar on value. course in adding fle xib ility to the report,” he stated. was formed, consisting of five and Letters said he thought next The move alllows more rgraduate curriculum will be The report belongs to the subcommittees: finance, student year's s pilot seminars would use requirements to be fulfilled after evaluated by the Academic Trustees since they originated the life, academics, residentiality, and volunteer faculty and randomly- the freshman year; natural Council or another appropriate committee in the first place, coeducation.” selected seniors, although these science, and at least one semester body after a two-year period. Ackerman noted, so it would be Student life subcommittee seniors would not need the course of philosophy and theology now (continued on page 19) appropriate for them to see the member Tom Drape observed, for graduation. must be completed by the end of results first. The committee “The committee has really only Crosson envisoned the volunteer the sophomore year. members were not elected by the begun to examine the area of faculty as taking “different ap­ Crosson favors seminars Today is the last students; instead they were ap­ student life. It is an area this proaches to the themes of the Crosson, who presented the pointed by the Board, so they are committee was not able really to courses,” After the value recommendation on the senior regular issue of responsible to them, he said. go into depth due to the time seminars are implemented as a value seminars from a report by Mary Ellen Keenan, also a limits and work load of the University requirement,all faculty the Committee on the Course of 0 6 & e % v e > i member of the residentiality (continued on page 6) w ill teach the course on a rotating Study, declared that he favored the It wouldn’t basis. idea of the seminars. He con­ •trial elective” defeated tended that students need to think about the responsibilities and m oral A proposed amendment to have criteria in which they will be the seminars incorporated into the directing their lives. curriculum as a “ trial elective” As possible class themes, was defeated 19 to 20, as F r. Crosson offered professional codes Theodore Hesburgh, Council for the in itia l seminars in the chairman, cast one of this rare tie- colleges of Business Ad­ breaking votes. ministration and Engineering. He The Academic Council sub­ admitted that experimentation will sequently approved in a voice vote lake place in the College of Arts a new grouping of University and Letters suggesting that some requirements for graduation which classes may be aimed at the would make the senior value professional fields such as law. seminar required for the Class of Crosson added that some 1978, the present freshman class. seminars would be geared toward This action also serves to for­ I “ the responsibility of the in; malize de facto University dividual to various committees." requirements which arose from Susan Hicks, representative courses required by all colleges. from the College of Engineering, Every baccalaureate student , stated she favored the idea of the beginning with the current fresh­ value seminars, but she "was not men, is now required to sure it will be implemented exactly satisfactorily complete one as w ritte n .” semester of English composition, •‘I think it could be implemented one of Freshman Seminar, two a little differently,” she continued semesters of mathematics, two of “ A lot of people thought so. The /CVCUST OEMON STttATfcS W W fw W physical education, two semesters progaram needs exprience,” Hicks of natural science, one semester of concluded. the observer Wednesday, April 30, 1975 world briefs Chemistry professor awarded T H I N K ... COLLEGE LIFE

Air Force MeritCertificate INSURANCE CO.OF AMERICA COLUMBUS OHIO UPI - Sen. George McGovern, 0 6. D., said Tuesday he is opposed to large numbers of Vietnamese, including Dr. G. Frank D’Alelio, research now is a research chemist with the orphans and children, being brought to the United States.. professor of chemistry at the Air Force Materials Laboratory. "I'm opposed to large numbers of Vietnamese coming," University of Notre Dame, An expert in the fields of McGovern told a news conference. "Not only because I think it is received the Air Force Certificate polymerization, rubber, plastics, not in our interests. I don't think it is in their interest. I think the of Merit Friday (April 25) for his and fibers, D’Alelio holds more Vietnamese are better off in Vietnam, including orphans and the research contributions to the than 400 patents and is noted for babies." development of resins for light­ the discovery of resins which weight, high-strength airplane permitted the cheap production of structures. penicillin and other antibiotics. He D’Alelio was honored par­ joined Notre Dame in 1955 as ticularly for his discovery of new chairman of the Department of ATTENTION WASHINGTON UPI - attorney David Leavitt said polymers capable of withstanding Chemistry and after five years was Tuesday that black market baby trade has mushroomed in the high temperatures yet readily named research professor. states that do not allow "healthy competition" between in­ processable at reasonable tem­ D’Alelio was graduated from dependent placement and private adoption agencies. Leavitt, of ALL peratures and pressures. He Boston College and Johns Hopkins Beverly Hills, who has privately arranged 800 adoptions in the past received a decade of support for University. He has been affiliated 16 years, said it is important that the racketeers and babysellers be his polymer research from the Air with Koppers Company, Inc., GRADUATING "put out of business." Force Materials Laboratory, Pittsburgh, as vice president and But he told a Denate subcommittee Investigating black market Wright-Patterson Air Force Base research manager, Industrial baby sales that legislation giving adoption agencies a "monopoly" (Ohio). Rayon Corp., Cleveland, as STUDENTS in child placement is not the answer. The certificate, a plaque and manager of high polymer "AThe baby buyers are all in states that do not permit a healthy letter of appreciation were research, and Prophy lacitic Brush competition between agencies and independent system," Leavitt presented to D’Alelio by a former Co., Noorthampton, Mass., as vice Measurements said. student, Dr. Robert C. Evers, who president and directorof research. will be taken WASHINGTON UPI - President Ford met with Jordan's King K of C announces new officers fo r Hussein Tuesday to review peace efforts In the Middle East. In a statement released at the end of the meeting, the White The Notre Dame Knights of j House said Ford and Hussein "reviewed the current stte of peace include: Joseph Antonelli, Grand Columbus ended the eurrenr Knight; Steven Lucero, Deputy efforts in the Middle East." academic year 1st evening with the Ford "assured His Majesty that the United States remains Grand Knight; Ted Plis, Chan­ announcement of newly elected committed to working for a just and lasting peace in the Middle cellor; Dan Mellett, Warden ;Terry| officers, the presentation of a East," it said. O’Laughlin, Inside Guard, Doug CAPS Knight of the Year award, and the Meyers, Outside Guard; Dave announcement that the ND post Medley, Recorder; Jay Scanlon, was in top contention for the Treasurer; Chris DiDiana, Ad­ membership award among K of C vocate. The Ladies of Columbus and on campus today college councils. The Knights of also held an election in which Ann Columbus increased its mem­ Bennett and Mary McCormick bership this year by 133, an in­ were elected co-coordinators of the crease over last year of 33 percent, Ladies of Columbus. GOWNS tinder the direction of Chancellor Wednesday, April 30 tnd Membership Chairman 4 pm lacrosse, ND vs Purdue, Stepan Field, free The Observer is published dally Patrick Keating. during the college semester except EVERY DAY 4 pm lecture,"cryptate complexes in chem istry", by prof. jean- For this direction, Keating was vacations by the students of the mari lehn, 123 nieuw. sci hall. designated with the Knight of the University of Notre Dame and St. Between Mary's College. Subscriptions 5 pm-vespers,evensong, log chapel. Year Award by Grand Knight 7:30 pm lecture,"introduction to transcendental meditation", by may be purchased for $9 per Thomas Dechant. semester ($16 per year) from The NOW rovert carsello, rm 249, madeleva. They newly elected officers Observer Box Q, Notre Dame, 8 pm lecture,"the palistinian factor and the prospects for peace in promised to maintain the good In d ia n a 46556. Second class the middle east", by dr. fayez sayegh, Washington hall. postage paid, Notre Dame, Ind. and leadership exhibited by this year’s 46556. 8:15 pm concert, chamber music, lib. aud. officers. Newly elected officers MAY 2 Thursday, May 1 Marantz - Sony 3 pm lecture,"the roots of the ukiyo-e: japanese woodcuts of the This is the floating world", by ron penkoff.moreau gallery. Harmon/Kardon- Pioneer - Crown 4 p m -lecture, "the avant-garde critique", by frederick crews, lib. Defir te aud. at 4:30 pm-awards ceremony, arm y rote caders, stepan center Deadline 5 pm-vespers, evensong, log chapel. 5 pm mass, may day mass, fr. griffin, grotto. THE STEREO SCENE 9:00 - 4:00 7:30 pm-address, senior class fellow address, by ara parseghian, eng. aud. 8 pm -drama, "m an of la mancha" $2,00 stud admission, o'laughlin Wholesale Prices on HiFi at the aud. 8:30 pm-lecture,"preserving the dunes," by charlotte read, Equipment & Accessories haggar hall lounge. NOTRE Fast Dependable Service!! Friday, May 2 (except fair trade items) noon-5 pm-adoration of blessed sacrament, benediction at 5 pm, DAME lady chapel of sacred heart. 287-1400 5 pm-vespers,evensong,log chapel. 8 pm dram a, "m an of la m ancha", o'laughlin aud. ASK ABOUT MAXELL 3302 MISHA. AVE . V, MILE PAST RIVER PARK THEATER BOOKSTORE

Saturday, May 3 11 am-lacrosse, nd " b " team vs. m iam i of Ohio, free, stepan field 130 pm-football, blue and gold game, $2.50 for adults, 50 cents for children under 15 yrs old, stadium. 3:30 pm lacrosse, nd " a " team vs Chicago lacrosse club, tree,all WIN A 10 SPEED invited, stadium. 8 pm drama "m an of la m ancha", o'laughlin aud. 8 pm observer party,"guarenteed blast for all ob- serverites",Heidleberg. BICYCLE

Sunday, May 3 2 pm-open house, smc campus 8:15 pm concert, nd orchestra, Washington hall. AND CRUISE May 1-11 billy graham crusade, acc. IN STYLE THIS Friday, May 16 6:30 pm concert, university band, dd, memorial library mall

8 pm -dram a,"m an of la mancha", o'laughlin aud. Saturday, May 17 The Purchase of Any 10 am rote commissioning,acc 11 am -phi beta kappa installation, lib aud. 2 pm-kniversity reception, oy the officers of the university, PRO TOOTHBRUSH at families of graduates inveted.cen. for con. ed. 4:30 pm-graduates assemble for academic procession,acc 4:45 pm Academic procession begins,acc 5:pm baccalaureate mass, acc. Notre Dame Bookstore

6:30 pm-cocktail party and buffet, tickets for each must be pur­ chased in advance, acc Will Give You a Chance 8:30 pm -dram a' man of la mancha" o'laughlin aud. Sunday, May 18 11:30 am/m-box lunch, north and south dining halls to Win This Bicycle 1 pm diploma distribution, acc. 1:35 pm -academic procession begins, acc 2 pm- commencement and conferring of degrees, acc. ENTER TODAY Wednesday, April 3o, 1 9 7 5 ______the observer_____3 Graduate proposal discussed by Maureen Flynn “ There is a diminishing interest in the kinds of programs The proposed merger could strengthen aspects of the Staff Reporter we’ve had in the past’” Mc Cabe stated. “ Quite a few graduate program or it could weaken them, Bartlett said, faculty members have left in the last few years and there but urged,“ All our options must be addressed, studied, A proposal to phase out the Departm ent of Graduate has been a corresponding drop in applications for and evaluated. What’s the best route for us to take? I Studies in Education was discussed at an April 11th enrollment in department.” hope we use this time before the proposal comes before meeting among education department faculty, Vice- the Academic Council to explore the basic options, to president for Advanced Studies Dr. Robert Gorden, and Possible merger with psychology department make recommendations, and to endorse recom­ Dean of Arts and Letters Frederick Crosson. mendations,” Bartlett concluded. The proposal, which must be approved by the Academic As far as the Counseling Psychology program is con­ “ Mergers do not take place successfully without con­ Council, calls for the termination of the graduate studies cerned, McCabe noted that the possibility of a merger siderable background thought,” Professor John program in Religious Dimensions of Education and the with the Psychology Department was suggested almost Borkowski, chairman of the Psychology Department transfer of the Counseling Psychology program from the two years ago. Last year a committee, made up of agreed, and expressed the opinion that a great deal of Graduate Education Department to the Psychology members of both bodies and headed by William Liu, consideration has been given to the proposal. Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Letters and Department of the College of Arts and Letters. Undergraduate vs. graduate educzation All students currently enrolled in the Religious director of the Center for the Study of Man in Con­ Dimensions program, however, will be allowed to com­ temporary Society, was appointed to study the feasibility Borkowski acknowledged that there are differences plete their degrees. “ The date for complete phase-out,” of such a project. The committee submitted its report last between the two programs and attributed many of them May. explained Gordon,“ is August 1977." He also noted that no to the basic contrast between undergraduate and students were admitted to the program this year and that "I suspect there are reservations on both sides,” stated graduate education. Minimizing the disparities between none have been accepted for 1975-76. Dr. Willis Bartlett, associate professor of graduate laboratory-based research and field research, the studies in education and former chairman of the depart­ department chairmen noted that “ it is impossible to Dates back to department change ment. "We need to look at out options and evaluate the separate the two because most laboratory research has The rationale behind the proposed move dates back to a pros and cons. What are our priorities, and what applied implications.” change in the education department two years ago. At arrangements will meet those priorities best?” Borkowski stated that the incorporation of the Coun­ that time programs in administration, history of edu­ Bartlett was personally concerned that the merger seling Psychology program into the Department of cation instruction, and religious education were combined “ might do away with the professional orientation and Psychology would most likely result in a “slightly under the heading “ Religious Dimensions in Education,” autonomy” of the present program. At the same time he stronger research emphasis,” but stressed that the and a moratorium was placed on admissions to that questioned the “ feasibility of remaining a small depart­ graduate program would still retain “ its basic features, program by the vice-president for advanced studies. Last ment on a large university.” goals, and purposes. ” fall, however, the education department faculty voted to Emphasizing his neutrality on the issue, B artlett noted, In addition , Borkowski predicted that a merger would suspend programs in history of education, instruction, “ We haven’t discussed our differences to see if they can result in widening of perspective for the undergraduate and general administration in favor of a new degree in be resolved or if we can reach a compromise.” One m ajor program by providing a “ more humanistic flavor and Religious Dimensions. difference Bartlett pointed out is the orientation of the enriched course offerings.” According to Gordon, the faculty proposal would have graduate program toward practical fieldwork as opposed Counseling, Borkowski pointed out, is a part of cost 33 percent more than the existing program. He cited to the undergraduate emphasis on research and ex­ psychology. The Psychology Department, he feels, could economic stress as a factor in the administration’s perimentation. provide the graduate program with “ a home. It could decision to reject the suggested move. Gordon attributed “ My main concern, ” Bartlett explained,“ is that we give it a basis from which to work.” The psychology the subsequent counter-proposal to phase out that maintain the high calibre of our current program.” He chairman cautioned, however, that it is difficult to ven­ segment of the department completely to a lack of faculty observed that the Notre Dame graduate program in ture a real opinion of such a proposal without knowing the interest in continuing the programs and to an unusual Counseling Psychology is one of only twenty accreditied details. number of faculty members leaving the department. by the American Psychological Association. New ,, The proposal w ill probably come before the Academic Sheridan P. McCabe, Director of the Counseling Center programs are usually given a provisional accreditation Council when it meets next fall, or perhaps the following (which is affiliated with the Counseling Psychology when first accpted, Bartlett said, but the ALPA “ was so January. If the project is approved, the merger will most program), explained the phase-out in similar terms. impressed they gave us the full five year accreditation.” likely go into effect the following academic year. May commencement

ders and check on them to make lending a hand with the great "Man of La Mancha” at SMC, and by John A. Kenward been closely associated with sure they are followed through. amount of diploma preparation, on the times for diploma distribution Staff Reporter Commencement plans and had begun them early in January. We’ve been doing this for some their free time. and the start of the Com­ years now and it is becoming fa irly As of now, a general program mencement ceremony. The Plans for the 130th Annual At that tim e the compiling of the routine-though in ways it is still has been announced that includes a general program schedule appears Commencement excerises, to take list of those graduating or kind of interesting,” she said.. concert in the Memorial Library in D 11 Campus Today of this issue. place Sunday, May 18th, and ac receiveng Masters or PhD Waechter added that many others Mall, Phi Beta Lappa installations, Major items yet unfinished are companyingi>vents of the weekend degrees began. Taking into ac­ in the Registrar's Officed not a liniversity reception, Bac- | the details of the speakers’ plat- are being finalized, the Registrar’s count adds, as in the case of directly connected to the making of calaureate Mass in the ACC, a Office reported Tuesday. Juniors qualified to graduate at the (Continued on page 17 ) the plans have been very helpful in cocktail party, performances of Handling of Commencement has end of the semester, and also drops from the list, orders for the in­ been done by the R egistrar’s Office I dividual diplomas were sent to the for many years. The reason for I this is the desire for maximum company who produces them on I efficiency. Assistant February 15. THE LIBRARY Registrar Beverly Waechter On April 7 they arrived to be I said. checked, placed in blue cases, and "The Registrar’s Office is enveloped in white before packing | Announces EXAM Week Specials probably the only office on campus in open boxes according to college qualified for this work,” Waechter of graduation and alphabetical stated. “ We know about grade order. changes and keep up on honors. In Though planning for Com­ M on.- M a y 5th this office we know who is in and mencement involves much work, who is not in school,” she added. Waechter expressed the opinion Rose Patterson, serving as “We can handle it. Our main Commencement Clerk for the first duties in Commencement - all the chicken you can eat - $2 time this year, and Waechter have organizing have been to give or-

Tues. - M a y 6th $2.00 large pizzas - 50? all mixed drinks

W ed. - M a y

Cut out the dollar, brmg HERE’S A DOLLAR it with you w htn you - complete rib j $1.95 come m lor your hat styling, and we I take FOR YOUR HEAD. $1 o il your bid Not only do you save a buck, but the girls are going to moke you look great and you get to practice Thurs. - May 8 Hurricanes - $1 ’ FOR APPOINTMENT CALL your cut outs Whot 0 i 255-8600 deal - complete Lasagna dinner - $1.75 CHR m aster [Remember - Library Carry-out for all your party needs. stylists □ □ I I We hope everyone does well on exams. HAIR CARE FOR MEN l See you in Sept. I TOWN & COUNTRY MINI-MALL / MISHAWAKA, INO. 46544 4 the observer Wednesday, April 30,1975 'Routinely admitted' Intruder robs Badin residents Gallagher decided to w a it until the She contends along with other Both women robbed were “ m ad” questioned whether there is an by Jeanne Murphy next day to report the incident, residents that the dorm should not at the tone of the directive from underlying reason for such action. (iuest Reporter "until someone in Security knew be a prison when one is just going Macheca. “ When I am in my room, What is wrong with the education what to do. ” She refused to com­ down the hall or visiting a neigh­ I naturally do not lock the door,” of the people around her, she An intruder identified as a young ment on the thefts. bor. Nor should it be like a prison explained the girl who was asked? And consequently, “ What black male reportedly entered two Both victims and the resident system where one would have to sleeping while the man entered her happens to the people who get unlocked rooms on the third floor who admitted the intruder (ap­ sign in and out guests. room. “ 1 think it is ridiculous to caught?” she said. “ Is it rig h t to of Badin last Thursday around 8:45 parently the friend who called the Many women claim that they lock the doors just when one goes throw the blame completely on the p.m. and stole a watch from one girl sleeping) perused through lock their doors when they intend down to the bathroom,” the other part of the students? And if they room and a calculator from the mug shots at Security of both male to be gone for a long period of time, victim commented. are to blame, can only they rectify other. students and men from town fitting but for short spans they do not After discussing the actual whys the situation? What is the ad­ The man, approximately twenty the description of the thief. The bother. behind the thefts, one resident ministration going to do about it?” to twenty-two years of age, was ******************************************************** woman who watched the man "routinely admitted’ into the dorm * enter and leave the other room by a resident who heard him * picked not a student whom she * knocking at the card lock door, identified as the visitor. * Don’t sit around according to a University Bulletin * issued by Dean of Students John + Macheca. Macheca's Bulletin + Join i n The alleged thief proceeded to * the third floor and was spotted * Every attempt w ill be made to + entering a room by a nearby neigh­ apprehend the individual, but this * bor. who consequently was one of will only be possible with the * I he victim s. cooperation of students,” Macheca * Upon leaving her room slightly explained in the directive which a ja r for the bathroom, she watched was posted in the women’s dorms. -i the man leave the room but turn * "Student cooperation is also * when he saw her as if he had left needed with regard to their something behind. “ He had the vigilance and responsibility for I look like he forgot something,” she security in their residence nails.” * claimed. * When she returned to her room, “ If the student had not been * given unquestioned access to the * she noticed that her watch was * missing. She then saw the man dorm itory, if the one g irl had * coming out of the other room. locked her door while she was * A p p arently he le ft the dorm asleep, and if the other girl had * locked her door even when she was * shortly thereafter, "but I think he * would have stayed, if I hadn’t seen only going out for a few minutes, * him. ” she stated. then neither of these losses would * No other room was reported have occurred,” it continued. * broken into' “ There is no way that the * The resident who saw the man University can provide security * * returned from a prior commitment vhen the basic means of security * later that evening and inquired re not utilized by the students,” * whether the man was a friend of tlacheca concluded. * the girls whose room he had en­ tered. The woman was unaware Residents Respond } * that anyone had come into her room because she was asleep, “ What else can you do? It is too % although the room was not locked. bad you have to lock your doors all * The'\voman, who also wished to I he time even to go across the * remain anonymous, awoke when a hall,” one resident commented in * Observer Staff Party friend called her on the phone at response to the bulletin. * * approximately 8:40 p.m. and Another Badinite agreed with * Saturday, May 3 wanted to see her in the basement Macheca’s call for more respon­ * 8pm of the dorm. s ib ility on the part of the students. * Upon returning to her room “ The only way to solve the security * iround 9:15 p.m. she discovered problem is to enforce the call * At the Heidleberq! * hat her calculator was missing system in the basement when a * because the case was empty, but guy comes to visit the girls. But we * Van leaves circle at 7:30 and 8:30pm thought another resident came in can't be expected to keep our * while she was sleeping and doors locked when we cross the * Bring a friend borrowed it. “ I did not even realize hall to the bathroom.” * *************************************************** . that a guy was in the room at all,” she commented. The two victims informed the rector. Ms. Helen Gallagher, about the thefts, who in turn called Security. According to the women, COME RAIN OR SHINE Suspended players to return to ND TO TOWN & COUNTRY yj Last July 25, a University press release cited the dismissal of six FOR YOUR FAVORITE Notre Dame freshman football players “ for a period of no less than one academic year” because of a serious violation of University rules which was "not a criminal WINES-LIQUORS m atter.” At this point, it is not known whether the students will be Both Stores Open Nights ’til 11 PM reinstated, but several sources fcckvijSot, Canadian LTD Jose Cuervo m o c I believe at lease five of the six A70 students have applied for read- BLEND. , 5th1# TEQUILA » 6 nnssion to the University. Usher’s Green Stripe American 5 Star Roy Henry is the only suspended 575 player who has not yet reapplied, 11 SCOTCH...... - 5th V BRANDY 5th488 according to a reliable source close Early Times 00 Ron Querida to the team. 4 3 9 1 The six student-athletes, Henry, BOURBON . . . . 5th5 RUM.. 5th Ross Browner, Luther Bradley, A1 Canada Drv Hunter. Willie Fry and Dan Knott, 195 Galliano Italian 5 4 m were reportedly dismissed for an incident involving an 18 year-old VODKA...... 5th LIQUEUR . . 12-OZ. high school girl. No one was S cuI rvo # Boston House ^ 0 7 Arak Rzzouk convicted, indicted or even for­ '52 mally complained against, ac­ GIN...... 5th LIQUEUR - . 20-0Z. cording to the St. Joseph County Police Record. TWO FREE The Notre Dame Admissions DELIVERY Office refused to divulge any in­ LOCATIONS T e C formation regarding the students, l£0.TV

JEWELERS

Career Research Associates, 200 S. Hanley, Suite 212, Clayton, the only jew elry in the entire m iilw eti Missouri 63105. If not satisfied, return within 10 days for when• you'll fiiu l all the hett ilia m onth!

refund of purchase price...... vii,* r M.u. u.s. 3 . l ^ North et Darden Rd. j 6 the observer VtfednekdaV; April 36, 1975 CIA bombings sti

Bv JAMES LAWRENCE Mrs. Sommerville said her there immediately follows a ties in cities on both the East DENVER (UPI) - A pipe day, shattering windows and husband was in Texas and said, rash of others,” he said’’What and West coasts,” a depart­ bomb explosion outside a shredding portions of the roof “ I know people are connecting with all the publicity in the m ent spokesm an said. “ We Central Intelligence Agency on the one-story brick house in this with his job but there’s no papers about the CIA, it could don’t know if this was the work official’s suburban home may south Denver. Windows in a real .oroof. 1 really can’t say have been a radical group. Who of a terrorist group or whether have been caused by radicals house next door were broken. what happened. I was asleep at can say?” it m ight have been just some inspired 1 j the bombing of a Bricks were blown from the the time. The explosion woke “ We re talking with authori crackpot.” bank hours earlier, or may front wall and the explosion me up.” have been the work of a damaged a sprinkler system Bomb squad Detective Fred “ crackpot” , police said Tues­ inside the house but neither Stevenson said the blast did not TIMM PARTY STORE day. Sommerville’s wife, Allane, nor appear related to the explosion of a dynamite satchel charge at The bomb exploded in front their 14-year-old son, asleep at OPEN Mon-Sat 9:00 A.M.-l 1 :00 P.M. of the home of CIA regional the time of the blast, were the American National Bank in director James Sommerville 30 injured. Denver 12 hours earlier in which six employes received Sun 12:00-1 1 :00 P.M. minor injuries. He said the pipe bomb was PACKAGE LIQUOR AVAILABLE CODL to release reports pushed against the foundation COLD BEER, WINE, GOURMET FOODS of the Sommerville home and (continued from page 1) offering comments and revisions,” said it may have been planted Eder stated. 31 IAS. 11th St. Niles, Mi. members of the com m ittee,” he by radical? who got the idea Some of the topics discussed bv said. from the bank explosion. the topics discussed by the com­ 683-9875 “ A pril 1 had been set as the “ You get one bombing and mittee included registration and original target date" for the com­ availibilty of courses, alternate mittee’s report last October,” forms of courses such as work- Ackerman noted, “ but that date ATTENTION ARTS AND LETTERS study attitudes to coeducation, was adjusted along the way.” women on the facutlty, women’s Applications for the 75 - 76 Academics subcommittee sports programs, possible im­ chairman Jim Eder said the provements in halls, the funding of deadline for their findings was A & L ADVISORY COUNCIL club sports, ticket pricing, rising reset for April 11. The reports tuition costs, the role of hall staffs, came in through Wednesday, April are now being accepted. Each applicant must write coed housing, off-campus living, 16. Former SBP Pat McLaughlin, the effectiveness ofthe SLC, the Drape, and Ackerman then a brief statement one typewritten page or less - office of student affairs, and rules compiled them into a single report and regulations as they affect which deals with particular interests and qualif­ adding an introduction and con­ studentws, according to clusion. The first draft was then McLaughlin. finished by April 21 and the ications. Please include present class year, phone The final report numbered ap- following day the committee porximately 112 pages, according members were invited to come up number, and address. Submit to: to Drape. to the Student Government office Student Body President Ed DEAN'S OFFICE. ROOM 137 O SHAUGHNESSY NO LATER and look over their final report. Byrne hopes to continue the work THAN FRIDAY, MAY 2. AT 4:30 P M begun by COUL by forming other Graduation committees or possiblity working w ith the SLC in the future. (interviews will then be arranged) set M ay 17

Saint M a ry’s College w ill hold its 128th annual com m encem ent Saturday, May 17, at 3 p.m. Aimee Sue Beckmann, daughter of Mr and Mrs. John J. Beck­ mann, Ankeny, Iowa, will give the valedictory address before the 355 graduates, their parents, faculty, administration, and honored guests during Commencement ceremonies. In addition to Dr. Elisabeth Sewell, commencement speaker, honorary degrees will be presented lo Dr. Elisabeth Kubler Ross, international consultant in the care of dying patients and their families; Carol Fox, general manager of the Lyric Opera of Chicago: and Eli J. Shaheen, president of Sutton Tool Company, Sturgis, Michigan, and friend of the College.

Finals Fling

The Noire Dame Social Com­ mission will offer its final activity Ihis year, a dance Friday night in Slepan Center from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. The Finals Fling will feature Buster, a band from Chicago. Admission will be $1 and refresh­ ments w ill be free.

• m

STARTS FRIDAY many INGMAR BERGMANS selections. Closeouts, Overstocks, Reductions.

SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE The decorator idea store. I LIV ULLMAN 100 CENTER COMPLEX * Mishawaka, Indiana Phone 259-0880 Wednesday, April 30,1 *7 5 the observer 7 Pifer to speak at commencement

Alan J. Pifer, president of the administering the Fulbright Education, the most extensive special counsel to the minority of the Rand Corporation, Santa Carnegie Corporation of New York Program in the United Kingdom study ever made of higher the House of Representatives Monica, Calif., doctor of and the Carnegie Foundation for between 1948 and 1953. He joined education. Committee on the Judiciary in the engineering. the Advancement of Teaching, will the Carnegie Corporation in 1953 as Pifer will receive a doctor of impeachment inquiry respecting Author and publisher Frank be the speaker at the University of an executive assistant and became laws degree. Others to be honored President Nixon doctor of laws. Sheed, Jersey City, N.J., doctor of N otre D am e’s 130th com ­ vice president of the corporation by the University are: Congresswoman Barbara laws. mencement exercises May 18 in and vice president of the Carnegie A rthur J. Decio, chairman of the Jordan of the 18th District in Alice Tully. New York, N.Y., a the Athletic and Convocation Foundation for the Advancement board of the Skyline Corporation, Texas, doctor of laws. noted music patron and former Center. of Teaching in 1963, acting Elkhart, Ind., doctor of laws. Chancellor William D. McElroy singer, doctor of fine arts. Dr. Peter F. Drucker, Clarke of the University of California at The 1975 La eta re Medal, given P ifer w ill be among ten persons president of both in 1965 and Professor of Social Service at San Diego, who is president-elect annually by the University to an receiving honorary doctorates president of both in 1967. Claremont (Calif.) Graduate of the American Association for outstanding American Catholic, from Notre Dame at graduation He has held numerous positions School and a noted management the Advancement of Science, will be awarded during com­ ceremonies in which a total of 2,062 on local, state and national theorist, doctor of laws. doctor of laws. mencement exercises to Sister Ann degrees are expected to be con­ organizations, principally in the Nancy Hanks, chairman of the Dr. Donald B. Rice, a Notre Ida Gannon, B.V.M., president of ferred. areas of foreign affairs, education National Endowment for the Arts, Dame alumnus who is president of Mundelin College. Chicago, 111. Educated at Harvard College, and urban problems. He also Washington, D C., doctor of fine Pifer did a year of graduate study originated, supported and par­ arts. on a fellowship to Cambridge ticipated in the Carnegie Com­ Albert E. Jenner, Jr., a Chicago THE MINNESOTA CLUB University in England before mission on the Future of Higher attorney who served as chief BAGGAGE TRUCK World Hunger Coalition raises funds loading up - May 12th 1 :30-4:30 Behind the bookstore A total of close to $1126 has been O XFAM . CORK and the South hope for the upcoming year in raised by the Notre Dame World Bend Justice and Peace Center. regard to the Hunger Coalition’s Pick up - May 15th 4:30-9:30 Hunger Coalition as a result of four The difference will be allocated activities. "On behalf of the hundred and seventy students shorly. according to Brinegar. Coalition and others. I’d like to 1931 GOODRICH ST.PAUL lasting from supper the past five Other fund raising efforts of the sincerely thank the students who Wednesdays. Notre Dame community include: supported our efforts throughout N.D. BOXES $2.50 COUCHES $8.00 1) A1 Sondej’s collection of over the year and urge them to continue “ Hopefully, others will realize $13,600 from co n trib u tio n s their interest and support until LARGE BOXES $3.50 CHAIRS $5.00 that if less than five hundred collected in front of both dining I here is no more hunger problem to students can raise over one BIKES $4.00 FOOTLOCKERS $5.00 halls from Sept. 15 to May 7. alleviate. ” he concluded. thousand dollars by sacrificing 2)The saving of over $2500 from the only five meals every five weeks, cutting of the quality of food Any questions Tom at 8414 then much, much more, can be South Bend mayor consumed by the Holy Cross raised with more participation over ■ Priests and brothers. ? - ;■ — . the span of a whole school year. So 3 1 Faculty and Staff payroll to discuss issues much can be accomplished with deductions amounting to over only a little sacrifice," Chris PLAYLAND GOLF CENTER $13,000. South Bend Mayor Jerry M iller Brinegar. President of the World The Hunger Coalition’s plans for will make a campaign appearance Hunger Coalition staled. 9 HOLE * PAR 3 GOLF COURSE next year include: the continuation Thursday on the Notre Dame Driving Range 18 Hole Miniature In addition to the dining hall of dining hall fasts in some form campus, discussing issues with rebates, the Coalition has collected LOCATED US 33 AT IRONWOOD (with rebate), an attempt at in­ members of the University approximately $6230 from the two stituting a payroll deduction comm unity from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 tea and rice dinners, mass of- program in South Bend p.m. in the University Club. JiWwMNkNi'11 288-0033 foratories, and gifts from Campus The question-and-answer business and industry and the If No Ans Call 282-2366 Ministry, Mardi Gras Committee session is sponsored by a group of formulation and integration of 1715 L IN C O L N W A Y EAST SO. BEND ($1000 each 1 . International classes pertianing to hunger, faculty and staff members who Students Club 1 $400) and many support Miller's reelection. individuals. ecology, etc. . (•! this money. $5645 has been Brinegar was satisfied with the allocated to relief agencies such as events of this year and professed STILL HUNTING Daily Rosary scheduled

Starling tomorrow. May I and compassion .... continuing daily all through May. The above quotes are taken from the Hosary w ill be recited at 1 :00 Tom Dooley's December 2. I960 p.m. at the Grotto. letter to Rev. Theodore M. “ That Grotto is the rock to which llcsburgh, CS C. The Grotto of my life is anchored... But just which Dooley talks is our own now...and just so many times,how grotto here at Notre Dame, a 1 long for the G rotto...if I could go center of devotion to Mary. to the Grotto now then I think 1 All are invited to join in praying could sing inside. I could be full of the Rosary and honoring that faith and poetry and loveliness and person to whom our University is know more beauty, tenderness and dedicated. Our Lady. ___ Send the FTD I I I ★ 2 TENNIS COURTS Sweet Surprise (to be completed this summer) I this Mother’s Day... ★ INDOOR SWIMMING POOL I ★ COMMUNITY BUILDING I I (complete with pool tables and pinball machine) I Usually available I for less than ★ DEAD BOLT LOCKS I I I 00 ' 15 I I "As an independent I ★ EXCELLENT SECURITY businessman, each 4- BASKETBALL COURT FTD Member Florist * SHAG CARPETING sets his own prices. I * 2 BATHS IN THE 2 -B E D R O O M * DISHWASHERS APTS. I * PRIVACY * SOUND CONDITIONED I S t I * LAUNDRY FACILITIES I * REGULAR SOCIAL ACTIVITIES ... a little extra credit I for being at the top of her class. I NOW RENTING FOR SUMMER AND FALL SEMESTER I The Sweet Surprise,™ a bouquet of colorful I flowers. Or Sweet SurpriseH, green plants ( 75 - '76 SCHOOL YEAR) J with floral accents. Each in an imported I ceramic keepsake. Your FTD Florist FOR RENTAL INFORMATION CALL 272-1441 will send almost anywhere, and most accept major credit cards. Order now

g w * -1’ee 1mm n m T U K H " P W M " I CAMPUS VIEW APARTMENTS I 8 the observer Wednesday, April 30, 1975 Take $250,000 Vietnamese officials abscond with embassy check

WASHINGTON (U P I) - The blank check signed by embassy presenting it to a grand jury as Hieu, said he told the F B I of detente, into believing that all FBI said Tuesday it is seeking superiors, filled it out for quickly as possible.!’ the incident April 22 after the competition has disappeared. two South Vietnamese embassy $250,000 and cashed it on A pril The embassy financial offi­ bank notified the embassy its “ Between these two extremes officials who disappeared after 18 at the Madison National cials with signature powers account was overdrawn, the we must navigate, seek to reduce allegedly stealing and cashing a Bank in Washington, taking the signed the blank check in Post reported. tensions on the basis of reciprocity quarter-million dollar check. money in $20 bills. advance because one of them The official Soviet news and seek to promote a stable The Washington Post said the The officials, according to the was to be out of town and the agency Tass reported from world. two unnamed officials took a FBI, worked in the embassy’s other thought the check was to Washington that “ officials of Kissinger’s remarks were made procurement office which is in be made for about $140 to the Saigon regime, now in its in the context of a question that Fordham priest the same building as the bank. purchase newspaper subscrip­ death agonies, are hurrying to involved blaming the Chinexe and An FBI spokesman said tions, the Post reported. ensure their own security’ ... Soviets forbreaking the spirit of Tuesday, “ We are investigating One of the officials with the ‘diplomats’ evidently decid­ Paris Accords, encouraging a speaks or steel with the ultimate aim of signing authority, Nguyen Dinh ed to embezzle the money Communist putsch in Portugal and asking why the United States Fr. W illiam T. Hogan, S.J., before this is done hv someone lulling ourselves in this, a period of continues to believe in detente. director of Fordham University’s Industrial Kconomics Research international program set Institute, w ill discuss “ Steel In­ dustry Problems in the late 1970’s” Whatever the age 7 Stylists at a meeting of the South Bend Mrs. Florence Yeandel, 325 Dame, are assigned a host family Whatever the length Full Time Manicurist Chapter of the National North Shore Drive, South Bend, if they indicate a preference to Whatever the fashion Full Service Solon Association of Purchasing has been named chairman of the participate in the program. They Edison & St. Rd. 23 Management on May 14. The Michiana International Hospitality are met by the host fam ily on their only mile Southeast of dinner meeting in the C.C.E. will Program sponsored by the Office arrival and are treated to several campus be attended by two area members. of International Student Services days of typical American family (across from Kentucky South Bend members represent at the University of Notre Dame. life to ease their adjustm ent in a Fried Chicken and the Michiana area firms with 1974 Organized in 1969, the program foreign nation. Linebacker) FOR sales of $4.26-billions and annual involves more than 150 area Persons wishing to participate in MEN purchases in excess of $1.34-billion. families in a program of the program are asked to contact Darwin R. Peterson of Miles hospitality for foreign students in Rev. Daniel O’Neil, CSC, director Laboratories, Inc., Elkhart, is the area. of the Office of International MICHAEL’S For Appt. 272-7222 president of the group and A1 Loh- Students at Notre Dame. Mrs. mann of Koontz-Wagner Electric International students, presently Yeandel succeeds M rs. Richard Company, South Bend, is directing representing more than 60 coun­ Rembold who has served since the annual dinner. tries at the University of Notre 1969. Hogan has been engaged in economic studies of the iron and steel industry as well as other basic heavy industries for the past 25 years. During this tim e he has published a number of books, in­ cluding “ Productivity in the Blast Furnace and Open -Heatrth Segments of the Steel Industry,” Vfe 11 get you to the first detailed study of its type. His book, “ Depreciation Policies and Resultant Problems,” was published in 1967, and “ An Economic History of the History of the Iron and Steel Industry in the Europe this year United Slates” in 1971. Hogan has testified on numerous occasions in Washington on the depreciation phase of tax legislation. He has served as a member of the Task Force on Business Taxation and as a con­ one w ay sultant to the Council of Economic Advisors to the President and U.S. Department of Commerce. Lit winners or another. announced If you thought higher air fares were in Europe, all you have to do is make your The winners of the English going to cheat you out of your summer in reservations and pay for your ticket at Department Literary Contest were Europe, we’ve got good news. least 2 months before your scheduled announced yesterday by Donald Sniegowski, director of un­ You don't have to have a lot of departure date. (You can make reservations dergraduate studies in the English money to get to Europe on Pan Am. even earlier and since seats are limited Department. Gary Zebrun won the Samuel Not if you take advantage of our it’s a good idea.) Hazo Poetry Award with honorable Youth Fares. If you have to cancel or change mention honors going to Robert Miklilsch. Zebrun will receive $50 And to take advantage of our Budget reservations before you start your trip in addition to Iheawaited Fares you need even less money. (after a trip has begun, no change in John Sears won the $50 Notre Dame Fiction Award. Honorable reservations is permitted), the most you can mention was awarded to Justo Youth Fares lose is 10% or $50. whichever is higher. Nunez and James Swartz. If you’re between the ages of 12 and The Meehan Medal for Literary | In limited circumstances, you’ll get all your M erit was awarded to James t 21, and you want to roam around Europe money back. Braun. Braun will receive a medal ' for a few days or a few months (but not for his winning essay. Nunez 1 We have Budget Fares to cities all received honorable mention. more than a year), pick your departure over Europe. Here are a few examples. E. Jane Robinett won the $100 date and give us your name. Academy of American Poets From Chicago round trip to: Prize. Awarded honorable Your seat may only be reserved 5 Rome, $591; Frankfurt, $527; Warsaw. mention were Miklitsch, Zebrun days or less before the departure date. and Nicholas Talarico. $572. ^ Judges for the contest were We have Youth Fares to cities all over These Budget Fares apply to flights faculty members from the Europe. Here are a few’ examples. leaving between June 1 and August 31. English, Philosophy, and Speech and Drama departments. From Chicago round trip to: After that, the fares are even lower. Rome, $525; Frankfurt. $520; Warsaw, If you leave on a Friday or Saturday, No money 9 $630. or return on a Saturday or Sunday, add $ 15 Fares are slightly lower in May. each way to the fare. no degree These fares are valid for travel June, July, The Office of Students’ Accounts For fares to other European cities reminds all May graduates that and August. or from other U.S. cities, contact your University degrees cannot be awarded to those who have unpaid travel agent. accounts. Budget Fares No degree or transcript of credit No matter what your age, if you’re w ill be issued to anyone whose account is not settled by planning to spend between 22 and 45 days The Spirit of ’75. graduation. A1 graduates who are concerned about the status of their accounts should stop by the Office of Stidents’ Accounts Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to See your travel agent. 1 1 :30 a.m. and from 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. - —— Wednesday, April 30, 1975 the obsGfVer____9 Ethnic talent highlights festival

The International Student International Student Advisor, to Hunters Dance as part of the their two act series,called the presentation was a colorful Organization of the ND-SMC acknowledge his 25 years of African act. Baltic Sokiai. The fun and Chinese Folk Dance by the Chinese community recently held their priesthood. Another presentation From France came songs by frivolity of dancing was brought Student Association. annual festival in Washington Hall. went to Julio Baez, a senior from members of the ND singers out with the added quick paced Finally the first half of the This event was the culmination of Puerto Rico , who has suc­ program and French students music of the accordian. Festival ended with an illustration the International Week which cessfully chaired the committee which included a fascinating Quite in contrast to the lively of Egyptian belly-dance by Rosy included the One Earth M arket­ organizing the Festival for the past example of how the French drink music was the slow rythmic Elias. place held in the Rathskellar of three years. wine. melody of the Chinese Fiddle Duet. The second half began with folk LaFortune Student Center. The Festival then began w ith a Always a treat, Lithuanian The art of playing the Chinese songs from India played by Mrs. Before the festival began a lively note when Ron Taylor a dancers from the Chicago com­ fiddle with its intricate notes was Vijaya Shah on a remarkable special plaque was presented to professional dancer from In­ munity, representing the Baltic displayed splendidly by this instrument, the dambur. Father Dan O’Neil, CSC. the dianapolis, performed the Lion countries performed the first of combination. To end the Chinese The conclusion of the colorful Lithuanian number was next with the I-eetuvii Sohiai. Again the fast paced music and dancing was one of the liveliest acts of the nights. Seniors to celebrate with final fling One of the newer additions to the festival came from the group of Islands in the South Pacific called Six days of varied activities, the approximate cost of this week’s Stepan Center from 9:00 to 1:00 Thursday, May 15 - Senior Death Polynisia. This act consisted of the highlighting food, drink, music and activities per event would be $22,” p.m.; unlimited beer, food March; the firs t Class of ’75 Knife dance from Samoa, the assorted antics, will comprise stressed Class Treasurer Chris available, live entertainment. $2.00 reunion w ill begin at noon at the Hawaiin hula, a Maori dance and Senior Week ’75, which is Fenn. “ For the exceptional beer this event only. Senior Club and proceed to a with the help of some of the scheduled to begin Saturday, May drinker the cost could be as high as Sunday, May 11 - Dunes Day; variety of specially selected audience the Tahitian Tamure. 10 and run through Thursday, May $40 without the package deal.” private beach party all day Sunday private watering holes; a hearse, Somehow it didn’t seem natural to 15. Package tickets w ill be on sale through until Monday; sleeping complete with refreshments, will amny to see dancing girls and As a final celebration before next Wednesday through Friday, bags suggested; unlimited beer. lead the procession. $2.00 this palm trees in ND. graduation, (he Notre Dame Class May 7-9, at four locations. The $2.00 this event only. event only. The numbers that were natural Officers have announced a Senior Club will sell tickets during Monday, May 12 - Senior Bowl; These events are open to all ND- to South Bend were the ones package deal for all six of the regular business hours on these Beacon Bowl has been rented out SMC seniors, and one guest per performed by. the Irish Dance events. This $12 ticket will provide days and tickets will also be from 7:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.; price senior w ill be admitted to each group which came from Detroit for “all the beer you can drink and available in LaFortune (main includes unlimited beer and all event at individual prices. Seniors the performance. admission to all the events,” ac­ lobby) from 12:00 noon to 1:00 p.m. free games. $3.00 this event only. may also pay for each event in­ In conclusion was the Latin cording to Class President Greg all three days. Dining hall sales Tuesday, May 13 - Kegs Away dividually. American song group which put Ericksen. The package ticket will (North and South) w ill be held Day; Senior Club from 2 p.m. until Anyone with questions con­ together a fabulous collections of resemble the football ticket during lunch from 12-1 and during 7:00 p.m .; outdoor events in­ cerning the Senior Week activities songs, played with the ac­ procedure, with a hole punched in dinner from 5-6. St. Mary’s dining cluding canoe races, unlimited can call Greg Ericksen at 3687 or companiment of bongos and the the pass at the entrance to each hall sales will be at dinner from 5- beer for package ticket holders, Chris Fenn at 1572. piano. event. 6 . pay-by-the-beer for other seniors. Those seniors purchasing the Seniors who purchase the $12 Wednesday, May 14 - The Last package ticket w ill also be entitled package w ill also receive maps to Hurrah; Senior picnic, possibly in I SALE! SALE! SALE! 1 to all I he free beer they can drink all locations and a detailed the football stadium from 1 to 4 during Senior Week at the Senior itinerary of events, locations, and p.m.; unlim ited beer, hot dogs and GOING OUT OF SCHOOL Club, upon presentation of their limes. other food available; live en­ “ Senior Week pass.” The calendar of events includes: tertainment; games and contests. | - 30 SHIRTS (25

DO I OH, YEAH, UH-HUH- RJ6HT HEE.HEE!MAN,DD REMEMBER. RI6HT, R16HT! AFTER YOU AND WE 6ET STOMPED IfcThe Observer THE STRIKE? YOU WERE M K T OF YOUR ROOMMATES ST THE TROOPERS ▼ on independent student newspaper I HEY, M A N , I THAT SANS UMO TRASHED THE FOR THAT! PRETTY Founded November 3, 1966 IM S ONE OF CARRIED THE DEAN R.O.T.C. FILES! BAD CRAZINESS, / CULL TELL Terry Keeney Editor-in-chief ° 7HE MARSHALS! YOU! Tom Modglin Business Manager ? \ Tom W helan Advertising Manager EDITORIAL BOARD A! Rutherford. Managing Editor, Fred Graver. Executive Editor; Jim Eder, Editorial Editor Km Girouard, News Editor, Pat Hanitin. Campus Editor, Mary Janca. St Mary's E ditor Ken Bradford, Copy Editor; Bill Brink, Sports Editor; TomO'Neil, Features Editor Chris Smith. Photo Editor

Editorials: 283-8601 News 28) 1715 Business: 281 747 I Wednesday, April 30,1975 4 -3 0

SO HOUIS 600D, MAN, LA N I SCHOOL 6 0 0 D -1 MADE New Year’s 60!N6? THE REVIEW. - The process of coeducation has barely The year is over . . . Before the events ' 3 of the last several months become lost in begun. With the total female enrollment the rush of exams or the shuffle of expected at 1500 next fall, the University graduation plans, it would be valuable to now has no plan for future enrollment of put the year in some kind of perspective. women students. It has been a good year . M any good - Students have had a minimal impact things have happened to the students on policy decison here. Only on the largely because of their own efforts. basketball ticket controversy were Many bad things nave occured that students actually able to have their should spur some New Year's resolutions viewpoint effectively heard. The II for next semester. calendar fight and the Harter Heights Some of the events of the year on ordinance are examples of the inef­ balance would look like this; fectiveness of student input. Good The balancing of good and bad could go Opinion - The Committee on 1 Undergraduate? on. What is important is that students , Life has been a channel of student Ideas in reviewing the year, make resolutions to effectneeded changes In all areas of for the next year. E x a m M a n student life. Although the recom­ The major resolution must be to prove mendations the Committee have made what students can do when they act must be approved by the Board of together. The COUL Report is a result of pat kearns Trustees, the mechanism for effective seven students getting together to make a Right now, most of us are feeling that exaltation of spirits which change has been established for a long realistic report on student life to comes with the thought of taking final examinations. You know, the same sort of exaltation one feels when one sees those two time to come. the Board of Trustees. Darby's, the revolving red lights in the rear view mirror. -The social life of this University has Nazz, and "the Quickie" are all examples While such a disposition seems natural enough to all of us, maybe improved through innovative, yet simple, of students working through student it isn’t all that natural . In fact there appear to be a few ex­ ideas like the Nazz, Darby's Place and organizations.. The Hunger Coaltion gets ceptions to the rule that, “ Man Must Dread Finals and Act Ac­ "the Quickie". its energy from a dedicated core of cordingly". For lack of a better term, this exceptional - The student body has shown great students working closely with faculty. phenomenon may be called the “ exam ” . He is the one who studies interest in something beyond the campus The high points of the year are those diligently all semester then quietly burns through his exam with the easy confidence of a Lou Brock w ith an eighty-five foot lead off and the ND community. The meals of tea activities which were proven good by first base. Of course, we mere humans usually suffer through the and rice and the projects of the Hunger students. When students were given the week feeling like the catcher with a popgun arm. Coalition have brought a global confidence to perform, they responded So. it seems, finals might be a lot more enjoyable if we all had a awareness of human problems to this well. little of the exam m an’s touch. Let us study hima little bit and see if campus. W hat makes or breaks this school year we cannot learn some things from h im .That is, of course, if we can Bad is the extent of student leadership. It has find himin his library retreat where he is already reviewing for his - The SLC has proven ineffective in been a good year, but also a good year for first final exam. Assume we do locate him (which is possible because he really making legislative decisions. The New Year's resolutions. does exist) and we convince himof the valuable service he will be reductions in its m em bership serves only doing us by lakinga few minutes to give us some insights into his to complicate the problem. Terry Keeney system No doubt we will hear him describe his well-planned schedule, orderly desk and-or carrel, and terrific powers of con­ centration. But, without even mentioning it, the exam man’s real 22 picas = efficacy will become clear. He has the attitude of a man who sees his studies as his current professional work. Therefore, the exam man has the m otivation of Why is the Observer? someone w ith valuable work to be done, He realizes the value ofknowledge, both for its humanizing effects and as the basis for fgraver one’s professional competence after graduation. Knowing that a real grasp of the material before him will genuinely help him The question which has been But, those exact journalistic about as much to do with jo u r­ develop as a person and as a professional, the exam man throws bothering me for some time now: standards can become too nalistic standards as warts have himself into, his studies. Not because he has to, but because he Why is the Observer the way it is? ” rigorous, too demanding and to do with beauty marks.) I ’ve been wants to.There is no need for him to be continuallyurging himself (Notice the lack of verb in that limiting and exacting. Reporting looking through back issues of the onward by counting the days until summer. He honestly enjoys sentence, m y own essential sense the facts is just that, getting them Observer for some time now, a t­ what he is doing. The present is spent in the pursuit of very worth of inaction onthe matter.) right and putting them down.. The tempting to chart the evolution of while and rewarding goals. Why yearn for tomorrow, when so person who does so is not this paper. I’ve noticed that in the much can be done today? I believe that a good newspaper necessarily telling the truth, but last three years, w ith the coming of Well, obviously the exam man has some definite goals he is directly reflects, mirrors if you they are not necessarily professionalism and journalistic working towards, i.e. human and professional development, but will, the place that it is reporting sidestepping the issue, either. standards, there has also been a aren’t these goals a little selfish? Too often the answer is yes, but on. If the place is a center of I’ve been told that the recent marked decline in personalities. the exam man with a heart can see beyond his ownlittle world. He cultural and creative activity, a “ Absurder” had more truth in its Up until three years ago, the knowshe has the obligation to use his talents and abilities for the home for artistic growth and three pages than the Observer puts names of the people working on the good of others. However, unlike the shallow well-wisher, he production, then the reporting of in a year’s worth of pages. I ’ve Observer were well-known. Even realizes one cannot give what one does not have. Consequently, the that will carry a sense of creative said that myself, because I feel if they were regarded by many as Christian exam man is further motivated by the awareness of his growth and production. that the tru th is not found in getting mountebanks, iconoclasts and own shortcomings and the need to overcome them. the facts down right, but in con­ buffoons, at least there was a sense No doubt we all find ourselves falling short ofthefew exam men veying the feel, the meaning of of knowing and understanding If the place is Notre Dame, then what is happening. between the readers and the people here at Notre Dame. Yet, wouldn’t it be great to launch into finals you are going to get the Observer. There, have been many times putting out the paper.People knew with at least a spark of such noble aspirations. It surely beats This paper is an exceptionally that I have been writing an article counting on the dining halls to provide the only pleasant moments clarified mirror of Notre Dame, who the columnists were, who the or an editorial and have wanted to for the next week! perhaps too clear, to the point of members of the editorial board abandon the limitations of jour­ blatancy. Observer “ serving the were, and they were able to take nalism. Sometimes I knew that the this into account when they read Notre Dame-St. Mary’s com­ wavering or lack of confidence. the truth. They don’t try to tell the only way that I could tell the truth the 'colum ns, editorials and a r ­ munity," will be the same Ob­ That’s dangerous because we truth in journalism, and they don’t was with some crazy allusion to a ticles that were printed. server no m atter who is putting it aren’t professionals, and we are try to tell the truth here. past event, even to a fable or fairy Now the corporate image has out. fools if we pretend to be. "What is ironic is that the per­ tale. But I couldn’t, and I often subsumed the personalities of As Kurt Vonnegut relates in centage of people seriously think that I missed conveying those working on the newspaper, “ Mother Night,” the workers of planning to go into a journalistic This paper, in the last three the truth about an issue because of transformed their energies into Chicago’s stock yards boast that career here is less than half. years of its development, has the demands of my profession. nameless, faceless, efforts of they can use every part of the pig So it ’s not their career that is on assumed a corporate identity. A t the same tim e that I realize journalism. That gets to be but the squeal. But it’s the squeal the line here. And I don’t think that ( “Corporate" in the sense that the limitations, the crippling ef­ dangerous, for two reasons. that is the speaking part, that is any of them lack the personal the product obliterates the names fects of journalism’s framework, I This paper changes hands telling the pig’s part of the story, integrity or the ability, put forth and the faces of the people who put also profess that they are the best almost every year. I think that to and the Observer is beginning to do such an effort. it together.) The last year has seen means of getting across those assume a corporate identity is away with the personal point of I think that it all comes down to the Observer turn into a first-rate things that don't warrant com­ disastrous because of this rate of view. the limitations of the journalistic journalistic effort. It gets the facts ment or criticism or whatever.I’m changeover. I wouldn’t have to involve very profession, as they begin to come right more often than not, reports interested in seeing the jour­ What scares me the most, many of my fingers to count the forth both in the Observer and in them in a clear and readable nalistic standards of the Observer though,, is that in gaining this numbers of people of the Observer its people. fashion, transmits the information evolve further. (Just as much as I basso profondovoice of journalistic staff at present who have the And the truth, then, is to be found in a useful manner. In short it am interested in seeing someone, maturity, the Observer is going to willingness and determination to somewhere else. The best we can fulfills most of the requirements perhaps myself., beginning a lose the high notes, those that put their names to an extremely do is to get it right. I t ’s up to you to for a newspaper. journal of public opinion that has indicate even the slightest individual effort, and say that is figure it out. Wednesday, April 30,1975 the observer ihowever, as it is quite secure in its difference between life and death dividual differences and opinions, ipuppetry of both student govern­ for a patient, perhaps one has an if we firm our own values and ment and SLC. ethical duty to at least test out the hopes and commitments for the The “ Opinion” can be respected claims that TM can help one be a future, then it’s a worthwhile P. O. Box Q as advice from an intelligent and better learner and therefore a venture for all of us. experienced man, but its better, more responsible and ef­ It has been a great joy to me to usefulness ends there. The early- ficient physician. have worked w ith and come to to-bed victorianism which he know so many people in three short supports is an inconsequential W alt M ills years. I know our paths will cross (examples are fa r too numerous to thing, actually; its principle effect again in the future. Thanks for Using The enumerate) and I agree that there on modern life has been the your friendship and support. is no academic justification for population explosion of the 1960’s. remaining in the program here. I No More Subway diffe r from Mssrs. Flaherty and Mike Shaffer Father Dave Schlaver. C.S.C M akielski in that, not only did I Notre Dollars Director of Student Activities wish to remain in Japan to travel, Alumni' but I did realize my obligation to Dear Editor: Dear Kditor: N.D. to stay. TM And Freshman Within the past week, students Our parents and we did sign It seems the recent transition in have received in their mail a form statements obligating us to remain the Office of Ticket Management to befilled with names and ad­ in the program its entire duration. The Pre-Med has failed to bring an end to inane Law dresses of people they think would As such, an obligation does exist. and repressive policies concerning welcome a chance to become However, as 1 wrote in a letter Dear Kditor: student tickets for athletic events. Seminars members of the “Notre Dame signed by all nine of us here, a copy Last year, a successful student Subway Alumni Association.” of which was sent to F r. Broestl, Everyone has seen the posters protest managed to keep in­ Dear Editor: This association’s aim is “ to give Dean Crosson, and The Observer, around campus explaining that flationary pricing of basketball formal recognition to the my anger stems from the fact that Transcendental Meditation is a tickets to a minimum. This year, This semester I was fortunate thousands of ND fans who have I feel that Notre Dame similarly simple natural technique that is once again, an inordinate price enough to get a law seminar for my never seen the campus but still has obligations to us to see that we practiced twice a day. It lends to increase has been abruptly Freshman Seminar requirement, love the school and its spirit.” are receiving what we ought, but more effective and harmonious presented to the would-be but it appears as if freshmen in th e After paying a membership fee without some sort of contractual activity. I believe that TM may basketball fan. years to follow w ill not have the (of course), these lucky people w ill obligation from N.D., as it has help the pre-med get into medical The $28 demanded for a lower opportunity to be this fortunate. receive “ an official car decal, a from us, we are without anything school and become a more com­ arena seat reflects a 27 per cent This injustice to future freshmen ‘Subway Alumnus’ certificate and on which to base our arguments. petent physician. price hike and is an arrogant blow at Notre Dame and to Notre Dame a subscription to a quarterly Often the Pre-Med gets the to all students of modest means. law students can be credited to the newsletter. Preference for football When Notre Dame told us and feeling that the amount of material (When w ill the powers on high man in charge of graduate studies. tickets at away games is also a what Sophia gave us were two to be mastered and the amount of realize that not all of us have possibility.” (Observer 4-10-75) different things, but we were time alloted for learning it makes Mommies and Daddies who can Each semester, six Notre Dame To put it bluntly, this impressed without recourse in our the task insurmountable. afford to pick up the tab?) law students teach law seminars, me as but another one of the arguments. If Notre Dame is going Moreover, with the exponential This year tickets are being for which they are paid the same U niversity’s “ le t’s use some more to bind us contractually, than we, growth in medical knowledge in distributed much: arlicrthan usual as other graduate students are people” games. too, should have some sort of recent years, the task of learning in what only can be interpreted as paid for teaching a course: tuition 1 am firmly against duping contract to similarly bind both to be a truly competent physician an audacious attempt to “use” and a stipend. However the people into financially supporting Notre Dame and Sophia. Even if I seems to be becoming even more Super Soph Adrian Dantley’s in­ director of graduate studies said and taking “official” pride in a feel that we did not receive what impossible. As pre-med students decision to turn pro as a means of he was not going to pay any university which they know we should have, according to our the demand placed on us is to find m axim izing ticket sales. It is stipends to law students teaching nothing about. The regular Notre written materials from Notre some way to increase our ability unfortunate in this great athlete’s seminars this year. In an unusual Dame Alumni Association is valid Dame, I do feel obligated to to deal with the rising level of hour of deliberation that the display of equity, though. Father because the men and women rem ain in the program. I w ill medical knowledge. U niversity has chosen to set this Burtchaell stepped in and said the graduates who become members fulfill my obligation even though I If we experience any futility in sad example of “getting all you stipends had to be paid. Now the do so with their eyes wide open. feel Notre Dame has not fulfilled trying to make it through the pre- can get.” graduate studies director has said They have personnally witnessed its obligation to at least inform us med grind, what will medical A D , I refuse to play the Ticket that next year he will pay neither much more than a few football of exactly what we will get. school and post-medical school Dictators’ game plan. I wish you tuition nor stipends to law students games each year. They have at­ Being told that we will receive years be like? While we may leave the best and want you to know that teaching seminars. So far, Father tended classes, m et teachers, two electives first semester and the pressures of pre-med behind I w ill continue to follow next fa ll Burtchaell has not intervened. made friends and become a part of two electives second semester, and upon graduation, the pressures wherever you may be (NBA, the university. then being allowed one first and responsibilites of* being a ABA, or N.D + Notre Dollars)... A dislike for law students does But, in addition to this, they have semester and none second knowledgeable doctor will cer­ only this time I’ll be watching you not justify the termination of the realized that Notre Dame’s “of­ semester, angers me. I had more tainly be no less. Ask any doctor on the tube. most popular type of Freshman ficial” image is largely a freedom in high school and without about the pressures of trying Seminar. Unless something hypocrisy . They have been treated a doubt my high school was far tokeep up w ith the const ant Igrowih is done, beginning next semester, like children, they have seen better academically than Sophia, of m edical knowledge: endless Tom Xanstoos six law students and countless friends punished and suspended although I realize it is hard for journals, updates in procedures, freshmen will be victims of without mercy, they have seen N.D. to guarantee quality from diagnosis, drugs, etc. another Notre Dame screw. coeducation handled miserably, year to year, i But Sophia is far, far Now, you ask, what relevence and they have seen the faculty below Notre Dame quality). can TM have to this dilemma? If Thanks Name withheld upon request ignored as inferiors by the ad­ 1 personally feel academically the potential physician is faced ministration...all in the name of cheated this year, although with the problem of having more America’s “Christian com­ culturally , without a doubt, I have m aterial to learn than he has the Dear Editor: munity.” So, if the students who gained much. Culturally speaking, capacity to master he seems to As. my stay in this community And Lest graduate from Notre Dame wish to there is definitely reason for have two options. Either he can draws to a close for the tim e being, become members of the alumni > offering a year abroad program in learn less and be satisfied with allow me to writemy first letter to association, they know fully well Japan. But Notre Dame should incompetence or he can in the Observer. I want to thank the You Forget... that type of institution they are guarantee contractually what it creasehis capacity to learn. many people who have given such supporting publicly and finan­ tells the student going abroad he Psychologists say that we use great cooperation and enthusiasm Dear Kditor: cially. she w ill receive, not only in this only 5-10 per cent of our brain's to the outside the-classroom ac­ As we come to the end of the Obviously, this cannot be said program, but in the others as well. potential. Research indicates that tivities of this campus academic year. I want to take a about the Subway Alumni. The Because it was known that I , too the practice of TM enables in ­ moment to commend you for the m ajority of them w ill be sup­ was angry about the academic dividuals to use more of their I'm convinced we can’t create a job you have done in preparing and porting a football team - nothing nonsense here and had had con­ mental potential. Objective “ Christian Community” on paper distributing the college m ore; and maybe if the title ot the flicts w ith the director of the studies have said that meditators’ or in theory. We can only build on community newspaper. Association could be changed to program here, it was assumed that IQ go up. More specifically, one the individual human potential Although the proofreading and illustrate this idea more clearly, I would automatically wish my study showed that “meditators around us and try to link it together typesetting are not always so good the formation of such a group name to be signed to that last perform better on recall tests and in friendship, sharing, and give- as we would like . the paper shows would be valid. The letter. However, without having learn more quickly than non­ and-take, with a healthy regard for a decided general improvement futuremembers are not and read the letter, I would like to meditators. Meditators also tradition and a hope for a future in this year. Coverage is good (there w ill not be informed as to the retract my name from it. showed significantly better results which we w ill continue to be could be more m aterial from the rest of what “ Notre Dame” stands on m ore d iffic u lt m a te ria l.” bonded together wherever we are. Saint M ary’s side) and your using for. One glance at Notre Dame If it is true that one can increase material from all constituencies Kristin Thorson Magazine shows that not even our learning ability then it appears If this comes about at Notre (students, faculty, administrators, true alumni get a realistic picture that TM could aid the pre-med in Dame - and I’m convinced it does - alumni) is extra good, en­ of what goes on at this campus. solving his problem. Moreover, if then Christ is in our midst whether couraging a wider readership Therefore, I believe this Misguided one is contemplating a career in we recognize him or not. If our Sister Maria Assunta Werner, world expands while we are here, association to be a needless vic­ medicine where one’s memory and (SC timization of innocent, ignorant, learning capacity could be the if we develop a tolerance for in­ Department of Religious Studies goodheartedpeople; and I refuse to Arguments lake part in it. Dear Kditor, OFQDURSE I'M ASAINST lit lomewMM Jeanine M. Sterling ’76 In the midst of the parietals THE DEATH PENALTY! INHWW debate, it is important that the recent “Opinion" of Dr. Julian Obligations Pleasants be contested as a par­ !| ticularly misguided argument Dear Kditor. against a parietals extension. In his support of the current bedtime. Having just found out that my Dr. Pleasants misses the entire signature was used without my point of student input : a man who knowledge in aletter referred to by works votes, and is drafted is The Observer in an article ap­ certainly of the age where he can pearing April 25, and not knowing make a choice of hours which best IT S G tM ETElY INCONSISTENT exactly what was written, I feel I fit his academic and social _ WITH (MWPOm, should articulate my feelings on schedule. STANDARDS OF DECENCY/ being “ trapped” in Japan. Dr. Pleasants' argument bears BflSHSflsu a distinct taint of unwillingness to While I know of the rough copy of confront the more relevant the letter and approved of such a sexuality aspect;inientionalor not, letter being written, I felt its tone it illustrates the absence of a SHBWH J to be somewhat indiscreet , tenable position regarding p ! although I support its basic sen­ sexuality and the restriction of K - CRUNCH timents. We have been hours. The administration ap­ W academically insulted here parently feels no concern with this. 12 the observer Wednesday, April 30, 1975 outrider IT Warren Commission The Notre D — gurry wills b y M In four years of college I have w ritten an There were some incredibly hellish times he grew up weari infinite number of articles, press releases, around here when you fantasized telling spending Satui It is time to say a word for the Warren Commission. Even those cutlines, headlines and even features. But I your favorite University administrator Fighting Irish, h who believe that Oswald was the sole assassin of President Ken­ have only written one editorial column what he could do with his spirit, but there time defending ti nedy are beginning to grant that the Warren Commission did a bad before this. So you must realize that I take were also the times you thought you were enemies. And li| job. They say we should “ reopen the case,” if for no other reason, this very seriously. The only other topic I living in a real working community that was spent years getti just to resolve doubts caused by sloppy detective work. But most have ever graced this page with was in this thing all together. Notre Dame spirit ticing jump shot: doubts are caused by two classes of men-those who have not really Hoosier Basketball. Now you know how may mean a section of friends and drinking addition to Dome read what the Warren Commission said; and those whose doubts serious I am. buddies, it may mean a small circle of person, take my would not be resolved by the Second Coming (which they would women trying to find their identity, or it spends his four treat as a CIA plot). It is of course impossible to condense four may mean a group of club members en­ many miles awa) The attacks on the Warren Commission come from three main years of life at any college, let alone this joying the same weekend activities. A few someday realizes directions: trauma heaven, into three pages of copy. I precious times it might mean most of this a thing. He is a 11 Some think the commission was part of the plot itself. These will therefore be carefully selective. This incredible place banded together to beat people are at least consistent. If one could mobilize all the Dame spirit and column is written for the general public, but USC, or to lower the price of basketball what goes on her, resources most conspiratorial theories demand, then controlling not necessarily about every member of this tickets. It might take the form of over 1,000 the commission should have been no problem at all. But this, like to be a registered community, or even every senior. students sweating through a mock con­ most such theories, proves too much. If one can "control” a chief make a differenci vention that really means something to justice, a future president, a bunch of prominent lawyers on the group is living e' them, or of twice tthat number of people make, an attorney general who happens to be the assassinated There is one question that seems to loom acting like lunatics during a weekend of An man's brother, then one controls everything, and there is no longer menacingly in front of every freshman and Living up to n Tostal festivities. any need to hide-i.e., to be a conspiracy. every graduate in Domedom. "Why did you even explain all the literature of the John Birch Society offers the only parallel. come to Notre Dame?" I guess that query is can't ever remi They think the Bilderbergers are behind every major event in appropriate to those people going through a Whatever it means to each of us as in­ couldn't express history. But if so, who are they still underground? They could run transition period. I truly believe that almost dividuals,. the Notre Dame spirit is a fact. wanted to. Which governments with much less time and effort by taking over openly everyone at Notre Dame has given this This University has an incredible number of the things they control. As it is (according to the theory), they have question a lot of thought. You can't cop out students involved in at least one ex­ Thanks Mom a to control three things secretly to control one thing indirectly. It is by saying the place has a good academic tracurricular activity sponsored by the wouldn't even km a tremendous waste of energy. They should cut out all the record, so do dozens of other places. And institution in some way. As somebody thousands of little men. Domeland sure isn't a financial bargain famous recently said, we even started the 2) Others think the CIA and-or the FBI bamboozled the com­ either. Social life is all what you make it, so Quickie. mission-which is a rather touching exercise in credulity. Even if that can't enter the picture until you have those agencies were efficient, they would have to tread carefully already settled in with the cockroaches and Log the roommates. Sports is a definite drawing Granted, by the time they are graduates, where so many other factions and rival interests were at play-and some Domers have decided that it all wasn't where the results were going to be published in 26 volumes. But, of card for some, but to let out a classified secret ND doesn't have a monopoly on worth the effort, and some may wish they course, the record of both the F B I and the CIA is enough to make could do it all over again, somewhere else. any criticism of the commission look like praise. If the conspiracy national championships and miracle vic­ tories. To these people I can only express my depended on the FBI and the CIA, then Howard Hunt’s whole sorrow and hope their futures are more career tells us what would have happened to it. fulfilling. But for what I consider the vast That leaves us with that corny, over­ :$) Others, by far the most numerous, think the commission just m ajority of the Class of '75 or those that w ill fumbled the job out of haste, imcompetence, or unconscious worked, and tritest of trite phrases-the Notre Dame spirit. Also known as tradition, soon follow them in caps and gowns, I feel prejudices. Most of the evidence for this is the citing of “ leads” confident that they will do a lot of thinking community, pride and enthusiasm, this that the commission did not track down. In fact, many of these about that corny spirit idea, and decide that simple explanation generates a frenzy of were tracked down, or were patently false leads from the start. there really is something to it. The commission supplied its critics-with all their ammunition. cheering, smiling, t shirts, and best of all, With admirable self-confidence and courage, it published the entire contribution (which supposedly help pay for testimony taken in the investigation--!hose formidable 26 volumes more spirit seeds to keep the crop in­ I choose to think that my proof of this, that conspiratorialists try to memorize. The commission did not creasing). illusory though it is, is more than just publish conclusions on most of the testimony, though a fair reading superficial thoughts of someone who does usually explains what judgments the commission made of the As a freshman you might be able to say think she made the right choice in not evidence. "Notre Dame spirit" with a straight face, transferring away from the Dome a while A fa ir reading is not what the volumes norm ally get. As police but after four years, anyone who can back. I also have a secondary reason for officials know, investigation of a famous crime of its decade, and it manage that has either freaked out once too pondering the meaning of Notre Dame attracted the dippiest possible assortment of characters. The often, or has really missed the complete spirit. His name is Cary and he has wanted conspiratorialists often take this wild unreliable testimony, quote it college experience. But reciting those words for a long time to attend this particular selectively, and then ask why the Warren Commission did not has nothing to dow tih thinking about them. University. Like someone else I once knew, follow it up-often without knowing that the commission did follow it up a step or two, which is where most of it broke down. A fair example is Mark Lane’s use of testimony by Nancy Perrin Rich He devoted a whole chapter of this book to this woman’s bizarre tale. He neglected to tell the readers that the same woman appeared two other time, in two different places, to volunteer The everyday evidence to the commission. The investigators listened politely, though she told three totally different stories. At one of these ap­ pearances, deliberately omitted from Lane’s chapter, she took by Pati tand flunked) a polygraph test. Ovid Demaris and I, back in the sixties, took Lane’s advice and How do you cram four years of living into she wasn't arriving until the next day. As I one I my favorite) < followed up this woman’s testimony. We found that she was an one column without getting wordy, mushy started to creep down the hall toward the iroo. Soon afterwi unstable woman, had been in and out of psychiatric care and police or relevant? It is probably fitting that the shower, Kathy, her father, mother, and knocked my Sovereii stations, that she loved to “ testify” about all her famous friends in last thing I write for this paper will be the sister burst into the room, and there I was the window, on to a mob trials and other celebrated crimes. We also found that Lane most difficult to do. in my shower cap and bathrobe. It was to below. Later we l> knew all this, that he told the woman’s husband he would not be I've been racking my brain trying to think be the only time in four years that Kathy's men discussing the able to make anything of her testimony. But he made an entire of the significant highlights of the last four parents would address me by my name. ditioner that was hi tendentious chapter out of one-third of that testimony. years. I've had some of the best times of my Pat and Colleen v Here is a simple rule of thumb for dealing with con­ life because of people here and I've had a I'm not sure of the exact date or who two hours after I bee spiratorialists: If they question the integrity of the Warren Com­ few of the most awful experiences here. In started it, but somewhere around the third "D o n 't those Obsen mission yet quote Mark Lane with approval, they are intellectually looking back the things standing out the day of school they all started calling me Didn't they just ca! very ill equipped or intellectually dishonest. most are not the big campus events like the Cootie. Their parents call me Cootie; some think I'm going to te un merger debacle (which I would rather of them even call my parents Mr. And Mrs. that you eloped and ************************************ forget) or the election of Kersten as king Cootie. they lamented. " I f it instead of SBP, or the various An Tostals, Colleen delights in explaining to people someone from the Mardi Gras, Armory Parties, etc. Instead I why they call me Cootie. "You see it's form ation office, or t find myself thinking of the everyday crazy This issue is dedicated to because she's so tiny and cute like a little around with. Maybe things that happened. bug." Personally I never found bugs very swering service, Co I still have a vivid memory of my arrival cute, and these are the same cowards who Whoever said se at St. Mary's. My first reaction upon en­ scream bloody murder if any type of bug is year was jock must tering room 394 LeMans was despair. I had sighted in their presence. who came up with si never seen a room like it; the room conjured to have loved and l< Tom Drape, up pictures of a hospital ward or an or­ Sophomore year was historic in that I loved at all; Better phanage, but not a place to call home. This started working at the SMC library and as heals all wounds, etc particular room had been a classroom staff reporter for the Observer. My prize on fourth floor LeW converted into a quint that had been stories that year were "Mr. Dirt" being tale of woe: "I've < reconverted into a triple. On the left wall nominated for Senior Class Fellow and the never graduate, I'll I was a covered over blackboard, complete editor-in-chief 1974-75 frog jumping contest being held by the lock myself up and < with chalk ledger. Along the wall were three ministry of propaganda, o of student want to . . ." We wrought-iron infirmary beds with bars at ************************************ government. My friends and I also spent whether we're goinc the head and footboard. The windows gave a almost every Sunday night in Kubiak's that our work, but in the ______the observer______scenic view of the parking lot. The right side year. go out. My motto is of the room was dominated by two mon­ Night Editor: Val Zurblis Features: Tom O'Neil, Maureen you can safely put < strous box like structures that had two Assistant Night Editor: K atie O'Neil Sajbel What will I think o colliding, sliding doors, presumably closets. Junior year we lived in luxury, a two- Kerwin Sports: Bill "Socks" Brink things like a friend i I wasn't there long before Melissa arrived room triple, complete with a full bath. There Layout Staff: Al Rutherford, Jim Typists: Martha Fanning, Don was sick, someone with the largest number of relatives and the was never a dull moment in that room, from Stevens, Bob Brink, Maureen "F in g e rs" Roos, Maryann Corr, birthday party for nr largest trunk I ever saw. Naturally It was the morning when "B row nie" came in to Flynn, Maggie Waltman, Chip Janet Carney, and a supporting the pouring rain fro pouring out while we tried to transport all "borrow" my toothpast and Col's Spina, Janet Carney, Terry cast of thousands SMC library one last our belongings to the room. Both of our cigarettes, to the evening when she ap­ Keeney, Boone Sanchez, Martha Compugraphic: Phil Orschein bringing me ace bar fathers kept saying, "I think we have all of It peared to borrow Pat's coats and my iron. walk, someone flyl Fanning Night Controller: Al Rutherford, now. What did you put in this footlocker Tom O'Neil driving in from N Day E ditor: Don Reimer anyway - bricks?" One night Brown's borrowing led to bombing out on the < Late Typist: Stamina Roos, Tom The circumstances under which I met my Copy Reader: Gregg "J.B." O'Neil catastrophe. Since she had my iron, I took out, but still having < second roommate were somewhat em­ Bangs, Bob Mader, Ken Bradford Picture Screener:A lbert Pat's to do my once a-semester ironing. the company. barrassing; Melissa and I had decided that Editorials: Jim Eder, John Ad Layout: Bob Tracey, Don Roos, After going through three shirts, the fourth Amantea Maureen Tracey Sajbel Wednesday, April 30,1975 the observer 13

Watching the ch jr/eneZloza by Jeanne Murphy ig Notre Dame t-shirts and Perusing Change. But there is more to change than changes manifested in yearbook portraits? days cheering for the through the senior section of the Dome just what meets the eye in a yearbook How definite is the change in s e has also put in a lot of yesterday, I was overwhelmed at the portrait. . A very visible change takes tudent life compared to the short-lived plans lis insane place to outside amount of change which took place in people place within a person's personality, within of flunky pre-med majors? How long lasting e others I know, he has just over the span of one short (too short) his spirit, w ithin his psyche. Over the four- is this new attitude in student life compared ig straight A's and prac- year. Even though the portraits were, on the year peiod a person spends in college, he is to the changing attitudes of a freshman and so as to be a worthwhile whole, extremely poor resemblances of expected to experience a change of at­ a senior? and. This is a very special many seniors, the change which took place titude; he is supposed to become more vord for it. And even if he was quite apparent. mature, accept responsibility and all the As a senior I am in the position to evaluate ears of higher education other characteristics that go along with and question the changes which I have witnessed the past four years. I can look from the Dome, I hope he In some people, the change was funny and becoming mature adults, to use the back and see which ones were good, and that he didn't really miss amusing; in others it was sad. Receding proverbial explanation. which ones were not so good. ready part of the Notre hairlines last year (when the pictures were he has already affected taken) to near baldness now; half a dozen Even though this topic of growth and everafter. You don't have gray hairs last year but Grecian Formula 44 m aturity and change has been overused, I To laugh at the inevitable physical student at Notre Dame to this year; dark brown to blonde or vice am still interested in the effects of this changes in yearbook portraits. To cry over . The new subway alumni versa in a year's time; hair down to the change and the realization of its actuality. unattainable ideals and goals. To hope that idence of that. waist then, now over the ears (both sexes happy things and events will be remem­ included); fu man chus once upon a time, I can laugh now as I look back upon my bered and experienced. AM these changes y reputation, maybe I II Rip Van Winkle beards lately; Roman nose four years of higher education. To evaluate and more are real, and hopefully will )f this to Cary myself. I one year, pug nose the n e x t... the "w ay I w as" as a freshman in al all girls become a recognizable part of each in mber anyone saying I school in White Plains, N.Y., versus my dividual's college experience. myself when I really Physical differences are always noticed behavior and attitudes throughout the three eminds me . .. and always predictable. How many seniors years I spent at Notre Dame amuses me w ill look even close to what they look like now. id Dad. Without you, I now at reunion time in 1980? Not many. w what spirit is. And to think that I, at one tim e in my career, executed the same shenanigans that freshmen are still doing today, and will probably do for years to come. Of course, king when we are freshmen, we believe that our It’s behavior is like everyone else's on campus; there is no difference between a freshman and a senior. How untrue that assumption is is apparent to me now. The change in a t­ the titude, aire, will determination . . . is like night and day. Unfortunately, it takes four years to realize this impending difference. people Change. How often do students change their majors during four years time? How often do they change their majors with only by Bill McLean one year left to go? How often are they forced to change majors against their own will or by constant threat of expulsion? Just What can you say about Notre Dame that what does this change mean? hasn't already been said? With the cast of characters you have around here, it would Freshmen enter these hallowed halls with seem safe to say almost nothing. However, an intent to m ajor in premed. After taking being a bold young fool who isn't getting any Emil T, and Thorsen their first years and wiser, I have been persuaded to make an ass missing a passing grade on each test by only of myself. This may not seem unusual to one point, they are asked to leave the those that know me, but I might point out preprofessional program in search for that there is a difference between being another major, even though they still want foolish and stupid. The former is what I to become doctors. So they transfer into usually seem to be while the later is what I business, but after realizing that they will am about to become. have to take 22 credits each semester before they graduate to make up credits, they How to decide they want to transfer into the College Notre Dame to me is people. People like of Arts and Letters. A fter all these moves Fr. Wilson, Fr. Griffin, Fr. Joyce and Fr. s and changes, where do they go from here? Mulcahy who each have their own approach Imagine the amount of goal tending they and yet who all are trying to make Notre thank them? must do befoore they graduate. Dame a little better. Notre Dame to me is a ie Cooney cast of characters that encompasses ever Indeed, the manifestations are obvious in type of personality known to exist and then ttached itself to Pat's by Al Sondej my present attitude and personality. I have some. Characters like Fr. Lally, Fr. rd Pat, accidentally shed most of my hang ups and quirks within Riehle., Fr. McDonagh, and Fr. Hager who n Liquor Store mug out I was asked by the Observer staff to w rite the past four years (only to return home to each have their own unique way of dealing i office air conditioner an editorial on my reflections of this past pick up new ones). And like others, I have with life. Notre Dame to me is a collection sard the maintenance year at Notre Dame . . . Thirty hours have acquired new fetishes. It is only natural. of individuals that are unforgetable. In­ repair of an a ir con gone by and I haven't written a word. It's dividuals like Jim Hunt, H Man, Pat by a flying mug. not because I don't know how to put it into McLaughlin, and George Pompe. No two ere ready to evict me words. I rarely get into a situation where I I suppose what I really want to say here, is of whom are alike a me St. Mary's Editor, feel a little helpless, but when I do, I do that I have witnessed the process of change er people ever sleep? something that perhaps I should do more taking place on many different levels of The list is endless or at least seemingly so I five minutes ago? I often, and that's talk to God. being at ND: personal, individual, w ith such names as Brian McGinty, Bob II them you're dead, or academic, physical. You name it; it Bode, and John Barkett coming to mind. went to Hong Kong," Dear God, how do I thank all the people changes. But one of the most significant Indeed, there are those who seem tohaveno isn't the Observer, it's here for accepting me for what I am. I stand changes that I have witnessed, and I am last name and yet are friends such as Helen, ibrary, the public in outside the dining halls of Notre Dame sure that others share my thoughts, con­ Pat, Rosemary, Irene, Billie, June, and lose weirdoes you hang pestering the students everyday for money cerns the change in tone of ND, the change Marge. Without a doubt, Notre Dame is you should get an an in spirit of the students, the change in at­ and instead of rejecting me, they allow me people which Isupposeexplains why things itie." to collect and how do I thank them for their titude of the adm inistration, the change in academics. Some of these are legitimate, here seem so confusing and hard to keep up :ond semester senior contributions that will enable others whom with and what can one say about being part be the same imbecile they will never see to eat, drink, learn, and others are not. of Notre Dame without thinking of a :h gems as: It's better work so that they can lead menaingful The class of '75 is one of the last to ex thousand faces and the times spent with the st than never to have lives? individuals who owned those faces. late than never; Time perience and reap the effects or the In every seniors' room How do I thank the people of security, struggles and efforts of the more m ilitant I wish I had something more spectacular ans there is the same accounting, cashiers, and vending depart­ and liberal students of the late sixties and to say, yet somehow I know that what I have ot so much to do, I'll ments for storing and sending this money to early seventies. When we go, who will un said is what is most im portant to me. I may ever finish. I've got to the agencies? How do I thank all my fellow derstand and know what having no parietals not be all that sm art despite what I say to et to work, but I don't workers for putting up and subbing for me was like? Who will know what a real hall the contrary at times and yet somehow I feel always debate as to when I had to leave work early? How do I party was like with wapatulaand kegs in the that live has been good to me and that the out or not, listing all thank the World Hunger Coalition, Campus hallways? Who will remember what the main reason for such fullness is due to end we almost always Ministry, faculty, staff, and administration Senior Death M arch was? others who always seem to be there to share Don't do today what for their intellectual support? themselves in this adventure we call life. ff until timorrow. All these events and others represented a most often? Probably good tim e for students (good in the sense of At this point, I probably sound like Fr. making me tea when I How do I thank the people of the Observer being happy). Now they have become ex­ Toohey which makes me wonder why I throwing a surprise for letting me use their room as an office tinct. The philosophies underlying their agreed to this arrangement. Nevertheless, I e, someone walking in and write those textbook editorials? And eradication have changed the tone of thank the Observer crew for this chance and student life, and the students in years to n Stanford hall to the how do I thank my mom, dad, brother (Al), thank all of those who have touched my life, tim e to visit, someone sis, relatives, and friends for being there come will never know that it was possible to p a rticularly those who have done so in such dages when I couldn't whenever I need them? have keg parties, that it was possible to a way as to enrich it. It has been my rig in from Arizona, have girls in rooms after midnight, that pleasure and privilege to be a part of this ew Jersey, and me there really and truly was a drink called community for the last four years and I will wapatula. ki slopes the first time I guess what I'm really asking of You, always be grateful to the two people who i good time because of Lord, is to love them all, they've beer made it all possible Ma and Pa McLean. more than too good to me How much more permanent is this change is student life compared to the physical ■

1 4 the observer Wednesday, April 30, 1975 Letters to a Lonely God a family feast

reverend robert griffin 4 would consider herself a fool for acting like minister, the street priesting in New York, celebrate our togetherness in grace and Editor’s Note: This article completes the some “ ould Mother Machree. ” Religion was the life of the chaplain who travels, my days love. Ahead of us, at this tim e of year, lies a fifth year that the Rev. Robert Griffin has a private affair, she would forgive the son as parish priest, or teacher. But the days of summer of separation; and for the seniors a written for the Observer. who got her into the Catholic version of it; my growing up in Maine belong to a whole permanent departure. Nearly behind us are but she didn’t intend to become a other tradition, I am not yet at peace with the times of good fellowship recently lived cheerleader for his faith. Religiously, she my religious past; it always seems adrift through: the afternoons and evenings on the For me, it is the celebration of the would do what she had to do; but she didn’t from the rest of my life. One event jostles quads; the meals, the games, the trips, the Eucharist that brings all of it together: the half to have every Delia and Deirdre and another in a lifetime until existence can drinks, the entertainments, the love, the friendship, the caring, the sharing of life; Bridget in Chistendom watching her do it. become chaos, if there are not touching tenderness, the tears. whether it is among children or students; She never said all this, of course, but I stones of faith for our experience. For me, At the Eucharist is the promise that in I he religious Community of Holy Cross or guessed how she felt; but God knows, she the Mass has become such a touching stone. belonging to the vineyard, we belong also to the larger community of campus friends, or didn’t have to make the First Fridays for my At each day’s altar, I can, with the help of each other, and our roots are planted the families I have belonged to for a little sake. 1 knew too that privately she didn’t grace, separate the light from the darkness. eternal. The Mass I celebrate in Manhattan, while. The Eucharist... the bread and wine think God would consider it a great sin if she That is why I need to say a Mass that can put the Mass you w ill attend in Detroit, the Mass of sacrifice, touched by the love of Christ, sent a little money for the Congregational it all together. in the Grotto on Thursday: all of them are blessed by the Cross of Christ, gracing us church’s flowers every week. More darkly I would, then, love to say Mass for my the bread and wine of a fam ily feast. Here is together into aliveness in the Lamb. s till, she didn’t think He minded if she mother; but strangely enough, I won’t mind a homecoming that gives us to each other, In the twenty-one years since I was or­ flavored the fish of the Friday abstinence too much if she continues to say no. There is despite separation, and afterwards a dained, I have offered many hundreds and with a few pork scraps, after the New a great danger in me, you may have noticed, laughter we will share in heaven. thousands of Masses; in every one of them I England way of cooking. But she kept these of taking myself and my vocation too On May 1st, then, there is a Mass for Our have prayed for my family: my mother, my little aberrations to herself, as though she seriously. If you tend to be too serious about Lady at five o’clock . . . and soon after that, sister, my brother, and my father, who has feared, if I found out, I would think I had your ordained self, it helps keep you humble the summer! been dead now for thirty years. In all that made a hypocrite out of my own dearest if someone like your mother resists you. My On June 5th, the twenty-first anniversary time, no member of my family-neither my parent. As a Catholic, my mother isn’t family is in little danger of spoiling me as of my ordination, I hope to be saying Mass mother, my sister, nor my brother-has ever perfect; but as a human being, she has more a priest. At home among the relatives, my at another Notre Dame: at the cathedral attended a Mass I have said. There are no truth in her than the Bishop. priesthood is treated as something quite church in Paris. If mystic communings are shabby reasons for this absenteeism. No In June, my mother will be eighty years detached from the family experience. It is true, you will be there with me in the way I neglect nor abuse of the ordained son and old; and in twenty-one years, we’ve never like a horse I can’t bring into the living remember you. brother was intended. My sister and brother been in church together at the same time. I room, or a car that is left parked in the I have been imagining a scenario of that are sim ply not Catholics, that is all. When can picture myself saying, “ Mother, is there driveway. It is just as well that my family anniversary occasion: me, standing at the my mother finally decided to become a some way we can get this relationship treats me that way: it keeps me from being high altar of the cathedral, with incense member of the Catholic parish back in between us out of the closet?” I mean, it’s ruined more than I am as a preacher-type. drifting in clouds around me, and the Glee Maine, it was a matter of quiet sacramental not that she’s a crypto-Catholic. It’s just On Thursday afternoon, May 1st at five Club humming Latin in the background. (In arrangements made between her and the that if 1 am not in collar, she still introduces o’clock, if weather permits, I am going to the movie version, the role could be played local pastor; I wasn’t informed until af­ me to her friends as Mister. She doesn’t at celebrate Mass at the Grotto, and I hope you by Barry Fitzgerald opposite Maria terwards. As a freshly recovered sheep, my all mind my being a priest; from her sup­ will come. For me, as for you, standing at Ouspenskaya, as at the conclusion of Going mother did not feel ready to take her place portiveness in essential ways, she may even year’s end almost on the brink Of summer, My Way). among the handmaidens of the Pope who be a little pleased w ith the fact. But she this Mass can bring a lot of things together. Suddenly, out of the pews, a veiled figure came with veils and rosaries to attend the doesn’t want to play a role as the reverend’s Obviously, it w ill be a Mass in honour of a will rise and move toward the Communion eight o’clock Mass every morning. I think mother, not if it means she has to watch me Jewish mother. She must have refused at rail. she feared the Galway blather of some working at the rituals of redemption by times to take her Son too seriously when He “ It’s Mrs. DeGaulle,” a Parisian will daughter of Erin who would say, “ Oh, Mary which the parish worship is accomplished. brooded; it probably helped to keep Him shout. dear, isn’t it grand that you’re one of us When I have offered to say Mass for her at human. “ Queen-rose of the rosebud garden “ It’s Jackie Onassis,” another will cry. now,” and my mother would feel the ground home, she will say, “ Well, now, dearn, that of girls,” Tennyson might have called her. “ It’s a Kennedy woman,” the choir will shaking beneath her feet as my father rolled seems a little silly. The pastor isn’t feeling Whatever belongs to gentleness, thought­ scream. over in his grave. Or she dreaded the em­ at all well; he brought me Communion just fulness, and beauty belongs to M ary. At I alone will know who the lady is. It will be barrassment of comments in ambivalent this morning. Why don't you just run along Mass, I shall be thinking also of the no surprise to me when she throws back her praise of her son, the celebrant: “ Oh, it ’s and serve Mass for him?” It doesn’t matter thoughtfulness, gentleness, and beauty of veil. There, from Maine, five thousand your little man, Mary; it’s Father Robert. that Masses are served by altar boys; she my own mother. She is blue-eyed and Irish, miles from the parish church whose Doesn't he read the Latin well, with only will still talk of my serving Mass. and her name is M ary, too. She w ill be Catholic ladies she once snubbed, w ill stand just the slightest trace of a stammer; I used to think it was the Protestant ghosts eighty years old in June; whatever I know of the widow of the Yankee Fisherman, though to tell the truth, Mary, they were in the walls of our house that she was afraid mothers, even God’s mother, I know acknowledging the Mass “ server ” as her saying Sunday that his sermons are a little of offending. There were many ghosts at because of a loveliness first seen in m y own flesh and blood; and a mother and her son long.” home,all of them Protestant; not only my Irish rose. will be at home together in a church of their She thought to herself: she didn’t go to father’s, but my grandparents’ ghosts as Even if I praise God for mothers-yours, shared Catholic faith. Mass before I was ordained; she didn’t well. My grandparents lived in that house mine, His, ours-our May Mass will not be a To tell the truth, I don’t jieed cathedrals; intend to haunt the pews just because I had once. My brother and my sister still lived liturgical indulgence of sentimentality. it would be joy enough if she were just well. I been ordained. It was tasteless to go, there. Outnumbered" as we Catholics were, There are, this year, too great a number of think, fo r her, it is too late for Paris. But just showing off like a Fulton J. Sheen convert; my mother may have thought it impolite to the dead to be remembered; too many once-at least.once—I wish we could break it was contrary to Yankee reticence. The get pushy with the pieties of a prayerbook mourners to be comforted; too many suf­ bread together on our knees. Protestant relatives would consider her a approvated by prelates. ferers needing to be cheered w ith the Please come to the May Day Mass. Bring fool if, at the age of sixty, she began running I hope that some day soon my mother w ill promise of hope. sandwiches, if you like, for a lakeside back and forth to the Catholic church. Even let me put my life all together by saying a “ I am the Vine; ye are the branches,” supper. Darby O’Gill asked me to add: Griff, if the relatives didn’t know about it, she Mass for her: the work of the campus said the Lord. At the Eucharist, we and I never said we didn’t love you. entering alice’s nigh Tuesday night the Alice Cooper Show visited club. The drama continued as a nine foot Notre Dame, leaving the audience with a tall cyclops first killed the spiders and then question of whatever happened to the rock attacked Cooper as he mocked it. Again and roll concert? Alice’s new show has left Alice went down,to all appearances dead. I he realm of Gilbert and Sullivan’s musicals But his dreams would allow him no respite. or P.T. Barnum ’s circus’s. The show In a perfectly timed and executed sequence, opened with a lavishly choreographed ren­ a screen arose onto which was projected a dition of "Welcome to My N ightm are” , also rather amateurish film of Alice in a the title of theentireproduction.The first of graveyard. This scene, however, was I he many and varied characters to appear turned into a spectacular success by a on stage was a two-faced giant, one of whose guitar dialogue, the only time the exellent faces was that of a medieval devil and the hand was allowed to exhibit their abilities, other a grotesque parody of a human face. and by the perfect timing with which Alice Four dancers then leaped across the stage and the dancers burst through and back into in ballet-like form, heralding the arrival of the projected images. I he dream er, Alice. The music was, to most listeners, secondary Through the course of the show, Alice was to the show. Cooper did play three of his hits bitten, poisoned, encoiled, tram pled and early in the program, driving the crowd thrown, in addition to doing some cutting insane as he sang “ I ’m Eighteen” while and hammering himself. The stage was a dressed in a high school varsity sweater masterpiece of demonic design in itself, with the number eighteen in place of the complete with a bedpost of sticks crowned school letter. His appeal to what was in by what appeared to be human heads large part a high school audience came out surrounding a moveable bed centerstage, a at this pointand in his next to the last song, giant toy box into which Alice was "School’s Out.” The remainder of the music deposited, and two giant pylons supporting was from his new album and was primarily a girder from which two of the major a vehicle for the stage action. props were suspended. The firs t of these The show as a whole had some degree of was a twenty foot square spider web which coherence in that it was a continuous drama was the backdrop for the most frightening presenting the horrors or one m an’s former he has taken the rock musical to a Cooper band was the same as had ap­ part of Alice’s nightmare. Three of the nightmares. Alice smoothly worked in his new height. peared w ith Lou Reed for his legendary dancers, costumed as Black Widow spiders hits, keeping them consistent with the concerts in New York. They were dressed in came on stage, two 0f them clim bing the overall theme of the production. Each 1 he opening act was a lively performance black capes and looked something like webbing as the audience heard a horrifying individual scene nevertheless could stand on by Suzi Quatro, queen of raunch and roll. nineteenth century pallbearers. They dissertation on the deadlines of the Black its own as a devastating combination of Her backup band was, unfortunately, only deserve more recognition than they receive, Widow. Alice, in his nightmare, saw himself music, volume, action, and visual effects. moderately talented and in general unin­ for the solo guitar work of Steve Hunter was taunting the spiders to attack him, and so L yrica lly, Cooper is not too poetic, neither is teresting. although the lead guitarist did spectacular and worthy of the best show they did as he fought back with a primitive he musically rem arkable, but as a per­ oroduce at least one im aginitive solo. The in the rock and roll circus. Wednesday, April 30,197$ the observer 15 Top ten stories of 1974-75

Ford's visit

I. President V oid’s Visit: Amidst a flurry of confusion as to his exact intention, a smattering or protest at a “ political” appearance in an “ academic” context, and the over all leeling generated by the office of the Presidency, Gerald R. Ford accepts a Doctorate of Law degree in an ACC ceremony. Also included in the day’s activities are a national media conference, a meeting with leading University presidents, and a national press conference. President Ford leaves a happy man, calling this “ one of the best days in my life.” In the aftermath, there is a debate over the ef­ fectiveness of the student walk-out.

Arc's retirement Football suspensions

2. Ara Parseghian’s retirement: At the close of the 1974 3. Football Suspensions: Six football players are suspended season, leaving w ith a 94-16-4 record, Ara Parseghian an­ for a parietals violation over the summer. Controversy nounces his retirement. In his final Orange Bowl showing, surrounds the decision, which stems from an allege pe in the team pulls it out for the coach, 13-11. He takes a position Stanford Hall. The final decision to suspend is :e by for the next year, working on “ University Development.” Father Hesburgh, who states that the lives of th yers Coach Dan Devine, formerly of the Green Bay Packers, were on the line with his judgment. replaces Parseghian.

C alen dar

I. The 1974-75 Academic Calendar: The Academic Council passes a Calendar which begins after Labor Day, to the cheers of students, faculty, and staff. But the illusion of.input wears thin, and the actual calendar shows a minimal Thanksgiving break in the first semester, which enrages many. Once again, “ You can’t make a calendar that everyone can be happy with,” says University Provost Fr. James. T. Burtchaell.

B-ball ticket Lewis H a ll compromise

5. Lewis Hall: Lewis Hall, originally built to house the women 6. Basketball Ticket Compromise: After the annour: -nt religious studying here, and which has housed as guest of a $28 charge for all student basketball tickets, s graduate women, is switched to the status of undergraduate become enraged at the proposed dent in their p. women’s dorm. The graduate women are sent to Badin Hall. Protest abounds, with a boycott proposed. Instead, a nur The University also alludes to plans for graduate housing to of proposals are arranged by Student Body Presiden be built in the next year, though they state that, at this time, McLaughlin, and these are voted on by the students there are no funds for such a project. proposals are brought to Fr. Edmund Joyce, and a final proposal, charging $22 for padded seats and $18 for bli seats, is settled upon, w ith a stipulation that the char, raised to $21 for the bleachers this year.

Duggan C.O.U.L. form

appointment X. Committee on Undergraduate Life Formed: Aft' to the Board of Trustees by seven student leaders 7. Duggan Appointed to SMC Presidency: After a year-long Student Body President Pat McLaughlin and search. Dr. John M. Duggan is appointed by the Saint Mary’s Kditor Tom Drape, the Committee on Undergradu Board of Regents to the position of College President. Dr. formed. The Committee will study five areas: a Duggan characterizes his expectations of his term as having student life, finances, residentiality, and co-educat “ a sense of excitement and humor.” final report will be made to the Board of Trustees n

SLCs sexuality rule Alcohol regulatic is

9. Alcohol Regulations: The year began with the sv nsi n of all alcohol regulations on campus, because of th. State Law which held the University responsibl or the 10. The SLC Sexuality Rulings: Working on the vetoed ver­ conduct of those students who drank on its premis The are also numerous raids on bars in the campus ar sion of the sexuality guidelines, the SLC spends the greater Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Commission. Universi part of the year on a revision, which is again vetoed by Fr. Hesburgh. The discussions cripple the SLC for the best part Dr Philip Faccenda drafts a bill to relieve the Urn legal liability while Student Government leader pf i Hp vear, and they are largely inactive in other areas. student lobby to lower the drinking age to 18. A1 cessful voter registration drive, representatives an for this vearwho are sympathetic to the student loloy: The Faccenda B ill passes early in A pril. 1 6 the observer Wednesday, April 30, l°75 Americans leave South Vietnam SAIGON (UPI) — The United buildings around Saigon, unable It appeared that what tipped added two more demands— destroyed by the crowd at the States pulled out of Vietnam to get transportation because of the scales and forced the issue withdrawal of U.S. naval forces U.S. Embassy. Tuesday. The last American the c ity ’s 24-hour curfew. was an ultimatum from Presi­ from Vietnamese waters and At least one of the U.S. officials fled the country and Some Vietnamese went with dent Minh to U.S. Ambassador disarming of Saigon’s army and telephone circuits was out of left it up to the Vietnamese to the Americans. Others, by the Graham Martin. In effect, Minh police. order. find peace hundreds, gathered outside the told M artin he had 24 hours to There was an unconfirmed The automatic FM radio The Americans were ordered U.S. Embassy pleading to be leave the country. report from a political source' station run by Americans in out by new President Duong taken along. Marines were Saigon surrounded late Tuesday that the govern­ Saigon continued its Muzak-like Van Minh to meet one of the flown in by helicopter to guard ment would agree if necessary broadcasting long after it was At that point, the Communists Communists’ major conditions the compound—and the depart­ to disarm most of its forces. abandoned. But by midnight, had Saigon hemmed in with for peace talks—an end to the ing Americans. Within hours, signs of the the tapes had run out and the 150,000 troops, had just taken U.S. presence. Political sources Yet other Vietnamese found American presence already station had ceased broadcsting. the 23rd of South Vietnam ’s 44 said the Communists and the their own way out. A Pentagon were disappearing. Most of the government’s provinces—Bien Hoa—and had Saigon government had agreed spokesman said in Washington A youthful mob looted the generals were gone, including the capital itself within range in principle to call a cease-fire about 10 Vietnamese helicopters Brink Hotel, a U.S. landmark in the Saigon city defense com­ of its Soviet-made 130mm guns. Wednesday. ditched near the amphibious downtown Saigon. The hotel mander, Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van ship Blueridge, but that all But as the Americans left, had housed American officers Minh. He went out on one of the •MMI Americans leave crewmen were rescued. the shooting died out. And for for more than 10 years and was U.S. Marine helicopters. Some 900 Americans quietly Some Vietnamese, mostly the first time since 1965, Saigon twice bombed by the Viet Cong. President Minh called a but quickly climbed aboard m ilitary officers and families, issued no daily war com­ Abandoned American homes meeting of all his Saigon helicopters for the final flight made it to the Philippines, munique. were looted and property command generals. out They would remember for Taiwan and Singapore, and at There was no immediate stolen. The UPI bureau car was Only one showed up. years the Vietnamese cries of least 70 planeloads landed in confirmation of the reported “ Please help me! Please help Thailand. Some of the planes, cease-fire agreement between me!" that cut even through the according to reports reaching Saigon and the Viet Cong. Vice SPECIAL WEEKEND ROOM RATES FOR noise of the w hirring propellers. Washington, apparently were President Nguyen Van Huyen NOTRE DAME PARENTS OR VISITORS Vietnamese crowded by the stolen. denied it. But knowledgeable political hundreds in front of the U.S. Two marines killed Kmbassy, pleading for a ride sources said Huyen had been in $095 out. "Please take my children,” The deaths of Marine Cpl. contact with the Viet Cong $695 cried one young woman clutch­ Charles McMahon Jr. of Wo­ delegation at Saigon’s Tan Son ^Single occupancy w Double occupancy ing an American. A well- burn, Mass., and Lance Cpl. Nhut airbase and had reached dressed young man told ano­ Darwin L. Judge of Marshall­ a tentative agreement. No Notre Dame identification required, just ther, “If you will help me get town, Iowa, apparently helped Huey n mention this ad. Effective any Fri„ Sat. or Sun. out of Vietnam, I will give you prompt the American evacua­ $200,000.” tion. They died in a barrage of Huyen himself appeared on But there was nothing more Communist rocket and 130mm official Saigon Radio and HICKORY INN MOTEL the Americans could do. artillery fire that pounded television to say his govern­ Saigon's Tan Son Nhut a ir base ment had decided to meet the 50520 U.S. 31 North Kra of high costs in the predawn hours of last two demands of the Viet South Bend, Indiana 46637 Tuesday. Cong for the opening of peace (219) 272-7555 The departure ended an era Within hours, President Ford talks—an end to American 3 miles North of the Tollroad that cost the United States 14 decided to go with “ Option 4” intervention in Vietnamese af­ years, $150 billion and more —a final helicopter evacuation fairs and abolition of the Saigon Cable T.V., Air Cond., Phones. than 50,000 liv e s —the la s t of similar to that carried out April “war machine.” which were two U.S. Marines Send this ad to your parents 12 in Phnom Penh. But in Paris, the Viet Cong killed in a Communist attack on Saigon’s airport early Tuesday that spurred the pullout. The evacuation came 27 days AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT. after the United States aban­ doned Cambodia and closed out U.S. involvement in Indochina.

7th fleet to leave M arine CH53 helicopters pro­ tected by Navy F4 Phantom jets and Marine helicopter gunships ferried the Americans to carriers waiting in the South China sea. The 7th Fleet vessels were expected to leave quickly, thus meeting another Communist demand — that American ships quit Viet­ MATCH IMG TIE namese waters. 8 The pullout went fairly smoothly. The Communists had HANDKERCHIEF said they would not interfere with the American departure and apparently lived up to their word. ALBUM At 1 a.m. Wednesday, the evacuation was still under way. Unconfirmed reports said some Americans were still stalled in

It took the British 200 years to get even. And the accountancy departments of they’ve done it with their secret weapon. The Monty DePaul University Python Matching Tie and and Handkerchief. University of Illinois An insanely clever and at Chicago Circle zany expedition that offer a joint intensified includes the only three­ sided two-sided album in CPA REVIEW existence. It’s definitely for the November Exam something different. And Days at Circle Campus A unforgettable. Evenings at DePaul University Classes conducted by distinguished faculty from both institutions PRICE FOR FAST MAIL ORDER SERVICE and master practitioners SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO KING KAROL RECORDS • MAIL-ORDER DEPT. REGISTER NOW P.O. BOX 629 Review starts June 23 TIMES SQUARE STATION and ends November 1 PREPAID • SHIPPING INCLUDED NEW YORK, N.Y. 10036 Phone or Write CPA REVIEW NAME DePaul University 25 E. Jackson Boulevard ADDRESS Chicago, IL 60604 Phone: (312) 321-7820

A Python Production for New York State Residents— Add Appropriate County Sales Tax Charisma Records. Ltd New York City Residents— Add 8% Sales Tax Send Check Or Money Order Only. Wednesday, April 30, 1975 the observer 17 700 arrive in Vietnamese airlift continues blue sports shirt. including pediatrcians. a larger populaion than that of Bv LAWRENCE OLSEN into an ear-to-ear grin. An The group Tuesday was taken Expressing concern about the nearest town, San Clemen­ CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. elderly woman, stylishly to Camp Talega which had their arrival was Calfornia te. Its m ayor, Tony DiGiovanni (UPI) — The vanguard of a dressed opened a white parasol- readied 50 quonset huts holding Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said he was worried abut the massive airlift of Vietnamese to shade herself from the brilliant sunshine. 20 persons apiece and 90 tents who said the state “cannot state of health of the refugees. - refugees moved into a quonset After being cleared by for 16 persons each. Two mess afford to have any more “ I just have to assume they hut-tent city Tuesday on this customs and immigration, they halls were ready to serve hot unemployed people iving here.” would be restricted to the camp marine base which was in the were bused to the huge meals and there were 30 Estimates of the number at least for a quarantine midst of a mock war. Pendleton base where a “ c ity ” medical corpsmen on hand and coming into Pendleton have period,” DiGiovanni said, dupli­ About 700 men, women and had popped up overnight on the also a nmber of doctors numbered up to 20,000 which is cate to b wire points children were bought in through northern part of the reservaion the day on flights from Guam about five miles from former to begin a new life in a strange President Nixon’s home. land with some California Commencement plans announced Field maneuvers had been officials voicing hopes that they scheduled for this period long would not be saddled with their those to receive Baccalaureate or ago by the Marines but a Continued from page 3 Doctor of Philosophy degree care. Masters degrees will find tables recipients will receive their spokesman said the refugees form during Commencement The biggest contingent of 356 arranged in two semi circles-one diplomas personally from Father probably would see little of which will include a guest speaker arrived on a chartered blue and along the east wall for the College Hesburgh during the Com­ them although jet airplanes silver DC10 emblazoned with from outside the University yet to of Arts and Letters, and the other mencement ceremony. would be frequently overhead. the words “ Holidayliner Free­ be announced, and packing of the along the west w all for the Colleges The first group was said to be lather Hesburgh will dom .” For the most part, they last of the diplomas for of Business Administration, then confer their degrees by- among the higher echelon of distribution. were unsmiling as they came Science, and Engineering. At citation. The order of conferrings Vietnamese society, many of down the ramp and walked The northeast corner of the these tables department chairmen w ill be as follows: the Law them wives and children of across the apron at the El Toro Registrar's Office now in w ill pass out diplomas. A fter they School's Juris Doctorates, Masters Americans or civilians who had Marine Air Station. dominated by the white boxes have been picked up. the receivers other than M B.A. s. and Masters worked for the United States A few children broke into containing the diplomas, which are asked to assemble along the of Business Administration, government in Vietnam. smiles. One litte boy in a white when full, will hold approximately outer perimeter of the area set up followed by Baccalaureate degrees One girl in a brilliant, chic 2,080 of them. Each envelope shirt turned wide eyes on near the hockey rink for the Iprm the Colleges of Arts and pink dress held the hand of her photographers and then burst containing a diploma is gold sealed procession soon after which will Letters. Science, Engineering and husband who was dressed in a and blue tagged, and w ill be given start the procession. Business Administration. to the person whose name appears in the corner beginning at 1:00 pm on the Sunday of Commencement in the northern dome of the ACC. Boar's Upon arriving through Gate 3, LUNCHES MONDAY thru FRIDAY 4 k Miller outstanding ( f t Senior Joanell M ille r has been 11:30 - 2:15 selected by Glamour Magazine as one of the ten outstanding college students for 1975. DINNER MONDAY thru SATURDAY Miss Miller, who will be featured in the August issue of Glamour, w ill receive a free trip to New York and $500. FROM 5:00 - A recipient of the Borden scholarship for her junior year, GOTCHAL YEARBOOK YET? To these gentle strains, yearbook Miss Miller is majoring in English itors Tom Paulius and S.M.Darin started the distribution of writing. English literature, and SUNDAY FROM 4:00 government. She was employed by yearbooks yesterday.(Photo by Paul Joyce.) the South Bend Redevelopment Commission last year and developed “ The River Bend WE HONOR CHARGE CARDS Gazette," an advertising insert Plea results in reunion which won recognition by the 55285 U.S. 31 NORTH Indiana Advertising Council. A daughter's plea to University same time, the office ol She will enter Northwestern 272-5478 of Notre Dame officials has Congressman John Brademas was U niversity Law School in the fall. resulted in a reunion with her contacted by a field represen­ parents in Miami after a flight tative. Frank Sullivan, Jr., and the from Cuba that was sidetracked U.S. State Department was asked END OF SCHOOL YEAR through Spain. Now blind and in to intervene. failing health, I he father, Juan Miss Osberger subsequently was Perez, received a civil engineering informed by Mrs. Castanedo that degree from Notre Dame in 1907. her parents had received per­ Imelda Perez di Castanedo’s mission from the Castro govern­ SALE! letter of March 17 to “ Body of ment to fly to Spain on A pril 2 and Professors at Notre Dame” was hence to America. They had THIS THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY BEFORE delivered to the dean of ad­ remained in Cuba, it was ex­ ministration. Leo. M. Corbaci. plained, because they wished to LEAVING THE GOLDEN DOME IN YOUR W ritten in Spanish because she stay with another daughter. With admittedly was weak in the the death of this daughter last REAR VIEW MIRROR, BOOGIE DOWN TO English expression of sentiments, year, the parents began efforts to the M iam i woman said she was rejoin their other children in appealing to her father’s school for M iam i. all possible assistance in removing The combined efforts of all the legal barriers to his return to parties resulted in a new letter received this week at the & the United States. Waiting in Miami this month to University: With much respect I greet Perez and his wife of 64 years salute you. We are very grateful were four sons, three daughters, 25 for your gestures that favored our 50 c OFF ALL $3.99 AND $4.99ALBUMS grandchildren and three great­ parents. In spite of their age, they grandchildren Mrs. Castanedo’s have sane minds and they $1.00 OFF ALL$5.99, $6.99, $8.99 letter was translated by Kathy remember with affection and pride Odberger, a senior from South Notre Dame. My father tells his Bend who has been active in grandchildren that in his time it is PLUS NEW RELEASES BY: summer volunteer work in like now with the famous football Spanish-speaking countries. At the team,” Castanedo wrote. PLUS ★ ERIC CLAPTON PAof FCb MACS RECORD T « p t S $ | OFF Con i v ★ LEON RUSSELL ALBUM I ★ CARLY SIMON OF YOUR CHOICE i ★ BOB SEGER (with this coupon) ★ BAD COMPANY 288-1178 I A F u ll Service Record Store 9 19-B COLLEGE SQUARE NEXT TO RIVER MISHAWAKA, INDIANA 255-0266 2923 MISH. AVE. p a r k th ea tr e (across from Town & Country) 18 the observer Wednesday, April 30, 1975 fiction Circle K designated ’Club of Year'

Circle K is an international The first project of the school look part in the “Shamrocks for. social service organization year was a clean up around the Dystrophy’’ campaign in March. composed of college students in all lakes which netted twelve bag of The last- project of Hie fall , fifty states and Canada. II is af­ trash, cans, paper, etc. The next semester was a Christmas party (J. U lien does the OMBUDSMAN service close up this semester? weekend club members helped lor the people at the Cardinal A Tuesday, May (i. will be the last day of operation. filiated with Kiwanis In­ ternational. The Notre Dame club with the annual South Bend Nursing Home. . Kiwanis newspaper sale. Circle K The recycling project which was 0 I am a senior and haven’t yet received my graduation an was chartered last May 4. Since that time the club has members helped raise" $350 for to begin second semester activities nouuccnicnts. Who should I contact? local charities. tell through, but in February - a \ Contact no one ; they are waiting for you in the Registrar's office .become active in campus and Money for the club's own ac­ project was begun al Ixigan In­ as well as anything else connected with graduation you might need. community activities, and at this years s Indiana District Con­ tivities was raised at hot dog dustries which earned the club a vention was awarded the “ Club of stands on two home football second place district award in the O What w ill he the hours of the OMBUDSMAN service next fall? the Y ear” award. Also, two Saturdays. The hot dogs “ steamed area of concern for dependent and A The organization which claims “ If we can’t help you, we know members were elected district in beer" brought in $70 for club neglected persons. Ixigan In­ who can1 ’, w ill he answering phone calls 9:30 am to 5:00 pm officers for the coming year. Tom projects. Excess hot dogs were dustries is a non-profit Monday through Friday and 10:00 pm to 12:00 pm Monday through Schneilenberger was elected dohated to Delos House, a local organization -which employs Thursday. Governor and Jackie Simmons drug rehabilitation group. retarded adults to do simple tasks was elected Secretary-Treasurer. l ’erhaps the biggest undertaking lor various businesses. <} \\hat was the secret chant recited by the Green Lantern as he Directing the club the past year of the first semester was the Interspersed in the working day hosting of the Fall Issues Con­ recharged his power ring? have been officrs Tom are classes that attempt to teach A The Green Lantern’s chant goes as follows: “ Through brightest Schneilenberger, president; Kevin ference. Over forty Circle K basic concepts of physical exer­ day. through darkest night, let no evil escape my sight. Let those Ford, vice-president;Jackie members from clubs throughout cise. grooming, arts and crafts, Indiana joined the Notre Dame W IIP - evil’s might, beware my power. Green Lantern’s Simmons, secretary; and Ann lime, money.etc. Circle K club for a weekend of projects, \ lig h ts . ~ Gardner, treasurer. members have volunteered time in meetings and partying. the afternoons to leach some of The conference began Friday these classes. October 4 with a party for A project which is going on at children at the Family and this time is the marathon Children Center in Mishawaka. basketball game co-sponsored by On Saturday morning a district Circle K and the Social Com­ board meeting was held and the mission. Donations are being afternoon's program included taken lor the Muscular Dystrophy speakers on Circle K’s major Association. emphasis areas: environmental On April 26, the club held its concerns. prison concerns, year end banquet and installed neglected and dependent persons officers for the coming year. concerns, health concerns and Those officers are: Janet student concerns. Spillman, president; Celeste Volz, In November club members vice-president ; Linda Tempel, canvassed areas of South Bend to secretary: Joan Wiegand, collect money for the Muscular treasurer; and Ann Gardner, Dystrophy Association. They also board member. Cavalier Camera

STUDENTS TAKE ADVANTAGE of the rare South Bend weather as classes move outside SCOTTSDALE MALL for a pleasant change of scenery, (photos by Paul Joyce). SOUTH BEND a n d BUSINESS '' cancelled . U.S. 31. NILES. MICH. OPPORTUNITY

after 20-year Good Potential Income No Age B arrier NEW YORK UPI - The CBS gambler and his show girl wife; Full or Part Time For sale at Television Network cancelled “Phyllis,” a spin-off from the OLYMPUS OLYMPUS Mary Tyler Moore Show starring “ Gunsmoke,” the second longest- Contact D. A. Doxie O M -1 M D running prime time show in TV Cloris Leachman as Phyllis; and 503 N. Blaine Ave. Niles store: "Joe and Sons” starring Richard history, after 20 consecutive years South Bend, IN Costellano as a widowed blue OM ,00 of broadcasting. (219) 234-4469 fl.8 lens The announcement was part of collar worker trying to raise his SYSTEM $279 Chrome Body CBS’ new fall lineup that included two sons. the cancellation of five other shows and the addition of nine new programs. The biggest surprise was the movement of “ All in the Family” TV’s highest-rated show, from Saturday to Monday. “ Gunsmoke,” which began as a radio program. started its historic television run in 1955 with James Arness as Matt Dillon, the marshal Observer of Dodge City, Kan., in the 1870’s. Arness still plays Dillon although several other cast members have come and gone through the Coverage mainstreets of the frontier town. Only “The Ed Sullivan ” show, Sommer Graduation which ran for 22 years exceeded “ Gunsmoke s” longevity. Cheerleader's Convention “ We spent a lot of tim e agonizing over the decision and there comes Alumni Reunion a time when something must end,” said Robert Wood, CBS-TV Letters to a Lonely God president. Ten Weekly CBS also cancelled “ Manhun- Administration Antics ler.” “We ll Get By,” “The CBS Friday Night Movie,” and Issues (Jun 12-Aug 14 ) “ . The network’s new shows in­ clude "Beacon Hill,” an American Delivered to your adaption othe British series, “ Upstairs, Downstairs*'; “ Bronk,” starring Jack Balance as Home $2 ,« ( m a il m e !) an unorthodox police investigator; “ Switch. ” starring and Eddie Albert as two private I YES! Enrich my summer! eyes; and “Kate McShane” starring Anne Meara as a woman lawyer. CBS also added “Three for the Bring Your *2 Name Road,” starring Alex Rocco as a to the Observer freelance photographer who Jakes his two orphaned sons oh his Office1 O r assignments; “ Doc," starring Sign-Up in the | Address Barnard Hughes as a neigh­ borhood doctor in a racially mixed Dining Halls on Tues\ neighborhood; “Big Eddie,” •:vMd-Wed:Nights starring and ShereeNorth in a tale about an ex­ Wednesday, April 30, 1975 the observer 19 Lear to deliver lecture IMPERIAL MUSIC

William P. Lear, best known for retired chairman of the board of bearing the U niversity’s seal, is STORE CLOSING the development and manufac­ Hallicrafters Company; Charles bestowed annually on individuals turing of the Lear Jet, will deliver W. M ueller (B.S., E.E ’34), fellow or organizations for significant 1517 Lincoln Way West, So. Bond Store Only the lecture at the College of of RCA Laboratories; John A. contributions to the advancement Engineering’s Honor Awards (B.S.,E.E.’48), vice president and of engineering or architecture, or ‘% ENTIRE STOCK ceremony Friday. The program, general manager, AiResearch for meritorious achievement in which is open to the public, w ill Manufacturing Company of their fields by an engineer or Save % 50 MUSIC & INSTRUMENTS begin a 3:30 p.m. in the Centr for California; Francis L. VerSnyder architect. Phone 288-2600: M o n -F ri, 12-6; S a t.,'10-5 Continuing Education auditorium. (B.S.,- Met.’50), manager of Everyone in the University materials engineering and Internationally recognized as a community is invited to attend the research, Pratt & Whitney Air­ designer and inventor, Lear ceremonies. Beginning at 3 p.m. craft, and Harry F. Vickers, currently is involved in research Friday, all classes taught by the retired president of Sperry Rand and development of low-pollution College of Engineering w ill be Corporation. power systems to replace the in­ GUfe (Eolonial cancelled to allow all engineering ternal combustion engine. In the The award, a Steuben glass bowl students to attend the event. past three and a half years, he has Panrake Ifnuae Five individuals, three Notre established Titanium West Cor­ Dame alumni, will receive the 1975 poration, William Lear En­ Engineering Honor Awards. They terprises, Lear Motors Cor­ include William J. W Halligan, poration and Lear Avia. The "Enjoy a snack or dinner subject of his lecture will be “ Infinite Energy. M D dance •A 35 Varieties of Pancakes $• College of Engineering students SjChicken - Steak - Sandwiches also will be recognized at the Friday Mites: Perch Dinners # sucessfui award ceremonies for special honors received during the Darryl Chock and Pete U.S. 31 (Dixieway) North Y o u r H ost Kinsella of Notre Dame won the Social Commission’s Dance Across from Holiday Inn) Bob Edwards, ND '5d Marathon for Muscular mi I«»I Hi !■ II. I m Dystrophy. The winner was Academic Council determined by the amount of money the contestants had raised (continued from page 1) THE BIKE RACK for Muscualr Dystrophy since all Courses suggestd as sample five couples that entered the mini-courses included a class in contest completed the thirty-six Plato s Republic, a course in TUNE-UP NOW FOR SPRING hours of dancing. mortgage banking, or a class on the Chock and Kinsella won the first American Revolution. PARTS & SERVICE ON prize of three hundred dollars Crosson stated that the mini­ worth of travel expenses for ALL AMERICAN AND raising five hundred and four courses would “offer a greater dollars. They were sponsored by variety of choices for elective courses, would give greater access FOREIGN-MADE BIKES Grace Hall, Farley Hall, and MOV IN' AND GROOVIN' their to teachers d ifficu lt to get courses Farrell’s. Trophies were awarded way to victory, Darryl and Pete with. and. most of all, would allow LOCATED ONE BLOCK EAST to both the second and third place demonstrate the style that made for courses to ve clustered in them champions. OF THE DISTILLERY ON RD. 23 finishers. Barbara Hailey and Dan related sequences more easily.” Mellett, sponsored by the Kinghts of Columbus, came in second and He predicted that, after a suf­ IN GREENWOOD SHOPPING CTR Jane O’Donnell and Roy Deda ficient period of time, students will came in third. Kissinger doesn’t have a choice of twice as many electives as they do now. OPEN 9:30-6:30 DAILY Wilhemy remarked th mini­ MONDAY-SATURDAY 277-1391 blame Soviets courses will present the op­ Fitzsimons portunity for students to see what departments other than their own WASHINGTON UPI - Secretary ARE YOU A DOMER IN or teachers not in their respective receives of State Henry A. Kissinger said departments are like. Tuesday he did not blame the DISTRESS WITHOUT WHEELS? Soviet Union for the rise of Com­ "1 think it will be popular with A w a rd munist power in Portugal. He the students,” commented Hicks. When In Need Of A Quick warned against “ascribing every In its final action, the Council A veteran University of Notre Getaway, Call Lois At# reverse we have to our Communist voted to receive the Committee on Dame professor of history. Dr. opponent because that makes them Matthew A. Fitzsimons. has been the Course Study’s report section appear 10 feet tall.” selected by fellow faculty mem­ on educational technology and JORDAN FORD FORD refer it to the coordinator of bers and students to receive the “ I think it would be a great 259-1981 Father Charles E. Sheedv Award educational media who will join mistake to blame the Soviet Union the University’s staff next year. of 1975 lor excellence in teaching. for what happended in Portugal,” STUDENT RATES: UGS Accompanied by a $1,000 gift he said in answer to a news con­ Rent a PINTO or MAVERICK for just from an anonymous donor, the ference question. Coupons redeemed award id presented each year during the fall meeting of the Unused Laundry-Dry Cleaning $5 Day & SVMile (MIN. AGE 21) College of Arts and Letters ad­ “ It may have taken advantage of coupons issued during the period visory council. the situation in Portugal. But the from August 27,1974 to May 2, 1975, A teacher at Notre Dame for 38 fact that the Communist Party in may be redeemed for cash during 609 E. Jefferson, Mishawaka years. Fitzsimons is a specialist in Portugal has emerged despite the the week of May 5 to May 9 at the British history. America’s foreign fact in recent elections it had only Laundry Building (north of the policy and international relations. 12 per cent of the vote cannot be Grotto) at the following times: He is the author or co-author of ascribed to Soviet machinations 9:00a.m. to 11:00a.m. several books and articles in but due to causes that are much 1:00p.m. to 3:00p.m. periodicals, and has served as more complicated and also due to Only coupons issued during the editor of “The Review f evolutions in Europe that have school y e a r, 1974-75, w ill be Politics." a Notre Dame quarterly roots quite different from Soviet redeemed. No refunds will be treating philosophical. and pressure. made after May 9, 1975. historical appoaches to political YES realities. A recent evaluation of the professor in a student handbook J THIS SUNDAY NIGHT (M AY 4 ) ISj staled that “ Fitzsimons is a There will be universal man and unequivocally {N.D. & S.M.C. NIGHT AT SHULA'Stj qualified to teach history and historians. The opportunity to iNO COVER CHARGE WITH THISADi know him and work with him should not be passed up by any N O W APPE AR ING Mass and supper serious student, whether this is his major area of study or not.” Born in New York City, Fitz­ simons received degrees from NEON CAT Columbia University, Oxford University and the University of AND the next two Fridays. Chicago. A member of the American and Catholic Historical LISTEN Associations and the Indiana Academy of Science, he has been cited by national organizations for his scholarly achievements. The Sheedy Award is named for Come, and bring a the former dean of the College of s l l ; m. cu Arts and Letters who is currently NO COVER CHARG E TU ES W E D THURS serving on the theology faculty at on U S 31 b*t>»e«n Kies So Bend Free Perking 683-4350 Notre Dame. Previous recipients i of the award have included the late friend . . . 5 p.m. Francis J. O'Malley, Joseph coNTMNiS E nnm w eiii tu n i r e nu \ an. Evans. William Storey Robert . VjKjca and Michael J. Loux. 20 the observer Wednesday, April 30, 1975 Connecticut Couple to discuss dune ecology Baggage Truck

The topic, “ Saving the Dunes by Energy Commission (AEC). filing date the citizens have been for Information Stopping the Bailly Nuclear t he Read's active participation fighting to block construction Plant,’’ will be discussed by is due m ainly to a series of in ­ arguing that the plant would en­ Charlotte and Herbert Read, teractions between the Council, danger the survival of Cowles Bog call Mike - 8766 or members of the Save the Dunes and evironmental group in the and other Dunes land. Earlier in Council, on Thursday May 1, at Dunes area, and the two the month they succeeded when a 8:30 in the Haggar Hall Lounge. organizations which began in 1971 federal court in Chicago ordered George - 8772 The disscussion, which is when NIPSCO filed for a permit to NIPSCO to halt construction and also to have the site filled in. sponsored by InPIRG, will center build a nuclear plant next to In­ |k 11"""^^ The Musical Play on citizen action against the diana Dunes National Lake shore The struggle was mainly with Northern Indiana Public Service east of Gary. the WAEC and in 1972 the council Co, (NIPCO) and the Atomic The three year period since the filed a suit against them because of their refusal to aid the group in N U J ® ” * their objections. The hearings Food co-operative membership fee continued with Herbert Read, an architect and nature expert, and Ed Osann, an attorney leading the SM c yApr. w 25,225, 26, May 1, ^ 2, 3 way for environmentalists. The can be charged to student billing at8:00P.M. outcome was a ruling in favor of O’Laughlin Auditorium which is tentatively scheduled to the plant and the citizens group Students who sign up for a THEATRE A ll Seats $2.00 be located on East LaSalle Street, appealed, resulting in the federal membership in the off-campus Reservations w ill be completed over the summer court hearings. Students-Faculty-Staff food co-op may now charge the five 284-4176 dollars fee to their student billing by Shankel and several other accounts. According to Steve students. He stated that anyone House Painting Shankell, co-organizer of the co­ who w ill be in the South Bend area TOMS UNIVERSITY op, the charge w ill be placed on over the summer and would be DOES YOUR HOME willing to help renovate the the student’s first billing card of NEED PAINTING? 17993 STATE ROAD 23 272-0083 next year. He also emphasized building should contact him. EXPERIENCED that students will not Shelves, a security system and PAINTERS (TWO N.D. automatically be charged the fee if refrigeration units will be installed GRADUATES) WILL CONVENIENTLY LOCATED they do not sign up personally. over the summer and the co-op hopes to be in operation by the PAINT INTERIOR AT THE CORNER OF This procedure was approved EXTERIOR yesterday by Fr. Carl Ebey, second week in eptember, ac­ IRONWOOD AND STATE STANDARD cording to Shankel. director of student accounts, and VERY REASONABLE!! ROAD 23 Bro. Kieran Ryan. Both were Shankel will serve as the CALL 234-1889 For Free ■ ■ instrumental in getting the plan manager of the co-op and w ill be ACROSS FROM THRIF T- MART Estimate accepted. assisted by Jim Wershing. The 10 PERCENT DISCOUNT TC N.D. & S.M.C. STUDENTS policies of the co-op w ill be set by a Shankel hoped this method of board of directors composed of the payment would encourage SBP, the general manager of the COMPLETE CAR CARE students to purchase mem­ STEWART co-op, a representative from the berships. N.D. credit union, a representative Shankel reemphasized that from SMC, and others to be named MCGUIRE ALWAYS THE BEST memberships were open to St. later. M a ry ’s students as w e ll as An advisory council will also be SHOES members of the faculties and staffs established to lend professional With the Spring IN GAS SERVICE of both schools. He also reiterated help to the co-op. The council w ill thaLhe was still in need of persons consist of professors form the Step cushion to work on the membership drive University who would be willing to DAD & FAMILY AND MECHANICAL and the coop organization. Anyone lend assistance. Shankel noted interesteds should call Shankel at that he was now looking for 503 N. Blaine Ave. 288-3176. professors willing to serve on the So. Bend 234-4469 WORK Work on the site of the co-op, council.

( e a t ® THE PAN a n d DEEP DISH PIZZA THAT HAS CHANGED THE GET IT EATING HABITS OF THE ND-SMC COMMUNITY OPENING SOON!!! A The Pan Pizz OUR Your best friend | RESTAURANT WILL SPECIALIZE IN now and thru | DELICIOUS PIZZA &FINE WINES AND BEERS finals is The Pan just | The atmosphere 277-1221 or 277-1222 | any other in the for II FREE DELIVERY This summer ID i

fall we will CO Try our friendly, quick | CO fabulous offers. 3 pick-up service. 1 □ PAN

107 DIXIEWAY NORTH ACROSS FROM RANDALL'S INN Wednesday, April 30,1975 the observer 2 1 Irish drop pair to Spartans by Rich Odioso less than a foot fa ir in right field middle and was sacrificed to Bob Stratta accounted for four for a cheap single. Terry Hop then second. Randy P ru itt doubled to tie runs and completed the MSU Smith and Pat Coleman, catchers Don Wolfe turned in his third got the Spartans second hit with a the game and Al Weston followed scoring. Tony Iarocci and Dave Doemel straight strong pitching per­ hit-and-run dribbler through the with a single to left scoring Pruitt Meanwhile the Irish were being and outfielder Mike O’Neil . . . formance, holding Big Ten leading right side of the infield. Wolfe got with the winning run. Stan held in check by righthander Spartan back-up quarterback Michigan State hitless into the out of this jam when .400 hitting Bobowski started the Irish seventh Duane Bickel, who scattered four Tyron Willingham played left-field sixth inning, but it wasn’t enough Mike Fricke flied to right. with an opposite field hit but hits in upping his record to 5-1. in the opener and was l-for-3 . . . as the Spartans rallied to down the The Irish broke the scoreless tie George Mahan finished off his Bickel got stronger as the game Jim Smith recovered from two Irish 2-1 w ith a pair of runs in the in their half of the sixth, scoring third win of the Spartan season, went on, fanning the last three errors in the first game to play a final inning. MSU had an easy time their only run of the doubleheader. retiring the next three hitters. batters he faced to run his total to fine game in the field in the winning the opener 9-0. Jim Smith legged out an infield hit Pruitt and Weston were also the ten. Only three ND runners made it nightcap. His leaping stab of Wolfe, who pitched a no-hitter to deep short and stole second. batting stars of the opening game as far as second including Smith Pruitt’s line drive in the fifth his first time out against Butler, Mark Schmitz then punched a win, teaming for four extra base who doubled with two out in the preserved Wolfe’s hitless string . . . held State without a hit until two single into right and Smith scored hits good for five rbi's The Irish first. MSU Coach Danny Letweiller did were out in the sixth, running his to make it 1-0. started the Spartans off on the The Irish are now 14-11 with six not bring along his $1200 battery- three-game hitless string to 15 and The Spartans roared back to win right note in the top of the first, games remaining. Saturday they operated radar gun which clocks one-third innings. Joe Palamara it in the top of the seventh as Rick making two errors to help account go to Ferris State for a pitchers just as the State Polic then hit a looping fly ball that fell Seid bounced a single up the for three unearned MSU runs. doubleheader, then return home clock speeders... BobStratta gaw Tainted single runs in the second for 1 p.m. twin bills with Xavier on his first action in the field in the and third made it 5-0 when the Sunday and D etroit on Monday. second game, playing third . . . rhe Spartan bats lashed out four extra IRISH ITEM S - Seven seniors Extra Points base hits in the fifth. The two w ill be seeing their last Irish action Spartans are now 19-11 with a 5-0 Big Ten Mark. doubles and two triples off loser this week. They are infielders < continued from page 24) liimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM IIIIIIIMMIMMMIIIMHIfMIMHNMMttHlttlllllllUJ casualties as they had last. year. They just do not have the depth of last 1637 Lincoln Way West phone 232-6622 year’s team. Ever since thefresjman have been allowed to play varsity football. Notre Dame has come up with a few freshmn to fill voids in key positions. For the Irish to be successful this has to happen again. Coach Devine and O he Windjam his staff have signed 28 out of 30 players to whom they offered scholar­ ships. The recruiting process is always an important part of the Notre Dame’s football success. Th Next year cannot be an exception to that Hair Care Center for the Sexes rule. The 1975 Notre Dame Football Chedule is one of the toughest that hte Irish have had in many years. The schedule is complicated by the fact that ABC Sports ispushing to change the dates of the Boston College and 1 CONGRATULATIONS! ANOTHER YEAR IS Pittsburgh games. The Boston College contest would be moved to Sep­ tember 15, two days later than originally planned, and would be aired | ALMOST OVER. THE PROFESSIONAL nationally on that Monday night. This would give the Irish less than five days to prepare for intra-state rival Purdue. The Pittsburgh battle would I STYLISTS AT THE WINDJAMMER WILL be moved up 12 days to Thanksgiving Day, November 27. But Notre Dame PPLAYS Miami o Saturday night. November22, thus giving the j BE GLAD TO HELP YOU LOOK YOUR Irish little time to prepare for the Panthers. Southern Cal, Georgia Tech. Michigan State and North Carolina all w ill be tough foes for Notre Dame 1 BEST FOR GRADUATION OR SUMMER next season. At this point in time, Notre Dame’s football program is burdened with a 1 WORK. WHY NOT CALL TODAY lot uncertainties. Anything can happen between now and the opener at Boston College. There is no doubt taht the nucleus of a good football team 1 FOR JUST THE LOOK YOU WANT. is present here. Coach Devine and his staff will hve to work hard to I ALL SERVICES BY APPOINTMENT SO bolster the post it ions where te Irish are weak . If the Irish continue to show the weaknesses (hat have veen haunting them al spring, then next | THERE'S NEVER ANY WAITING fall Coasch Devine and theNotre Dame football aans could be in for many a long Saturday afternoon. rfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiituiiiiiiuiiie

ENROLL NOW NOTRE DAME AVENUE APARTMENTS FOR SEPTEMBER LEWIS UNIVERSITY’S • NOW RENTING FOR 7 5 -7 6 SCHOOL YEAR • COLLEGE OF LAW • Applicants are individually reviewed with a 4-week Pre-Law 500 learning/test LSAT alternatives • Inter-disciplinary curriculum-challenging “track" programs — begin the first year • The Lewis approach to legal education guides you to your future as a competent, humanistic attorney. • Our 128-acre suburban Hi llll campus offers a unique learning environment, close-by a major m etropolitan area. INTERVIEWS AVAILABLE MAY 1 AT S.M.U. WITH DEAN A. CHURCH. CONTACT PROF. ANN THOMAS. Lewis University College of Law Rt. 53 & Roosevelt Rd Glen Ellyn, III 60137 I H b (312) 858-7200

THESE AIWHTMKNTS ARK LOCATED JUST SOUTH OF THE CAMPUS ON NOTRK DAME AVENUE EACH APARTMENT IS c a l l THEATRE FOR TIMES! DESIGNED FOR FOUR OR FIVE STUDENTS AND IS COMPLETELY MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL.

\ ^D ining Aria 1PE t.* "H a r r y S * % l 1 ° SOME OUTSTANDING FEATURES 9 MONTH LEASE AVAILABLE Private Patios and Balconies USHtu NEW LEASE APPROVED BY Air Conditioning frlONTO" DIR OF OFF CAMPUS HOUSING. Kitchen with Rang \ Refrigerator and FLIX 2 Garbage Disposals Cooking Utensils. Dishes, Silverware, ONE BUILDING BEING RESERVED Glasses, etc FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS - 9 MO. Wall to Wall Carpeting OR 12 MO. LEASE. Party Bar % Soundproof and Fireproof Construction Prewired for Cable TV and Telephone SUMMER APARTMENTS Lighted Paved Parking Area AVA ILAB LE NOW. Completely Furnished (X Long Beds) Trunk Storage w m O ver 1,000 sq. ft ap artm ent B oiler APARTMENT LAYOUT Excellent Security Bouse B lix Twin Theatres/100 Center 255-9575 ____ FOR RENTAL INFORMATION CALL 272-7656 or 234-6647 2 2 the observer Wednesday, April 30, 1975 Irish golfers th winner Ohio State. Jeff Burda led an NCAA at large invitation to the The coaches from each district by Tom Kruczek holes w ith 6-foot birdies on 3 and 6. national championship tour­ select the five teams that w ill go to He then bogeyed 7 and 9 to finish the way for Notre Dame with a 36- nament June 17-21. the tournament. This year Behind Paul Koprowski’s 71 and the front nine with an even par 36. hole total of 152. Right behind According to Coach Noel however, since Ohio State will be On the back side, Koprowski Burda was Paul Koprowski with Jeff Burda’s 73, the Notre Dame O’Sullivan, the Irish are still very hosting the event, they will receive wound up with eight pars and one 155. golfers finished out the regular much in the running for the bid. “ I an autom atic bid. In effect 6 teams season w ith a third place finish in The Irish ran into the same birdie. believe that because of our per­ from Notre Dame’s district will go the Mid-American Invitational Following Koprowski and Burda problems at Purdue that they did formances at the Kepler (8th place to the NCAAs. for the Irish was Rich Knee 75, at the Indianapolis Intercollegiate, Monday out of 20 teams. of 24 teams) and the Mid­ 0“ Sullivan pointed out that Koprowski’s one-under par effort Mike Kistner 78, and Jim earlier in the spring. At both American, we deserve not just a usually the Big Ten champion and was the best in the tournament, Culveyhouse 80. As a team Notre tourneys, the golfers did well for look, but a strong consideration for runner up go, along w ith the M id­ Dame finished with a 377 total, three the first 27 holes, but ran into held at Miami of Ohio, earning him an NCAA bid. Based on our American conference champion his first medalist title of the strokes behind the invitational difficulties on the last nine that beating of Ball State twice, and and runner-up, w ith the other spot season. Closest to the junior was a champion Bowling Green. pushed them out of contention for because we have proved that we going to the top independent. This pack of eight golfers, including On Saturday, the Irish competed the championship. can play with anyone in our year however, with the additional in the Purdue Intercollegiate, With the conclusion of the Burda. at two strokes back. district, I feel that we stand a v e ry ' bid coming to the district, the Irish Koprowski,started the event where theu finished in sixth place regular season, the Irish now can good chance of the invitation.” chances are that much better. well, moving two-under after six with a 776 total, 28 strokes behind only speculate on the possibility of CLASSIFIED ADS

WANTED Tickets for the May 9 Frank Zappa Summer Cottage for rent! Private For all those who knowland even This ispersonal. My favorite dirtball and May 17 Lou Reed concerts at location! Less than a stone's throw those that don't): bike for sale. Antiquated but func­ Burial plot of area mynah bird. Call Morris Civic Auditorium are now on from A8.P, laundromat , car wash, Nothing is better for thee than me - tional. Call Steve at 287-7360. gordie bird, 1943. sale at Morris Civic Auditorium and Corby's, Library, Nickie's, and See you in two years or whenever we Boogie Records. From Sunshine Louie's (if you got a good arm). 4 meet again. Thought for the DAY: Need one housemate for next year. Promotions. bedrooms, furnished, nice yard , a The WILD Bunch II Does a cookie a Day keep the doctor Call F ra n k or M a ry , 234 6535. mere $150 per month (plus cost of away? Hope not. Take the Greyhound from Notre this ad). Call 287-7981 today! Leary Boy, Love, Hedge Ride needed desperately to NYC or Dame to Chicago every Friday at You're my friend. You say how and Long Island area. Kathy, 4367 . May 4:40. Two buses return Sunday. Call House for rent, 1 mile from campus, I'll say when. Or, as Stevie Wonder DAY in Day out. . .How was it 13 or after. Tom, 272 1807. ready for immediate occupancy. would say, "Don't you worry bout a Murph (Hedge)? 233 6438. thing " Ride needed to Syracuse TH E C H E A P T R U C K IS Real Man. T 8. T are dynamite, But are they Binghamton area, graduation night. BACK (Offering the lowest prices for Furnished apt, 503 W. Jefferson explosive? From one who knows Call 6843. baggage to Long Island. Our prices duplex, 3 rooms, second floor, gas To Sue, Janet, and John M urph, one who wishes she did M D , are trunks $6, suitcases $4, boxes heat furnished. 289-6307 , 234 0596. Congratulations! Don't drink too and one who's not telling. One housemate for two bedroom S3, bicycles $6, golf clubs $3.50 For much Irish coffee. house beside ND Apts. Call 289-8083 information call Leo at 1152. $2 FOR SUMMER RENTAL: large 4 Congratulations to the Divine Faye or 1184. deposit required. bedroom furnished house near Jeff A rt Best: Malone. Eddy. Big lawn. 2 baths, washer, Please return the safety pins. Desperately need ride to Detroit, Block party Saturday May 3, 4:00 d ry e r, u tilitie s . $175. 234 1972. KB. Jim , Friday. Call 1132. pm 1:00 a.m . at Campus View Like graham crackers? How about a Apartments. Music by .Talisman and 2 bedroom furnished apt at Campus T.K. M .B. box? Need ride to Youngstown, Ohio. Can Fat Chance. All ND & SMC students View for summer. Rent negotiable. Orange you sad to see us go. Diane leave any time. Call Tom, 288 3234. invited. After the Blue Gold Game, Call 277 0003. J.J.K.T. come on over. Just 3 blocks east of Tony, Need 1 filing cabinet or anything Cartier Field. Three bedroom house close to ND, It's the Dinty Moore Twins Bir Kumonjwanaleia. close. Call Bill, 6710. May 15 to Aug 15. Carpeted and thday. Maria, 1346, Diane, 1349. M a ria Typing, editing, dissertation paneled living room, complete Car to North Texas or Dallas Ft. specialists, IBM, special symbols. kitchen, washer and dryer, all TIME RUNS SHORT: I still have a To Terry, Ken, Gregg, Dad, Chip Worth area to take personal Linda's Letters, 289-5193. utilities included $150 per month. limited selection of turquoise Danny Bob, Bill, Pat, John, Freddy, belongings home. Call Kathy, 1391. Call Mrs. Cooper, 272-3004. jew elry. The prices are super so is Tom, Al, Jim, Martha, Maureen, STUDENTS: Don't throw away all the quality but hurry. 287 0076 after Val, Katy, Marty, Maggie, Julie, Need ride to Boston (Framingham) those things that you don't want or 2 rooms, private $50. Kitchen, rides. 7. Mary and the rest of the staff: love after exams. Call Jim, 8504. refuse to carry home. Charitable 233 1329. you all. Organization wants your discards. "Then who is the best hum p on Ariverderci, Maureen. Riders wanted: leaving May 12 for Free pick up Call 272-8333 after 5:30 Student home, furnished, four cam pus?" P C. asked. Bethesda, MD. Returning to ND and we will arrange to take those bedrooms, near ND. Available 23rd Maureen: cam pus on 16th fo r graduation. Call items off your hands. of May or August. Phone 1 553-9665. "Sugar" Tate, let's get it on. Couldn’t you just have told them in late, 283-6309. L.C. person? NY Met. Club baggage truck to L.I.- By owner: 3 bedroom, bi level, A I Afternoon Typist (formerly Riders wanted: leaving May 19th NYC: call 3007 or 1986 for in­ condition. Large finished rec room, Carol Jean have a Happy Birthday. Benevolent Afternoon Typist) (after graduation) for California. form ation central air, fenced backyard. Under See you soon. 283-6309. $300 2325 E. Fair Oaks, Niles, Mich. R ichard M. Douglas Me. C. Summer storage, dry, clean, safe, 684 0621. Have prepared accomodations for Need ride to Dayton. Call 1200. reasonable rates, pick up and To the Knife Knocker: you for thq second week of August in deliver at dorm. Call Mrs. Cooper, Apt. to rent for summer. Approx. 1 Quit knocking and open the door to zip code zone 43204. Am looking Students for light office work and 272 3004. mile from campus. 2 bedrooms. 288 your identity. forward to your arrival. Trust^ou'll telephone sales. Salary and com 5083, 5 pm 7 pm. S.M. be there. * mission. Apply 224 W. Jefferson, Accurate, fast typing. 50 cents per C. D. Salads corner of Lafayette St., room 313. page. Close to ND. 232-0746, M rs. Summer rental: 3 bedroom house, Papa Bear, Dirty Dragon, and Donoho. furnished, corner of ND Ave and Sweaty Bare: Dear Kellen, Students for light delivery. Ex­ Wayne St. Rent negotiable. Call 288 Thanks for the year and much, It's going to be a long lonely sum cellent pay. A.A.A. Advertising. Managem ent T rainee 2825. much more. You put up with a lot mer. Try to stay out of the blinding Apply 224 W. Jefferson, corner of To $14,000 from me. It's been "real." Love you sun. If Bob wonders why you're Lafayette, room 313. Ready for a new career? We are Need a place for summer? Fur­ a ll and gonna m iss you lots. Be good chasing rabbits, tell him to go ask interviewing for a management nished full houses or single rooms at (well, try). Alice. Me and my trunk need a ride to training program that w ill allow you a discount rate. Walk to campus. Au revoir a bientot, Baby Bear (la The Future Odd Quadians Washington, DC, or northern Va., to earn $25,000 or m ore in 5 years C all 233 2613. Petite Ourse) May 8 or 9. Call 4055. while representing our top team of To the CAN CAN GIRLS of 249 financial specialists in Equities, House for rent for next school year. "K.K." LeMans: Insurance, Mortgages and Tax Fully furnished, 2 complete baths, This is it! I'm nearing the end of my Dear Skeets and Rags: FOR SALE Shelters. Send your resume' to close to campus, 5 bedrooms. $280 rope. Send comfort soon. They way you walk and talk really Charles M. Newbanks per mo. 233-2613. M u ffy re a lly sets them off- But when things Sherwood S7100 A; 22 RMS CH, PE 120 W. LaSalle, Suite 906 realty get HOT you can always use (Dual) Table; Base cover, Stanton South Bend, IN 46601. Summer storage for dependable Need your stuff shipped to Boston the FIRE ESCAPE! cart., 2 KLH32 Speakers $295 total. service, call us! South Bend Storage. area? Call M ilt, 1986,or Bob, 1972, See you n e xt year. Free pick-up at room and free M ike, 234-6535. St. Louis Club Truck. Leave the for information. delivery to dorm. Boxes, $5, trunks, Dear Kathy and "Old Lady D," hassle to us. Our prices are: bikes footlockers, or bikes, $6. Call 233- OLDS Cutlass '67, small engine, $7, tru n k s $6, footlockers $5, s u it­ M a ry Blue, To the Queen of the Kleptos: 2613. good mileage, 8 track tape: $500 cases $4, boxes and other item s $1 Will I see you in September? Don't lose your touch over the New Remington 12 gauge pump per cubic foot. For information and Boone summer. See you both next year, al CABINS ON LAKE MICHIGAN m agnum : $120. C all 284 4008 or 234 reservations call Pat at 8640 or 8652. long as your bathroom buckets are 8679 FOR RENT: only 30 min. from Fish, still here. campus. GINTARAS RESORT, Typing done: $.35 per page, $.05 per Have a terrific 21st birthday on May From the 15860 Lake Shore Rd., Union Pier, Must sell now 2 speakers, turntable, page extra for carbon. Call 272-5549 9. Let's celebrate together. CANstruction Crew of 222 80 w a tt re c e iv e r, a ll P io n e e r and ask for Dan. M ich. 616 469 3298. I love you, Button. equipment, 9 mos. old, perfect To the Best and the B rightest: W e've condition price negotiable. Call HOUSE PAINTING: tw o ex LOST AND FOUND "K.K." lost one b attle but w e 'll w in the w a r - Denny, 1052. perienced painters (ND graduates) If the South is rising disregard other they can't stop your sincerity, will paint interior exterior. Very Lost: critical notes in brown binder. message. honesty, humor, good looks and all Stereo Panasonic portable ex­ reasonable. Call 234-1889 for free Call 8179. your other humble skills. Have a few cellent condition inexpensive best estim ate. To the Pontiff of Rome: B's on us this summer and we'll offer. Call Mary, 7953. Lost: jacket, navy blue, with words Thursday night is victory night. All start fresh next year. Pittsburgh Club Luggage Truck "CYO Camp, Christina, Staff." 7854, artists laugh! The Irish Mafia rew ard. Feldhaus AntiChristals 2 L a fa ye tte 3-way speakers, $70. Call loading May 12-13. Details posted P. Chou: John, 288 7637. soon. Info, 6871, 8414. Lost: wire frame glasses in a black Joe T r ita : Bonne Sante, Bonnes Vacances, Green, yellow, orange and white All private 3 rooms up for married leather case. Between Morrissey Best wishes for a long hot summer. Tout Mon Amour. flowered bedspreads (2), wardrobe graduate student. All utilities, near and Sorin. Call 8705. G. Chou drapes, window curtains. Also 2 tone Memorial Hospital. No rent in Lost: brown wire rim glasses, Au revoir. Observer! Thanks for Dear Mom, green shag rugs (3x5, 2x3). Call 7960. return for aiding parents to help lift everything. Love you one and all lightweight son and daughter to and between D 1 and Cavanaugh. Please Thanks for helping us out, and 1972 Pinto, new camshaft. 19,000 from wheelchairs, etc. No nursing. call 1503. and will miss you next year. putting up with us the entire year. miles. Phone 8854. 232 9128. A bientot, Katie We'll keep the coffee table neat for Lost: one pair bronze rimmed you this summer. Keep making us glasses in brown case. Please call fat we love it and you. NOTICES OVERSEAS JOBS: Australia, To C am m y, Europe, S. America, Africa. 277 1698. Thanks for everything that a Corby A ll of us Students, all professions and oc­ girl can give to some desperadoes. Always the best in gas sales and To all OBSERVER reporters: mechanical work now at Tom's cupations, $700 to $3000 monthly. PERSONALS From the Boys at the View: Mark, University Standard, corner of Expenses paid, overtime, sight George, Paul, and Mike. Thanks to everyone for the Ironwood and State Rd. 23. 10 per­ seeing. Free information. TRAN What's happenin' Moe, Joe, Train tremendous job youv'e done in the cent discount to ND 8, SMC students SWORLD RESEARCH, Dept. F3, Snake, Erving Lefty, Mother F. Individual interested in working on past weeks. Have a good summer the food co op call Student Govt, on all purchases except gas. Box 603, Corte M adera, C alif. 94925. Casino Royal like and see ya next year. 7668, before Tuesday, April 29. Four best bumps on campus: Kathy, Ken ______Found: Old beagle, Tues. night Carol, Sue, and M argo. To Edward Davis, Naked Hawaiian: Betho: get your head together Good Howard Hall. Call 8183 FOR RENT Let's shower together again. luck! Join now save later. Join ND's first Sue. Attic antique and yard sale May 2 Food Clothing Record Co-op. Snip, Now renting Campus View Apart­ Starting Wed., enjoy 50 percent off Els: and 3, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 721 Napoleon. ments. Still some choice 1 and 2 The past three years have been the Modern and Antique furniture and charter membership fees. Call the This year's been great! Thinking of bedroom apartments available. Call Ombudsman 7638, or Student Govt you always. Can you feel it? best of my life! Thanks for being dishes. Many miscellaneous items. 272-1441 for information or stop over Heirlooms and collector items. 7668 for more details. Love, John, Jim, Ted, Paul, and here. Love you very much. and see the model apartment at Uncle Jerry 54585 Iris h W ay. Snot ______The new Bob Seger album now at Karen, Still thinking of you, loving you. But Sam, Ginny, Boogie Records, College Square Summer sublet (time negotiable). 5 M ishaw aka. why don't you write to Muffy See you soon. Better luck next year. I hope your'e rooms, furnished. $60 plus care of someday? She loves you, too. Rainbow not as busy. cats. 234 4824. Tom Love, Chet ______For women who like jewelry: Today is not your birthday, but May enhance your collection with a Puka Furnished: house and apartments Ken Girouard, this is your very own 7th is so your birth d a y cookie is shell or Paper shell necklace from and small house near ND. Sum m er l don't believe how many ads there personal-pt last. w aiting. Hawaii. Call Chris, 287 7026. only. 272-6174. were today. •Love, K.K. Love, Kath BAT. v ■

4 I I

Greg Collins Wayne Bullock

Pete Crotty /r Rlii 4 Jim Smith

Tom Clements Fighting Irish Class Of 1975

Jim Kane Mike Housely

Dwight Clay Les Larson n n tii , Mark Schmitz

Jeff Burda Pat Conroy 2 4 the observer Wednesday, April 30,1975

Irish aimingk., D ill D .i.l, towards annual * I . Blue-Goldic a c e . *r- , , m r game■ m m w f ‘ V V :• by Bill Brink Sports Editor After taking a rest Monday afternoon, the Irish football squad resumed drills yesterday on Cartier Field. They will practice the rest of this week in preparation for Saturday’s Blue-Gold game. "You never get everything done that you want to get done,” said head coach Dan Devine of his initial coaching stint here at Notre Dame. “ But under the circumstances I think the squad worked hard and did their best.” For Devine it was an opening month of ups and downs. If he was new as a coach, he had a lot of company in the great number of new players he was dealing with, graduation having robbed 9 offensive and 5 defensive starters In addition, the squad was further depleted by crippling in­ juries. Throw in a new system which took time for the players to get used to and you seem to have the cards stacked against you. But at Notre Dame you always have one thing going for you, and that’s sheer talent. In the twenty practice sessions allowed during the spring, Devine and his staff have tried to get a good look at all the talent, evaluate it. and develop it. Drills have been held 3 or 4 times a week, and four scrimmages have been run. % Offensively, the staff’s major concern is finding a quarterback. Frank Allocco started the spring in the number 1 spot, but separated his shoulder in the second scrimm age and sat out the rest of the drills. Rick Slager took over the starting QB position, and despite bruised ribs suf­ fered in last Saturday’s scrimmage, seems to s till have a hold on the spot. Behind him are Joe Montana, Gary Forystek, and a host of other young prospects, a ll with as good a chance as anyone. .. ,» • : • The rushing game is perhaps the most promising area, with strong This week's drills and Saturday's Blue-Gold game mark the end of spring practice and Dan Devine's first stint as new head coach. starters and real depth at the position. Fullback Tom Parise missed coach. The receiving corps is sound and that has remained intact all practices with a torn hamstring, but Art Best, Mark McLane, Russ Devine’s response to his return healthy. Ted Burgmeier, after a spring. Randy Harrison is at free Kornman, Steve Schmitz, and Steve Orsini have all had excellent springs. to college coaching at Notre Dame brief try at quarterback, occupies safety, along with John The line has suffered some costly injuries, losing center Vince Klees, is one of satisfaction, but his the number 1 wide receiver spot, Dubenetzky, and Tom Lopienski guard Elton Moore, and slowing down tackle Steve Quehl. Ken Andler, feelings are not over-emotional. with Kevin Doherty and Dan and Randy Payne at the cor­ Ernie Hughes, and Mike Carney have filled in adm irably. “ I ’m so involved in coaching the Kelleher right behind. Ken ners. Mike Banks has performed team that I don’t have time to MacAfee is excellent at tight end, well at this position fo r the second Bill Brink. dwell on the emotional aspects,” as is his back-up Doug Buth. team and Bob Zanot and Tim he says. “ But it ’s been a smoother Defensively, the Irish have a Simon, though they missed drills transition (from the pros back to little more experience. Co-captain because of injuries, w ill also be The Irish Eye college) than I thought. This Jim Stock practiced two weeks competing for a secondary spot. summer we’ll make an evaluation before injuring his wrist Devine has brought in four new of the squad as a result of the Th6 Y 63 T jfi T6Vi6W ligaments, and he combined with coaches to help him with the job of spring practices in preparation for reconverted tackle Steve Niehaus training these young players. Hank There were no national championships, a few surprises and a lot of the fa ll.” to make for a devastating left side Kuhlman has taken over as of­ disappointments, but overall it was another outstanding year for athletics Right now there’s a lot of work to line. Jeff Weston and Tony Zappola fensive backs coach, Merv at Notre Dame. be done, but a lot of talent to work have^been solid on the right. The Johnson is the new offensive For the football team, it was themost tragic tale of all. Before last with. linebacking corps is inexperienced coordinator, former-pro John summer it consisted of a national championship squad that could only get The Blue-Gold game is and Marvin Russell missed the Roland coaches the wide better with age. But freak injuries and suspensions during the summer scheduled for Saturday at 1:30 in spring drills with torn knee receivers, and Ed Chlebek handles opened some unexpected holes in the lineup, and the seemingly invincible the stadium. Students will be ligaments. Tom Eastman retained the specialty teams. They join Irish looked more human. admitted free, and one adult ticket his middle linebacker (and often veteran assistant coaches Joe In* I he th ird game of the season Purdue proved that they were, ($2.50) w ill gain free admission for middle guard) spot, and Doug Yonto, defensive line coach, streaking to a 24-01 lead and handing ND a shocking 31-20 defeat. The two accompanying children. All Becker, Pete Johnson, and Tony George Kelly, linebacker coach, Irish proceeded shakily from there and suffered their ultimate tragedy proceeds from the game go to the Novakov have been working at the Paul Shoults, secondary coach, when USC’s second-half onslaught humiliated them 55-24, ending their outside spots. The starting Brian Boulac, offensive line coach, academic scholarship fund of the hopes for repeating as national champs. It was a tense, frustrating Notre Dame Club of St. Joseph defensive backfield is the one area and Greg Blache, junior varsity sea n and it forced the person they called “ The Man” into retirement. Valley. Afte- 11 seasons, 94 career wins and two national championships, head Ci.ai Ara Parseghian announced that he would retire after the Orange .)v, ! me on New Year’s night. The Irish were scheduled for a rematch Iowa’s Dick Kuchen named new with imber-one Alabama, and only a win could salvage for Ara what had l fen an emotionally-upsetting season. . But when faced with dramatics, Notre Dame is never one to get stage flight. Tom Clements led a precise, conservative attack and the defense assistant basketball coach at ND Dick Kuchen, assistant played brilliantly against the Crimson Tide wishbone, and the Irish had a Pittsburgh and Monmouth (N.J.) “ He has gained a fine reputation as basketball coach at the University 13-11 victory to send Ara out on. Dan Devine, who stepped down from the College. He is a bachelor. a basketball coach at a young age of Iowa for five years, has ac­ Green Bay Packers, would replace him. “ We’re pleased to be able to add and I know he’ll work into our Basketball was the surprise, and a pleasant one. Digger Phelps had cepted a similar position under Dick to our st=ff.” says Phelps. program very well.” lost All-Americans John Shumate and Gary Brokaw, and the cagers were Notre Dame coach Richard given little chance to repeat last year’s heroics. “ D igger” Phelps. But Phelps took his young ballclub and did the unexpected. Playing the Kuchen, who replaces new head Ernie Torriero toughest schedule in college ball, he engineered another upset over Stanford coach Dick DiBiaso, UCLA at the ACC with an 84-78 victory. From there the Irish won 11 out of joined the Iowa staff in 1970 as a their last 13 games and moved the NCAA into tournament. freshman coach under Dick A victory over Kansas in the first round put the Irish as far this year as Schultz and became his top Extra Points they had been the previous one, and Digger Phelps made Believersof assistant for the 1971 season. everyone. ND was ousted by a tough Maryland team in the next game Kuchen was retained by Lute and dropped the consolation game to Cincinnati. This put their final Olson when he took over the head record at 19-10. The Irish’s big name, sophomore forward Adrian job in 1974. The long, hard road Dantley finished second in the nation in scoring with a 30.4 average “ I enjoyed my stay at Iowa and I The 1975 Notre Dame Spring Football Season can hardly be termed a hope I made a contribution,” says rousing success. The spring practices have revealed glaring weaknesses The hockey team, despite some outstanding individual talent had a Kuchen. “But I look forward to in many key starting positions. The deficiencies,if not corrected, could disappointing season, finishing w ith a 13-22-2 record, including two losses this new experience immensely. I lead the Irish ot their worst season since 1963. to Michigan Tech in the WCHA playoffs. feel it w ill give me an opportunity The line of Brian Walsh , Alex Pirus and Clarck Hamilton was very New Coach Devine’s major problem will be to find a quarterback. He to grow as a coach. The Notre w ill have 11 men to choose from .There is no doubt that any one quar­ potent and Jack Brownschilde, Les Larson and Paul Clarke were solid Dame basketball program is one of terback on the squad can start here at Notre Dame. Devine must search defenders, but the Irish did not have the depth to challenge the stronger the most respected in the nation to find the right man that can run the offense consistently. So far, there conference opponents. and it’s an honor to be able to join has not been a quarterback that has shown that consistency. Ironically, it was the fencing team that came the closest to capturing a this staff.” national championship. Coach Mike DiCicco’s team had an exellent 20-2 This makes the fall workouts crucial and the battle for the starting Kuchen went to Iowa from berth will be highly competitive. Devine must find a concrete starter. He season, including an 18 meet winning streak, and placed third in the Washington (Mo.) University NCAA tournament in Fullerton, California. cannot afford to shufflequarterbacks in and out of every game. Ara tried where he was assistant basketball that in 1965 and 1971. It hurt the offense terribly in those years. Alabama The swimming team produced one ot the campus’ finest athletes in Jim coach. Before entering the might have been National Champions last year if they had a solid man in Kane . and streaked to a 10-0 record, finishing 11-1 overall. Kane swept all coaching profession he worked in the quarterback spot.If the Irish are to challenge for supremacy in the three freestyle events in the Motor City Invitational and coach Dennis sales promotion for the National collegiate football world, then Devine must have a solid performer at Stark’s tankmen finished second. The wrestling team had a 14-11 record Lead Co. He was the head coach at quarterack slot. but managed to send one competitor, freshman Pat M cKillen to the Art Institute Junior College in One of the keys to Notre Dame’s football success next fall w ill be how NCAA finals.The track team finished 4-2 in winter and has turned in Pittsburgh, Pa., for the 1968-9 well Ross Browner, Willie Fry Al Hunter and Luther Bradley perform in some impressive performances in the spring relay competition. season. His team compiled a 20-2 fall practice. As of yet, the University has not confirmed that these four The spring sports teams are impressive also, with the baseball team, record and placed second in the suspended players w ill be back at Notre Dame. But it is almost certain golf team and tennis team all in the running for NCAA bids. Coach Jake National Little College tour­ that they will be readmitted. If they can return to play as well as they did Kline’s baseball squad currently has a 14-11 record, and fine in­ nament. in 1973, then the Irish w ill be helped greatly. Browner and Fry could make dividual performers in BobStratta ,Jim Smith and Mark Schmitz. Noel Like Phelps, Kuchen is a the defensive line one of Notre Dame’s best ever. Bradley could add the O'Sullivan’s golfers have also done well, especially with their eighthplace graduate of Rider (N.J.) College. speed and toughness needed to solidify the defensive backfield. Hunter’s finish in the Kepler Invitational last week. The team and captain Jeff He scored over 1,000 points in his amazing speed w ill be an added plus to the offensive backfield. Burda. are awaiting an NCAA bid. For Tennis coach Tom Fallon it has four-year (1962-66) career and set The offensive backs cannot go far if they do not have the blockers to been asatisfyingseason, sweeping the spring trip matches and moving to a school rebounding record. He open up the needed holes. The offensive line lost three of its fourstarters a current 15-3 record. Randy Stehlik , John Carrico and Chris Kane lead was Tri-State all-league selection through graduation, with guard Al Wujciak being the only returnee. Due the netmen. his last two seasons. He was to many injuries this spring, the line has been changed around a lot. Club sports have become increasingly popular over the years, with drafted by the St. Louis Hawks and Once again the fall practices w ill tell a lot about who is going to more people taking an interesst in LaCrosse, rugby, sailing, crew, and played amateur ball in Western challenge for those positions. soccer. And added dimension to Notre Dame sports has been the rise of Europe for the Gulf Oil Cor­ The Irish have lost many players due to injuries this spring. But all the women’s teams to a more respected status. The Women’s Athletic poration in 1966. walking wounded should be healed by August. But all the walking Association, formed to help shape the development of women’s sports Kuchen, who w ill be 31 June 22, wounded should be healed by August. The only question mark is how well here, is w orking hard to get the ND women’s club sports to varsity status, received his bachelor’s degree Frank Allocco’s shoulder heals. Yet it is important that Notre Dame and although they were turned down, will continue to work in that area. from Rider in 1966 in business remains healthy next season. The Irish cannot afford as many crippling Overall, the vear in sports was as it always been at Noter DAme; up, administration and has done down, but always first class. graduate work at the University of (continued on page 21)