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'It"-- ,. Faith, feminism and the future FilmJunkies.net ~ <4 Theologian Sandra Schneider comes to Saint Freshmen Brian Bircher and Brian Scofield are Thursday I Mary's for this weekend's Convergence running a successful Website offering movie news conference to lecture on woman and the Church. and reviews from their Siegfried dorm rooms. APRIL 27, .. ~ • News • page 3 Scene • page 17 ...... - -...... 2000 THE

The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's VOL XXXIII NO. 127 HTTP://OBSERVER.ND.EDU Married science professors enjoy a match made in lab

"Notre Dame is pretty accom­ By MARIBEL MOREY modating of married couples," News Writer Jeff said. "Notre Dame sees [hiring a spouse] as a way to Students who do not find a bring people I they J otherwise signil"ieant other or fiance by wouldn't." thrir senior year of college will When Crislyn arrived at Notre usually find one in graduate Dame for her interview two school. aeeording to Jeff and years ago, she was very Crislyn Sehorey. impressed with the campus, she The Sehoreys, both Notre said. DamP scienc1~ professors, did "I really enjoyed my interview just that at the University of here and the campus was beau­ Texas. tiful," she said. "When I got on "In graduate school, all the the plane the chances were tinw is spent at the lab. The pretty high that I would come if world revolves around your Jeff got a position as well." lab," Crislyn said. "That is why Crislyn was offered assistant it's not uncommon to see two professorship and endowed sei()ntists together." chair in the Walter Cancer Since 60 hours a week are Institute, while continuing her usually spent in the lab during research in basic cancer. Jeff a biological seionce Ph.D. track, became an assistant biology the currieulum can be very professor researching infec­ consuming. Those students tious diseases. often ultimately spend much of Although the labs are on tlwir time with fellow science campus, the science discussions majors. As a result, it is no continue at home. coincidoncc that thrre are hus­ "We used to talk a lot about band and wife teams in science. science over dinner, but we've After finishing school, the tried to reduce it," she said. "It Schoreys were searching for just happens ... We try out best jobs at the same time. not to bring work home, but "If a university is interested more often than not, we talk PETER RICHARDSONfThe ObseJVer in one person, they will at least about science." Biology professors Jeff and Crislyn Schorey met while in graduate school. They eventually mar­ look at the other [spouse]," Jeff These discussions at night ried and, together, made their way to Notre Dame. said. A lot of times a school will can bring new insight into only fill the positions it adver­ their own research. tises for. but private schools field. great. He's my biggest support­ standing spouse in the same "If I have ideas or problems, I have more leeway. "We have some interests that er and has made things much field. bounce ideas off Jeff. He cri­ Although there is no special overlap. Beneficial from a sci­ more fun," she said. "He's been "The long hours, the high tiques stuff that I do," Crislyn program for married faculty at entific viewpoint, we can rely such a source of strength and pressure, manuscript writing said. Notre Dame, the Schoreys were on each other's expertise," he support." time and grant time -it's diffi- very impressed with University, Similarly, Jeff is quick to said. The Schoreys both agree that they said. notes the perks of his wife's "Having Jeff as a scientist is it truly helps to have an under- see COUPLE/page 4

Garces explores Pinochet trial issues Committee • Victims' lawyer included torture. Spain is among at least eight other countries that are looks to foster descibes investigating the Pinochet case. international effort The countries include England, France, Belgium. Switzerland, academic life for justice Italy, The United States, Argentina and Chile. By HELENA RAYAM "For the first time, it's the public By ERIN PIROUTEK News Writer opening their eyes to the civil injus­ tice of these crimes [and ignoring] Associate News Editor .Juan Garces. a close advisor to a the immunity that Pinochet granted to himself," Garces said. For most Notre Dame students, academic former socialist president of Chile, life does not end when class does. But Salvador Allende, confronted the "My main challenge is [to discov­ er] how to make real the imple­ should Notre Dame do more to foster the intP-rnational aspect of General relationship between academics and stu- Augusto l'inoehet's regime during a mentation of international norms of an international criminal, prevent­ dent life? l1~cturn Wndnnsday. Recent issues, "Because ing the interference of political interests and ensuring that the specifically when the Pinochnt's perse- See Also Women's Resource cution of thou- courts of justice can act in an inde­ "Court debates Center (WRC) was put sands of pendent and professional way," said Garces. on probation, have led Chileans are Pinochet case" to questions regarding erimes against The collaboration of various page 9 nations on the investigation of the relationship humanity, coun­ between academic tries other than Pinochet would reveal more con­ crete evidence that Pinochet com­ Mooney and student life at Chile are justified in seeking legal Notre Dame. retribution, but Pinochet should not mitted crimes against humanity, Garces said. He added that because The Ad Hoc bn able to escape through the loop­ Committee on Academics and Student Life hole of diplomatic immunity," said no court has reached a conviction or a final sentence, jeopardy SHANNON BENNETfThe ObseJVer has recommended the creation of a new Garces who is the Spanish prosecu­ Juan Garcas, the Spanish prosecutor involved advisory council which will integrate acad­ tion lawyer for the Pinochet case. is not a possibility, thus enabling the different countries to continue in the trial of Chilean dic~ator Augusto emic and student affairs issues, possibly As a prosecutor, Garces repre­ replacing the Campus Life Council (CLC.) sents those who fell victim to investigations and charges. Pinochet, talks about the work to punish the general for crimes against humanity. Pinochet's military force, which see PINOCHET/page 4 see COMMITTEE/page 6 page 2 The Observer+ INSIDE Thursday, April27, 2000

INSIDE COLUMN THIS WEEK ON CAMPUS Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Ode to JP + Event: Humor Artists; +Event : Notre Dame + Event: Dessert Tasting; + Event: African Dance 8 p.m.; Library Auditorium Opera presents "Hansel 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Hammes and Drum Workshop; 2 to "Now Kelly, be nice to your little brother - + Event: Student Dance and Gretel;" 7:30p.m.; Bookstore 5 p.m.; LaFortune no matter what happens or where you live he'll always be your greatest friend." Recital; 7:30p.m.; Little Washington Hall + Event: Chili Cookoff and I rolled my eyes during each lecture, but my Theater, Saint Mary's + Event: Martial Arts Bluegrass Musie Festival; mother's words of wisdom still continue to echo in my head. College Lecture; 3:30 to 5:30p.m.; 8 to 11 p.m.; North Quad As kids, I tortured my Kelly Hager Room 117. DeBartolo and Fieldhouse Mall brother. When Grandma bought me my first {and only) make-up set, Justin received his first Copy Editor makeover. When Santa brought darts, Justin's forehead paid the price. OUTSIDE THE DOME Compiled from U-Wire reports That was our relationship: Kelly ruled all. It's not like I didn't loye him- I have always been protective of him. I remember when he burst into my bedroom in his Superman {com­ West Chester to offer Holocaust degree plete with Velcro cape) pajamas and WEST CHESTER, Pa. grams. Within this same period, she exclaimed, "I am Superman! I can fly out the West Chester University will be the "Believe me, it did happen has had 11 books published. window to the garage!" And I sveltely saved his first University in America to offer a "In Answer," published in 1988, life by blocking the window and replying, "Oh Holocaust studies master's degree and people must know refutes revisionist theories that the No, Justin. You can't fly to the garage- but you program. After nine years of prepa­ the truth" Holocaust did not occur. can fly through the wall." Which he did, and ration, the State System of Higher "Believe me, it did happen and has the scar to prove. Education approved the program people must know the truth," Shur But now, things are different. He has had last week for initiation in the fall. Irene Shur said. many identity crisis' in the past; from insisting The master of the arts degree in history professor In the last 10 years, schools across everyone call him Dorothy at age four, to Annie holocaust/genocide studies was West Chester University the country have begun to show an at five, to Superman at six, to Hulk Hogan at developed by history professor Irene interest in Holocaust and genocide age seven and Batman at eight. Now, without Shur, a specialist in the study of the studies. Five states currently require me around the house, Justin has found Justin, holocaust. Shur has spent nearly a present the scope and rationale of classes about the Holocaust in their and is happy. decade defining the program and the degree program to the Board of secondary schools, while seven rec­ His Fisher Price super coop has long since finding appropriate faculty. Governor's committee. ommend it. been abandoned; Sesame Street lingo has been "Nine years we have been working Students will study evidence of the "We will be the tirst university in replaced with lyrics to the "Thong Song". His on this and putting the right faculty llolocaust and examine the reasons the country. and as far as I know. voice has changed. and he is beginning to grow together," Shur said. behind the events that defined much the first in the world to offer a facial hair. Worst of all, girls are calling my University president Madeleine of the 20th century. Shur has spent degree in this field," Shur said. house - for him. Adler, dean of Graduate Studies 20 years teaching undergraduate Because this is a very sensitive At age 17. my brother. who stands a tower­ Gary Knock and dean of the School and graduate Holocaust classes, subject, a seminar will be conducted ing 6-foot-2, has turned into a macho man - of Arts and Sciences Dave Buchanan seminars and conferences as well as to train teachers in the field. truck stereo and all. Still somehow, despite his traveled to Harrisburg last week to organizing several overseas pro- alarming size and stature, he will always be my little brother. This week. my first Easter away from home, the Easter Bunny delivered the biggest Easter egg of all time to my front door- my brother. Brown ACLU pushes for reform S. Miss debates co-ed dorms When met at the dorm entrance by his totally bald big sister, he didn't even flinch. Instead, PHOVIDENCE, IU. HATTIESBURG, Miss. he hugged me like only Justin could hug me: With the recent outcry over controversial disciplinary Some University of Southern Mississippi students Squeeze, two feet lift, lift, lift, drop. cases on campus, the Brown Chapter of the American disagree over whether or not colleges should have co­ During the days we spent together, I noticed Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is pushing University ed dormitories. Males and females living together is a not only JP's growing maturity, but also our administration' to consider its reform proposal for the regular part of college life in institutes such as Yale love growing stronger. Looking back through University Disciplinary Council {UDCl. Since UDC's cre­ University in Connecticut and Haverford College in all the years - through tragedy, illness, school ation in 1990, the ACLU has submitted at least three Pennsylvania. The reported that the time and playtime. Justin has always been proposals to the administration, resulting in limited co-ed phenomena is partly in response to requests there for me. Even after convincing him to eat changes to the UDC process. The ACLU gained support from homosexual students who say they often have mud or making fun of him, he always got back for its latest UDC reform effort through a petition circu­ trouble finding roommates of the same sex. Lorinda up and continued to love me. Through every­ lated last week. More than 375 students gave their sig­ Krhut, director of residence life, said USM will not thing, JP has shown unconditional love, a true natures, according to ACLU president, Samantha have co-ed dorms any time soon. Krhut said the test of our friendship. And although he is no Musher. The petition. which asks for student support in Institute of Higher Learning enforces a policy against­ longer physically my little brother. he will improving UDC, is now accessible at the ACLU Web site. co-ed dorms that covers all Mississippi colleges. "If always be my little brother in my heart. "In previous years, there hasn't peen much interest in there were going to be any allowance of this kind of While running around campus towards the the disciplinary system at Brown but now the student facility, the IHL board would have to approve it," she end of his visit, we decided to take some pic­ body seems very interested," said Musher. She added said. Shakeshia Dean, a senior child and family rela­ tures of us together at Notre Dame for our par­ that within the next two weeks the ACLU will present its tions major, said even though college students should ents. Handing the camera to a passer-by. proposal to members of the administration, stating dear have the right to make their own decisions, they Justin pulled me close and smiled. Then, after and specific sentencing guidelines which affirm the should not be allowed to live in co-ed dorms. "I think looking up for a second, scooted me over a cou­ principle that the nature of the crime, not the vic­ our current policy is enough," she said. "If you need to ple inches. and commented. "Kelly, stand right tim's graduation date, should guide sentencing. entertain your guest after midnight, go to a hotel." here. That way, we can get you, me, and the reflection of the dome off your head in the pic­ ture." While the person taking the picture remained speechless out of disbelief, I smiled and smacked him - forgave him quickly and LOCAL WEATHER NATIONAL WEATHER hugged him. I didn't grow angry. I could never grow angry 5 Day South Bend Forecast with him. AccuWeather®forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures Why? I guess my mom was right all along. Me and my brother are best friends. ~ ...... _...... ,_., ;~,.~ ...... ~" H L The views expressed in the Inside Column are those of the author and not necessarily those of The Observer. Thursday ~ 70 41 Friday ~ 62 42 TODAY'S STAFF ~ 45 News Scene Saturday 62 Erin LaRuffa Matt Nania FRONTS: Kelly Hager Graphics Sunday ~ 67 49 ...... ~ 2000 AccuWeather, Inc. COLD WARM STATIONARY Courmey Boyle Jose Cuellar Pressure:

' . (:1 Sports Production ® © D D c::::J D ' w D Mon,day c::C1 67 47 High Low Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow Ice Sunny Kevin Berchou Lauren Berrigan ~.,) Viewpoint Lab Tech AJ Boyd Tony Floyd Atlanta 72 54 Las Vegas 96 72 Portland 61 45 Baltimore 58 46 Memphis 76 54 Sacramento 72 47 Q,Q,~9,6.;}Q ~ Boston 43 40 Milwaukee 62 44 St. Louis 65 48 The Observer (USPS 599 2-4000) is published Monday through Friday {) u Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Chicago 69 45 New York 53 46 Tampa 78 54 except during exam and vacation periods. The Observer is a member of the Vra Associated Press Graph/csNet Houston 86 62 Philadelphia 67 48 Wash DC 59 47 Associated Pre~s. All reproduction rights are reserved. Thursday, April27, 2000 The Observer+ CAMPUS NEWS page 3

SOUTH QUAD SALUTE Scholar to speak about women and the Church Editor's Note: This is the sec­ from Lafayette College and ond of a three-part series on Saint Bernard's Institute. Convergence. the conference Among her areas of special held this weekend at Saint interest are the Gospel of St. Mary's. .John, feminist theory, Christian mythical tradition, By NELLIE WILLIAMS methodology in the study of News Writer spirituality and biblical spiri· tuality. Schneider has also found time for· international Fourteen years ago, when study and travel. Sandra Schneider came to This Saturday, Schneider Saint Mary's College to give a will present, "With Oil in Their biblical interpretation lecture Lamps Faith, Feminism, and for the Madeleva Lectures in the Future." She will be Spirituality, she had no idea speaking about the emergence she would one day be back at of women in the past century the College to give the series' and its effects on the future of 16th lecture. American culture. "It wasn't foreseen that any­ "My concern is the belief one would give fa lecture! that women have an impact in twice," said Schneider, cur­ the culture," Schneider said. rently a professor of New Her lecture will also cover Testament Studies and the effects of women's reli­ Spirituality at the Jesuit School gious life on the Church. The Members of the of Theology at Berkeley. discussion will encompass the Reserved Officer Keith Egan, director of the effect of feminism on the cul­ Training Corps (ROTC) Center for SpiritualHy at Saint ture of the 20th century (above) salute Air Force Mary's, said Schnieder's lec­ America, the effect of femi­ ture this Saturday will be F-16s flying overhead nism on the church and how about offering hope to women the past impacts the future. as part of for the in the new millennium. Presidential Pass in Though Christians may seem "Her [past] lecture was so fragmented from the world and Review, an annual outstanding and drew much tempted beyond their abilities, ROTC event at the. attention," there is still University. Father Egan said in hope in the Malloy was the guest of regards to why "I'm trying to say, if end, she honor. During the cere­ Schnieder was said. She asked to Catholic women become monies. ROTC student truly committed to gospel added that officers from all of the return to pre­ s h e sent this lec­ branches of the military feminism, that can have believes ture. h u m a n (left) receive awards for In addition a major impact in good conduct. beings to being affili­ the culture. " need to ated with cooperate numerous bib­ Sandra Schneider with the lical and theo­ Berkeley professor power of logical com­ the Savior mittees, and go into American Schoo·ls of Professional Psychology Schneider has the world taught in various elementary with energy and light from and high schools, as well as their lamps. the having held many editorial ''I'm trying to say, if Catholic Changing Face positions and published women become truly commit­ numerous books, articles, ted to gospel feminism, that or Psychology reviews and tapes. can have a major impact in the Schneider received an hon­ culture," Schneider said. orary degree from Saint Fifteen other women scholars Mary's in 1998. She has also are involved in this weekend's "J cho.1e ISPP hecau.Je it ha.1 a .mzall .1cbool received honorary degrees lecture series. atmo.1pbere atUJ it ba.1 the type ofprogram that I wa.1 looking for. Being ahle to tra~Uition from the Ma.1ter.1 program to the Doctoral wa.1 a iJefinite pluJ!" r fe\t so ,, -Diana M. Bonifas ''l'"e ne"e . ab\e. Illinois School of Professional Psychology Student and cap strong From private practice to corporations, from counseling centers to board rooms, today's psychologists and professional counselors are finding endless opportunities waiting for them. Helping others was a family Graduate Programs Offered ... tradition for Amy Zaleska, of • APA Accredited Doctorate in Clinical Psychology (Psy.D.) Massachusetts. So after getting • Clinical Psychology (M.A.) her master's degree, she signed up • Counseling Psychology (M.A.) for a year of service with AmeriCorps. She • Health SeNices Administration (M.S.) moved across the country to coordinate a hunger • Postdoctoral Respecialization Programs program in California, where she developed new skills and decided to pursue a career in nonprofit management. "My project affected so many people," Amy says. Illinois School of "Now I know that one person really can make a difference."

Professional Psychology For more information, contact Courtney Chicago Campus Nicholas at (312) 353-0574 or Two First National Plaza, 20 S. Clark St., Third Floor, Chicago, IL 60603 E-mail: [email protected] 1-888-488-7537 www.aspp.edu or visit our on-line campus at http://argosy.aspp.edu AmeriCorps: got news? Are you up to the challenge?

1-5323. 1-800-942-~677 www.americorps.org/joining page 4 The Observer+ CAMPUS NEWS Thursday, April27, 2000

because Pinochet's self-appoint­ ment as a Chilean senator for Pinochet life, Garces said. continued from page 1 lie compared Pinochet's dicta­ torship to the Third Reich in Germany when "impunity Although. Garces supports the became institutionalized." extradition. investigation and "No one can assume to be rep­ prosecution of Pinochet, he said resenting humankind or subject that tribunals should not focus to amnesty," said Garces. on punishment, but recognize Due to European involvement their capacity to bring about in the Chilean ex-dictator's trial, responsibility f(lr a perpetrator's Garces said that justice would actions. prevail because Pinochet's crimi­ "[The] l'inochet trial in Spain nal actions will be uncovered and London have improved soci- through the ety," said legal process. Garces. " I n Chileans "For the first time, it's the European who have suf­ public opening their eyes states. former fered under to the civil injustice of heads of state Pinochet's dic­ can be prose­ tatorship have these crimes [and cuted against found a safe ignoring/ the immunity crimes haven· in that Pinochet against m a n y granted to himself" humanity SHANNON BENNET/The Observer European without Father Dave Scheidler leads a discussion on premarital sex entitled "Great Sex and How to Get countries. immunity. In it" Wednesday night at Recker's. The event was part of "Food for Thought: Discussions on especially Juan Garcas crimes Virtue," a student-organized program to encourage open discussion on campus. Spain. which Pinochet prosecutor against was "the first national law, to be open to extradition hear about . can be grant- these crimes," according to ed in the country, even if the talk to is great. And know that Science, and Jeffs manuseript Garces crimes haven't been committed Couple he's on your sidA." was publislH~d a couple of "Victims of torture. murder in those specific crimes," Garces Both Jeff and Crislyn applied years later. and disappearances have come said. continued from page I for positions at universities "Looking at other friends, massively to Spain," said Garces. Even with heavy international across the country before couples usually have one suc­ Seventy to 80 percent of the involvement, Garces said that cult," she said. "lie under­ deciding to come to Notre cessful person while the other Chilean population favored hav­ Chile is making strides in their stands the pressures involved Dame. struggles. but we are both ing the trial conducted in Spain, legal system so that Pinochet's because he's in the same pro­ "Coming to Notre Dame has very fortunate," she said. "We said Garces. However, Pinochet actions, which were legal in the fession." been wonderful because we're were very fortunate thing is currently in Chile where the past, are still questionable in the Although research demands both Catholic," said Crislyn. materialized well fo-r us. We nation will begin hearings within courts. a Jot of time and stress, the The couple also wanted to stay were lucky." a few days. "Chilean courts are changing Schoreys are very excited close to family in the Midwest. After arriving at Notre Dame "Both [Spain and Chile] have their doctrine by recognizing abou.t being at Notre Dame. The Schoreys have been for the fall of 1998, the couple had positive social and civil con­ that the disappearance of a per­ "It's been an enjoyable expe­ very fortunate because both is still very enthusiastic about sequences because public opin­ son is a permanent offense until rience," Jeff said. have been very successful. research opportunities at ion has become aware that the body is found," said Garces. "It's great! We're two assis­ they said. One-and-a-half Notre Dame. Although they crimes against humanity have "The Supreme Court has recog­ tant professors." said Crislyn. years into her post-doetorate, have not worked together, been committed," Garces said. nized that assassinating and tor­ "It's nice to have your own Crislyn's manuscript was pub­ Crislyn said they will probably C:hileans should not allow ture are not part of the military lab, but have someone else to lished in the Journal of collaborate in the future. Pinorhet to assume that his procedure and falls under civil crimes are not punishable eourts, not military courts." TlmPsdaqs oPe -students nlqht. Students Peceive LOW 25% off meal p•ke wifl. lfOUP sfuJ•mt I.D. student U£1 Airfares ~on Europe • Africa Asia • South America

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Hackers hit Russian gas company Court sentences five ex-officers MOSCOW Gazprom, Russia's huge state- gas Associated Press monopoly, was one of a growing number of MADRID targets hit by computer hackers last year, a The National Court sen­ law enforePment official said Wednesday. tenced five former securi­ Acting with a Gazprom insider, hackers were ty force members to more able to get past the company's security and than 65 years each for break into the system controlling gas flows in their part in the torture pipPiinPs, Interior Ministry Col. Konstantin and murder of two sus­ Marhabeli said. according to the lnterfax peeted Basque sepa­ news agr~ncy. The central switchboard of gas ratists, defense lawyers flows was "for some time" under the control said Wednesday. of external users, Machabeli said in the Tho sentences ended the report. He did not say if the hackers caused second so-called 'dirty any damage. Gazprom officials could not be war' trial and added n'ached for comment. weight to allegations that a dirty war sponsored by the former Socialist gov­ ernments of Felipe Gonza_lez wa·s waged in the early 1980s against Nuclear power aids Israel suspected Basque sepa­ ratists and sympathizers. UNITED NATIONS Gonzalez has consistent­ Syria accused nuclear weapons states ly denied that his govern­ WPdnesday of denying the rest of the world ment was involved in any access to p1~aceful nuclear technology while such war, though the first !wiping lsnwl build up its nuclear arsenal. 'dirty war' trial two years The commnnts by Syria's U.N. ambassador, ago convicted one of Mikhail Wehbe, appeared to be a swipe at the Gonzalez' former minis­ Unitf~d Statns, which maintains tight export ters and several ex-secu­ controls on its nuc!fmr technology but signed rity officials. an agreenwnt with Israel in February allow­ The Socialist party said ing it access to sonw types of "nonsensitive" in a statement that the U.S. nuclear technology. Wehbe.said Israel's guilty verdict showed that nuclear ea pability threatened security in the the actions of the death whole Middle East, where Israel is the o.nly squads were never pro­ country that hasn't committed itself to the moted by the government Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. "Until when of Gonzalez. will nuclear states continue to defend Israel?" Lawyers for the accused WPhbe ask1~d a confPrence reviewing imple­ in the latest case were mrntation of tlw treaty. informed Wednesday that the three-judge tribunal AFP Photo had sentenced Gen. Former civil guard ~eneral Enrique Rodriguez Galindo leaves the National Court Enrique Rodriguez Wednesday in Madrid. Galindo has been sentenced to 71 years in prison for his Galindo and Julen part in the kidnapping and killing of Jose Antonio Lasa and Jose Ignacio Zabala. Hillary Clinton accepts Elgorriaba, former repre­ sentative of the Interior debate offers Ministry in the Basque pay $138,000 to each of southern French town of the neighboring country, region, to 71 years each the victims' families. Bayonne. according to declassified SHELDON, N.Y. for kidnapping and killing None of the five ETA, which has been Spanish military intelli­ llillary Hodham Clinton on Wechwsday called the two men. appeared in court for the blamed for the deaths of gence documents. for tax changns to help krep family farms in the Ex-Civil Guard member sentencing, state-run Efe nearly 800 people in its Lasa and Zabala were family and ar.cPpted two offers to dPbate her AngPI Vaquero was given news agency reported. 32-year drive for Basque driven across the border St>nate rival, New York City Mayor Rudolph 69 years in jail. and for­ Jose Antonio Lasa and independence, was partic­ into the Spanish Basque (;iuliani. Clinton stoppnd at a more than 100- mer seeurity force mem­ Jose Ignacio Zabala - ularly aetive at that time. area, where they were yPar-old dairy farm and called for increasing bers Felipe Bayo and two young men suspected The group used south­ tortured for several days. tlw nstatn tax nxemption for family businesses Enrique Dorado were of belonging to the armed ern France as a hide out, They were each killed to $1.75 million. It now is $600,000. "You ought each given 67 years on Basque separatist group, and Spanish security with a gunshot to the to bn abiP to leave your land and the bulk of thP same charges. ETA - were abducted forces retaliated by stag­ head. your fortunes to your children and not to the All five were ordered to Oct. 15, 1983, in the ing kidnapping raids .in govPrnmrnt," she told more than 100 people at thP farm 35 miles east of Buffalo. Also Wednesday, Clinton said she had aceepted invi­ tations for two tPlevised debates with Giuliani in tlw fall. But the first lady did not eommit to a third proposPd debate. Clinton and Giuliani have been invited by New York's Independence Columbine tapes available for public Party to a forum Saturday in Buffalo.

includes aerial footage taken by TV tionallawsuits by the public or news Associated Press news teams that showed wounded media." GOLDEN, Co. and two slain students outside With Sarah McLachlan's "I Will 14Z,ii#IIWlfiWt1B Large pools of blood soak into Columbine. Remember You" playing in the Dow AMEx: beige carpet, marked by yellow paper "For the first time today, I saw my background, the vide·o, taken by 896.43 cards bearing victims' names. 0 39 daughter being dragged over to the firefighters, enters the library ]ONES + · Calculators and pencils lie next to fire engine. I don't need to see that through open doors, flanked by win­ -179.32 Nasdaq: open books on tables. A computer and nobody else needs to see that," dows that had been shattered by 3630.09 monitor sits blown to bits. said an angry Beth Nimmo, mother of gunfire . . g l.l.f To the horror of Columbine victims' slain student Rachel Scott. It shows books pulled to the floor. families, authorities released video­ "It's something you'd see on a gory Chairs are askew, as if pushed out NYSE tapes Wednesday that offer the publie 654.31 music video," said Nimmo, her voice of the way hurriedly. Bullets have -4.46 the first glimpse of the high school's choked with anguish. shattered windows and punctured library at least a day after two stu­ "It hurts. They have pictures from . walls. A window blind is still jum­ S&P 500: Composite dents killed 12 schoolmates and a the helicopter of dragging Richard by bled from the hurried escape of one 1460.99 Volume: 10945.50 999,649,984 teacher before committing suicide on his feet," said Connie Michalik, student. -16.45 April 20, 1999. Ten of those students whose son, Richard Castaldo, was But it is the pools of blood on VOLUME LEADERS and the gunmen died in the library. shot outside the school and left para­ desks and on the earth-tone earpet­ ~gtlfa:a I:U;I~B !!. !:Ha.ti!:i~ !:IIAU!:iS u:u;1 Authorities charged $25 for each lyzed. ed floor that most captures the eye. HICJWSOP'T CORP MSP'T -1.98 -1.3750 68.00 CISCO SYSTEMS csco +1.14 +0.7500' 66.75 tape. Jefferson County Attorney Frank Folded yellow cards are carefully COMPAQ COMPUTER CPQ -3.31 -1.0000 29.25 JDS UNI PHASE JDSU -1.41 -1.3125 92.00 The nearly three-hour tape, part of Hutlless released the videotapes to placed near the stains to mark the AMGEN INC AMGN +5.41 +2. 9375 57.25 NASDAQ 100 SKAR QQQ -3.41 -3.0888 87.38 it set eerily to a pop music sound­ the victims' families Tuesday to names of LaurPn Townsend, Daniel ORACLE CORP ORCL -t.Ui -3.3725 72.19 INTEL CORP INTC -3.35 _, .1900 120.81 track that was added when it was comply with a court order. He said Mauser, Corey DePooter and other DRXOOP • COM INC XOOP +53_,_., .18 +1.2U3 LS9 SUN MICROSYSTEM SUNW -(.1900 89.56 turned into a training video, was he then released them to anyone victims. Numbered cards mark mostly shot by firefighters. It also who asked- for them "to avoid addi- pieces of evidenee. page 6 The Observer+ CAMPUS NEWS Thursday, April27, 2000

Committee Members think it's• Library theft Committee possible • John Cavadini, chairman of the Theology Department continued from page I that it • M.L Gude, assistant vice president, Student Affairs might teaches hard lesson replae<) + David Kirkner, chill engineering and geological sciences "Not only is the Olliee of Student t h () + David Lodge, biological sciences professor elevator on the 12th f1oor I Affairs independent from the C L C." Office of the Provost, but there • Naomi Meara, psychology professor By BRIAN HOBBINS saw this guy rush onto the s a i d News Writer ehwator. I didn't think any­ art) no University structures Mooney. • Carol Mooney, chair, vice president and assistant provost thing of it and I didn't real­ aimed at examining issues that T h e + Michael Palumbo, former student body vice-president cross the jurisdictional lines of A yellow warning sign ize that my wallet was gone report the two offices," states tlw Ad + Pat Thomas, rector, Walsh Hall emblazoned with the mes­ until I came home at seven docs not Hoe Committee's report to the sage. "While you are grab­ that night," she said. m a k e + Barbara Walvoord, director of the Kaneb Center Academic Counc:il. The report bing a snack, somebody Upon realizing her wallet any spe­ notes that although faeulty and + Carolyn Woo, dean of the College of Business Administration else mi"ght be grabbing had been taken, Bryant dl'ic roe- Student Affairs have difTon~nt your stuff. Don't leave your called Notre Dame Security om m !) n- rt)Sponsibilities, they both involve book bag or computer Police to file a report. dations about tlw futun) of the thing like [tlw advisory eoun(:ill eel ucation of the same stud

FRIDAY, APRIL 28. 2000 QueNch vour thiRst for Knowleoge onLine at Versitv.com SATURDAY. APRIL 29, 2000 ~ Lecrure notEs . Novel notEs . exAm prepararion S3 STUDENTS AND SENIOR CITIZENS ' ;. amonG otHer mourh wAteRing acadeMic rreats 7:30PM, WASHINGTON HALL S6GENERALADMISSION(RESERVEDSEATING) -always (1440.355) open- TICKET) ARE AVAILABLE AT rHE LJiFORTUNE BOX OFFICE. (219) 631-8128. PLEASE CALL (219) 631-6201 OR VISIT WWWNDEDUJ-MUSIC FOR MORE INFORMATION. Where to go when you need to know.~

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STUDENT SENATE O'Donoghue highlights Student Union strengths, weaknesses • Student body of the Student Union is every single person who has one knows about it, did we approved the 2000-2001 Club strong."' O'Donoghue said. taken a position of service to ever accomplish it at all?" Coordination Council budget. president suggests "Well. I guess I am going to the students. They, and you, O'Donoghue added. +John Osborn, Mark improving have to break with that tradi­ can do remarkable things," He also encouraged the sen­ Donahey and Mike Heinz pre­ t i o n O'Donoghue said. ate to remember that their sented the executive summary communication tonight. I O'Donoghue stressed two main purpose is to serve the for the Board of Trustees will not major points of his platform: students. report calling for more stu­ By LAURA ROMPF stand here building community and com­ "And most importantly, we dent representation in Assistant News Editor and say municating with the students must never forget to serve the University governance. that every­ themselves. students. They are, after all, + The senate approved pos­ Student government can do thing is "We must, as student lead­ why we are here," he said. sible topics for next fall's much more to improve life at perfect." ers, build community over all O'Donoghue concluded his Board of Trustees report. the University, said Brian W hi I e diversity - speech Topics are tuition and finan­ O'Donoghue, student body improve­ O'Donoghue be they with a cial aid with the possibility of president, as he addressed the ments are economic, "We need to reach beyond the contradic­ merit based scholarships; the Student Senate last night with necessary, religious or walls of LaFortune to educate tion to his rector endowment fund that his State of the Student Union many people involved with multicul­ students to the opportunities opening. will aid students with various address. student government have the tural "As so, I expenses; more social space "For the past two years I ability to make changes, while still which we work so hard to I o o k and the possibility of a new havP sat where you sit now O'Donoghue said. rejoicing in provide them with. " around student center; and finally, and have heard every student "This is not to say that the the individ- this room, any topic the Board of body president make the same student union is in poor condi­ ual gifts and I Trustees suggests to the stu­ statement year after year. tion; for it is not. I personally God has Brian O'Donoghue realize dents. ThPy all have said: 'The State have the utmost confidence in granted to student body president maybe + The senate unanimously each of us," those past approved two amendments he said. presi­ and two bylaws to the consti­ Clearance Sale • April 28 & 29 "We need to reach beyond dents were right: the state of tution. The bylaws added a the walls of LaFortune to edu­ the student union is strong, steering committee and desig­ at the Logan Center cate students to all the oppor­ and its future and so much nated chairpersons to commit­ tunities which we work so more are in your hands," he tees while the amendments Tackle the Bargains! hard to provide them with. If said. removed a duplicate sentence Come to the Blue-Gold Game and take advantage of reduced we accomplish something wor­ and changed the allotted com­ prices on Notre Dame Filhtlng Irish licensed merchandise. thy to be remembered and no In other senate news: + The senate unanimously mittee formation period.

HOURS; Friday 1o.6; SatuniiiY 9-6 Repter to win door prizes! Winners need not be p,.....nt.

I Sexual Identity' and the Workplace Thursday, April 27, 2000 7:30p.m. Hesburgh Ubrary Lounge Refreshments will be served

Spon~~Jred by Peter Hawkins is a noted Dante scholar. He is currently a prates­ so;- of Religicn end literature at Yale Divir.ity School. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin (Madison), Hawkins received his Master of Divinity from Union Theological Seminary and his Ph.D. in Er1glish from Yale Unive;sity. Through the lens of his own

ANDING COMMITT•E ON experience, Professor Hawkins will discuss how issues surrounding GAY AJID LKII•IAN STU~NT Na&D• one's sexual identity can affect the workplace. P.age 8 The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT Thursday, April 27, 2000

All student groups must re-register annually to be eligible for official recognition and funding. Official recognition can only be granted by the Student Activities Office. For the 2000-2001 academic year, club registration will be held on April27 and 28 in the Club Resource Center. Forms for the April registration were distributed at the February registration session. All undergraduate clubs are required to register during one of these two days. An appointment is not required --just show up between the hours listed below!

TODAY! 10:00 AM - 7:00 PM CLUB RESOURCE CENTER (314 LAFORTUNE)

TOMORROW- FRIDAY, APRIL 28 10:00 AM - 7:00 PM CLUB RESOURCE CENTER (314 LAFORTUNE)

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------Thursday, April 27, 2000 The Observer+ INTERNATIONAL NEWS page 9

CHILE JAPAN Court deliberates Pinochet case Nuclear accident around the building were closed gator Juan Guzman who had Associated Press to traffic. requested and end to the immu­ Anti-Pinochet demonstrators, nity, sporadic clashes erupted claims second victim SANTIAGO, Chile including members of leftist outside. Police detained several discharged in December. Amid clashes between foes Associated Press groups and human rights orga­ demonstrators. Hearing of Shinohara's and followers of Gen. Augusto nizations, protested at one end of After listening to the report, death, Japanese officials Pinochet, a court on Wednesday TOKYO the block-long building. They the judges were to hear on vowed renewed efforts to began deliberating on whether A worker exposed to radia­ carried photographs of alleged Thursday and Friday the argu­ restore trust in the country's the former tion in Japan's worst nuclear victims of Pinochet's rule and ments by the lawyers for nuclear energy program. dictator accident died Thursday signs demanding a trial of the Pinochet and the plaintiffs. morning, becoming the sec­ "We will redouble efforts to h 0 l d s u former ruler. The judges did not immedi­ strengthen safety and disas­ stand trial ond fatality in a disaster that Police confined the ex-dicta­ ately rule on a request by ter prevention measures," on human shook the nation's faith in tor's supporters to an opposing Pinochet's defense lawyer that said Masaru Hashimoto, the rights abuse nuclear energy. corner. The activists carried medical tests be ordered to governor of lbaraki charges. Masato Shinohara, 40, died posters showing a smiling determine whether the 84-year­ of multiple organ failure, the Prefecture, where Judges Pinochet. old former ruler is fit enough to Tokaimura is located. will decide if University of Tokyo Hospital Pinochet returned home in stand trial. said. Japanese Prime Minister P i n ° c h e t Pinochet February after being held for 16 According to an official Yoshiro Mori expressed his can keep Shinohara's condition had months in London, where he report, 3,191 people were killed improved condo­ the immuni- blocked efforts to have him or disappeared during lences and ty from prosecution he currently after the extradited to Spain for trial. He Pinochet's 17 years in power. accident, "We will redouble efforts said the enjoys as a senator-for-life, a was released by Britain after On Tuesday, Pinochet had govern­ post he created for himself dur­ but began to to strengthen safety and doctors there determined he was defended himself through ment will ing his 1

ARGENTINA Senate approves labor reform salaries in collective-bargain­ Associated Press ing. Foes of labor reform gath­ BUENOS AIRES, Argentina ered outside of the heavily The Argentine Senate guarded Congress, waving approved a controversial labor union banners, banging drums reform bill Wednesday, hand­ and setting ofT bottle rockets ing President Fernando De Ia as Senators sought to clear Rua his biggest political victo­ obstacles to final legislative ry to date in his bid to restart approval of the ambitious bill. Argentina's fledgling economy. Debate of the bill was post­ The late night vote came poned last week following a after daylong protests by thou­ bloody police clash with If you need to do some catching up or want to get a jump on fall, summer sands of union workers demonstrators. classes at Holy Cross College may be just the ticket. Choose one or both opposed to the government's Hardline labor groups noisi­ sessions, each offering a wide variety of quality general education courses. And pay our effort to overhaul the nation's ly protested Wednesday that the bill would eventually drive summer tuition rate of just $170 per credit hour. labor laws. The legislative package will now be sent to up the 14 percent unemploy­ Take advantage of exceptionally small classes, a dedicated and caring faculty, and our the lower house, where its ment rate while sending wages down. Hundreds of convenient location just to the west of ~he University of Notre Dame campus. Credit approval is expected. police watched from behind earned is transferable. And on-campus student housing is available. The bill calls for overhauling rigid laws, ineluding extending mesh barricades ringing You'll enjoy summer activities even more, knowing that you're also getting ahead in your the trial period of new hires Congress. studies. Contact Holy Cross College today. Applications for Summer Sessions I and II, and lowering employer payroll Interior Minister Federico Storani ordered out a heavy as well as for the 2000 Fall Semester, are now being accepted. contributions for new workers. The government says that will police guard, intent on pre­ venting a repeat of last week's HOLY boost wage flexibility and cre­ ate more jobs, while reducing violence in which 30 people CROSS were injured. Police used rub­ Session I - May I 7 to june 2 7 COLLEGE the cost of doing business. The bill also seeks to decen­ ber bullets and batons to Notre Dame, Indiana Session II- june 28 to August 8 tralize collective bargaining. break up that demonstration. Office of Admissions De Ia Rua's ruling center-left The reforms have the back­ P.O. Box 308* • Notre Dame, IN 46556 ing of the International (219} 239-8400 • Fax (219} 233-7427 Alliance coalition reached a e-mail: [email protected] • hcc-nd.edu compromise with foes early Monetary Fund, which says Wednesday on a clause to bar Argentina needs more flexibili­ companies from lowering ty in labor markets to keep the eHCC 2000 prices of exports competitive. ~- page 10 The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT Thursday, April 27, 2000 ! ~ i t I l

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Thursday, April27, 2000 The Observer+ NATIONAL NEWS page 11 Presidential bid not in Clinton's future Ver01ont governor

"I hope that this taste of free­ government's armed removal of • If elected to dom and the opportunity to be 6-year-old Elian from his Miami signs gay union bill Senate, she won't with his son and to have this relatives, saying it was "regret­ pursue White time perhaps would lead to table. but I understand the that," the necessity for it." side over another. These cele­ Associated Press House in 2004 first lady Pressed about her earlier brations, as the subject of the pledge not to run for president matter of the bill, will be pri­ said when MONTPELIER, Vt. a s k e d in four . years, even if vate." Associated Press Gov. Howard Dean signed a about the Republicans win the White The law will allow gay cou­ first-in-the-nation law ples to form civil unions begin­ BUFFALO. N.Y. C u b a n House this year, Clinton said: "I Wednesday granting gay cou­ boy's case am going to serve my six-year ning July 1. That will entitle Hillary H.odham Clinton ples nearly all of the benefits term as senator. I owe it to the them to all of the 300 or so pledged Wednesday that if elect­ during a of mar- people of New York." rights and responsibilities ed to the Senate she would not town meet­ riage. The first lady also said that available to married couples run for president in four years. ing broad- "I think while she was a supporter of under Vermont law in such The first lady also said she cast by Clinton it is a CNN. "But abortion rights. she could sup­ areas as taxes, inheritance hoped the time Juan Miguel coura­ at the end port legislation that would out­ and medical decision-making. Gonzalez spends in the United geous and of the day this has to be the law what critics call partial-birth Other states will probably State will persuade him to powerful father's decision." abortion except in cases endan­ not recognize Vermont civil remain with his son in this coun­ statement Clinton again defended the gering the woman's health. unions, and such status will try. about who not entitle gay couples to any we are in Dean the benefits available to mar­ the state of ried couples under federal law Vermont," in areas such as taxes and the Democrat said. "I also immigration. believe that this legislation Nevertheless, no state has speaks to the heart of this gone further than Vermont is ntANK YOUI state, and certainly to my • giving gay couples something heart." approximating marriage. An!oc;-tdl C:..Ommi-fte;.e;. C./a<;<; of 2.002 The legislation creating mar­ The bill came about after the riage-like "civil unions" Vermont Supreme Court unan­ S1vde:.nt Union Boavd Sidff T 01.1.'fvida~<; reached the governor's desk imously ruled in December shortly before lunch time, just that gay couples were being S-tvde:.n-1- AcA-ivi-tie;.c; Offiu­ G-hi/i'c; a day after the House gave its unconstitutionally denied the final approval. And })y the time benefits of marriage. The Me:.die:.v'd/ C.lvb Pv1t-Pv1t Minia-twe:. 0lolf of a 2 p.m. news conference, court left it up to the he had already signed it out of Legislature time to decide f1ip-Side:. Av-D~'c; view of TV cameras, photogra­ whether to let gays marry or phers and reporters. to create some kind of domes­ Poe.- 5vown C:..O/ovado Ste:.ak.hov<;e;. Dean said he signed the bill tic partnership. privately because he did not The legislation passed after Ame:.vic.-an S-fdndavd Olive:. 01avde:.n want the ceremony to be a tri­ strong debate in which oppo­ umphal party by supporters of nents argued that homosexu­ P-5one:-z... 1-afOvfvne:. ltaiv Salon the law. Instead, he said, it ality is "against natural law." was time for the state to begin Opponents have warned that Tvoop NP S1vde:.bag-lc; healing. their anger will be apparent at "In politics, bill-signings are the polls in November when triumphal," he said. "They Legislature members are up __,,_.do/-'"b e represent overcoming of one. for re-election. A N ~ursday, 4127 0 *free t-shirts to the first 50 people s Music Mania & Games! Fieldhouse Mall 4 pm - 9 pm (LaFortune Ballroom if it rains) FEATURING: 4-5 pm: D-Bonez T 5-7 pm: Doc Brown 7-9 pm: American Standard

Air toys, inflatable moon walk, twister, A pop-a-shot basketball (provided by Class of 2002) Free wings from Wings, Etc ... L Troop ND performs at 4:45pm ~.nd.edul->u,e Page 12 The Observer • PAID ADVERTISEMENT Thursday, April 27, 200U

CENTER FOR SPIRITUALITY

SAINT MARY's CoLLEGE AND ITS PRESIDENT DR. MARit.ou ELDRED INVITE ALL To PARTICIPATE IN

CoNVERGENCE 2ooo

Friday, April 28 7:30p.m. O'Laughlin Auditorium Sandra M. Schneiders, IHM "With Oil in their Lamps: Faith, Feminism and the Future" 16th Annual Madeleva Lecture in Spirituality

Saturday, April29 1:30-3:00 p.m. Regina Hall North Lounge A Town Hall Conversation of the previous evening's lecture

5:00p.m. Eucharist at the Church of Loretto

7:30p.m. O'Laughlin Auditorium "A Charter for Women of Faith in the New Millennium" presented by The Madeleva Lecturers, 1985-2001

followed by reception in the foyer

All these events are free and open to the public.

-et~ SAINT MARY'S COLLEGE NOTRE DAMB, IN· Thursday, April 27, 2000 The Observer+ NATIONAL NEWS page 13 Judge: Ban on gay Justices debate gay scout case

ity is immoral," he said, asking Amendment. issues club unfair Associated Press why the Scouts must accept as Some justices also had point­ a leader "someone who embod­ ed questions for the Scouts' as an ar.ademir. club. The WASHINGTON ies a contradiction of their lawyer. George Davidson. Associated Press · dub's goal is to discuss histo­ Supreme Court justices strug­ message?" Justice John Paul Stevens ry through gay and lesbian gled Wednesday over whether Founded in 1910. the Scouts asked whether a homosexual SALT LAKE CITY issues. and their applir.ation to let the Boy Scouts bar homo­ have an oath and law that long could be excluded if he did not A student dub that for.uses said the club would "expand sexuals from serving as troop have required members to publicly deClare his sexual ori­ on gay and lesbian issues will and enhanr.e our study and leaders, role models in an promise to be "clean" and entation but it was discovered be allowed to meet while its understanding of Amnrican organization "morally against his wishes. casP against the sr.hool dis­ history and government." that teaches straight." But Yes, said Davidson. arguing trict is considered, a federal But Cynthia Seidel, its members "In your view, a Catholic no written that the organization had a judge decided Wednesday. Assistant Superintendent of to be rule specifi­ right "to choose the moral U.S. Judge Tena Campbell the Salt Lake City School "morally organization has to cally address­ leaders for the children in the grantnd PHISM - or People District. turned them down. straight." admit Jews." es homosexu­ program." llespnr.ting Important Sor.ial She said the club's gay sub­ Without ality. "Boy Scouting is so closely Movements ject matter saying how Stepen Breyer Wolfson identified with traditional -a prfllim- was too nar- they will said the moral values that the phrase, i n a r y "[Judge Campbell] has row, and ultimately Supreme Court justice Scouts are not 'He's a real Boy Scout,' has injunr.tion, thus not vote, several primarily an entered the language." ruling that vindicated the important curric:ulum­ justices "anti-gay Davidson said. The Scouts the sr.hool Constitutional require­ related. voiced skep- organization" believe homosexuality does not district ment that when govern­ J u d g e ticism about and therefore Dale's presence fit that moral code, he said. unfairly Campbell how far the court could go to did not burden the group's Souter told Davidson, "Mr. denied the ment regulators, includ- disagreed. force open adm~ssions upon message. Dale is not asking to carry a East lligh ing school officials, set saying thn private organizations. Dale did banner. lie's School stu­ about restricting free s r. h o o I "In your view, a Catholic not seek to saying, 'I'm dents per­ board was organization has to admit use his lead­ "[Boy Scouts is] a pro­ not going to mission to speec ... they can't keep being unfair Jews" and "a Jewish organiza­ ership posi­ carry a ban­ me Pt. moving the goal posts." because no tion has to admit Catholics," tion to advo­ gram that I hold dear to ner."' In the rul­ narrowness Justice Stephenn Breyer told cate homo­ my heart, and I hope to Dale and ing, shn provision Evan Wolfson, the lawyer for sexuality, one day be able to be his parents suggested Stephen Clark had been James Dale of New Jersey, a Wolfson attended the that sr.hool attorney put in writ­ former assistant scoutmaster added. back in the program." argument. of' fie i a Is American Civil Liberties Union ing. ousted when the organization N e w and he spoke violated "She has learned he is gay. Dale subse­ Jersey's high­ James Dale afterward to their own vindicated quently filed suit against the est court reporters. policy and the impor­ Sr.outs. ruled that the former assistant scoutmaster "I have the Constitution in snubbing tant Constitutional require­ Justices Sandra Day Boy Scouts' always loved PRISM. ment that when government O'Connor and David Souter ban on gay the Boy In 1996, the sr.hool district regulators. including sr.hool followed Breyer's line of ques­ troop leaders violated a state Scouts of America,'' he said. eliminated all nonacademic off1cials, snt about restrir.ting tioning, asking Wolfson prohibition on discrimination in "It's a program that I hold dear dubs rather than allow a gay free speech ... they can't keep whether his argument meant public accommodations. But to my heart. and I hopr to one club at East lligh, a move that moving the goal posts," said the Scouts could be required to the Scouts s-ay the state law day be able to be back in the was upheld in fedPral court. Stephen Clark, an attorney admit girls. violates the organization's program." Bring morally In response. Jessica Cohen with the American Civil Justice Antonin Sr.alia voiced rights of free speech and free straight means "standing up and Maggir, llinckley applied Liberties Union who repre­ his reservations another way. association under the for yourself and being honest," in FPbruary to set up PRISM sented Cohen and Hinr.kley. "They think that homosexual- Constitution's First he added.

"(1-W,e. ~ u,, tk LcMi ~"" Ht ~ G~~J.. H~ lc~,e. ~ ~Jl41~. II P~106:1 Campus-wide Prayer Vigil of Gratitude Join us for 23 hours ofprayer in Eucharistic Adoration to express our thankfulness for God's goodness in this jubilee Year. Eucharistic Adoration is an especially intimate form ofprayer in which the Blessed Sacrament is exposed for all to look upon as they pray and meditate.

Tuesday, May 2nd, 2000 Midnight to 11 p.m. Fisher Hall Chapel Join us tor 3D-minute b/oclfs beginning at Midnight 0MPU5 For more infiJ: Erin at [email protected] or 4-1497 or Frank Santoni at 1-3250 t\111NI5TRY .------~-- - VIEWPOINT THE page 14 OBSERVER Thursday, April 13, 2000

THE OBSERVER

P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 024 South Dining Hall, Norte Dame, IN 46556 EDITOR IN CHIE Mike Connolly MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER Noreen Gillespie Tim Lane ASST. MANAGING EDITOR OPERATIONS MANAGER Tim Logan Brian Kessler

NEWS EDITOR: Anne Marie Mattingly VIEWPOINT EDITOR: Lila Haughey SPORTS EDITOR: Kerry Smith SCENE EDITOR: Amanda Greco SAINT MARv's EDITOR: Molly McVoy PHOTO EDITOR: Liz Lang

ADVERTISING MANAGER: Pat Peters AD DESIGN MANAGER: Chris Avila SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATOR: Mike Gunville WEB ADMINISTRATOR: Adam Turner CoNTROLLER: Bob Woods GRAPHICS EDITOR: Jose Cuellar

CoNTACT Us Mobilizing a non-violent army OFFICE MANAGER/GENERAL INF0 ...... 63I-747I FAX ...... 631-6927 ADVERTISING ...... 631-6900/8840 On April 14th, I drove to D.C. with by police and arrested. us had riot gear, pepper spray and at [email protected] four ND students to reverse the widen­ Sunday was the big day. Organizers least one tear gas gun. Twice we heard EDITOR IN CHIEF ...... 63I-4542 ing global gap between rich and poor. had divided the area around the IMF that the police had tried to break MANAGING EDITOR! AsST. ME ...... 63 I -4 54 I Our goal was to shutdown a joint meet­ and World Bank into eight pie slices. through a blockade just a couple blocks BUSINESS OFFICE ...... 63 I- 53 I 3 ing of the World Bank and International Each slice was assigned to a couple away, but were turned back. Tension NEWS ...... 631-5323 Monetary Fund hundred people who were divided into built to the point where everyone put on observer.obsnews.1 @nd.edu (IMF) on April 16 Aaron Kreider affinity groups. Each affinity group a gas mask, or a bandana soaked in VIEWPOINT ...... 63 I-5303 and 17. appointed people to talk to the police, vinegar or lemon juice. However we observer. viewpoim.1 @nd.edu Those two bodies do jail support, be a legal observer, were never attacked. In contrast to SPORTS ...... 63 I -4 543 are imposing a Think. communicate with other groups and other intersections, our blockade was observer.sports. I @nd.edu neoliberal (a.k.a. Question, other tasks. The entire protest was gov­ quiet and non-confrontational. SCENE ...... 631-4 540 "neo-classical") Resist. erned by a spokescouncil consisting of At noon we lifted our blockade to join observer.scene.1 @nd.edu economic develop­ representatives from each affinity 10,000 to 20,000 people in a large legal SAINT MARv's ...... 631-4324 ment model upon group, and it made decisions by consen­ march around the Ellipse. I learned observer.smc.1 @nd.edu the Third World. When a poor nation sus. I woke at 5:15am to see groups of later that delegates had been bussed in PHOTO ...... 631-8767 needs funds to kick-start development, several dozen protesters walking by my before our blockade, so we had failed to SYSTEMS/WEB ADMINISTRATOR5 ...... 631-8839 it has only one option: to follow the dic­ Foggy Bottom residence. I then got lost \>top the meeting, yet the protesters tates of the IMF and World Bank which and was worried that everyone would were clearly victorious. From Seattle to THE OBSERVER ONLINE are controlled by the rich nations. be arrested before I found them. But I D.C. (and possibly to Philadelphia in Visit our Web site at http://observer.nd.edu for daily Neoliberal economics tries to pro­ finally found my affinity group on F and July for the Hepublican convention) we updates of campus news, spans, features and opinion mote "development" by increasing pri­ 22nd street around 6:40a.m. We pro­ are building a movement for global jus­ columns. as well as cartoons. reviews and breaking news vate corporate, and generally foreign, ceeded to F and 20th street. where tice with the youth in the lead. In D.C. from the Associated Press. investment. Thus the IMF will ask a around 150 people blockaded until thousands learned that we can shut SURF TO: country to reduce its taxes on corpora­ around 12:30p.m. down major parts of the nation's capi­ weather for up-ro-the movies/music for tions, but because it still has to balance To blockade we strung ribbon in the tal. It was a huge, joyful. progressiw minute for~casts weekly studenr reviews its budget this is usually accompanied intersection, making it difficult for the street party! We do not f'oar thn police. by slashing its social spending (educa­ polieo to mount a charge. Somoonn and know that thn nnxt tinw will only advertise for policies online features for spe­ and rates of print ads cial campus coverage tion, health, food subsidies, public donatnd a dumpstnr. Anarchists bor­ be bigger. transport, etc). These cuts hurt thB poor rowed about a hundred large hags of' The police may, in the short tnrm. bn archives to search for about The Observer the most. Also the IMF may encourage mulch from a nnarby construction site, abln to get away with raids and beating articles published after ro meet the editors and a country to devalue its currency to which we later retumed when llw pnoplc (a frioncl of' mine was bnaten on August I 999 stair make its exports more competitive. This polien threatened us. We blocked the Monday), but tho protesters got away lowers its real (after inflation) wages, road to tho IMF and World Bank with with shutting down D.C. By filling the one or two layers of "soft-blockaders" jails and refusing to coopnrate for fivn POLICIES which corporations like because it low­ - pnople who linknd arms and were days, most arrested protestors were The Observer is the independent, daily newspaper ers their costs. Neoliberalism wants to published in print and online by the students of the turn the developing world into one big eithor standing (to block delngalns), or relnased without giving their names University of Notre Dame duLac and Saint Mary's sweatshop. In addition to its abuse of sitting (if we thought the police w11re aftnr paying only $5 for "jay walking". College. Editorial content, including advertisements, is labor, the World Bank encourages envi­ about to charge). The soft blockaders ;\t 4 a.m., as I drove the last hour not governed by policies of the administration of either ronmentally destructive projects such lined a light three-foot metal fnnce, back to South B1~nd, I saw poliee in riot institution. The Observer reserves the right to refuse as large hydroelectric dams that dis­ boyond which stood around forty police. gear and anarchists in black in the dark advertisements based on content. place hundreds of thousands of people Some intersections also had peopln sit­ shifting shapes of the rainy night: The news is reported as accurately and objectively as and intensive exploitation (a.k.a. ting or lying in a drcle, linked together "There ain't no power like the power of possible. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of destruction) of resources (forests, min­ with arms locknd into lubes, making it the people, cause the pownr of the peo­ the majoriry of the Editor in Chief; Managing Editor, ple don't stop!" Assistant Managing Editor and department editors. erals, land, etc). Neoliberalism thrnat­ very diflicult for the police to movn Commentaries, letters and columns present the views ens the health of our Earth and its pBo­ them. of the authors and not necessarily those of The ple. By this morning, knowing that police After D.C.. Aaron Krieder. a graduate Observer. We woke up on Saturday to learn that had tear-gassed. pepper-sprayed and student in sociology. has an almost Viewpoint space is available to all readers. The free the police had raided thn protest head­ shot rubber bullets at hundreds of unstoppable urge to wear a bandana expression of all opinions through letters is encouraged. quarters, confiscating puppets, medical peaceful demonstrators in Seattle, and ouer his face and wave large black Letters to the Editor must be signed and must include supplies, and $3000 of food (which they with the tension building due to the flags. contact information. later threw in a dumpster). That al'ter­ arrosts and raids on Saturday, I felt The uiews expressed in this column Questiom regarding Observer policies should be direct­ noon 600 legal demonstrators, protest­ pretty sure that I was going to be are those of the author and not neces­ ed to Editor in ChiefMike Connolly. ing the prison system, were surrourHll1d attacknd and arrested. The police near sarily those of The Obseruer.

DILBERT SCOTT ADAMS QUOTE OF THE DAY

I UNDERSTAND DOES THAT MEAN SHE CLAIMS IT YOU'RE THE NEW WHAT I THINK DOESN'T MEAN ENGINEERING IT MEANS? LIAISON. "It's the anarchy of poverty that delights me." E 0 0 t:: William Carlos Williams Q) .a Poet 't:J 5i ~ r---4.l...__JH:

L-~~~~--~--~~ VIEWPOINT THE Thursday, April27, 2000 OBSERVER page 15 Wordmeisters make LETTERS TO THE EDITOR sports fans cringe Humorist missed the joke When I read Scott Little's people? This stereotype is so first two paragraphs he serves I guess my journalism degree must have expired, because I no article in the Scene section of unfounded and inaccurate that to group the entire black popu­ longer understand what has become of the craft (in my day, jour­ yesterday's paper I was flat it defies my understanding. I lation together and basically nalists did not consider writing to be a profession). out shocked. It is the first piece realize that Mr. Little is trying advocate social segregation by One of our local sportscrafters recently wrote an entire column of writing I have ever read that to be funny but he is not. saying that blacks and whites criticizing head football coach Bob Davie for saying he was looking has made me rethink my He says that he is not being should act differently. for a defensive starter to play like a "thug." stance on censorship. I now racist and that it is only about Little, as always, fails to say While every football fan, even my 87 -year old think that we should protect image but he fails to under­ anything funny in his article mother, knows what Bob meant- and sports­ the public from ignorance and stand the impact of his state­ while managing to make every writers often use words like "assassin," "hit nonsense. ments. He refers to all black statement either unoriginal or man." "killer instinct," "tear his head off," etc., Little says that since African men as brothers and all black nonsensical. His history of with impunity- apparently this local scribe Americans have been in the women as sisters. That is not white rappers is adequate at didn't understand that Bob was using a United States white people funny, it's stereotypical. In best and his analogies to feces metaphor. From now on, I guess Bob will have have been trying to emulate addition, he just substitutes are just plain dumb. Every to "dry clean" his language, as Andy Sipowicz them. This statement is the the word race for image. He once in a while an article would say. best argument for a mandato­ assumes that there is a black screams to be put in the bot­ Local readers were treated to a diatribe about ry African American history image and a white image and tom of a bird cage and this is how rap music is full of "thug" imagery, and it Cappy Gagnon class that I have ever read. never the twain shall meet. I one of them, however it hap­ is especially bad for young black males to hear Apparently Scott hasn't heard would like to know what the pens to also be evidence of the this word spoken by the Notre Dame football of the institution of slavery. I black image he speaks of is. racial ignorance that is perva­ coach. I know Bob Davie pretty well, and never Gappy's don't have the stats but I feel Especially, I want to know sive in society. once have I heard him hum the tune to any Corner pretty secure in saying that no what parts of the white image song by Tupac Shakur, or even Vanilla Ice. slave owners desired to be black people should not be Todd Callais Doesn't Bob have enough to do, without some black. Secondly, which white allowed to tread on. If he is not Junior, Sr. Edwards Hall wannabe football expr-rt lecturing him about the symbolism of his people are you talking about racist then I want to know April 26, 2000 word usage? and what belongs only to black what he thinks he is. In the The article also quoted from someone who calls himself "Brother Sage." I don't know this fellow (although he can't be a member of a religious order, or thn local paper would call him merely "Sage"). but I'm puzzled why his !irst-ever newspaper comments about the evils of rap music are directed at one of the least likely rappers in Serving Haitians, serving us town ... nobody calls him Puff Daddy Bob. If rap lyrics are poisonous to There is something unique in the student body hopes to see the rising number of infection cases youth, let's air out the topic, but if a of Notre Dame and Saint Mary's, something that reduced. The micro-enterprise would help llaiti check of Bob's C. D. collection fails to sets them apart from other students pursuing medicinally (by providing bednets which would turn up. any rap tunes. let's give the scholarly studies at ranked universities. Is it that prevent and lower the number of transmission man a break. they study more, party less? Or is it that they are cases) and economically (provide jobs to the Ironically, all across the country, survivors of South Bend's mercurial weather people). there are college athletes who really and Notre Dame's rigid administration? HBC is further subdivided into several commit- are thugs. These players have gone Although this uniqueness weaves itself tees led by Sandra Peterson, Justin Campbell. unnoticed on West Colfax through the heart of every Domer and Belle, Meaghan Flaherty, Akmaral Omarova, and Boulevard. (I have even heard of a embroidering a distinct pattern onto them which Sharon Watson. Many of HBC members donate basketball coach, who grabs his sets them firmly apart from the myriad of preco- valuable time to develop ideas and formulate players by the larynx and peppers cious college students, it is found in neither aca- plans to prepare presentations. HBC has gener- reporters with profane prose, if you demic nor athletic achievements. Instead, ated tremendous support from the adminis- can believe that. Our local reviewer it is the humanity exhibited by students 4c=:::i tration, the College of Arts and Letters, of word appropriateness took that who forego spring breaks to help the the College of Business, the College of coach to task, not for being a cretin, poor in Appalachia, who conduct Engineering, and from SIBC. An but, only for jeopardizing another blood drives to help an ill class- immense amount of effort has been player's chance for a post-season honor.) mate, and who volunteer in the put in by those involved with the Our local sportswriter can never seem to spot these miscreants community to help the less for- hope of seeing the plan come to (even though he has written a maudlin story about one of his pals tunate around them. It is this completion. who committed an actual murder). One third of the roster of one sense of social responsibility To accomplish its goal, HBC Big East basketball team was recently arrested for assault. One Big that positions Notre Dame developed the Four Phases East coach, who got some votes for Coach of the Year, and who is and Saint Mary's a notch Plan. The first phase entails considered one of the hottest commodities around, used exclusively above the rest. And it is this intense theoretical research blue language during his sideline tirades. same sense of sociai respon- on Haiti and the bednet indus- During the week that one-sixth of another Big East team was siveness that has brought try in general. The second arn~sted for theft, our local sportswriter criticized Notre Dame stu­ together a group of diverse phase, the Assessment dents because they indelicately pointed out that another player on but dedicated students to a Evaluation, begins this sum- that team had fathered a couple of children. No mention of the two cause first purported to be mer and will include additional thieves. real only in a dream. research on the disease and The other bad aspect of rap lyrics is their denigration of women. This group is known as the economy of Haiti. In the third A huge problem in many big time athletic programs is the number Haiti Bednet Committee or phase, students will develop a of children fathered (and neglected) by star athletes. Apparently the HBC, a committee of a larger comprehensive business plan. "Sports Illustrated" expose of that problem (where Shawn Kemp student organization known as the which will be present to a non- leads the way with eight kids by seven women) served only as a Student International Business government organization in the challenge to emulate, for players on many campuses. According to Council (formerly called the Notre Fourth Phase. former coach Larry DiNardo, his LSU players fathered 29 children Dame Council of International Business As HBC enters its third year (fifth semes- in one season. No mention of this in the local press. Development). The committee is actually the ter) of planning, it asks anyone with a keen Most Notre Dame students are ardent football fans. Many are brainchild of fr. Thomas G. Streit, professor of desire to help to come to one of its meetings next quite literate. Perhaps one of them can come up with some accept­ biology at Notre Dame, who approached the semester or visit them at their website: able word usage to describe the aggressive type of defensive men­ Council in the fall of 1998 with the idea of using www.nd.edu/-mmarcell. tality Davie is looking for. These words must pass political correct­ bednets to combat vector-borne diseases in HBC trusts that its plan of action is ideal for ness. No rappers need reply. What we're looking for is something Haiti. HBC hopes to provide the academic infor- the purpose of providing long-standing assis- macho. but tender; violent, but soothing; and which could be readily mation needed to construct a bednet-producing tance to the medical concerns of the Haitians. understood in a pre-game pep talk. Try to envision Alan Aida or micro-enterprise in Haiti. Haiti is a small island namely with regard to vector-borne diseases. In Phil Donohue as Knute Hockne. If you've got something, please send in the Caribbean constantly plagued by spouts of doing so, it hopes to foster the philanthropic along your ideas. I will be happy to relay them to Coach Davie, after malaria, dengue fever, and lymphatic filariasis. sentiment upon which it is founded, which is I see if they pass muster with the local paper's wordmeister. All three diseases are transmitted by mosquitoes defined by the Committee's aphorism of "Irish and have an adverse effect on the health and helping Haitians, so that one day Haitians can Cappy Gagnon. '66. points out that the editorial headline on the economy of Haitian civilians. By using a bednet, help Haitians." April 25th local paper was "America -not always 'the good guy.'" a net that encloses a bed to protect sleepers This also seems to be their premise about Notre Dame. from mosquito bit€s, the diseases can be pre­ Myrmose Marcellon The views expressed in this column are those of the author and vented. Sophomore not necessarily those of The Observer. Through the application of bednets, HBC April 24, 2000

Viewpoint is accepting letters for the commencement edition. Please label letters "senior week" and send them to [email protected] I ' E

page 16 Thursday, April 27, 2000

MOVIE REVIEW 'U-571' sub thriller needs less speech, more speed much time spent loading a boat with sup­ By JOEY LENISKI plies - the vessel shoves otT upon their Scene Movie Criric dangerous and highly classified mission. Disguised as a German supply boat, the The format of "U-571" reads like a crew will attempt to board the submarine, roller-coaster ride. Like the clatty-clink, subdue the German sailors, sink their boat clatty clink of a coaster's 200-foot incline, and recover their prized Enigmas without the first half-hour is slow and boring. But alerting the rest of the enemy fleet. If you it allows the viewer to look around the film are wondering why 20 Navy men fresh and get a feel for what is going on. from heavy drinking at a wedding recep­ After 40 minutes of climbing, the ride tion were assigned to such a dangerous levels out. and the audience has no choice and intricate task, you join the company of but to scream and wail their arms franti­ this reviewer. Regardless, they reach the cally in the air as the movie kicks into disabled U-boat and set their boarding high-gear and plummets down an action­ plan into motion. filled slope. The results are disastrous. After a series Anticipation for what is to come fuels the of catastrophes, Lt. Tyler opening sequences. The finds himself the sole setting is early in World "U-571" commander of a skr.leton War II. during the fiercest crew aboard the German naval fighting between U-boat as they try franti­ allied forces and the axis cally to transport thr.ir powers. In the middle of a sensitive cargo back to Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures wedding celebration out of five shamrocks the United States. This Matthew McConaughey (left) and Harvey Keitel battle German submarines in while on shore leave, Lt. Director: Jonathan Maslow means operating a the deep-sea action thriller "U-571." Cmdr. Dahlgren (Bill wounded vessel with the Paxton) has the unfortu­ Starring: Matthew instructions entirely in moment the U-boat is capturod, the ernw The same complaints can br, said about nate duty of explaining to McConaughey, Harvey Keitel, German as they try des­ faces alarming pr,ril in many forms - all the plot in this film. While based on actual his executive officer. Lt. perately to avoid detec­ accentuated by rapid-fire sequences whieh events that happened during WWII. the Tyler (Matthew Jon Bon Jovi and Bill Paxton tion by the German Oeet. play out very convincingly. succession of events in "U-571" could be McConaughey), why Their prospects are not The acting. plot and character develop­ considered hackneyed, repetitive exactly the young Tyler is not prepared to hopeful, but they make for vastly enter­ ment of this movie are lost in the rubble sequences pulled from any number of pre­ command his own boat. taining movie-viewing. after the action ceases to boom across the ceding submarine movies. Angst riddles the scene, but military "U-571" is typical of schizophrenic scrr.cn. Matthew McConaughey does at Once reaching the summit, "U-571" is police intervene and break up the tension action movies that cannot perfectly blend least a competent job of portraying a definitely a 70-miles-an-hour downhill with important news: Dahlgren's crew has their emotional undercurrent with the Maverick-type naval officer who realizes ride. Like all roller-coasters, however. been selected for a special mission. They flashy spectacle of their physical the full implications or his duty, and when it pulls back into the station at the have been charged with commandeering a sequences. The strength of this film rests Harvey Keitel is wonderful (though under­ end, it is a bit of a letdown. As a premiere German U-boat marooned in the Atlantic in these action sequences, which comprise used) as the old WWI veteran along for the submarine film, it has neither the convinc­ Ocean and recovering its Enigma the majority of its running time. While the ride. The other actors are difficult to make ing suspense of "The II u n t for Red machines, the encoding devices that trans­ sub-plot (no pun intended) which involves comments about because their characters· October," the quality acting of "Crimson mit sensitive German messages to forces Lt. Tyler gaining the courage to control his arc often lost in the story-telling, which is Tide" nor the realism of "Das Boot." But as across the globe. own ship is a sweet distraction, it simply one major drawback to this movie. IIow two hours of mindless, edge-of-your-seat After much character introduction and a does not compare to watching four torpe­ can the audience care about character entertainment, this movie succeeds. And heightened sense of intrigue among the does narrowly avoid detonation by scrap­ when they are introduced out from under after all, isn't a movie all about the ride principles - not to mention entirely too ing across a submarine hull. From the - then stuffed back beneath - the rug? anyway?

VIDEO PICK OF THE WEEK Exciting car chases punctuate a brilliant 'Connection' senseless explosions, overdone be a lost art. down the tracks above the city. the basketball court. Shaquil!P By JOHN CRAWFORD special effects and bewildering The car-train pursuit in 'The "Police emergency, I need your O'Neal, and the recent and Scene Movie Criric MTV-style quick cuts, all accom­ French Connection," a 1971 car," says Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle uneven "Buies of Engagement." panied by some loud and bad Oscar-winning police drama, is (a gutsy and driven Gene In "ThP French Connection," Hollywood doesn't know how music. about as good as chases get. Hackman), as he hijacks a vehi­ however, Friedkin presents a to do good car chases anymore. Chases that are testosterone­ Without relying on effects, cle and blasts through Brooklyn, world that is real and brutal. It's With the exception of the boiling, octane-burning thrill explosions, gimmicks or heavy­ zigzagging through traffic, flying full of dirty streets and seedy dizzying pursuits in Robert rides, like the muscle-car show­ metal music. it involves just a blindly though intersections and neighborhoods, places you DeNiro 's 1998 spy flick "Ronin," down through the hills of San man, a fast car and a revving crashing into wouldn't want to modern movie car chases are too Francisco in the 1968 Steve engine, not to mention a run­ ears and walls. "The French touch without often grating scenes full of McQueen film "Bullitt," seem to away elevated train barreling It's beautiful washing your and exciting and hands after­ it inspires a sym­ Connection" wards. phony of goose His protago­ pimples- every- nists are tough thing a good car Director: William Friedkin and flawed. chase should do. Starring: Gene Hackman They're good The car-train guys who don't chase is the cen- and Roy Scheider always act good. terpiece of a heroes who don't movie full of police pursuits, as always win and cops who don't two New York City cops, Doyh~ always get their man. and Hoy Scheider's Buddy Husso, The center of Friedkin's uni­ tail suspects through streets, verse is Doyle, a rough and tum­ highways and subway stations. bin mess of a police officer: he The film is one big cat-and­ drinks and bickers, flirts with mouse game as the two cops try women, utters ethnic and racial to intPrcept a huge heroin ship­ epitaphs. slaps suspects and con­ ment from France. ducts alley interrogations. II<' The film won five Academy advises his partner, "Don't trust Awards, including Best Picture, anyone." Best Actor for Hackman and When shaking down suspected Best Director for William drug dealers, he taunts them. Friedkin. saying, "Want that hand bro­ Director of the 1973 horror ken?'' classic "The Exorcist," Friedkin lie's a character so hell-bent is a standout 1970s filmmaker on justice that he careens down who has seemingly disappeared. crowded city streets pursuing an His work in the '90s includes out-of-control train, giving cine­ Photo courtesy of 20th Century Fox the far-from-stellar "Blue Chips," ma one of its greatest car chas­ In the 1971 action drama "The French Connection," Gene Hackman plays Jimmy "Popeye" starring that Marlon Branda of es. Doyle, a tough police detective on the trail of a heroin shipment from France. M e E

Thursday, April27, 2000 page 17

MOVIE FEATURE FilmJunkies.net is perfect for movie buffs Two Notre Dame freshmen launch successful Website from their dorms experience with designing Webpages, help. By MATT NANIA I thought that maybe we could do our "I figure, why Assistant Scene Editor own movie site," Bircher said. not share any With the Web already jam-packed DVD shopping Hecently launched by two Notre with movie sites, how was Film know-how that I Dame students, the all-new Film Junkies going to stand out from the have with others .I u n k i e s We b s i t e ( w w w .fit m - crowd? like me, junkies.netl is the ideal place for "Well," explains Scofield, "we saw Scofield said. If movie bu!Ts. all kinds of movie Websites focusing the article gets Brian Scofi!dd and Brian Bircher, too much on upcoming movies and not popular enough, two froshmnn living in Siegfried Hall, enough on discussing the films them­ he intends to founded Film .I unkies in February selves, after they came out. None of make it a per­ with the hopes of launching it by the them were discussing the statements manent feature. rmd of tlw semester. Their goal with the films were making right now." Further illus­ Film Junkies is to give the site's view­ "The Internet is an enormous public trating the site's ers the best movie news, reviews and forum," Scofield said. "We wanted goal of provid­ entnrtaining commentary on to create a place where ing its readers the Internet. film buffs could find with helpful Scofield, the site's other people who information, Webmaster. has love movies and Bircher put am pie experience discuss the art forth a Ramble <" r !~ at i n g We b of film with on the upcoming pages, owning them." summer movie his own Web Indeed, season. design compa­ most movie "I just wanted ny: Synapse­ sites on the to give people a Web Design ilm head-start on Internet ( tl'IL'W. synapse- focus only what was com­ u• " b . c o rn ) . on uncon­ ing out. There's Founded in firmed a lot of movies August of rumors and to see, and I 1997 in wanted to give Sc:ol'ield's movie news and even my opinion on MARY CALASH!The Observer hometown what look to be of Austin, Texas, fewer offer FilmJunkies.net was created by film buffs Brian Bircher (left) qualified the biggest and Brian Scofield, shown here with their movie collection. Synapse makes high movies of the quality, professional reviews. Film Junkies, however, summer, Websites for smaller Bircher said. tastes while staying true to our own companies that can't afford offers commentary on ideas. It's frustrating at times, but it both recent releases and Such useful articles are what sepa­ the Web design fees that other, rate Film Junkies from other movie really is a labor of Jove," Scofield said. big-time designers require. past films. Scofield and company are planning Supplied by the site's contributing sites. "After officially registering and Aiming not only to entertain its on supporting the site and its expan­ writers, which include Scofield, sion (an extensive movie trailers sec­ starting the business, I put up a sign readers with interesting articles and Bircher and Matt Wetzler (Scofield's tion is underway) through paid adver­ in my dad's office, got a couple offers humorous features, the site, which and word began to spread," Scofield good friend and co-worker from back tising. home), Film Junkies' reviews are claims it has got "enough cool movie Running a large-scale Website is no said. Working on these company sites stuff to pull the ears .off a Gundark" (a gave Scofield the experience he need­ valuable tools for deciding whether to small undertaking. Scofield and his see a film or even just to see how Star Wars reference), also wants to writers are devoting a great deal of ed to undertako Film Junkies, as well inform people. as his Write Place Website opinions can differ. their free time to keeping the site cur­ "We want to entertain people with "We spout out about whatever we rent and up-to-date with all the latest (www.synapse-web.com/writer), a feel needs to be said," said Scofield. Website whore young authors can all types of articles," Scofield said. news and reviews. And, with the sum­ That's where Film Junkies Readers can expect discussions on mer movie season just around the cor- share their work with others. numerous film-related topics, from Bircher, whose hometown is "Ramblings" come in. ner, they're not let­ "If Film Junkies was a newspaper, casting news to arti­ ting up any time Hochester. NY. is a huge movie fan cles explaining the thanks to his friends. the ramblings would be our editori­ soon. als," Scofield said. Ramblings are pits and falls of DVDs "The summer is a "My friends at home are really big and Laserdiscs. "We're working really movie fanaties and I kind of got free-form articles about anything very exciting time movie related. For example, Scofield Film Junkies also hard to appeal to people for any movie fan, sucked in," Bircher said. gives its readers a When ho and Scofield met at Notre "rambled" on about how he bought with different tastes and it'll be an excit­ "The Shawshank Redemption" DVD chance to express ing time for the site Dame, they soon realized their mutual their own opinions. while staying true to our admiration for films. for only $1.99. Every movie fan (heck, as well," said "If someone has Bircher. "And since "When I found out Brian had a lot of every college student) wants to get own ideas." DVDs cheap. And Film Junkies can something they'd like we won't have to to share with worry about classes the film commu­ Brian Scofield anymore, we can nity," says Film Junkies Webmaster devote more time to Scofield, "we seeing and reviewing can post their the movies that are ramble in addi- coming out then." tion to our own." Looking towards the future, Scofield Headers can submit their admits that he's not expecting thoughts via e-mail or they can Amazon.com-like popularity. post them on the Film Junkies "We know our limits; we won't Forums, which ani message become the largest movie site on the boards tailored around various planet. But we have things to say and movie topics. we want to hear what other people Above all, Film Junkies is a have to say too," Scofield said. place for people who love When asked what films they were movies. looking forward to this summer, As Scofield explained it, "The Scofield and Bircher agreed: Internet is already the biggest "As far as main stream movies go, movie club in the world. We 'Gladiator' [a Roman-soldier epic star­ want to bring it together into a ring Russell Crowe) and 'The Patriot' new kind of community. We want [a Revolutionary War drama starring everybody to be part of it. It's not Mel Gibson). Those will be the ones to just for people who love summer beat this summer, "said Bircher. blockbusters, it's also for people If the site's hit count is any indica­ who love film as an art form." tion; the same can be said for Film Striving to attract a large audi­ Junkies. Said Scofield, "We've got a ence, Film Junkies promises an strong following already and it's only

MARY CALASH!The Observer enjoyable, informative visit: going to get bigger. We're all really Brian Bircher (left) and Brian Scofield, two freshmen from Siegfried Hall, browse "We're working really hard to looking forward to the site's future. appeal to people with different FilmJunkies.net, a movie Website they launched just last week. It's going to be a lot of fun." Thursday, April 27, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 18

AMERICAN LEAGUE Red Sox crush Rangers, reach season high of 21 hits

against Texas. He is 25-for-48 homer, also his third. went into all four Twins hr. faced before a designated hitter. Associated Press (.521) against the Rangers the right-field bleachers. Mariano Rivera pitched the He won both his MVPs as an since the start of last season. Mays shut down the Yankees ninth for his seventh save in everyday first baseman. And ARLINGTON. Texas During his hitting streak this on two hits over the first five eight chances. his slump the last two years? Nomar Garciaparra had three season, Garciaparra is 25-of-54 innings, and Jeter's homer was Came when he was primarily hits, including a , to (.463). He raised his average 17 New York's first extra-base hit White Sox 11, Orioles 5 DHing. extend his hitting streak to 13 points to .386 Wednesday. of the three-game series, a Playing first base obviously Thomas went back to first games as the After Clark got the first two span of 23 innings. Jeff Nelson agrees with Frank Thomas. without complaint in spring routed the Texas Rangers 14-4 Boston batters out, Brian (4-0), the second of four Thomas, back at the position training, but moved to DH on Wednesday. Daubach and Garciaparra hit Yankees pitchers, pitched 1 2/3 for the first time since April 9, April 11 because of tendinitis in Garciaparra's RBI double consecutive doubles, Following innings and was credited with hit a grand slam as the Chicago his right foot. Manager Jerry provided Boston's first run, and a walk, Carl Everett hit a three­ the win in relief of Andy White Sox beat the Baltimore Manuel decided to put him was part of a five-run first­ run homer and No. 9 hitter Pettitte, who made his first Orioles. back at first after watching inning outburst after Texas Wilton Veras later added an start since coming off the dis­ It was the seventh victory in Thomas in a rundown Tuesday starter Mark Clark (2-2) got the RBI single. Daubach had four abled list with a mild back eight games for the White Sox, night. first two outs. hits. including a career-high strain. who are off to their best start "I saw him scamper back and Garciaparra was among three doubles. Pettitte, on the disabled list since the 1973 elub went 15-5. forth," Manuel said before the seven straight Red Sox hitters since April 13, worked five Thomas' big homer overshad­ game. "I said, 'That looks like a to reach with two outs. The Yankees 2, Twins 0 innings. allowing three hits, owed Harold Baines' 2,800th big first baseman over there. bottom seven hitters in the bat­ Derek Jeter broke a scoreless walking one and striking out hit. Baines, who played for the he can do some things." ting order, responsible for tie with a sixth-inning homer four. And Thomas didn't disap­ Boston's best first inning of the White Sox for almost 12 years and Tino Martinez added He retired the first eight and already has his number point. season, had at least two hits. another solo shot two outs later Twins before Jason Maxwell retired by the club. reached the After Sidney Ponson ( 2-1) The 21 hits were a season high as the New York Yankees beat singled with two out in the milestone with a solo home run walked Jose Valentin to load for Boston and the most ·- the Minnesota Twins for their third and Cristian Guzman in the third. the bases in the bottom of the allowed by Texas this season. second win in six games. reached safely on Scott Whether he likes it or not. fourth, Thomas sent an 0-1 With his second 3-for-5 game Jeter drove a 2-2 pitch from Brosius's fielding error at third. pitch rocketing into left-center in the series, plus an intention­ Thomas has always put up bet­ Joe Mays (0- 3) in to the right­ Pettitte got Denny Hocking to ter numbers when he's playing for the grand slam. al walk with Boston leading by field seats for his third homer hit into an inning-ending force first. He's a career .337 hitter It was his fifth homer of the six runs. Garciaparra was 8- of the season. Martinez's out. Mike Stanton followed at first. compared with .290 as year, and his first grand slam for-14 in the three games Nelson in the seventh, retiring since July 31. 1998, at Texas.

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I love web radio. -Manage & coordinate the Society's FURNISHED ROOM, AIR, PRI- LOST: blue warmup jacket. left in Web Site (spj.org) VATE BATH, PRIVATE KITCHEN, Yes, Jeff, this one is directed toE- And the African safari music. Lafun. Please call Eric at x4606. -Implement/coordinate the daily site LAUNDRY, PHONE, 5 MIN. N of Vintage Gibson ES-160. dogg. updates from staff & updates from CAMPUS Aaron at 4-4235 Kelly loves the African safari music. staff and volunteers 272-0615 Not to one of the million other Erins WANTED -Manage relationship with ex1ernal at Notre Dame. But not half as much as she loves Web hosting company WANTED: 6 subletters for summer. PERSONAL Billy Joel. Caregiver needed 2000-01 acade- -Collaborate with the executive 1022 Madison St. $300/month We don't have that problem with mic yr. Tues-Thurs. 7:45- 5:45 for 2 director, staff & volunteers on negotiable. Contact Barb x1573 or '""The FINAL issue of THE Min. 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Cause now, I am [email protected] 8901 Call631- COPY tion. gone. Thursday, April 27, 2000 The. Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT page 19 Student Union Board Thursday, 4/27

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, ,- . ' page 20 Thursday, April 27, 2000

I I I NFL Carruth murder case continues Marinovich arrested

men are charged with first­ where near the minor child Associated Press degree murder in Adams' slay­ before the charges against him for sexual assault ing and are being held without are resolved creates a clear CHARLOTTE. N.C. bond in the Mecklenburg and present danger to the life sions." Former NFL wide receiver County jail. All four could face of the minor child." Ellerbe's Associated Press The alleged attack occurred Rae Carruth. accused of mas­ the death penalty if convicted. motion said. shortly after midnight Tuesday terminding his girlfriend's Carruth's attorneys last week Charlotte attorney Bill Diehl, LOS ANGELES at Marinovich's Marina del Hey murder and trying to kill his filed court papers asking that representing Carruth in the Todd Marinovich apartment, said sheriff's Sgt. unborn son. he be permitted "limited, safe custody case. said he would is expected to practice with the Norine Plett. should not be contact" with Chancellor. The wait until a family court hear­ of the Plett said that Marinovich's allowed visi­ lawyers said Carruth rimy not ing Thursday to respond. Arena Football League arrest was based on the tation rights, stand trial for his former girl­ Ellerbe also is asking Judge Thursday, two days after being woman's statements and evi­ the child's friend's mur- Yvonne Mims arrested for investigation of sex­ dence of a physical examination grandmother der for more Evans to take ually assaulting a woman. she had at a hospital after the says. than a year. "To let (the) defendant possession of "Todd has been, is now and alleged attack. Carruth's and the baby anywhere near the minor Carruth's will be part of this football Marinovich was released on request "is would be more child before the charges house and team," Avengers coach Stan $50,000 bail at about 12:15 a.m. no more than Carruth than a year old cars to sell Brock said Wednesday during a Wednesday. Sgt. George a desperate by the time he against him are resolved them for news conference at the team's Ducoulombier might win child sup­ attempt on creates a clear and West Los "Todd has been, is now said. his part to appear to be human acquittal. present danger to the life port. Angeles train­ Arraignment and to avoid death row using Prosecutors Carruth's ing facility. "In and will be part ofthis is scheduled the verv child he has been allege that of the minor child. " last child respect to the football team. In respect May 16 in Carruth, a for­ support charged with trying to law. we have to the law, we have to let Culver City destroy," Billie Ellerbe, an mer first­ Billie Ellerbe check for to let it run its Municipal attorney for the grandmother. round pick of $3,000, course." prosecuting attorney it run its course. " Court. said in court papers filed the Carolina dated March Marinovich is Marinovich. Monday. Panthers, was 8, was scheduled to Stan Brock 30. is the Ellerbe represents Saundra upset over Adams' pregnancy returned for insufficient funds. attend Avengers' sec­ Adams. who has temporary and already was making sup­ court documents said. Thursday Avengers coach ond-string custody of 5-month-old port payments for a child in Carruth's mother, Theodry, morning's quarterback. Chancellor Lee Adams. His Calil'ornia. said she and Carruth's father meeting and tflam He did not play in either of mother. Cherica Adams, 24. In her court filing, Ellerbe have sent checks to cover the practice, Brock said. The their first two n~gular-season was shot Nov. 16 while driving noted that in addition to mur­ March child support payment. Avflngers were not schflduled to games. in Charlotte. Doctors delivered der. Carruth is charged with "If Chancellor is causing a practice Wednesday, and their Marinovich was the University the baby by emergency using an instrument with the hardship on Saundra, I'm next game is Monday against of Southern California quarter­ Caesarran section. Adams died intent to destroy an unborn more than willing to take care Oklahoma at Staples Center. back as a redshirt freshman on a month later. child. of my grandson without child Brock said he has not talked the Trojans' 1990 Hose Bowl Carruth. 26. and three other "To let (the) defendant any- support." she said. with Marinovich since the quar­ champion team. lie left school terback was asked to leave) the following his sophomore season. practir.e field by Los Angeles The Los Angeles H1liders made The last issue of County sheriff's deputies just Marinovich their first-round befom his arrest. choice in the 1991 NFL . but The Observer will run "As far as I'm concerned. peo­ released him before the 1993 ple ar<'l innocent until proven season. guilty," Brock said. ''I'm not Marinovich acknowledged Wednesday, May 3, 2000. going to jump to any conclu- drug use was a major factor.

With joy and thanksgiving the Congregation of Holy Cross and the families of:

Hev. Terrence P. Ehrman, C.S.C. and Rev. Peter J. Pacini, C.S.C.

invite you to celebrate their ordination to the priesthood for lifelong service to the people of God.

The Sacrament of Holy Orders will be conferred by the Most Reverend Daniel R. Jenky, C.S.C., .. Auxiliary Bishop, Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend

Saturday, April 29, 2000 1:30 p.m. at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart

THEY ANSWERED THE CALL! The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT Thursday, April 20, 2000

One Last Consideration... Ordination to the Priesthood (Congregation of the Holy Cross) Saturday, April 29, 1:30 p.m. Jim Lies, C.S.C. [[email protected]] Basilica of the Sacred Heart After four years of writing this column, this is it, one last consideration. Rejoice! Mass The impending end of this academic year means different things for different Sunday, April 30, 4;00 p.m. people. For the seniors it obviously means something quite different than it Sorin Hall does for the younger folks among us. For the faculty and staff and administra­ tors it has meaning, too. For me, personally, it is especially poignant because Confirmation program Sacrament of ~L1fh~ of my leavetaking for graduate school. All of us are affected by this end in Confirmation The Most?Rev. Daniel R. Jenky, C.S.C., D.O., preslder Auxiliary some way. But just what do we take away with us. There was a message con­ Bishop Fort Worth Wayne-South Bend veyed on the Senior Class Retreat three years ago which is apt for us all as we Reception to Follow · · end the year and move in different directions for a time, maybe forever. It's a ·30 p mrnn Mon day, May 1 • 7· · · ..• 1¥ri!J' message that has been stabbed at in this column throughout the year. It's real­ Basilica of the Sacred Heart\ ly the question of what really matters in the end? What's the constant that will hold us together in our separation and in our distance from one another? Campus Bible Study I'd like to think that those of you who take the time to read this column Tuesday, May 2, 7:00 p~m. already know. I'd like to think, actually, that it is so ingrained in the hearts Badin Hall Chapel and minds of every one of us in this community that it need not even be said. And yet, it would be wrong not to say it, not to proclaim it! Please God, it won't be a shock to anyone that the one constant, the one thing that matters, the one thing that will hold us all together is Jesus, and the love that God revealed in sending him to be among us as one of us. Oh, I know it may Interfaith Christian Night . sound like pius piffle, and maybe a bit ethereal, but it doesn't make it any less Wednesday, May 3, 10:00-10:30p;r'Q, true. Walsh Hall Chapel < For those who call themselves Christian, there is nothing more, nothing else we need to cling to than that. It isn't money, or an accumulation of Notre Dame Handbell ChoitDina-rt ' Sunday, May 7, 8:00p.m. friends, or even "good times" that wili ultimately sustain us in our search for Basilica of the Sacred Heart meaning and for happiness. It is only Jesus. Our departure from this place has us separated for a while, for some longer than others. But in the Lord, we are not really separated. Just as we gather united around the table now, we will Exam Week Study Break ... ········•·•· .Y< Take a break and stop by fc)rJonu~~~les again. Every time we gather to celebrate the Lord's supper, wherever we are, and coffee or juice .. Hours are Monday we gather together as one family. We are forever bound in Jesus and in Notre through Wednesday - 8:30 to 3:30. Dame. Hours for Thursday are 8:30 ~() 1.2 noon So whoever you are, whatever the circumstances around your depar­ Monday- Thursday, May 8-11 ture, whether it be for a few weeks before the summer session, or the summer 103 Hesburgh Library months or until the first home football game, Notre Dame will always be home. It is not, for you seniors, an ending, but a beginning of a life more won­ derful and more blessed than you can now even ask for or imagine. Trust in the Lord's love for you and pursue God with the same fervor and hope with which you engage every pursuit. Have faith in the God who has brought you this far, and who will never leave you. From all of us at Campus Ministry may God richly bless you in these waning days of the semester and beyond; may God give you prudence, perse­ verence and wisdom as you enter into the rigors of final exams. And finally, know that all are welcome at the Library Office of Campus Ministry for free coffee and donut holes during finals week. Godspeed! As gift and prayer, especially to our seniors, we leave you with the words of Mrs. Charles Cowman and Mary Gorges:

So now... we sail and something of what we may expect as we continue our voyage we may infer from the past. Without doubt storms will come as Second Sunday of Easter they came in the bygone days. But we will give them firm and courageous welcome, for we have already weathered so many storms that we are unafraid Weekend Presiders of the wind and the tide, the lightning and the snow. And so we shall -when the Voyage is completed drop anchor where no Basilica of the Sacred Heart storms come, but where the green swell is at last in the haven dumb, and we are forever out of the swing of the sea. Saturday, April 29 Mass 5:00p.m. We have come very safely- hitherto; Rev. Michael S. Driscoll And sometimes seas were calm, and skies were blue; Sunday, April 30 Mass Sometimes the wild waves rose - the tempest roared; 10:00 a.m. But never barque went down with Christ on board. Rev. Mark B. Thesing, C.S.C. And so it shall be to the very end - 11:45 a.m. Through ebb and flow, the one unchanging friend, Rev. Patrick M. Neary, C.S.C. Ruling the waves which sink at his command, Holding them in the hollow of his hand. Scripture Readings for This Coming Sunday There comes an hour, when, every tempest o'er 1st Reading Acts 4: 32-35 The harbour lights are reached, the golden shores: 2nd Reading 1 Jn 5:1-6 Never, oh nevermore to fret or fear- Gospel Jn 20: 19-31 Christ, give us faith to praise thee even here! CZ\MPUS Jim Lies, C.S.C. ~INISTRY page 22 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, April 27, 2000

NHL Detroit, Colorado Contrasting styles meet in East

+ Devils won't team with a smothering rattle Toronto goalie Curtis renewr fierce rivalry defense. Joseph, going as far as to change 'boring' "When you win, nothing's threaten to "camp out" in the what's important, but I think Associated Press style against high­ boring," said Holik, a mem­ Leafs goal crease. The Maple everybody is a little disappoint­ flying leafs ner of the 1995 Stanley Cup Leafs' challenges are main­ ed with how things went. championship Devils team taining discipline and creat­ DENVER "We're not going to go They're healthy. they're rest­ that patented the trapping ing enough offensive opportu­ through another series where Associated Press ed and they're playing their style. "Even the fans, no mat­ nities. it all depends on the specialty best hockey. What better way ter where you go, they like "We have to cut down on teams, and I think that's why TORONTO for the NJ-IL's fiercest rivals, winning. If at the end of the our mistakes, especially on we're a little concerned." The debate on whether day you win, then every­ the blue line," Sundin said. the Detroit Red Wings and In the first round, Detroit speed beats defense has Colorado Avalanche, to kick off body's happy." "We have to get the puck ranked second in the NHL in raged for years. Toronto and their second-round playoff No one's happy just yet. deep and try to play deep and . ? power-play production, scoring New Jersey will try to settle it The Devils have had a week use our speed, hopefully cre­ senes. seven goals in 23 opportuni­ in their second-round series. Some hockey observers have to rest, coming off a four­ ate enough chances on ties, or 30.4 percent. Colorado The Leafs, who play host to game first-round sweep of Brodeur to score some goals suggested that the Red Wings­ was third at 25.9 percent. the Devils when thfl best-of- Avalanche showdown, which the Florida Panthers. It's on him." "We learned against Phoenix seven series begins here Thursday night, is, t h e i r The two teams are meeting and the Red Wings learned begins in effect. the real Stanley Cup c h a I - for the first time in the play­ against the Kings that the Thursday, sit Final, since it matches two of "When you win, nothing lenge to offs. The Leafs hold the all­ power play can be a big fac­ firmly in the I' i n d time regular-season edge the teams most often touted as tor," Hartley said. "They were offensive cor­ is boring ... If at the end favorites to win the Cup. enough going 40-23-16 against New great on power plays, and so ner. Colorado coach Bob Hartley of the day you win .. offense. Jersey, including 3-0-1 this were we. "It's not for tended to agree with that everybody's happy." while at season. Not much, however, "This is going to be a hard­ me to decide the same separated the two teams in assessment. While insisting fought series. You're going to how the game there are "still tons of good t i m e the standings as both teams see a lot of body checks, but I should be Bobby Holk shutting won 45 games. hockey clubs remaining," don't think you're going to see played. I'm Hartley hinted it is unfair for Devils player d 0 w n The Devils are minus Sergei any undisciplined play." only a guy who Brylin (knee) while forward such contenders to be meeting The blood-letting that was tries to get his so early in the playoffs. .Jason Arnott is nursing a commonplace in this series in own guys to Toronto's big guns. sore wrist but should play. "We faced the Red Wings last 1996 and 1997 has subsided, play a eertain way," coach year in Round 2 also," Hartley The Leafs' line of Steve The Maple Leafs arc banged leading to a more civilized Pat Quinn said following Thomas, Mats Sundin and up, missing Yanic Perreault said Wednesday. "That's the brand of hockey. But bad blood practice Wednesday. "It way the schedule is. There's Jonas I loglund is particularly (knee) Nik Antropov (knee) remains. (offensively) is the way that I intimidating, accounting for and Bryan Berard (eye). no sense fighting the system. "These teams don't like each like and hopefully (the play­ We're part of the same confer­ 10 of the 17 goals To ron to "We know they're a very other." Avalanche captain Joe ers) like too. It happens to be ence, and that's the way it's scored in eliminating Ottawa explosive hockey club and Sakic said. just a different philosophical in six games. Second-liner have lots of offense," said the built." Added Hartley, "There won't approach." Defense is also a Such is life in the Western Sergei Berezin is no slouch Devils' Alexander Mogilny. be any friendly games out part of the Leafs' game, he either, coming off a 26-goal "We can't afford to start Conference, which clearly is there. We're going to go to said. the strength of the NHL this regular season, plus three in doing run-and-gun hockey war, and they're going to go to "It's not as if the Toronto the playoffs. with those guys. We just want season. Each team is at the top war. We're going to have to Maple Leafs don't have to of its game. Detroit comes to "They're a team that's to make sure we're playing fight for each inch of ice out check to win. We do," Quinn Colorado after sweeping its going to score goals. It our game, sound defensive- there."· said. "We just don't want to doesn't matter how well ] y. " opening-round series with the Colorado beat the Wings in fall back and be the Maginot Los Angeles Kings, finishing off we're going to play defensive­ Countered Toronto's Darcy last year's playoffs, rallying Line. We want to try to do it ly, they have the talent to put Tucker: "Good defense is that series last Wednesday. from a 2-0 deficit to win four in a different fashion." Colorado is 12-1-0 in its last the puck in the net," Devils" g'oud offense s'omet'i'mes. straight games before losing in In other·words, not the way 13 games, having eliminated goalie Martin Brodeur said. We're trying to make that our the next round to eventual New Jersey plays, whieh Phoenix 4-1 in a series that "We have to minimize that as thing for this series. to play champion Dallas. many purists - especially in ended Friday. Both teams much as we can and get some in their end of the iee and- not Detroit had the advantage Canada - consider to be on enter the series with no signifi­ momentum on our side so much in our end. during the regular season this the snoring side of boring. cant injuries, and Colorado's defensively." Hopefui.!Y· that will be our year, beating Colorado four The Devils' Bobby Holik Peter Forsberg has strung The Devils will also try to defense. times in five meetings. makes no apologies for a together two dominating "That doesn't matter at all," games after struggling with Avs defenseman Aaron Miller shoulder and other ailments. said .. "San Jose beat St. Louis Typically, both teams insist (in the playoffs). and they they must raise their level of didn't beat them all year. No See Friday's Observer for a preview play in this series. one really cares about the reg­ "It is time right now to raise ular season anyway. We're just our game a notch," Avalanche worried about winning four · of the Blue and Gold Game. goaltender Patrick Roy said. games now." "We've got to play better in

theRed nextWings sflries center to advance," Steve ..------... Yzerman said. "Everything tightens up, everything picks up another step." Teammate Brendan Shanahan agreed. "As the playoffs go on, you've got to improve," Shanahan said "The Summer Storage * intensity and the pressure of the games increase and your - competition gets better and No need to take your sweaters, coats more desperate. Each year we won the Cup, we got better as & comforters each round went on." home for the summer !!! Defenseman Larry Murphy sounded a word of warning. "If you took away all our power­ play goals and empty-net St. Michael's Laundry * goals, it (Kings series) would Summer Storage Program be a pretty tight series," * Murphy said. begins Monday April17- May 12, 2000 "We got through it and that's Bring all items to be cleaned & stored to the Bundle Distribution Center (on campus). ERASMUS BOOKS All stored items must be cleaned at the normal (over-the-counter)

- Used books bought and sold processing charge plus a $7.00 storage fee. - 25 Categories of Books - 25.000 Hardback and Paperback You m;;:ty apply these charges to: books in stock - Out-of-Print search service: $2.00 your student account - Appraisals large and small * * your laundry contract * OPEN NOON TO SIX TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY or next semester's laundry contract 1027 E. WAYNE SOUTH BEND, IN 46618 (219) 232-8444 Please call 631-7565 for additional information * Thursday, April27, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 23

NBA Ankle injury benches Nets miss playoffs, fire coach

new position, the Orlando a 2-15 start and a 2-14 fin­ Hill for playoffs Associated Press Sentinel reported Tuesday. ish. which was capped by a There also are several can­ season-ending 11-game los­ playoff game at Miami. scoring EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. didates for the coaching job. ing streak. Associated Press 13 points, but was clearly in Don Casey was fired including NBA great Isiah A big part of the problem pain. However, treatment and Wednesday as coach of the Thomas; St. John's coach was injuries. Former All-Star AUBURN HILLS, Mich. anti-inflammatory medication New Jersey Nets in the first Mike Jarvis; Utah coach Rick center Jayson Williams The season is over for Grant had Hill feeling better by move of an expected house­ Majerus; Lenny Wilkens, who missed the entire season Hill. The rest of the Detroit Monday. He had a good practice cleaning by recently quit as coach of the because of a knee injury and Pistons might not be far behind. and said he was ready to go. the team. Atlanta Hawks; former play­ broken leg on April 1, 1999, Doctors said Wednesday that "It was my decision to play," General er Maurice Cheeks; and for­ in a game against Atlanta. llill has a Hill said. "Monday, I felt really manager mer Net Rick Mahorn. Shooting guard Kerry Kittles fractured left good," he said. "It was probably John Nash The Nets will probably try was bothered all season by a ankle that one of the best practices I've and presi­ to get a high-profile coach to knee injury. will need had in months. I was running dent Michael improve their tarnished Casey also could not get his eight weeks around, running through Rowe also i m a g e , team to win to heal. That screens. I had high energy." And are in dan­ which is "It was a very difficult close games. It means the the second game started reason­ ger of losing Casey what they was 10-24 Pistons' lead­ ably well. Hill sank his first their jobs tired to do decision to make because in games ing scorer three shots in the opening five after the last year. Casey had been a friend decided by Nets (31-51) misseathe play­ They went five points or will have to Hill minutes. Sometime after that, of mine for more than sit out the rest however, Hill said he felt some­ offs for the second straight after Phil less. Still, of the NBA thing go pop. "I have no idea year. Jackson after three decades. " Stephon playofl's. when I heard the pop," Hill said. Principal owner Lewis Katz Casey fin­ Marbury and The announcement came less "If I watch the tape and watch said no decision has been ished out Lewis Katz Keith Van reached on their futures. Calipari's Horn helped than a day after the Pistons lost myself. I probably could figure Nets' principal owner 84-82 to Miami to fall behind 0- out when it happened. Casey, who never got the season in the Nets post 2 in the best-of-five first-round "You know. the adrenaline Nets turned around after 1999 with a a 27-22 series. Game 3 is Saturday at was flowing. I was pumped up replacing John Calipari on 13-17 record, but the former record in the middle of the The Palace. pretty good." March 15, 1999, went 44-68 Chicago Bulls coach signed season, a run that got New "I felt it at some point in the The All-Star forward was in 1 1/2 years. with the Los Angeles Lakers. Jersey within striking dis­ first half." Hill said during a hurting so badly in the second "It was a very difficult deci­ Casey will stay with the Nets tance of the eighth and final news conference at The Palace. half that he could no longer sion to make because Casey doing charitable and commu­ playoff berth in the Eastern "I tried to go back out, but it play. Still. he tried. "Even at the had been a friend of mine for nity work. The contracts of Conference. hurt. All I can do now is try to beginning of the third quarter, I more than three decades," assistant coaches Jim Lynam, However, late-season get healthy and see what hap­ said. 'Let me give it one more Katz said. Eddie Jordan and Mike injuries to Marbury and pens." Hill, wear:_ing blue sweat try,"'Hill said. Casey, 62, did not immedi­ O'Koren will expire in June. Kittles ended their playoff pants and a gray pullover shirt, He hopped to the bench 3:30 ately return a telephone call The firing of Casey has hopes. had his head bowed as he hob­ into the third quarter and left at his home by The been expected for weeks, not "I want to thank the Nets bled into the news conference kicked the back of a chair in Associated Press. By making only because the injury­ ownership for giving me the on a pair of aluminum crutches. frustration. "It was painful to the move a week after the plagued Nets struggled this opportunity to coach the Team physician Ben Paolucci watch him," interim coach end of the regular season, season but also because Katz team," Casey said. "I strongly said Hill won't need to wear a George Irvine said. the team will save $1.3 mil­ was reportedly under pres­ believe the Nets have a cast while the break heals. Hill scored nine points in 21 lion, since the second vear of sure from YankeeNets, the bright future." Dr. HobE~rt Teitge. the team's minutes. "Nobody should ever the contract Casey signed on joint operation that oversees Casey spent much of the orthopedic specialist. said play­ question this man's courage," June 25 was not guaranteed. the Nets and Yankees. The last week fending off ques­ ing on the already sore foot Irvine said. "We knew we were Katz also announced New sports and entertainment tions about his expected fir­ pr.obably didn't r.ause this ,{taking a chance. But he wanted Jersey would hire a director regional power was con­ ing. injury. "You r.an speculate. but to be out there." of basketball operations. cerned about securing future Since joining the NBA in probably not." Teitge said. Neither Hill nor the two doc­ Hall of Farner Julius TV contracts if the Nets were 1976, the Nets have changed Hill picked up the bone bruise tors could predict whether this Erving. an executive vice not an attractive product. coaches 12 times, including late in the regular season. miss­ injury might keep off the president with the Orlando New Jersey showed poten­ five times since 1989. They ing the t!~am's final three games. Olympic basketball team this Magic and former Nets star, tial at times this season, but have made the playoffs 10 He played Saturday in the first fall. is being considered for that the team could not overcome times in that period, making it past the first round only once and never past the sec­ MARKETING INTERNSHIP ond. aleader in electronic trading since 1994 The head coaching job was Family Ventures, LLC of the second for Casey in the Northbrook, IL is seeking an league. He took over the undergraduate Summer Intern Clippers from Gene Shue during the 1988-89 season GSHOLD. with an interest in web-based and went 41-85 in 1 1/2 marketing. Family Ventures is years. A former coach at .------~· launching a national magazine Temple, Casey joined the later this year which celebrates NBA in 1982 as an assistant ASSISTANT and encourages family life. E-mail with Chicago and then spent Positions resumes to John Madigan ('84) a year as a head coach in at [email protected] Italy. Available in the TRADER New York City Area f HUMAN RESOURCES NOTRE DAME '------ll ASSISTANT - POMSQUAD • OUTSTANDING ENTRY-LEVEL OPPORTUNITIES will be holding try-outs • FULL MEDICAUDENTAL BENEFITS IMMEDIATELY for • COMPETITIVE SALARY the 2000-01 season • GREAT WORK ENVIRONMENT TODAY APRILl7 PLEASE FAX RESUME: 201-499-8n5 -OR- SEND RESUME TO [email protected] at the JACC auxiliary gym . (the Pit) www.gshold.com Come ready to dance at GSHold.com, is the parent company of On-Line the Investment Services Inc. which is located in Jersey City, New Jersey. first clinic. Thursday, April27, 2000 page 24 The Observer+ SPORTS rI I I I Strength of hitters, multitude of homers worries Selig

Costa Rica plant 10 years pace to hit 50 homers. not a corresponding advantage numbers back in line. Other Associated Press ago," she said. Suddenly, the half-century available to pitchers. It doesn't people see days of warmer But even as Selig talked on club never felt less exclusive. help them to get much bigger weather and worn-out pitch­ the telephone Tuesday night, S t e v e and they ers ahead and believe they With America in the throes will only get more skewed. of its biggest home-run epi­ Arizona wrapped up a 10-2 Hirdt of "What strikes me as can't be win over the Phillies with Elias Sports throwing While the commissioner demic ever, baseball commis­ non-cyclical is that hitters talks about the baseball, oth­ sioner Bud Selig is pleading Kelly Stinnett hitting two Bureau, one y e a r - round." ers think he should consider for calm. home runs. It was the second of the savvi­ have an incentive to bulk up He paus­ raising the mound. forcing "Let's just time he managed the feat in a est statisti­ - more weight-training and es. umpires to earn their keep by see how few days. There was a time cal analysts dietary supplements - and "The dif­ calling strikes and giving this plays when Stinnett had trouble around, has ference is pitchers a half-chance to get out," he cracking an egg - provided it heard the there's not a corresponding noticeable through an inning unscathed. said. was thrown off a mound. In whispers advantage available already. If They mean that literally. Nearly his first 168 big-league games, about this to pitchers. you took .Making home runs seem dull everywhere he had six HRs. Two years b e i n g Steve Hirdt team pic­ may not be baseball's worst and every ago, he hit 11 in 92 games; choreo- tures with problem. moment the then 14 in 88 games last sea­ g r a p h e d , statistical analyst, Elias Sports Bureau Griffey the shirts The gap between the mound game is on son. about Selig off." Hirdt and batter's box seems to be TV, some- This year, Stinnett showed reckoning up for camp with 225 pounds that if one McGwire-Sosa duel said, "you'd have no trouble narrowing and a few pitchers body goes deep. In one seven­ already suffered broken bones game homestand, Toronto and layered on a buffed 5-foot-11 sells tickets, dozens of them telling the 14 position players frame. He has six 1-IRs in his will sell plenty more. apart from the 11 pitchers." after being hit with line drives. two visitors divvied up 33 It's no longer just their pride home runs. Earlier this month, last 40 at-bats. The reason Hirdt believes no Last season was the game's that's getting hurt. a record 57 left the yard in "I worked my tail off in the one is pulling strings is most prolific by any measure one day's worth of games. offseason to get stronger and because there's no need. Now, - 5,528 HRs in all, an aver­ Sunday, two switch-hitting it's paying off," he said. every job in baseball pays so age of 2.3 per game. This sea­ Yankees each homered from There wouldn't be cause for well that home runs are son, the average is 2.6 per both sides of the plate. Old­ alarm if Stinnett were the only included in the job descrip­ game, a pace that would yield timers regard these as signs of unknown closing in on proven tion. 6,800 home runs. Cam us Vibe.com the apocalypse. long-ball performers like Mark In the old days, only home­ Selig is hoping a handful of is seeking correspondents in the "Of course we have con­ McGwire, Sammy Sosa and run hitters drove Cadillacs. big-name pitchers will return fields of Marketing & Videography. cerns,'' Selig said from his Ken Griffey Jr. Instead, the These days, middle infielders from injury soon and bring the Milwaukee home. "We always opposite is true. give them to personal trainers Marketing Interns have concerns. But at this American League leader for Christmas. must be able to develop and stage we're just sitting back Jermaine Dye had just 51 Hirdt sees all the usual implement advertising and and monitoring." home runs in his first four accomplices being blamed for marketing campaigns to reach Selig just hired scientists to seasons and 27 last season. He the power surge: juiced base­ your campus community. take a fresh look at the base­ has nine already. Kansas City balls, shrinking ballyards, ball. But Liz Daus, spokes­ teammate Mike Sweeney had pitching thinned by expansion, Video Correspondents woman for Rawlings, the 41 the last four years and 22 even dense Canadian hard­ Zoomculture.com must be able to furnish an edited Fenton, Mo.-based sporting last season. He's got seven this wood in bats. Only one trend final product in the areas of music, goods manufacturer, said that month. genuinely troubles him. student film, sex on campus, etc ... won't yield anything new. A few more hitters with sim­ "What strikes me as non­ "They're made in the same ilar numbers and stories: Tony cyclical is that hitters have an ?? Interested ?? incentive to bulk up - more place with the same materials Battista, Jose Cruz Jr .. and For more details go to: and the same way since we Geoff Jenkins. Remember weight-training and dietary those names; they're all on supplements - and there's apply at: shifted production to our www.zoomculture.com/internship www.campusvibe.com/intern

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NBA BOXING SprelVell saves in Knick of time Grant predicts 1Oth

• Forward scores stop Sprewell man-to-man as after playing with a noticeable with 1. 9 seconds New York kept running the lack of intensity in the first round knockout same play in the final few min­ three quarters to draw boos to steal win utes. from the sellout crowd. On the deciding play, Unlike Game 1, the Raptors • Lewis refuses Lewis {35-1-1, 27 knock­ Associated Press Sprewell got the ball isolated looked relaxed in the opening outs) weighed 242 when he on the right wing against quarter as they quickly took a to enter knockout outpointed Evander Holyfield NEW YORK Carter and drove to his right, comfortable lead. A dunk by prediction in their rematch Nov. 20, and Latrell Sprewell took Vince pulling up in the lane for a Tracy McGrady made the score he is expected to weigh in CartPr one-on-one, and Carter short jumper that gave the 20-11 as Toronto hit eight of that range again. By the time took a pass Knicks their first lead since the its first 11 shots, and a layup Associated Press of the 5 p.m. EDT weigh-in, a on taking second minute of the game. by Kevin Willis at the buzzer squabble of gloves should be tlw last With teammates hugging him gave the Raptors their first NEW YORK settled. shot. at midcourt while Toronto double-digit lead, 26-15. Michael Grant believes he Lewis said Reyes gloves will Sprnwoll called timeout, Sprewell plead­ The Knicks' problems got knows how his challenge to be worn. Grant said he has a outdid ed with them to play defense. worse early in the second heavyweight champion problem with them. Carter yelling OOne stop!6 quarter as they committed six Lennox "Michael says the gloves down the The Raptors were able to turnovers in the first three Lewis IBF don't fit his hands,"Lewis stretch inbound to Carter, who won minutes and fell behind 32-17 will end. Heavyweight said. "l find that hard to Wednesday four games during the regular on a jump hook by Willis. New "If you believe, because he doesn't night, scor- Spreewell season with buzzer-beating York then found some of the ask me Championship have bigger hands than me." ing 13 of shots. But his in-air decision to defensive intensity that had to make "I tried on 16 pairs, "Grant New York's final 17 points­ pass to Brown turned out to be been missing and held Toronto a predic- + lennox lewisvs. said. "If they want to come up including the game winner the wrong one. Johnson without a field goal for almost tion ... with another 16, OK. My right with 7.1J seconds left- as the scored eight straight points for seven minutes. the 1Oth Michael Grant hand fits well, but my left is Knicks came back from a 14- the Knicks midway through the A 3-pointer by Sprewell off round + Madison Square uncomfortable, If we can use point deficit in the fourth quar­ fourth quarter to help cut a an offensive rebound cut the has been Reyes, OK. If not we have a Garden ter to b1~at Toronto 84-83. 14-point deficit to three, and Knicks deficit to 36-34 with v e r y problem." Carter had a chance to take Sprewell scored New York's 1 :04 left before halftime and good to +Saturday It's the kind of problem that next 11 points on three got the crowd revved up for m e , II the final shot, and it looked +10:30 p.m can be solved when a fighter like he was going to put it up jumpers - including a 3-point­ the first time, but Charles Grant is guaranteed a reported $4 when he left his feet from 25 er - and four foul shots to Oakley answered with a 3- said. million and is getting at feet away with three seconds give the Knicks their first tie pointer, Marcus Camby missed Two Grant's last three vic­ chance at becoming heavy­ left. But he passed to Dee since early in the first quarter, two foul shots and Carter hit a tories were on lOth-round weight champion. Brown for an open 3-pointer 78-78. turnaround jumper to give technical knockouts. In the Lewis reportedly is guaran­ from the wing. Muggsy Bogues hit a 3-point­ Toronto a 41-34 lead at inter­ last one, he got up from two teed $10 million. The fight The shot was long. the er from the corner with 1:33 mission. first-round knockdowns and will be the fourth on a pay­ Knicks rebounded and walked left and Patrick Ewing dunked Carter grabbed a loose ball beat Andrew Golota on Nov. per-view {TVKOJ telecast ofT with a 2-0 lead in the best­ to make it 81-80 heading into under the basket and dunked 20. Lewis says he doesn't beginning at 9 p.m. The main of-five series. Sprewell fin­ the final minute. Carter and it for a 48-37 lead early in the know the script. But he even is expected to start ished with 25 points and com­ Allan Houston each hit a pair third, and a smattering of boos knows the ending of the 12- about 11:30 p.m. bined with Larry Johnson to of free throws before Carter was heard when the Knicks round fight Saturday night at Preceding the heavyweight score 21 of the Knicks' final missed a 3-pointer with 25.6 called timeout with 8:03 left Madison Square Garden. title fight will be an IBF feath­ 25. Game 3 is Sunday in seconds left and the Raptors following a jumper by Antonio "I never make any predic­ erweight championship Toronto. leading 83-82. Davis that made it 50-37. tion in my defense Carter rebounded from his Ewing had 19 points, It was 67-55 entering the fights," Lewis by Paul ghastly 3-for-20 effort in Game Houston 12 and Johnson 11 for fourth, and 69-55 after a jump s a i d "Every time I step into Ingle {22- I and Inc! the Haptors with 27 the Knicks. who got their act hook by Willis before the Wednesday at the ring it is a serious 1, 15 points, but he was unable to together in the fourth quarter Knicks began their comeback. the final news knock­ conference. fight. When you've got a outs) of "The only man weighing 250 England prediction I pounds trying to take against Please Reycle The Observer. will make is Junior that Lennox your head off, you've got J o n e s Lewis wi II be to be serious." (47-4, 27 victorious." knock­ The cham­ outs) of pion from Lennox Lewis Brooklyn, Britain then heavyweight champion N.Y. made another T h e prediction. telecast "My next will open fight after this fight will defi­ with a 12-round heavyweight nitely be in England," he said. bout between Wladimir He added that he was not Klitschko ( 3 2-1. 30 knock­ Over 30 Sites Open! slighting Grant {31-0, 22 outs) of Ukraine, and David knockouts). Bostice {21-1-1, 12 knock­ ~ Buffalo, New York- (Local Student) "Every time I step into the ~ Columbus, Georgia - Small home for homeless men outs) of Mesa, Ariz. The other THE ~ Dallas, Texas -Brady Center for Kids - (male) ring it's a serious fight, "said bout will be a 10-round wel­ SUMMER ~ Delaware- Sojourner's Place (live on site) the 34-year-old Lewis. "When terweight match between SERVICE ~ Dubuque, Iowa - Camp for kids with physical problems you have a man weighing 250 Arturo Gatti {31-4. 26 knock­ ~ Ft Wayne, Indiana - Matthew 25/Clinic for low income pounds trying to take your outs) of Jersey City, N.J., and ~ Ft Worth, Texas - Habitat for Humanity/kids head off. you've got to be seri­ Erie Jakubowski of Whiting, ~ Grand Rapids, MI - Clinic for Migrant Workers (Spanish) ous." Ind. ~ Harrisburg, PA- Interfaith Family Shelter The 27-year-old Grant The New York State Athletic ~ Houston, Texas - Catholic Charities stands 6-foot-7, two inches Commission has ordered thn ~ Kansas City, Kansas -Catholic Worker House (male) taller than Lewis. He weighed weigh-ins for Ingle-Jones. Don Bosco Center - variety from 250 to 256 pounds in his ~ Kokomo, Indiana- Home for women (female) Gatti-Jakubowski and othnr ~ Marion, Indiana - Family Services/Emergency Shelter last five fights, and he is non-heavywnight fights on tho ~ Poughkeepsie, NY - Good Counsel Home for pregnant teens expected to be at least 250 at card to held at R a.m. ~ LaPone, Indiana - Sharing Meadows/Disabilitieo camp for adults the official weigh-in Saturday. This decision upset ~Muskegon, MI- Every Women's Place/Young teen program Thursday. both Ingle and Jones. ~ Nashville, TN - Oasis Center for troubled teens ~ Nonhero Michigan - Fr. Fred Foundation/Emergency services ~ Jacksonville, Florida- L' Arche Home ~ Rochester, New York- Home/clinic for pregnant teens ~ Peoria, lllinois - (local) Guardian Angel Home (kids) ~ Springfield, Massachusetts - Food Bank ~ San Diego, California - Disabilities/Job Training ~ San Francisco, California- Andre House (male) University of Notre Dame ~ South Dakota - Small shelters/reservation camp ~ Norwalk, Connecticut - Transitional shelter ~ Ventura. California - Emergency Services

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BOOKSTORE BASKETBALL XXIX No. 1 Keyplay.com, No. 2 NDToday.com lead Sweet 16

By KATHLEEN O'BRIEN "Paul [Moore] is our basketball knowl­ Assosciare Sports Editor edge. lie's our brains," Dietrich said. "We have good overall ball-handling, and obvi­ 538 teams entered Bookstore ously we have one big guy in Teasdale Basketball XXIX. Some entered for the who helps us a lot in the middle." fun. knowing that their lack of basketball Looking to stand in the way of ability would send them to the sidelines Keyplay.com's run at the title is the sec­ within the first couple rounds. Others ond-seeded team NDToday.com. signed up to take part in a great campus After playing on several teams in past tradition. more intent on putting on a years. B.J. Kloska, Todd Titus, Tim show for their friends than advancing in Muething, David Mikolyzk and Mark the tourney. But a few teams were aiming Godish pulled together to form a solid for something higher. the pride of win­ five-man squad. ning the title in the largest collegiate cam­ "We have really good team chemistry," pus competition. Godish said. "We've been playing together For 16 squads in the 2000 competition, for a long time." that goal remains intact. The round of the NDToday.com had no trouble making Sweet 16 gets underway today, and the its way to the Sweet 16, sending home the number of teams left standing will be Free Bailers with a 21-8 defeat Tuesday. whittled down to one by Sunday. The guys, however, expect things to pick Keyplay.com and NDToday.com rank as up now that the tournament has pared the consensus favorites to make it to the down to the cream of the crop. finals. "All the teams in the top 16 an~ good," No. 1-ranked Keyplay.com boasts four Titus said. "It's dP.!initely a whole ()nother players who return from last year's Final level of competition. We're not looking Four team that lost to past any teams." eventual champion "We want Jimmy Dillon. The No. 2-seeded Malicious Prosecution - NDToday.com will Paul Moore. Cas We want his head on a face off against a Schneller. Tom Dietrich stake. I think Coco Butter is group of guys from and football player John the team to beat. " Moreau Seminary in Teasdale. Moore. Nunc Dimittus at Schneller and Dietrich all 7:45p.m. played together two years Red Croker "We need to focus ago for Your Mom. a Coco Butter on defense, and squad that lost to tourna­ make sure that we ment winner PHIME- . play the way that we TIME. After two years bowing out just know we can play, rather than focusing short of victory. Keyplay.com wants to on the other team," Titus said. taste triumph. Although NDToday.com knows its got "The last two years we lost in the Final several games to go befom the title round, Four," Dietrich said. "Hopefully we'll put it's hoping for a shot at the championship. it together. We know what each other is "I think we have as good a shot as any­ JOHN DAIL YfThe Observer thinking and we know what reads each body," Godish said. Wearing a shirt bearing his team's logo, a player for No.2 NDToday.com guy is making. We just have to play up to Third-ranked Franchise made a leap in struggles away a member of the Free Bailers in Wednesday's game. our potential, take everybody seriously the rankings from their original seeding NDToday.com defeated Free Bailers, 21-8. and make sure we play well as a team of fifth, and hopes to defend the boost together." against No. 14 The Torch. The Franchise a potential match with top-ranked well. I think Gary Godsey is key. He's real­ The lone newcomer to Keyplay.com is Squad of Dan Reidy, Steve Craig, Kevin Keyplay.com in the semifinals. ly athletic for a person his size. He pretty no slouch either - the top-ranked team Muempfer, Dan Lustig and Matt Canna "We want Jimmy Dillon. We want his much opened things up in the second half picked up the starting point guard from has been playing together all year, and head on a stake," Croker said. "I think last game to win it." this year's Notre Dame basketball team in won't go down easy. Coco Butter is the team to beat. But Sixth-ranked Majesties takes on No. 11 senior Jimmy Dillon. Craig played on PRIMETIME the past Keyplay is the team that matches up best Fueled by Hate (formerly Dexy's Midnight "My original intent wasn't to play at three years, winning one championship with us." Runners) in an 8:30p.m. game. all," Dillon said. "I missed signups and I and making it to the Final Four each of Double Down plans to work double-time Corey Hartmann and Justin Heberle had 80 different people asking me to play. the other two tourneys. Canna and Lustig to upset an over-confident Coco Butter. lead Majesties into action, while Notre Once teams were released they realized also have some round of 32 experience, "We're looking forward to playing," Dame basketball senior Todd Palmer caps that I wasn't playing. But then John as Canna's squad beat out Lustig's for a captain Coley Brady said. "We're pretty off Fueled by Hate, a tea,m rounded out by [Teasdale] and I are pretty good friends, Sweet 16 slot a year ago. confident and we think we have a good Matt DeDominicis, Jim Moravek. John and I got an opportunity to play with "Personally, right now I think it's a two­ chance to win." Lally and Steve Kovatis. some of the other kids that have been horse race between Keyplay.com and No. 5 Versatility and No. 12 Rampage Fueled by Hate found itself in a 10-2 part of the tournament for years." NDToday.com," Craig said. "The rest of us square off at 8:30p.m. tonight. deficit in its last game against Guided by Today, Dillon will get the opportunity to are just kind of fighting. For our team to James Cochran. Chris Dillon, Ross Voices, before battling back to win 22-20. play against an opponent he knows better have a chance, we have to play smart. Hansen, Jason Childress and Joe Lillis In a match between the F-Bombs and than any other in the tournament - We're kind of small, so we need to beat play for Versatility, a squad ranked third Mourning Wood, the No.7 F-Bombs hope Fighting Irish teammate Skylard Owens, their guy to the glass. We need to take our in the early going of the to defend their advantage who leads Sexual Frustration V. time and make five or six passes down the tourney. They stormed ''They have us as the in the rankings. The team "It's kind of neat for teammates to be floor." past Team 126 to get to of Dan Kirzeder, Doug playing against one another," Dillon said. Shooting is a strength for Franchise. the Sweet 16, winning team to beat, and we feel Bartels, Sean McCarthy, "We've all three [Todd Palmer, Owens "One thing we do have is five pretty 21-6. that we can do that. " Kevin O'Neill and Andy and myself1 got a chance to play one decent shooters," Craig said. "Lustig and "It's probably our Sexton held off Manual another. We wanted to get a shot against Muempfer are our outside threats. Matt defense that sets the Steering 21-9 in the Jimmy Dillon the coaches, but I guess they're not good Canna can also shoot it out there. All of us tone of our games," round of32. enough to make it that far." are very capable from 15 feet in." Cochran said. "It looks Keyplay.com The final game in the Luckily Dillon doesn't have to worry In taking on The Torch, Franchise will like we've got a pretty Sweet 16 will pit No. 8 about running extra wind sprints in prac­ benefit from the absence of Torch player tough bracket ahead of Please Call Us Bosephus tice next year, as he joked about his for­ Matt Thompson, who will miss the us." against No. 9 Like Whoa. mer coaches' ability. Several Fighting remaining games because he is throwing The five Versatility players got experi­ Brian Ostick, Andy Bozzelli, Pat O'Brien, Irish coaches played in this year's for the track and field team in the Drake ence playing together as Keough residents Jason Sullivan and Evan Maher are the Bookstore tourney, but the last one was Relays. The Torch still plays a physical a year ago. All but Hansen played on the five freshmen playing for Please Call Us knocked out by Sexual Frustration V style of game, which will lead Franchise 1999 Bookstore runners-up squad. Bosephus. All but O'Brien live in Alumni, Tuesday. to turn to its shooting. Rampage features three varsity football and the five have been playing together "Who would have thought we'd be "They're real physical," Muempfer said, players in Jim Molinaro and quarterbacks all year long. squaring up against each other this "So we'll have to hit on the outside shots." Arnez Battle and Gary Godsey. Those "One of our strong points is we're a early?" Owens asked. "With me, I don't Fourth-ranked Coco Butter will be test­ three are joined by Will Matthews and pretty balanced team. All five guys pose a care who I'm going up against. I just want ed by No. 13 Double Down in a 9:15p.m. Tom Juntunen. Having three football threat," O'Brien said. "We're going to to go out there and play hard." match. players helps Rampage by giving it size, need to keep playing defense and Owens, playing on the No. 16 team, Coco Butter brings more varsity athletes but keeps them from getting practice time rebound." would love to bounce Keyplay.com from to the court than any other team left in together. Like Whoa features three football play­ ers in Deke Cooper, Benny Guilbeaux and the tournament. the tourney. John Owens, Lee Lafayette "Our strengths are our size," Matthews "A lot of people don't have much and Tony Fisher all play football, while said. "The shortest guy on our team is 6- Jay Johnson, joined by soccer player respect for our team," Owens said, "So we Red Croker, Doug Conners and Marshaun foot-2. We've got two big guys right Reggie McKnight and one non-varsity ath­ just want to go out and prove people West are on the Notre Dame track and around 6-6, 6-8. I think one of our weak­ lete. wrong. We'll just have to play good field team. West will miss the next three nesses is football practice. Last game they "We never get to play together because perimeter defense and make sure we box rounds due to competing in the Drake came right from practice, so usually we all have practice schedules and school out." Relays. According to Croker, everyone on they're tired or banged up." on top of that. That's some of the dynam­ But Keyplay.com has other ideas. Coco Butter was recruited to play basket­ Rampage plans to mix things up ics that come with being athletes," "We're ranked No. 1 for a reason," ball out of high school, making them a tal­ between shooting and penetration. McKnight said. "Dekc and Jay are really Dillon said. "They have us out there as the ented and confident crew. "We need to penetrate through their athletic guys who get some rebounds for team to beat, and we feel that we can do "We're very confident," Croker said. defense and use our size to our advan­ us and score some points. Everybody's that." "We know that if we play well, we don't tage. If we come out in a real good defen­ going to have to stay healthy." The veteran Bookstore players have not fear any teams at all. We're a fast-break­ sive set in the first half. we should be in 16 teams. Four days of games. Only one yet been tested, winning their last game ing team, and we press full court the good shape," Matthews said. "Tom's a will remain standing. It's Bookstore XXIX, and anything can in a 21-2 romp. whole time." real good shooter. He's been real effective Coco Butter is already looking ahead to from outside. Arnez runs things pretty happen. ~Tiff)tr?, ~ ··'\'!"'·''\<' ·,0·, Thursday, April 27, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 27

WOMEN'S BOOKSTORE BASKETBALL Welsh rivalry Look for more coverage of Bookstore Basketball in Friday's paper. sparks final eight Women's Draw,- "Dol'initely quickness." said 1JAAKE Playmates who can play 3 By BRIAN BURKE Lichon. Sports Writer The top seed remaining in the fiold. JAAKE has cruised It is now down to night. and into the round of eight and 8 Richie Frahn Club tonight at 7 p.m. the women's will face the eighth seed, Bookstore Basketball tourna­ Richie Fraim Club. 4 Silk Puppets _je're 52 years older than you 7 nwnt will. be narrowed down "We work really well as a furtfwr to set up the Final team. We try not to let person r--- Four. Highlighting tlw action do all the scoring," Amy is an intriguing ganw between Anderson of JAAKE said. 5 [email protected] I Muffet's 2nd string 2 tlw third -seed cd Playmates "We're up to the task, but Who Can Play and the sixth­ we've only played two games SPPded No Name But Got and at least today we had a G a nw , pi t t i n g big height intnrliall team­ advantage." Ill a tes against "/think we're definitely M a r y each other in a the underdogs. I think Lenzini of Welsh Family R i c h i e dash. tomorrow will be the Frahn Club ~HE w~~~~:~ d~~~~~~!c~~~in~esurts Plavmates toughest game we've had. realizes her 2 0 0 0 JAAKE def. Apparently we hate them Who (:an Play They'll be out to get us, squad needs is made up to play at a Richie Frahn Club def. Gl Jane play mind games with us, entirely of high level to [email protected] def. Aloe Vera seniors while but we'll be ready. pull off the No Name But Whoever wins I'll be root­ upset. Muffet's 2nd string def. Hardcore strokers Got Game fea­ "The team tures three ing for Welsh in the next we're sup­ We're 52 years older than you def. Kriminals fn~shmen, one round." posed to Playmates who can play def. C.J.'s finest sophomore and play looks one junior. pretty com­ No name but got game def. Team 45 Playmates Vanessa Lichon petitive," captain No Name But Got Game Lenzini said. Stephanie "I think we Eden sees the just need to tPams familiarity with each play really well, play good other being a factor .. team defense, and make all "They'rp the other half of our shots." tlw intnrhall team. I think it'll In the four against five Results from the ~GCTA.( be a very close game, we know match up, Silk Puppets takes each other very well," Eden on [email protected]. Round of32 said. "We play very good team Silk Puppets boasts good ath­ F-Bombs def. Manual Steering (21-9) 5n• baskntball. We're playing this leticism with two soccer play­ game for April Olsen, one of ers in the lineup. Please call us Bosephus def. Nylon Strokers (21-19) 2000 our teammates who tore her "We should play like we Sexual Frustration V def. Carpe Diem (21-16) ACL. That's our motivation to played tonight," Jennifer go all the way." Pavela of Silk Puppets said. NDToday.com def. Free Bailers (21-9) Meanwhile Vanessa Lichon "We're a scrappy team and we KeyPiay.com def. One-tenth Asian (21-2) of No Name But Got Game just need to come out and play Rampage def. Donkey Balls (22-20) knows her teammates have our game." thoir work cut out for them While Playmates Who Can Coco Butter de f. Scottie Who? (21-1 0) against their elder former Play and JAAKE bring consid­ Dexy's Midnight Runners def. Guided by Voices (22-20) tPamnH1tes. erable experience into their "I think we're definitely the games, the team with the Franchise def. Furious D (21-8) underdogs," Lichon said. "I biggest edge in that depart­ Mourning Wood def. Corby's (21-1-2) think tomorrow. will be the ment'"would have to be the Versatility def. Team 126 (21-6) toughest game we've had. seventh-seeded We're 52 They'll be out to get us. play Years Older Than You, a team Like WHOA!! def. Fast Eddie (21-19) mind games with us, but we'll of faculty members that is yet The torch def. Malicious Prosecution (21-19) lw rnady. Whoever wins I'll be to bow out against the Majesties def. Natty White (21-18) rooting for Welsh in the next younger competition. The round." going gets tougher however Double Down def. Five Degree Guarantee (21-15) Lichon feels her team has a has they face the second-seed­ Nunc Dimmitis def. The Individuals (21-14) signilkant advantage. ed Muffet's Second String. JOSE CUELLAR/ The Observer The round of 16

1 Ke ·, 'i NDToda .com 2 ST2 •:. ST2 ..·J.· ' 8:30 16 Sexual Frustration V ~----~ Nunc Dimmitis 15 7:45 ST2 ST3

____...... 9 Likeiiiioi.io ...... WHOA!_...... 4::30 ...... '''1. ~-- 4:30 ·Mourn in Wood 10 ST2 8 Please call us ST7 9:15 Bose ph us .t F-Bombs 7 7:45 ST5· 12 Rampage. 5:45' ·.,Fueled b Hate 11

.t'' ST7 j• ' ,l ST3 h: -· 8:30 5 Versatilit Ma·estics 6 8:30 ST2 :··,_ 4 Coco ·Butter 5:15 ,, Franchise 3 ... :( ST7 ,, I ,,, A " ST3 ' -~· ~ .. ··~d ... l~ ;;'• 9:15 . \ ~ 1 ~ .! ll . : . ' 1.· .• 9:15 13 Double Dow· , y., .,, .. , q.Torch 14 I' I

page 28 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, April 27, 2000

NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago tops Houston with help from Guiterrez, Sosa

the at five straight times this season Rockies in Montreal. cleared the fence before Associated Press home. and 10 consecutive dating to Guerrero singled in his first breaking into his home-run Jim Edmonds and Fernando last year. Stottlemyre (4-1), in two at-bats, then was hit in trot. HOUSTON Tatis also connected as the his 13th major league season, the right hand by a pitch from He came out of the dugout Ricky Gutierrez drove in a Cardinals reached 50 homers homered in his 216th at-bat. Kevin Jarvis (1-1) in the sixth. for a curtain call to aeknowl­ career-high five runs and in April, breaking the mark of He threw five-plus innings, Guerrero shouted at Jarvis, edge the eheers from the Sammy Sosa hit a tiebreaking 49 set by the 1997 Cleveland gave up four runs, walked four and was escorted down the crowd of 10,735. homer in the seventh inning, Indians. and struck out one for the flrst base line by plate umpire The 24-year-old Guerrero leading the Chicago Cubs over They have four games left Diamondbaeks, who are 14-7 Rick Reed. has 100 home runs in I ,657 the Houston Astros 13-8 this month to chase the record - their best record in April in Both managors camo out of career at-bats. Wednesday night. for homers in any month, 58 their short history. the dugout, with Montrnal's Guerrero's brother. Wilton. Sosa's seventh home run put by the 1987 Baltimore Orioles. Rob Ducey and Scott Holen Felipe /\lou pointing had a two-run, pinch-hit dou­ the Cubs ahead 4-3. They went Ankiel (3-1) hit a three-run eaeh hit two-run homers for Colorado's Buddy Bell. ble that put the Expos alwad on to stop a four-game losing shot for his second homer in the Phillies, who lost their fifth In the eighth, Gunrrero hit a 3-1 in the seventh. streak and send Houston to its the fourth. Edmonds had a straight. drive ofT Julian Tavarez for a Montreal scon~d six tinws in seventh loss in 11 games. leadoff homer in the f1fth, and The loss was the eighth in 420-foot homer run. Guerrero the eighth, eapped by Rondell After Sosa homered off Mike Tatis broke the record with a nine games for Philadelphia, stood and watched as the ball White's two-run double. Maddux (1-1), Joe Girardi had two-run shot later in the which has scored only 11 runs an RBI single and Gutierrez inning. during its eurront rive-game had a three-run double off Jay All three homers came off skid. Powell for an 8-3 lead in the Steve Woodard (0-3), who Gonzalez and Durazo each seventh. hasn't won in 14 starts since had two hits and three HBJs Damon Buford hit an RBI July 16,1999. for Arizona, which has hit double in the Cubs eighth and The Cardinals have homered seven home runs in its last two BRUNO'S pinch-hitter Shane Andrews' in 17 straight games, tying the against Philadelphia. three-run homer capped a team record sot in 1998, with Andy Ash by ( 1-2) struggled four-run ninth. 40 homers in that span. in the first and lasted just :{ 1- STUDENT DINNER BUFFET Roger Cedeno homered in They've connected in all but 3 innings, giving up five hits the Houston third and Ken one of their 21 games. and five earned runs. lie Caminiti hit a two-run shot in Ankiel, 20, allowed three walked four. hit a batter, the seventh. Mitch Meluskey hits and has thrown 14 score­ threw two wild pitches and homered for the Astros in tlw less innings his last three struck out two. ninth. starts to lower his ERA to Ashby retired his first two There have been 39 home 2.16. batters, but needed 36 pitches runs in 11 games this season He struek out four and to get out of the first inning as at new Enron Field. walked three, exhibiting mueh Arizona sent up eight batters Matt Karchner (1-1) got two better control than his last and scored three runs. Ashby outs for the victory. outing when he walked seven walked GonzalBz and surren­ Houston starter Octavio in five innings in a victory over dered a two-run homer to Dote! pitched six innings, giv­ the Padres. lie's batting .500 Durazo. Pizza, Po , Salad, ing up three runs and seven with a double, and five Steve Finley and Travis Lee hits. HB!s. walked before Kelly Stinnett and other Italian Dishes Cubs ·starter Andrew singled in a run. Lorraine allowed three runs Diamondbacks 10, Phillies 4 Ducey's homer barBly and six hits in 5 1-3 innings. Todd Stottlemyre hit his first cleared the left-field fenee in eareer homo run and earned the second to get the Phillies 2610 Prairie Ave. Location the win as the Arizona within a run, 3-2. Cardinals 7, Brewers 0 Diamondbacks beat the Bookie pitcher Rick Ankiel Philadelphia Phillies in Expos 9, Rockies 2 288-3320 le-d a three-homer surge that Philadelphia. Vladimir Guerrero hit his helped St. Louis set a major Luis Gonzalez and Erubiel 1 OOth career home run and *Accepting reservations for* league record for April, and Durazo each hit two-run raised his NL-leading average also threw seven scoreless homers for the Diamondbacks, to .452, leading the Montreal innings as the Cardinals beat who have beaten the Phillies Expos over the l.olorado GRADUATION ..

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WOMEN'S BASKETBALL lvey joins Canada-bound 2000 Big East All-Star Team

campaign. Special to The Observer lvey was the Big East leader in steals (2.97) and was sec­ Notre Dame senior Niele ond in assists (6.06) as she led lvey has been selected to the the Irish to a second-place fin­ 13-member 2000 Big East ish in the league's regular­ Women's Basketball All-Star season standings with a 15-1 Team which will compete on a record. six-game competitive tour of This marks the 11th eonsec­ Vancouver and Victoria, utive year that the Big East British Columbia on May 26- Conference is sending a .June 4. women's basketball all-star lvey, a second-team all-Big squad abroad. West Virginia East selection. headlines the University head coach Alexis 13-member squad which is Basil will direct the team. comprised of one representa­ Notre Dame, which made a tive from each lcague school, fifth consecutive appearance and features on~) senior, one in the NCAA tournament, fin­ junior. five sophomores and ished the 1990-2000 season six freshmen. with a 27-5 record. The .844 The 5-foot-.6 guard. who winning percentage is the best averaged 11.2 points as the in school history and the 27 team's third-leading seorer wins are the second most by and led the Irish in assists an Irish squad. ( 194), will return for a fifth The all-stars will play the season with Notre Dame in top club teams in Western 2000-20001 after playing in Canada during their tour, just five game because of an including Simon Fraser All­ injury during the 1996-97 Stars.

KEVIN DALUMfThe Observer Recycle The Observer. Niele lvey, shown here against University of South Dakota, averaged 11.2 points per game last season, ranking as the third-leading scorer for the Irish.

• • NBA Author s 1gn1ng Rivers wins coach Meet authors of the year

Associated Press

Anthony Walton ORLANDO. Fla. Doc Rivers didn't have to win and John Matthias the NBA coach of the year award to validate his first sea­ son with the surprising Orlando Magic. Just being mentioned as a candidate was enough for him. Thursday "It wouldn't have been disap­ pointing if I hadn't won. I don't think you go into a year compet­ ing to be coach of the year," he said Wednesday after receiving April 27th the Red Auerbach Trophy. "In my mind, I had already won something because every once in a while people men­ tioned me alongside Phil 7·30 pm Jackson .... Having said that, I know I have a long way to go in coaching. I do want to be THE winner someday. So I know I have a lot of work to do, a lot of in the learning to do, and this award will not stop me from doing that." Hammes Jackson led the Los Angeles Lakers to the league's best Notre Dame record, while the Magic were 41-41 and finished nne game behind Milwaukee for the final Boolcstore playoff position in the Eastern Conference. Rivers, who received 60 votes to Jackson's 53 from a 121- member panel, said last week Join us for a celebration of National Poetry that he thought the Lakers Month featuring Anthony Walton. His poems coach deserved the honor because teams are judged by have appeared widely in magazines, including the number or games they win. The Kenyon Review & The Oxford American. and coaches should be, too.

HAMMES Reading with Professor Walton will be John CORRECTION Matthias, Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame and author of 8 NOTRE DAME Mo MacDonald. a freshman volumes of poetry, including his newly released from lloly Cross Hall. was BOOKSTORE incorrectly identifit>d as a resi­ Pages. dent of Pangborn Hall in IN THE ECK CENTER Bookstore Basketball coverage phone~ 631·6316 • www.ndbookstore.com in the April 26Hl f.'dition. The Observer regrets the error.

L.....:...· ...:...·..:....· ..:....· .:....· .:....· :.....:....:· ·~·....:·....:·....:.·...:....;__:...._:....:....:..... _____:.______:. ____... _____ .______:_'__'___'_'___'_' c_•.__ • ._•• ._ •._ •._•___c•_:_•--'--'• • • • • • • • • • • • ...... page 30 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, April27, 2000

all new appliances when he made WOMEN'S ROWING it to the big-time. Chorney She loved Tony Larussa, not continued from page 32 because he was one of the best managers around. but because he Irish place seven boats in finals away from any Major League had already earned his law Baseball team. making trips to degree. She loved Dusty Baker first in their heat with a time they finished in fifth in finals games rare and deeply appreciat­ too, because he was proving peo­ Special to The Observer ed. Every summer. while vaca­ ple wrong. showing the white of 7:31.38, and then watched bettering their heat team by tioning at my grandparents' establishment that African­ as the Novice "B" captured in more than 11 seconds. MAJ)JSON,Wis. house, Gogo would take us to a Americans can coach baseball. thPir heat with a time of On the varsity side, both game. Eighty-plus years old and She didn't like Barry Bonds. Jose The Notre DamP rowing 7:36.28, two seconds behind women's varsity 8 teams did there she was sitting in the Canseco, or Rickey Henderson. team, competing in only its Wisconsin. In the finals. the quite well in their final-only bleachers making friends with the They were cocky, acting like they second season as a varsity "A" and "B" teams captured events. fans around us. talking their ears didn't have any responsibility to team, placed seven different second and fourth, respective­ , The Ser.ond Varsity 8 cap­ off. proving wrong anyone that be role models. Their run produc­ boats in the finals of their ly. tured third with a time of respective events at the didn't think an old ladv could be tion didn't really matter if they The womm1 's Novice 8 team 6:25.93, 9.10 sec,onds behind knowledgeable about baseball. didn't run out ground balls. Midwest Howing also had SU(~cess in their open­ Wisconsin. While the Varsity 8 Championships. Upon hearing the news of her Gogo taught me that there's not ing heat capturing first in team. finished in fourth with a passing. I couldn't help but think­ only a right way to fail. a lesson "Today was a great day for 6:34.93. time of 6:22.69. us," said head c,oach Martin The finals saw the team ing about how trivial all of this is, I've learned before. but a right The women's Varsity 4 boat Stone. "Putting all our boats these sports that consume many way to succeed too, a lesson too improve its time by a second came in second in their heat into finals is a big ste.p for this of our lives. Some deeper thinking many people don't ever learn. and a half and capture third with a time of 7:29.38. They program." made me realize how important She taught me that doing things place 4.37 seconds behind nearly matched their heat time Leading the way for the Irish they actually were. because the right way meant more than Wisconsin. in the !inals. posting a time of through sports. Gogo taught me a failing or succeeding, a lesson we was the Novice 4. Notre In 2nd Novice Eight action, 7:29.79 only to fall to sixth Dame's Novice 4 "A" captured very valuable lesson. She rooted all must learn. took third in their heat and place. for the teams. but not all of the She was excited about seeing players. She only rooted for play­ Pac Bell Park. excited about both ers whom she respected. the A's and Giants prospects in Midwest Rowing They didn't earn respect with the upcoming years. But for some their actions on the field. No bat­ reason, seeing these dreams real­ ting titles. defensive plays, or ized wasn't in God's plans. She Championship Results homeruns could earn it. They collapsed April 13 and died soon earned respect with both their after. So last week, I was doing actions otT the field and the way God a favor. I returned home for Novice 8 Novice 4 they carried themselves on the her funeral. Afterward our family 1 . Notre Dame Heat2 field. Her favorite players were went to the Pacific Ocean and 1. Notre Dame Carney Lansford, Dave Stewart, poured her cremated ashes into it. 2. Kansas Dave Dravecky Matt Williams and Some would think she did it 3. Southern Methodist 2. Northwestern Mark McGwire (not the andro­ because of a love of water or as a 4. Texas Club 3. Wheaton pumping, 70-homerun McGwire, symbol of freedom. But if I know 4. Cincinatti the one that batted .201). Gogo. it was for a different rea­ 5. Cincinatti If you asked her why she liked son. She's giving God an earful all 5. Southern Methodist Stewart or Williams. she'd tell right. She's trying to convince him that they were always gentlemen. to shift the currents so that she 2nd Novice 8 Heat 3 ·Varsity 4 McGwire? She'd say that she ends up in the Bay. outside the liked how he never watched his right field fence, a seat to watch 1. Wisconsin 1. Wisconsin "B" 1. Wisconsin "B" homeruns and how close he was her Giants. If only heaven's radio 2. Texas 2. Notre Dame "B" 2. Notre Dame to his son. could tune to the A's game. 3. Notre Dame 3. Creighton 3. Wisconsin LT She liked Dravecky for overcom­ The views expressed in this col­ 4. Northwestern 4. Wheaton "B" ing cancer with an upbeat atti­ umn are those of the author and 4. Texas tude. Lansford? She'd tell you not necessarily those of The 5. Kansas about how he bought his mother Observer. 2nd Annual Chili Cook-off and Bluegrass usic Festival Featuring: Saturday, April 29th The Galoots 8-llp.m. Straight from Kentucky, on North Quad The Home of Bluegrass Music' Live Music! Free T-Shirts Free Chili! for first 150! Free Drinks! See ya there Free Watermelon partner!

Limited quantities of food and drink available Sponsored by: The Student Activitie Office, Notre Dame Food Services, and Coca-Cola Thursday, April 27, 2000 The Observer+ TO DAY page 31

FOURTH AND INCHES TOM KEELEY A DEPRAVED NEw WoRLD JEFF BEAM

SUP-~. 1"'-IIS ~oT A Lo\ OF WOP..~. \ GU€5S I CAN ALWAYS wAKE UP EARL"( TOMO~R.OW., ~o I CAN GO OUT fOtz. A LliiL..c wHILE.".·.

Fox TROT BILL AMEND

WHY HEY J'ASON! C:.YMNASTS WATCH ME WASTE FALL OFF THE CUSHY SA BEAM! FLooR I ~MAf\1! MATS ON \ succESs­ FUL. MOVES IS BEYoND ME. I

Famous last words.

beam.1 @nd.edu

CROSSWORD HOROSCOPE EUGENIA LAST

ACROSS 28 "Smile!" 54 "Bye Bye Birdie" THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 2000 Paleological - 31 Cousin of a song CELEBRITIES BORN ON TinS change of heart. This will be a make­ place rhododendron 58 Advice for one DAY: Jack Klugman, Coretta Scott or-break period in your relationship. 4 Montana, for 33 Substitute for facing adversity I

NOTRE DAME ~~~c~~ BASEBALL oo~rn:~®'lf ©~oo©rn:~ ~w~~rn:oorn:®® ffil~oorn: ND ., vs. TODHY! St. Joh us. Cleueland St. 5pm Sunday@12:00 pm-Numerous special events Sat. us. St. John's(2) 12pm promoting breast cancer awareness will take place, Eck Stadium in addition to prize givaways and contests! Going abroad Senior Niele Ivey was selected to join the 2000 Big East Women's Basketball All-Star Team. The team will play six games in Canada during May PORTS and June. page 27 THE page 32 OBSERVER Thursday, April 27, 2000 Baseball WOMEN'S TENNIS bonds Belles defeat Crusaders in season ender By KATIE McVOY families Assistant Sporrs Editor I think that God's getting an The Saint Mary's tennis team earful right now. ended the regular season on a He made a mistake and I'm high notfl, defeating Division I sure she's letting him hear opponent Valparaiso University about it. by a count of I apolo­ 9-0. The Belles Saint Mary's 9 gize for wrapped up Valparaiso 0 being this match in unable to just about write a col­ three hours. handily defeating umn last Valpo. week. I "It was really an in-and-out was home. day," said freshman Lindsay in Mollan. California The Belles started their regu­ trying to Brian Churney lar line-up. with the exception of atone for the regular doubles team. Coaeh this mis­ Dee Stevenson played Mollan take. And On the and Trisha Jones instead of ifvou think Hot Corner Vietoria Cox and Elisa Hyan. that's an The move proved to be a good easv task. one. helping the Belles surge to think again. a big win. What was God's mistake. you After being behind early in thfl ask? Well. the big guy upstairs match, Mollan and Jones came took my Grandmother into heav­ back to win 8-6 in an eight­ en before she got to watch a game pro-set. game with her grandkids in Pac All three doubles teams Bell Park. the Giants new played eight-game pro-sets. The exquisite stadium that uses the first doubles team of Katie Vales San Francisco Bay as its right and Annie Knish controlled field homerun area. their set and took a eommand­ Anyone who knew her knows ing lead before winning the set not to keep her away from her 8-2. The second doubles team of baseball. Eighty-six-years old Becky Kremer and Natalie Cook and next to her family. baseball also had a strong match, win­ was her Jove. My grandmother ning 8-5. The singles players wasn't just any baseball fan were just as successful. Vales, DOROTHY CARDER!The Observer though. She was one of the best Cook, Kremer, Knish, Moll an Finishing the season 17-5 and 5-2 in the MIAA, the Belles must prepare for the conference fans, one of the fans that truly and Jones, who play first tournament at Albion next week. love and respect the game, that through sixth singles respective­ sticks by her teams throughout ly, all won their matches in record. along with a 5-2 in "But we bounced back. We had The Belles now have a week good times and bad, that was as straight sets. MIAA play. a good practice Tuesday, and and a half off to get ready for impressed with stardom as role "Everyone played great," Following Monday's loss to that helped." the conference tournament at players. Mollan said. "We were all more Wheaton and the fact that they Saint Mary's has fared well Albion that starts on May 5. The There was no such thing as focused coming out. It was our were not invited to the Midwest against upper level Division I Belles are looking to focus on too much baseball for Gogo (the last match before conference, so Invitational. the Belles were eompetition. particulars this week at prac­ nickname we grandkids gave we all wanted to finish the sea­ glad to have some practice and They faced Bucknell tice. her when she was young son on a good note." get back on traek. University during their trip over "This week we'll be fine tun­ because of her tendency to con­ The Belles did just that. ring­ "It kind of put a damper on spring break and were tri­ ing everything and getting ready stantly be on the go). It wasn't ing out the season with a 17-5 things for awhile," Mollan said. umphant in that match as well. for conference," Mollan said. only normal to see her sitting in her chair. watching her beloved Giants while listening to her SOFTBALL beloved A's, it was abnormal for her not to be. There wasn't a happier person in the entire world during the Notre Daille takes doubleheader against UIC 1989 Battle of the Bav World Series. Even the earthquake ers." junior outfielder Lizzy ing them closer to breaking the sixth before scoring with Kriech that interrupted the series and ByRACHAELPROTZMAN Lemire said. "They were not record of 29 set last season and Alkire on a series of UIC: damaged her home couldn't Sporrs Writer strong at all whereas our piteh­ Junior Danielle Klayman dou­ errors. squelch her excitement. She was ers did real- bled in the second before scor­ "They're a big hitting team," a good fan. though. not because Notre Dame's Jennifer ly well as Game 1 ing on a single to left field by Lemire said. "We did an out­ of the way she followed her Sharron led the Irish to victory always." Sharron to end the Irish scoring. standing job of stopping them teams during their good times, in game one in a doubleheader Junior Notre Dame 4 Pitcher Michelle Moshel defensively. We couldn't have but because of the way she fol­ against No. 25 Illinois-Chicago M e I a n i e Illinois-Chicago 0 earned her 11th win in game done better." lowed them through their with her 1Oth shutout this year. Alkire two with eight strikeouts. Notre Dame will travel to St. rebuilding years. Nothing The Irish, with a 4-0 win in kicked start­ Scoreless until the third, John's for a doubleheader on changed. She still rooted just as game one and 7-1 triumph in ed the Irish Game 2 Andrea Loman singled to left Saturday and Seton Hall in hard when they lost. game two, improved to 39-12 on in the first Notre Dame 7 field to drive in Klayman before another Big East doubleheader More importantly for us kids. the year and avenged a double­ with her Lemire drove in two more runs on Sunday. we still got to attend a game header loss to UIC last year. ninth home­ Illinois-Chicago 1 to give Notre Dame the 3-0 lead. "I thought we played really every summer regardless of Sharron struck out 11 while run of the Alkire doubled down the left well today," Lemire said. "They their records. I live six hours holding UIC to just three hits. season. Alkire, who totaled 10 field line in the fifth before scor­ were big games that give us "I think we did a really good homeruns last year, lifted Notre ing on a single by Lemire. conl~?ence going into the week­ see CHURNEY/page 30 job of jumping on their pitch- Dame to 27 total homeruns edg- Alexis Madrid doubled in the end.

Baseball Softball Blue and Gold Game vs. Cleveland State at St. John's Saturday, I :30 p.m. SPORTS '..: Men:s Golf Today, 5:05p.m. Saturday, 12 p.m. ATA • - at Big East Championships • Track and field Women's Lacrosse Rowing Saturday, all day At Drake Relays 4 at Rutgers at Navy • GLANCE • Friday-Saturday, TBA Saturday, 1 p.m. • Saturday, all day