150 YEARSg?

t i X H OBSERVER

Tuesday, November 29, 1994 • Vol. XXVI No.58 NOTRE DAME-IN THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SERVING NOTRE DAME AND SAINT MARY'S U.N. unable to keep peace in Bihac Student control over the entire Bihac According to Serbs have region, which was surrounded th e r u le s Serb assault continues accosted by Bosnian Serbs to the south under which Bosnian and Croatian Serbs have overtaken offensive surge and east and Croatian Serbs to th e U n ited one-third of the area around Bihac. NATO near Loftus By AIDA CERKEZ the north and west. Nations en­ appeals for a cease-fire are being ignored. Associated Press ______The Bosnian army concluded tered former that the Bosnian Serbs would Yugoslavia, By LIZ FORAN SARAJEVO attack to secure territory for a none of that □ Bosnian Serb ■ Serb-held Croatia Associate News Editor Just one month ago, out­ railroad that could link the should have ■ Muslim-Croat O U.N.-designated gunned government troops Serbian capital of Belgrade been possible. federation “safe zones” A female Notre Dame student burst from the isolated Bihac with the farthest-flung parts of In J a n u a ry was accosted last Tuesday 1992, follow­ corner of northwest Bosnia and Serb-held land in Croatia and SLOVENIA HUNGARY 50 miles evening, November 22, on her pushed Serb forces backwards Bosnia. The Bihac region was ing six months way to Loftus Center, according the only missing piece in the o f w ar in to Charles Hurley, assistant di­ in their most successful offen­ 50 km sive of the war. railroad plan. Croatia, the rector of Notre Dame Security. Rather than wait for an at­ United Nations The incident occurred at ■ see US OPTIONS, page 5 tack, the government army established about 7 p.m. as the student struck first, taking 100 square demilitarized SERBIA was walking between the Band miles of Serb-held territory. zones in the BOSNIA Building and Kline Field, just Government troops were on HERZEG0V1 the offensive elsewhere, too, At the same time, the army one-third of west of Loftus, Hurley said. and the United States was and its Bosnian Croat militia al­ Croatia con­ The student reported that an Srebrenica preparing to announce it no lies seized the town of Kupres tr o lle d by unidentified male approached longer would enforce an arms to the south. The Bosnian army Serbs. Most of her as she walked toward embargo against the Bosnian was pressing the Serbs in cen­ that territory Loftus and put his arm around tral and northeast Bosnia. The borders her. He ran when she began government. After 2 1/2 years VS) Gorazde of taking it on the chin, the government appeared to be on Bosnia. screaming. She was not in­ Bosnian government was taking a roll. Heavy jured. it to the Serbs. The United Nations did not w e a p o n s in The suspect was described as Weeks later, the governmen­ react to the government offen­ those areas a Hispanic male, about 6 feet t’s back is to the wall again. sives, and they were greeted w e r e to be MONTENEGRO, tall, approximately 20 to 25 Serbs have retaken most of the with some satisfaction in placed under r years-old, with a thin build and territory around Bihac, the U.N. Washington. U.N. control. a dark mustache, Hurley said. peacekeeping mission is in That told the Serbs two But so m e He was reportedly wearing a things: that the United Nations weapons red hooded coat, dark pants shambles and the U.S. defense ALBANIA secretary has acknowledged probably would not react to a n e v e r w ere and dark shoes. that the Serbs have in effect counterattack, and second, that under control; Hurley said security searched won the war. stronger U.S. backing for the others were the area, but found no sign of What went wrong? Bosnian government meant placed in U.N. the man. Again, security Bihac safe area, there was an­ Bosnian army miscalculations there was no sense in fighting storage, but were broken out urges students to use caution other problem: the United played a role. But the story of only a defensive war to protect again at moments of tension. when walking in the perimeter Nations, which decides when the Bihac campaign also high­ what they had captured. The Bihac region includes a areas of campus and to avoid NATO planes strike, said the lights U.N. failure to meet its The Bosnian 5th Corps in U.N.-mandated safe area walking alone at night. Serbs were so close to the cen­ basic responsibilities in the for­ Bihac was a threat and Bosnian around Bihac town, meaning In another incident, a gradu­ ter of Bihac that any air strike mer Yugoslavia. Serbs concluded they had to that NATO could launch air ate student residing in Fisher would threaten civilians. Sources in the Muslim-led contain it. strikes if the area were at­ Hall awoke early Thanksgiving And the U.N. commander in government’s army say plan­ Government generals ex­ tacked. morning when she thought Bosnia, Lt. Gen. Sir Michael ning for the Bihac campaign pected a Serb counterattack NATO launched two air someone was in her apartment, Rose, said peacekeepers “never began two months ago when from the south, which began in strikes last week: once to knock Hurley said. promised to defend anything.” the United Nations withdrew a the second week of November. out an airfield in Croatia from The student reported awak­ On Sunday, even U.S. Defense unit of French peacekeepers What they did not expect was which Serb planes attacked the ing at 4:30 a.m. when she Secretary William Perry from Bihac and replaced them intervention by Serbs from Bihac pocket, and once to si­ thought someone was standing appeared to be giving up hope with poorly trained and under- Croatia to the north. lence Serb anti-aircraft missile over her, and reported hearing that the Serbs could be rolled equipped Bangladeshis. Now, Serb forces are on the batteries that threatened its footsteps in other parts of the back. “It seems the Serbs have That was shortly after the outskirts of Bihac, planes based jets. apartment. She pretended she demonstrated military superi­ government army had routed in Croatia have raided Bosnian But by the time the United was asleep, then got up at 7:30 ority on the ground,” he said. renegade Muslims and taken towns and artillery has shelled Nations acknowledged that a.m. and called security, Bosnian government territory. Croatian Serbs actually were in Hurley said.

BOARD OF GOVERNANCE Saint Mary’s students hope to receive WVFI by EMILY RUFFNER station’s growth. News Writer______Sostak is encouraging BOG members to fix the broken The fact that Saint Mary’s transmitters, in anticipation of students have not been able to the station’s move to FM. receive WVFI, the college radio “Students need to weigh the station, for approximately importance of college radio,” eleven years was discussed yes­ claimed Sostak. “Now’s the terday evening at the Board of time to get the ball rolling.” Governance (BOG) meeting. Other BOG news: The station, instead of serv­ • BOG approved $300 toward ing both the Saint Mary’s and the December 3 Salsa and Notre Dame community, has Merengue Dance co-sponsored only been serving Notre Dame, by FUERZA and the Sisters of due to the fact that Saint Nefertiti at Saint Mary’s. The Mary’s radio transmitters have dance is featuring “Son del been broken. Barrio,” Chicago’s premier Steve Sostak, representing salsa and merengue band. The the radio station, informed BOG dance, costing $3 per person, is members that the station will open to students from both be going FM within the next campuses. few years so both campuses • BOG’s Open Forum is today will be able to benefit from the at 6:45 in Carroll Auditorium. station’s underground music. Panel members will include Sostak suggests more “stu­ representatives from BOG, The Observer/ Michael Hungeling dent support, including the RHA, SAB, and SAC to answer In the side pocket Saint Mary’s community” is questions and take suggestions needed to encourage the radio from any and all students. A Notre Dame student shoots pool in the Gorch Game Room at LaFortune Student Center. page 2 The Observer • INSIDE Tuesday, November 29, 1994

I In s id e C o l u m n W orld at a Glance 911 operators negligent B O X O F F IC E Finding more Top weekend m ______PHILADELPHIA Seven 911 operators who worked the night a teen-ager m o v i e s than the was beaten to death on the steps of a church will be disciplined for mishandling the calls, the mayor said W eekend of Nov. 25-27,1994 Monday. All d o llar fig u re s in m illions Transcripts of the 911 calls made Nov. 11, the day 16- Gross to date, weeks in W e e k e n d perfect gift release, number of screens g ro s s year-old Eddie Polec was beaten, show operators grew impatient with some callers and waited about 40 minutes The Santa Clause $ 2 7 . 4 $70.3, three weeks, 2,269 screens after the first of about 20 calls to send police. Police After going to the gro­ responded within five minutes. Star Trek Generations $ 1 9 .1 cery store four times the Mayor Edward G. Rendell said that of 11 operators on $49, two weeks, 2,681 screens day before Thanksgiving duty that night, three will be suspended with intent to Interview W ith The Vam pire $ 1 6 . 9 and still forgetting the dismiss, three will be suspended and transferred and one 3 $83.4, three weeks, 2,604 screens will be referred to a disciplinary board for a hearing. cranberry sauce, thus J u n i o r $ 1 3 . 4 necessitating a fifth run “They are being suspended for abusive and rude 4 | 0 r $13.4, one week, 1,749 screens during the Macy's responses to callers,” Rendell said. “That is unaccept­ Thanksgiving Day parade, able.” A Low Down Dirty Sham e $ 1 1 .4 $11.4, one week, 1,334 screens I decided I had just not Polec was attacked by up to 20 teen-agers swinging yet had my fill of crowds, Suzy Fry baseball bats, and died in a hospital the next day of a The Lion King $ 8 so mom and I hit the Viewpoint Editor fractured skull. Five young men have been charged with $281.8, two weeks in reissue, 1,510 screens malls the day after— murder. S t a r g a t e $ 6 .5 surely lunacy in its high- ______The attack followed a false rumor that someone from $60.2, five weeks, 2,033 screens est form. Nothing rep­ Polec’s neighborhood in Philadelphia had raped a girl from suburban Abington. The Professional $ 5 .3 resents the pinnacle of capitalism more than $2.8, one week, 1,220 screens millions of weary bargain hunters armed with The mayor has appointed a committee to come up with credit cards and Nike Cross-trainers the day recommendations for improving the 911 system. And he The Pagemaster $ 5 .1 following the feast of our nation. said more police supervisors will be added to the opera­ $5.1, one week, 1,803 screens Not nearly as dedicated to the mission at tion. M iracle on 34th Street $ 5 hand as our fellow shoppers, we braved the Ronald Mauldin, a union official, said the operators and i o $8.1, two weeks, 1,191 screens parking lots and the roaming perfume ladies dispatchers were being made scapegoats. Source: Exhibitor Relations Co., Inc. AP only to find ourselves back in the car on the way to another shopping center. Sure, the Volkswagen designs new Beetle Suit Challenges FAA Retirement Age sales were fabulous, but only if you wanted to risk bodily injury for that nifty gift set. FRANKFURT, Germany CHICAGO Finding ourselves too exhausted to continue Is it a bug or isn't it? “Well, yes, but ...” Volkswagen Gerard Sorlucco has been flying since he was 14. In after searching yet again for a parking spot, responded Monday when asked if a new car the compa­ three years he’ll have to quit the job he loves, unless a we decided to take refuge in a show. I am ny plans to produce is indeed a reincarnated Beetle. lawsuit succeeds in overturning the ban keeping pilots probably the only person in America never to The new car, to be sold in the United States, Canada and 60 or older from flying large commercial aircraft. “The have seen the original “Miracle on 34th South America, will have the familiar domed chassis. president of the United States was routinely over the age Street." The new version, with Richard But instead of the old rear-mounted, air-cooled engine, of 60, to say nothing of Congress and the Senate,” Attenburough, Dylan McDermott, Elizabeth the car will have a lean, front-mounted engine and new Sorlucco said. “It’s craziness, absolute craziness.” The Perkins, and Mara Wilson, brings to the safety features. “This is a whole new car,” company lawsuit was filed Monday by two Chicago-area pilots and nineties the timeless story of convincing non­ spokesman Matt Gennrich said. “The only similarity to the Professional Pilots Federation, a group of about believers that Santa Claus does indeed exist the Beetle would be from an aesthetic point of view.” 1,000 members that formed three years ago to challenge and the idea that a lie that brings a laugh is With the new car, Volkswagen hopes to cash in on the Federal Aviation Administration’s “Age 60 Rule.” far better than a truth that brings a tear. American nostalgia for a legend on four wheels that dur­ The rule was established in 1959 out of concern that the Having faith in anything these days proves ing the 1960s came to symbolize cheap, reliable trans­ deteriorating physical and mental functioning associated to be quite a challenge, particularly when one portation. VW plans to begin building the car before the with aging would make pilots over 60 a safety hazard. does not believe in relying on others. Perkins, end of the decade, he said, The company has previously Sorlucco, the group’s vice president and a pilot for the mother in this story, plays such a woman: indicated the new Beetle might be built in Mexico and be USAir, said that’s hogwash. “Airline accidents in recent ambitious, realistic, caring, honest, and cau­ priced at between $12,000 and $13,000. The Beetle, the years have been attributed in many instances to pilot tious—someone anyone could easily identify “people’s car” that Volkswagen was created to build, inexperience,” not to older, more experienced pilots, he with. No one can deny that success comes was designed by German engineer Ferdinand Porsche in said by telephone from his home in Littleton, N.H. from truth and honesty and hard word, but 1934, shortly after Hitler came to power. happiness results from an entirely different formula—one that we often try to ignore. Carter’s ex-nanny gets a new home Americans help Vietnamese school Confusing success for happiness is a pitfall for many, only to be side-stepped by materialism ALBANY, Ga. HANOI, Vietnam or a midlife crisis. To be happy means Four months after a flood swept away almost every­ A school paid for by Americans eager to reconcile depending upon the openness and kindness of thing she owned, Jimmy Carter’s childhood nanny is with their former enemies should open in time for the others; it means admitting that you need other about to move into a new house built with a little muscle 20th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, an people. from the former president himself. “If heaven is this organizer of the project said Monday. Terry Anderson, Again, 1 might be the last person in the beautiful, ” Annie Mae Rhodes said, “I’ll take wings and co-chairman of Vietnamese Memorial Association, said world to finally discover this and maybe I fly away.’” Mrs. Rhodes, 77, lost her house and car when he met with future pupils of the elementary school rising should have listened to that Barbra Streisand the Flint River flooded in July. A treasured picture of from a rice paddy in Quang Tri, Vietnam’s poorest song a long time ago, but this is something we Carter’s mother. Miss Lillian, was one of the few posses­ province. “Our reception was more than cordial,” often forget while immersing ourselves in our sions she was able to salvage when the muddy water Anderson said of the giggling children and grateful own lives. In our quest for success, families receded. “I didn’t know what I was going to do,” Mrs. townspeople. “It was delightful.” Anderson, a U.S. and friends are not often forgotten; however, Rhodes said earlier this month as volunteers put the fin­ Marine veteran of the war, is a former chief Middle East we frequently fail to remember the humanity ishing touches on the house she’ll move into next week. correspondent for The Associated Press and was held that surrounds us, composes us, and relies on “I just prayed. God opened doors. People came down, hostage for 6 1/2 years by Shiite Muslim guerrillas in us. Having faith in oneself also means having and they let President Carter know about me.” Mrs. Beirut, Lebanon. The association donated $75,000 for faith in humanity, no matter how bizarre, Rhodes and her brother, Clyde Ross, 60, who was dis­ the Quang Tri school, which will serve 560 children. unjust, and irrational it may seem. A world abled by a stroke, will share the three-bedroom, vinyl­ The association collected donations from Americans to with such a humanity can easily afford to sided house built by Habitat for Humanity, the house­ build the school as “a living memorial” to the 2 million believe in Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny. building charity for which Carter has volunteered since Vietnamese men, women and children who died in the Braving parking lots and perfume ladies 1984. war, Anderson said in a telephone interview. may not sound as difficult as proving the exis­ tence of Santa Claus—or dealing with the final In d ia n a W eather atio nal eather deluge of papers and lab reports before the N W Tuesday, Nov. 29 end of the semester—but these are the very The Accu-Weather® forecast for noon, Tuesday, Nov. 29. circumstances that challenge us to look out­ Accu-Weather® forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures side of ourselves for support. Having faith in Lines separate high temperature zones for the day. our world means not compromising your hap­ piness for success as well as not going crazy South B end p r O C on the busiest shopping day of the year. | Fort W ay n e| 43° | The views expressed in the Inside Column are those of the author and not necessarily those of The Observer. Lafayette 40°J

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The Observer (USPS 599 2-4000) is published Monday through Friday Boston 37 35 Los Angeles 67 47 Philadelphia 49 37 Chicago 59 35 Miami 82 76 Phoenix 58 37 except during exam and vacation periods. The Observer is a member of Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Sunny Pi. Cloudy Cloudy the Associated Press. All reproduction rights arc reserved. Columbus 57 48 Minneapolis 33 27 St. Louis 74 37 Via A sso cia ted P ress Q raphicsNel 01994 Accu-Weather, Inc. Tuesday, November 29, 1994 The Observer • US NEWS page 3 Dahmer killed by inmate in Wisconsin prison attack

By A RTH U R L. SRB apart before it could hurt Associated Press W riter Dahmer. 100 miles Reactions to Dahmer’s Death CANADA Monday’s attack occurred as 00 km MADISON, Wis. all three men were working on Jeffrey Dahmer was at­ a cleaning detail in the recre­ "Oh my God! My son! How could this happen?" — Mother Joyce tacked and killed while clean­ ation area of the maximum-se- Flint to TV’s “Hard Copy” from her Fresno, Calif., home. MINN. ing a prison bathroom Monday curity prison. in a gruesome end for the man A bloody broom handle was MICHIGAN who strangled and dismem­ found at the scene, but "He never expressed fear ... From the day he was arrested he bered 17 boys and men and Corrections Secretary Michael felt he deserved anything that he got. ” — Stepmother Shari cannibalized some of them. Sullivan said he didn’t know if Dahmer to WJW-TV in her hometown of Cleveland. Another inmate was being it was the murder weapon. WISCONSIN held in Dahmer’s slaying and in the severe beating of another “One could surmise a number "Dahmer had a death wish, and I know that he didn't have the Portage j ijj. prisoner at Columbia of things. Their heads could gumption to do it himself so I had predicted that the day would Correctional Institution. have been smashed against a come when he would be killed in prison." — Gerald Boyle, the Mad! wall,” Sullivan said. Authorities wouldn't identify lawyer who represented Dahmer at trial. Jeffrey Dahmer the suspect, who was serving a “There was a great deal of killed in prison life sentence for murder, or of­ blood in the area of the attack,” attack fer a motive. Corrections Department “That’s not justice. This was murder. I’m hoping that whoever “It’s not as brutal as what he spokesman Joe Scislowicz said. did it doesn’t emerge as a folk hero. ” — District Attorney Michael IOWA j ILLINOIS I IND. did to our children," said Dahmer had extensive head McCann, who prosecuted Dahmer. Shirley Hughes, a mother of injuries and died at a hospital AP/Carl Fox one of Dahmer’s victims. “This about an hour after he was was just a quick way out.” found. court. Anderson was found in men and boys since 1978 in dened and distressed by the Dahmer had been in prison At the time of the July attack, the prisoners’ bathroom across Milwaukee and Ohio. slaying and that authorities since July 1991, when a hand­ Sullivan said that it appeared to the court and was hospitalized should have known Dahmer’s cuffed man who had escaped have been an isolated incident in critical condition with head Dahmer drugged, strangled life was in danger because of his clutches led police to an and that Dahmer was not be­ injuries. and dismembered his victims, the July incident. apartment containing body lieved to be in imminent dan­ A guard overseeing the three having sex with one corpse and parts packed in oil drums, ger. inmates had just left the bas­ eating parts of others. “That’s not justice. This was skulls saved as mementos and “Oh my God! My son! How ketball court when the attack He flushed brains down the murder. I’m hoping that who­ one or two hearts Dahmer said could this happen?” Dahmer’s occurred, Sullivan said. toilet, kept skulls and other ever did it doesn’t emerge as a he had set aside “to eat later.” mother, Joyce Flint, said when parts as mementos and saved folk hero,” McCann said. “Dahmer had a death wish, TV’s “Hard Copy” informed her He did not know the where­ one or two hearts "to eat For a year, Dahmer was kept and I know that he didn’t have of his death. abouts of another guard later.” in isolation at the prison in the gumption to do it himself, The other victim in Monday’s assigned to watch the prison­ Portage, about 40 miles north so I had predicted that the day attack was Jesse Anderson, ers. Dahmer pleaded guilty by of Madison; then the staff de­ would come when he would be who was serving a life sentence “He never expressed fear,” reason of insanity to 15 termined he could mix with killed in prison,” said Gerald for stabbing and bludgeoning his stepmother, Shari Dahmer, Wisconsin slayings at his 1992 other prisoners, Sullivan said. Boyle, Dahmer’s lawyer at trial. his wife to death. told WJW-TV in Cleveland. trial, but the jury found him Anderson’s case drew wide­ “From the day he was arrested sane on all counts. The slaying came as relatives The 34-year-old former spread attention in Wisconsin he felt he deserved anything He later pleaded guilty to a of Dahmer’s victims try to auc­ chocolate factory worker, who because of his claim that two that he got.” killing in Ohio. He wasn’t tion off his possessions as par­ was serving 16 life sentences, black men attacked him and his Dahmer’s gruesome past charged in one other Wisconsin tial payment for the judgments had been attacked in prison wife, both white, as they left a came to light in 1991, when a slaying because of a lack of evi­ they have won against him. once before. restaurant. handcuffed man flagged down dence. The contents of his apart­ In July, an inmate tried to police and led officers to ment included a lava lamp, a cut his throat during a chapel Dahmer’s body was found in Dahmer’s reeking apartment. Michael McCann, the district toothbrush, homosexual porno­ service, but the razor blade the staff’s bathroom and show­ Within days, the sandy-haired attorney who prosecuted graphic items and an 80-quart attached to a plastic handle fell er area next to the basketball man had confessed to killing 17 Dahmer, said that he was sad­ kettle. To our Favorite Priest implicated in robbery Young By BEN DOBBIN Northern Ireland rebel, and 1990, masterminded the holdup Associated Press ______Moloney, a 62-year-old Catholic on Jan. 5,1993. Melkite priest who runs a youth He was acquitted of robbery, Republican ROCHESTER, N.Y. shelter, had leased a New York conspiracy and possession A Catholic priest and an ex- City apartment where police re­ charges that carried a maxi­ guerrilla from Northern Ireland covered $2.01 million a year mum 25-year sentence; the oth­ Happy Birthday! were convicted Monday of ago. About $107,000 had serial ers faced a sole charge of con­ charges related to the $7.4 mil­ numbers linking it to the rob­ spiring to possess stolen money. Stephen J. II lion robbery of a Brink’s ar­ bery. O’Connor maintained that at mored car depot. McCormick, 30, who sub­ least three masked gunmen 19 a n d Voting Two other men, ex-Brink’s leased the apartment to the slipped into the depot, tied up guard Thomas O’Connor and priest four months before the all three guards, took him unemployed teacher Charles stash was found, said federal hostage during the getaway and % McCormick, were acquitted. prosecutors produced “no evi­dumped him on a suburban LOVE, After a seven-week trial, the dence whatsoever” linking him roadside two hours later. BILL & HILLARY jury deliberated for 2 1/2 days to the robbery. In testimony, he acknowl­ before reaching their verdict in “It really makes me very sad edged smuggling Millar into the (AND M O M AND DAD TOO) the nation’s fifth-biggest ar- that power can be abused in United States in August 1984 mored-car robbery. such a manner,” he told re­ after meeting him four months The Rev. Patrick Moloney and porters. earlier in a Belfast bar. Millar Samuel Millar, who were taken “I just want to be with my had just completed 10 years in into custody after the verdict, family,” a solemn-faced prison for a botched bombing were each convicted of conspir­ O’Connor said as he hurried out and membership in the Irish ing to possess money from the of U.S. District Court with his Republican Army’s youth wing. robbery. The two men could get girlfriend. In the m onths after the rob­ up to five years at their Prosecutors had argued that bery, investigators said sentencing Feb. 9. O’Connor, 55, a retired O’Connor, Millar and Moloney Millar, a 39-year-old Rochester police detective who seemed suddenly to have a lot took a security job at Brink’s in of cash on hand. Among other things, Millar m m m m z sent his family on expensive Basket of chips & vacations to Hawaii and 4 cups of your favorite beverage $2S0 The University of Notre Dame Florida, O’Connor carried out Department of Music presents $26,000 in house repairs, and Moloney had $168,000 in cash in his safe — $1,200 of it in Babbel Fish Abend-M usiQ VE Canadian dollars. The stolen Foreign Beverages $12S Brink’s money included $1,450 C o n c e r t III in Canadian currency. triDLDfLiiSMm Schola Musicorum $4°°Entry fee Hotdogs $1°° ~ $.25 Special beverages Gregorian chant, medieval polyphony, medieval organ music S pecial O ffer ! S t u d e n t s O n l y ! WITH m m m z Autographed by Joe Theismann, award-winning book Notre Dame Captain’s Special C raig C ram er, medieval organ Free Prizes Football Today, reg. $49” , now just $35°°. Says Coach Lou Holtz: “It’s Basket of Pretzels $.50 Tuesday, November 29, 1994 the finest and most dramatic coffee- 10:00 p.m. table book ever produced on ND football.” A must for every student George & The Freaks Basilica of the Sacred Heart and an ideal gift for all Irish fans. Go for the Gold Night ______The concert is free and open to the public. ______Call Kyle Doty: Free Prizes (219) 634-1740 page 4 The Observer • US NEWS Tuesday, November 29, 1994 Clinton gathers support Holiday weather claims lives By W O O D Y BAIRD Rescue crews aided by search for GATT approval T AriAreas struck OHIO Associated Press dogs and spotlights dug b ytornadoes through debris this morning, s , u . . A w By MARTIN CRUTSINGER hoped to get possibly 150 to GERMANTOWN, Tenn. searching for the missing 16th A tornado demolished a person. Associated Press ______180 votes in opposition, far MO - ' short of the 217 they would home where 16 people were at­ About 70 miles away in Nashville WASHINGTON need to kill the deal. tending a family reunion, Friendship, northeast of P r e s id e n t Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fla., killing two and burying injured Memphis, a 75-year-old woman F rie n d sh ip Clinton acting chairman of the House survivors in the debris. died when a tornado smashed /« & - G G e e rm m a n to w n a s s e m b l e d Ways and Means Committee, From North Dakota’s snow- into her home, authorities said. M em phis; GA : S.C. the economic told reporters GATT should slicked roads to tornadoes in Two people in Magee, Miss., 100 miles \ Tennessee, storms claimed 13 died in Sunday’s storm: “The ALA. ■T X s ta r s from clear the House with 270 votes. 100 km high winds just ripped up the -X eight previ­ Consumer activist Ralph lives and stymied holiday trav­ AP Alox Sibimy ous adminis­ Nader said that opponents elers around the country. tree and it fell on the trailer,” a Arkansas, hurling cows into trations on were concentrating most of A powerful storm that piled police dispatcher said today. treetops, tossing a mobile home their efforts on the Senate, up snow in the Northern The Germantown twister M onday to Bill Clinton 60 feet and stripping buildings give a final where the deal must first win California mountains last week ripped a ragged path through of their roofs. push for con­ 60 votes to waive Senate bud­ was moving east. the well-to-do neighborhood, A 22-year-old Doane College gressional approval of a 124- get rules because the pact cov­ Thunderstorms stretched from destroying 25 houses, a high student from Korea died in a nation trade agreement. “We ers only about one-fourth of the the Deep South to Ohio, while school and a church and dam­ crash on an icy Nebraska road, have to do it now. We can’t estimated $40 billion in tariff parts of the upper Midwest aging 150 other homes. and a 25-year-old woman was wait until next year,” he de­ revenues that will be lost over were digging out from their “It was like ‘Apocalypse killed in an accident in another clared. 10 years. first big snowstorm of the sea­ Now,”’ said Steve Johnston, part of the state. Supporters predicted that the U.S. Trade Representative son. who along with other neighbors The storm encased much of rewrite of the General Mickey Kantor refused to dis­ Snow and freezing rain pelted dug into the rubble with his Georgia in fog, and was blamed Agreement on Tariffs and close the administration’s cur­ New Hampshire roads during hands to help the trapped for the death of a pilot whose Trade would sail through the rent vote count in the Senate, this morning’s commute. More Person family. small plane ran out of gas and House on Tuesday with per­ but he said that a deal reached than four inches of snow fell in Bricks, broken lumber and crashed while he tried in vain haps as many as 60 votes to last week to meet concerns of Concord, N.H. other debris littered the area to find the runways at two air­ spare. Senate Republican Leader Bob “There are vehicles off the for blocks. ports near Atlanta. But the fate of the trade deal Dole of Kansas about the WTO road all over the place,” New A twisted van lay on its back, The fast-moving cold front was far less certain in the 100- had brought “a number of Hampshire state police commu­ and the crushed remains of a blamed for the twisters sent member Senate, where it must Republicans on board.” nications supervisor Jack sport utility vehicle protruded wintry blasts further north. win 60 votes on a procedural The administration, which Zemla said. “(Highways) must from the wreckage. Minnesota had up to 15 inches question of waiving the next year will be forced to work be terrible because nobody’s on By the time ambulances of snow, which caused hun­ Senate’s budget rules. with a Congress controlled by them — they’re all off in the arrived, Johnston had a half- dreds of car accidents, in­ The 22,000-page agreement Republicans for the first time in w oods.” dozen bleeding survivors cluding two fatal crashes. slashes tariffs by an average of 40 years, was calling the GATT A pile of bricks and boards stretched out on the floor of his Police blamed two fatal 38 percent worldwide and ex­ vote the first test of whether was all that remained today of den. crashes in North Dakota on the pands the rules of world trade the two parties can work the house landscape planner “We couldn’t stop to take weather. into new areas such as agricul­ together. Walter Person Jr. bought for care of them because there One killed a woman and her ture, services and the protec­ It assembled officials from about $380,000 in a new subdi­ were still more back in the 23-year-old son, while a 15- tion of copyrights and patents. the Eisenhower, Kennedy, vision of Germantown, a fast- house,” he said. year-old girl died in the other. It creates a more powerful Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, growing suburb of Memphis. Johnston, who moved to the World Trade Organization to Reagan and Bush administra­ Person, 44, and another man suburb five months ago, said he The snowstorm shut down referee trade disputes and tions for the East Room gather­ were killed when a tornado had not yet made friends with Minneapolis-St.Paul eliminates the power of any ing, similar to a bipartisan pep struck the two-story house his neighbors. International Airport briefly one country to block an rally held last year right before Sunday afternoon. Thirteen “We had been planning to Sunday, disrupting post-holiday adverse trade ruling. crucial votes on the North others were hospitalized, take them some cookies or travel for about 32,000 people During a crowded GATT pep American Free Trade Deputy Police Chief Brian something,” he said. flying Northwest Airlines alone. rally in the East Room, the ad­ Agreement with Mexico. The Roper said. The storm also raked ministration produced a letter group included five former win­ signed by two former ners of the Nobel prize in eco­ Republican presidents, Gerald nomics who had served in past Ford and George Bush, and administrations. Democrat Jimmy Carter, urging Clinton said the trade deal congressional approval. would add hundreds of thou­ Clinton acknowledged fears sands of U.S. jobs, boost the av­ that the agreement, by lower­ erage American family’s in­ ing U.S. trade barriers as well come by $1,700 over the next as those of other countries, several years and provide the would mean U.S. workers biggest global tax cut in histo­ would face even more competi­ ry. tion from low-wage workers in James A. Baker 111, who other countries. served as White House chief of But he said in an increasingly staff and treasury secretary for integrated global economy, all Reagan and secretary of state countries had to be willing to for Bush, took on one of compete internationally. GATT’s biggest opponents, for­ “There is no other way to mer presidential candidate deal with this. There is no easy Ross Perot. Baker said that way out,” he said. “This will Perot’s opposition to GATT was help to solve the underlying just as wrongheaded as his anxiety that millions and mil­ fight last year against NAFTA. A Survivor lions of Americans face.” “During the debate over But at a Capitol Hill news NAFTA, the misguided and the Celebrates conference, a leading Senate misinformed predicted a vast opponent. Sen. Byron Dorgan, sucking sound as American Life. D-N.D., asked if it was fair to jobs went south,” Baker said, make American workers “com­ repeating one of Perot’s famous "Kedem shares pete against a 12-year-old lines. VV1NNIR OF. TH‘ working 12 hours a day for 12 the extraordi­ cents an hour. ” “Today the only sound to be GATT opponents, however, heard is the powerful wind of nary true stroy all but conceded defeat in the economic freedom raising pros­ of survival and House. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R- perity on both sides of the bor­ Calif., said anti-GATT forces der,” Baker said. courage, ex­ ploring the real Happy life drama and horror that in­ 2 1 s t spired the movie." Kev! 1 1 -2 8 -9 4 fg you can relax now! I1 L ove, y j Mom. Dad. Bryan & Amy Tuesday, November 29, 1994 The Observer • BOSNIA REACTION page 5 U.S. examines stance after Serbian advances By DONALD ROTHBERG to a Serbian confederation in British Foreign Secretary After surprising early success, For months, the administra­ Associated Press exchange for the Serbs’ com­ Douglas Hurd said that he and the Bosnian gains were swept tion has hoped futilely that mitment to the territorial in­ Prime Minister John Major away by a Serb counteroffen­ Serbian leader Slobodan tegrity of Bosnia. would meet Dole on Wednesday sive. Milosevic could force his Congress to What happens next in Bosnia and emphasize British opposi­ Bosnian brethren to give up depends in large part on what tion to a stepped-up air cam­ Marshall Harris, another much of what they have taken. take good look the Bosnian Serbs choose to do. paign. State Department dissident who Will they press their military Dole also made it clear the resigned during the Clinton State Department Spokesman advantage and move on other new Congress would be “taking administration, still believes in Mike McCurry suggested it was at situation in “safe havens” such as a hard look at what we spend Western military power. the Bosnian Serbs whose backs Gorazde? in the United Nations.” “We can still turn everything were against the wall. Bosnia as Dole Will they demand a revised The Kansas senator conceded around on a dime if we wanted “They can continue to fight peace plan that gives them that miscalculations on how to to,” he said. and continue to exhaust them­ heads overseas more of Bosnia than the 49 per­ deal with the breakup of selves, to continue to leave cent put forward by the United Yugoslavia began during the The administration continues themselves outside the com­ States and its allies? Bush administration. to place great stock in the pos­ munity of nations and to suffer WASHINGTON No matter how the terrible sibility that the Serbian gov­ the economic deprivation and W ith th e conflict is resolved, the Clinton “I think we gave the wrong ernment in Belgrade will main­ isolation that entails,” he said. Serbs administration is in for an ex­ signals to the Serbs,” he told tain pressure on the Bosnian It was a threat that seemed advancing on tended period of second-guess­ NBC’s Meet the Press on Serbs to accept a negotiated no more likely to move the B ih a c, the ing. Sunday. “But it got worse and settlement. Serbs than the earlier one of W est c o n ­ Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., a worse and worse, because ineffectual NATO air strikes. cedes it is senior member of the Senate President Clinton couldn’t de­ powerless to Foreign Relations Committee, cide what to do, and didn’t do stop them. All predicted the new Republican anything.” that remains majority in Congress would ex­ George Kenny, who quit the is to find a Bob Dole amine how the situation in State Department during the strategy for Bosnia got to where it is, par­ Bush administration because he stepping away from a war no ticularly regarding the role of wanted tougher U.S. action outsider was ever willing to the United Nations. against the Serbs, now sides fight. with the British and French Lugar also said it was time to view of the futility of military “There are really not good extricate the U.N. forces from action. choices here,” said White Bosnia, end the arms embargo House staff chief Leon Panetta against the Bosnian govern­ As for U.S. involvement, on Monday, displaying the ment and begin “extensive air Kenny said, “If we’re really not gloomy mood of the Clinton strikes that indicate that NATO going to do anything construc­ administration concerning the does amount to something.” tive and we’re just muddling former Yugoslavia. Incoming Senate Majority along hoping somehow things Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., flew will work out, it’s probably bet­ The military threats are gone. to Brussels Monday to meet ter for us to leave.” The new emphasis is on diplo­ with NATO officials. Kenny argues that the United macy and threatening the States “completely miscalcu­ Bosnian Serbs with interna­ And he made clear his frus­ lated what would happen if the tional isolation, something tration with the United Nations, Serbs went on the offensive.” they’ve lived with throughout which is catching a lot of heat He said that all the talk in the conflict. on Capitol Hill for preventing Washington about supplying The Observer/ Shelley Sullivan In the search for diplomatic NATO from taking tougher mili­ arms to the Bosnian govern­ Shooting the breeze carrots to offer, the United tary action. ment, encouraged it to launch Two Notre Dame students sit outside at Stonehenge on one of the States appeared ready to agree an offensive in the Bihac area. last warm days of the year.

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Use only e s directed. Contains caffeine equivalent to 2 cup* of coffee. C 1963 SmlthKJIne Beecham. page 6 The Observer • INTERNATIONAL NEWS Tuesday, November 29, 1994 Ford announces plan to New Shiite leader imminent invest in South Africa »yanwarfar UQ, at home among Iran’s over­ the Iranian clergy have elevat­ Associated Press ______whelmingly Shiite population of ed or will elevate a few more in 60 million and abroad, where time to choose Araki’s succes­ By TOM COHEN American Industrial Corp. Ltd., NICOSIA, Cyprus Iran seeks to export its revolu­ sor. Associated Press ______the holding company for In a bid to enforce its own tionary zeal. The selection of the marja ala Samcor, gives each a 45 per­ version of militant Islam, Iran is Tehran fears that a non- is not a matter of precise ballot- JOHANNESBURG cent stake. The Samcor trying to control the selection of Iranian, the Grand Ayatollah counting. Instead, it emerges by Six years after leaving South Employees Trust holds the re­ the next spiritual leader of the Ali Husseini Seestani, may consensus from the 1,000-year- Africa because of apartheid, maining 10 percent. world’s 100 million Shiite become the next marja ala. old seminary in Najaf and its Ford Motor Co. announced Samcor sells about 11 per­ Muslims. Seestani, 65, lives and teaches counterpart in the Iranian city Monday it would buy back cent of the approximately The task gained new urgency in Najaf, the ancient center of of Qom. some of the operation it left 200,000 passenger cars sold three weeks ago when the in­ Shiite learning in southern behind and re-enter the coun­ annually in South Africa. cumbent, Grand Ayatollah Ali Iraq. The leadership issue deeply try. Ford South Africa, a sub­ Araki, was admitted to the in­ Although the government has divides the Shiites, who com­ The size of the investment sidiary of Ford Canada, oper­ tensive care unit of a Tehran no official say in who becomes prise about 10 percent of the was not disclosed, but Ford ated in the country from 1933 hospital. Araki is at least 100 the next marja ala, it has, in world’s 1 billion Muslims. promised to inject cash, new until 1985, when it merged years old — possibly as old as effect, already vetoed Seestani’s In a biting editorial earlier equipment and products into with Anglo American's auto­ 106. selection. this month, Iran’s Salaam South African Motor Corp. Ltd., motive operations to form He is the last in a line of el­ Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, a newspaper criticized the idea known as Samcor, which as­ Samcor. derly spiritual guides who have senior cleric in the Tehran gov­ that the next marja ala must be sembles Ford, Mazda and It pulled out of South Africa dominated Shiite theology for ernment, said more than a an Iranian. Mitsubishi vehicles. in 1988 because of the the past century. Given the cur­ week ago that Iranian clerics Such suggestions are “an in­ Ford is returning to existing apartheid system of racial dis­ rent composition of the Shiite “have no intention of choosing sult to Shiite people world­ facilities, not providing the new crimination. Ford Canada religious hierarchy, Araki’s a marja ala from outside Iran." wide, ” said Salaam, which investment sought by President turned over the larger part of successor almost certainly will He said Iran’s enemies were speaks for Islamic hard-liners Nelson Mandela since his its holdings to Samcor be a man in his 60s or 70s — conspiring to establish an apo­ who think the Tehran govern­ African National Congress won Employees Trust. which means he could hold the litical marja ala in an effort to ment has grown too moderate the country's first all-race elec­ GM says it agreed in October post for decades. undermine Tehran’s authority. and must return to what they tion in April. to begin selling some of its For the world in general, the Seestani has steered clear of see as the "purity" of Since the end of white rule, North American-made products Shiites’ "marja ala" or politics, as have the other Khomeini’s revolution. other companies that have re­ in South Africa through Delta “supreme spiritual guide" has supreme guides of the faith. turned or plan to return to Motor, a company formed by been eclipsed by lower-ranking That is anathema to Iran, In Lebanon, where the South Africa include Pepsi Cola some of its South African man­ clergymen, such as the late which seeks to abolish the sep­ Iranian-financed Hezbollah International, Hyatt agers when GM pulled out in Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, aration of religion and politics. generally does Tehran’s bid­ International Hotels, CPC 1986. patriarch of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Traditionally, the marja ala is ding, a split has emerged on the International, Eastman Kodak, "We have no plans at this revolution. selected from among the Shiite succession. Honeywell Corp. and Sara Lee time to go back in there with a But to Shiites, the marja ala sect’s top clerics, or grand aya­ Sheik Mohammed Hussein Corp. manufacturing operation," said is their supreme spiritual force. tollahs. At present, there are at Fadlallah, Hezbollah’s spiritual The agreement signed by of­ GM sp o k e sm a n J. D avid He is also a potential challenger least five grand ayatollahs — mentor, has pledged allegiance ficials from Ford and Anglo Hudgens. of the Tehran government, both but there is a possibility that to Seestani.

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AMST 458E 01 2966 COMM 103 07 9707 ENGL 491 01 3630 HIST 468A 01 3783 MUS 226 01 1729 ROSP 102 05 2521 11/29/94 AMST 468H 01 3444 COMM 103 09 9709 ENGL 491A 01 3631 HIST 469A 01 3785 MUS 229 01 3853 ROSP 103 03 0239 AMST 491 01 2908 COMM 16 9716 ENGL 210 492C 01 3632 HIST 485A 01 3791 PHIL 101 03 0208 ROSP 103 04 0298 BA 363 01 0357 AMST 495E 01 COTH 3004 204 01 2712 ENGL 496E 3635 HIST 487A 01 3793 PHIL 101 04 1928 ROSP 103 09 0135 BA 490 03 0388 ANTH 328 01 2660 COTH 205 01 2713 ENGL 563 3641 HIST 598 01 1660 PHIL 101T 05 4257 ROSP 236 01 0133 CE 470 01 2032 ANTH 329 01 2842 COTH 205 FIN 02 2837 231 0633 I1PS 493 01 3993 PHIL 101T 06 4258 ROSP 319 01 0176 ENGL 301 01 0854 ANTH 330 01 1025 COTH FIN 360 211 01 0737 2363 UPS 634 01 3999 PHIL 201 01 2299 ROSP 329 01 1177 ENGL 321B 01 2971 ANTH 423 01 3458 COTH 413 3551 01 FIN 360 0693 LAW 592A 01 1021 PHIL 201 07 2310 ROSP 329 02 3939 ENGL 479A 01 3627 ANTH 448 01 3459 COTH 451 01 3553 FIN 361 0290 LAW 605 01 0094 PHIL 222 01 1409 ROSP 416 01 3940 FIN 462 02 1878 ARCH 444 03 2616 COTH 453 01 3554 FIN 361 1562 LAW 608 01 1703 PHIL 225 01 2769 ROSP 495 01 2003 FS 180 12 1184 ARCH 566 01 3155 COTH 477 3557 FIN 462 01 0399 LAW 615C 01 1328 PHIL 226 01 3864 ROSP 499 01 0950 HIST 350 01 3764 ARCH 582 01 3157 COTH 481 0621 01 FIN 462 1878 LAW 631F 01 0989 PHIL 226 02 3865 RU 496 01 3657 HIST 485A 01 3791 ARCH 584 01 3158 CSE 346 1442 FIN 01 474 0668 LAW 643 01 3169 PHIL 227 01 2371 SOC 202 01 0117 MBA 646 01 4034 ARCH 585 01 3159 DESN 217S 01 0211 FIN 475 2041 LAW 658A 01 2333 PHIL 240 01 4281 SOC 202A 01 3946 PHIL 227 01 2371 ARST 134S 01 0019 DESN 282S 01 0726 FS 180 1296 LAW 686A 01 3172 PHIL 241 01 4282 SOC 205 01 3947 PHIL 242 01 3866 ARST 232S 01 0280 DESN 319S 01 3493 FS 180 1598 LAW 695 01 0807 PHIL 241 02 4283 SOC 300 01 2375 THEO 243T 03 4184 ARST 242S 01 1952 EGON I2BT 07 3584 FS 180 1184 LAW 695 02 1208 PHIL 242 01 3866 SOC 346 01 2736 ARST 246S 01 0974 ECON 12BT 08 3585 FS 180 0498 LAW 695 03 0776 PHIL 242 02 3867 SOC 348 01 3951 ARST 248S 01 0592 ECON 225T 01 3560 FS 180 2287 LAW 695 04 0363 PHIL 243 01 3868 SOC 370 01 1063

COURSES ADDED AME 651-01 #3183 Change day/time to: TH 11:00-12:15 and change prerequisite to: AME 599 *4446 ANTH 496-02 Dir. Readings: SocioCultural Anrhroplogy; var. cr. hrs.; Parrick Gaffney; Permission Required AME 657-01 #3184 Change day/time to: TH 02:45-04:00 ANTH 496-03 *4447 Dir. Readings: SocioCultural Anthropology; var. cr. hrs.; Martin Murphy; Permission ARST 210S-03 #3485 Add restriction: Majors only through 3rd period; then open to all Reauired BIOS 342L-01 #1877 Change to: “Permission Required" and remove restriction of Majors only through 3rd ARST 485S-01 *4442 Studio Photography; TH 01:15-04:00; 3 cr. hrs; Richard Gray; prerequisite is ARST 285S, period; College of Science through 12/9. 366S or 375S BIOS 407L-02 #2325 Change day to: H 01:15-04:15 BIOS 304L-03 *4464 General Botany Laboratory; W 01:15-04:15; 0 cr. hrs; BIOS 304 corequisite, Majors only BIOS 421-01 #1459 Change pre-requisite to: BIOS 241 through 3rd period;College of Science only through 12/9, then open to CE 573-01 #3208 Change time to: MWF 09:05-09:55 all CHEM 224-01 #0960 Add restriction: Non-CHEG majors only; cross-listed with CHEM 224A CHEM 224A-01 *4468 Elementary Organic Chemistry II; MWF 12:15-01:05; 3 cr. hrs.; J. Freeman; CHEM 223 pre- CHEM 243-01 #2415 Change time to: MWF 11:15-12:05 requisite; COCG 325-01 #3526 Change time to: MWF 11:15-12:05 CHEG Majors only; cross-listed with CHEM 224-01 COTH 221-01 #2341 Remove restrictions and changed to “Permission Required" COAJ 212-01 *4435 Second Year Japanese II; MTWHF 11:15-12:05; 5 cr. hrs.; Yuko Nakahama COTH 421-01 #3552 Remove restrictions and changes to “Permission Required" COAJ 312-01 *4436 Third Year Japanese 11; MWF 01:15-02:05; 3 cr. hrs.; Yuko Nakahama; pre requisite is COAJ DESN 416S-01 #0492 Change prerequisite to: DESN 28IS 331 ECON 125-01 #2319 Change time to: TH 01:15-02:30 COCO 515-01 *4434 Greek Historians; TH 04:15-05:30; 3 cr. hrs.; David Ladouceur; cross-listed with COCG 455- ECON 421-01 #3590 Add pre-requisite: ECON 302 01 ECON 663-01 #4225 Change time to: MW 03:50-05:05 C O SA 402-01 #4451 Grammatical Analysis of Genre; W 03:35-05:00; 3 cr. hrs; Joseph Amar FIN 231 all sect Change restriction to: BA students only through 3rd period, then all ECON 380-01*4439 Development Economics; TH 11:00-12:15; 3 cr. hrs.; Peter Skott GOVT 640-01 #3728 Change time to: W 04:15-06:45 ECON 445-01*4440 Economics of Industrial Organization; TH 02:45-04:00; 3 cr. hrs.; Anaindya Sen I1PS 506-01 #1206 Change day to: F 07:00-10:00 p.m. ENGL 521-01 *4465 Adv. Engl, for Non-Native Speakers; MW 04:00-05:15; 0 cr. hrs.; Noreen Deane Moran; IIPS 640-01 #4001 Change time to: W 04=15-06:45 Permission Required - Permission to register is required from James H. MATH 120-01 #1327 Add prerequisite: M ATH 106, 119 or 125 Powell, Assoc. Dean of the Graduate School MATH 362-01 #2411 Change time to: MWF 03:25-04:15 ENGL 699-39*4438 Research and Dissertation; variable credit hours; James Robinson MBA 562-01 #0408 Change restriction to: “First year MBA students only" G SC 346-01 *4448 Practicum; 3 cr hrs; Marie Kramb; Permission Required MBA 653-01 #2563 Change time to: MW 05:00-06:15 MARK 382-02 *4466 Retailing; MWF 09:05-09:55; 3 cr hrs; David Appel; Majors only through 2nd period; College MBA 685-01 #1023 Change time to: TH 09:30-10:45 of Business students only during 3rd period; then open to all; MARK 231 ME 236L-01 #1763 Add restriction: ME 236 or CE 236 pre/corequisite prerequisite SC 362-01 #2880 Add restriction: GEOS 141 or SC 141 MUS 401-01 *4445 String Performance Techniques; F 01:00-02:30;! cr. hr.; K. Buranskas, C. Plummer, C. SOC 640-01 #3967 Change time to: W 04:15-06:45 Rutledge;cross-listed with MUS 501-01 THEO 587-01 #4207 Remove Permission Required - open to all M.Div students MUS 499-01 *4441 Undergraduate Thesis; variable credit hours; Ethan Haimo PHIL 295-01 *4437 Seminar Justice - Honors; TH 02:45-04=00; 3 cr. hrs.; Permission Required; Honors students only SOC 214-01 *4450 Minorities in America; TH 04:15-05:30; 3 cr. hrs.; Min Liu STV 456-01 *4444 Tradition & Moderization in China & Japan; MWF 11:15-12:05; 3 cr. hrs.; Peter Moody; Permission Required; cross-listed with GOVT 492N-01 THEO 582-02*4449 Service: Secular and Christian; W 02:20-03:35; 2 cr. hrs.; Regina Coll; M.Div students only CHANGES DART Tuesday, November 29, 1994 The Observer • INTERNATIONAL NEWS page 7 Britain increases contributions Norway will not join By MAUREEN JOHNSON sign and force an election the tion of the 12-nation European • _____ Associated Press W riter ______party probably would lose. Union. The Conservatives are some “Our money is being used ... European Union LONDON percentage 30 points behind to bribe the Greeks, the By D O U G MELLGREN union membership, and 47.9 Labor in public opinion polls Spaniards, the Portuguese and percent were in favor. and would be almost certain to the Irish all to believe in ever P a r lia m e n t The referendum is non-bind­ lose their 15-year grip on closer European union,” de­ voted OSLO, Norway ing. A three-quarters majority power in an election. M on d ay to clared Norman Lamont, fired Norwegians rejected in the 165-seat house is needed The rebels were to be pun­ by Major last year as treasury increase European Union membership to endorse membership, so just ished by being banned from chief. Britain’s Monday, bucking a regional 42 lawmakers could block the government office or taking Lamont, now a rank-and-file contribution trend by voting to stay out of proposal. More than that al­ part in any leadership chal­ legislator, said Britain might to th e the world’s largest trading and ready have said they oppose it. lenge. have to withdraw from the European political bloc. Election researcher Henry U n ion b u d ­ John Major That technically wipes out European Union unless it could It was the second time Valen said a high turnout Major’s 14-seat majority in the redefine its relationship with get, ending a Norway has opted out of the more than 90 percent — in 651-member House of fight on which Prime Minister the continent of Europe. European community, follow­ anti-EU rural districts helped John Major staked the life of Commons. But party managers Ailing lawmakers turned out ing a “No” vote in 1972. decide the outcome. his government. hoped the rebels’ desire to win for the high-stakes vote. One And it kept the European Norway’s clifihanger was the back party support would im­ Conservative legislator came to Legislators from Major’s Union from claiming a clean last of four recent referenduras Conservative Party cheered prove their voting records. the Commons from the hospital, sweep this year in its campaign by countries considering mem­ and another entered in a when the 329-44 vote was an­ to bring in wealthy new mem­ bership in the EU. wheelchair. nounced. Parliament voted down a bers following “Yes” votes in Sweden, Finland and Austria But the dispute left Major fac­ Labor Party attempt to require Austria, Finland and Sweden. all voted to join the 12-nation ing dissidents resentful at being more aggressive steps by the The biggest sacrifice was by a “It was the people who made European Union. Supporters of forced to support him, a possi­ European Union to cut waste legislator who renounced an the decision, and we as a coun­ Norwegian membership ble leadership challenge and an and fraud in its spending. ancient Scottish title so he try have to live with that,” said warned that rejection would Seven members of Major’s could vote for the bill. impending revolt over a sched­ Prime Minister Gro Harlem leave isolate the country, cost it uled doubling of fuel taxes party cast ballots against him Had he not given up the title, Brundtland, appearing deject­ jobs and cut exports. within a week. in that 330-303 vote. he would have been forced to ed after her long campaign in Opponents claimed member­ Labor legislators abstained in Major threatened last week to join the upper House of Lords. favor of membership. ship would mean submitting to quit if Parliament rejected the the final vote on the increased The prime minister said rule from union headquarters budget contribution. bill to boost Britain’s $3.75 bil­ Lord James Douglas- Norway would continue to in Brussels and that open bor Hamilton, who inherited the ti­ lion contribution to the abide by the European ders would bring immigrants, European Union next year by Deep divisions remained tle Earl of Selkirk when his un­ Economic Area agreement “so illegal drugs and crime. $118 million. Future contribu­ within the Conservative party cle died Thursday, said, “I owe we have the least possible Those arguments were also over Europe, between Major it as a duty to my constituents tions also would be increased. problems for Norwegian indus­ used in 1972, when In the end, only seven and the majority of the 22- ... and as a matter of loyalty to try.” Norwegians narrowly rejected Conservatives voted against member Cabinet on the one the prime minister and to the With 90.4 percent of returns membership in the European Conservative Party.” Major after he threatened to re­ side, and mainly right-wingers in, 52.1 percent voted against trade bloc. who oppose the closer integra­

" A s You Wish" Chemical accident haunts India

Imports By KRISHNAN GURUSWAMY Union Carbide Corp.’s Indian Associated Press Shyam Lai’s lungs were per­ subsidiary symbolized oppor­ Sweaters, Clothing, Jewelry, manently scarred. Lai, 80, tunity. The plant gave 600 BHOPAL, India coughs incessantly, tires if he high-paying jobs to the slum Accessories, and Much more! It is Bhopal’s second disas­ walks a few feet and is often ill. residents of the neighborhood. Guatemala*Peru*Mexico*Nepal ter. “Every time I go to the court, Today, the smokestacks are Ten years after a cloud of it’s the same story. The judge rusty and the metal tank that Thailand*lndia*Ecuador toxic chemicals killed thou­ has not come or the doctor has leaked the deadly methyl iso­ sands of Indians in the world’s not come, or they can’t find my cyanate is smothered with Incredible Prices! worst industrial accident, a records. ... I will never get jus­ weeds. half-million people are still tice,” he said. The Danbury, Conn.-based Great X-mas gifts! seeking compensation and suf­ company sold off the last of its fering the effects of the gassing. When his wife, Gomti, died, Indian holdings this summer. India’s slow-moving courts Lai filed a claim for 200,000 ru­ Victims built a monument to Bargain Corner!! are overwhelmed with the pees, about $6,500 — about six remind people of the disaster — LaFortune- Room 108 claims. Corruption riddles the times the yearly pay for a fac­ a concrete statue of a mother bureaucracy and judiciary. The tory worker in Bhopal. But a and two children. Nov. 28-Dee. 3 (Sat.) 10:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. hospitals are inefficient. doctor testified that the death Doctors demand bribes for ade­ was unrelated to the accident The government banned the quate care. and the judge threw out the monument, but left it alone And every day brings new case. after citizens put it unobtru­ patients with lung diseases, “That’s because Lai did not sively on a sidewalk outside the cancer, cataracts, gynecological bribe anyone,” charged Abdul abandoned factory. m 'f o r w u . .. disorders, psychiatric prob­ Jabbar, an activist who works In 1989, Union Carbide paid lems. with victims of the gassing. $470 million — one-twelfth of The cocktail of chemicals that Those who did pay people off India’s original claim — in an leaked from an underground got money swiftly, he claims. out-of-court settlement that storage tank at a Union Carbide Lai appealed the judge’s deci­ guaranteed immunity from pesticide factory choked about sion and was awarded 50,000 prosecution for Carbide execu­ 4,000 people to death in the rupees, about $1,600. Now he tives. Amy adjoining shantytown the night is back in court hoping to win The government has paid out of Dec. 2, 1984. Nearly 3,000 compensation for his own ail­ only $20 million so far and the more died slowly and painfully ments. balance has grown to $516 mil­ Happy 21st Birthday from the poison. Once, the tall smokestacks of lion. Love you, Mom Dad & Sean s l i d e s h o w

The University of Notre Dame Department of Music presents A 7 The Notre Dame Chamber Symphony Orchestra Guy Victor Bordo, COND U CTO R J*U*N*I*OR*S !

performing V ivaldi's V V Four Seasons * Pictures needed lor JPW slide show! • Turn in to Hall Presidents by Dec. 5th • Put name and Wednesday, November 30, 1994 8:00 p.m. campus address on pholos-lhey will be returned * Pictures WASHINGTON HALL may show cups, but no beer cans, bottles, etc. please! ______The concert is free and open to the public. VIEWPOINT page 8 Tuesday, November 29, 1994 THE OBSERVER N otre D ame O ffice: P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 631-7471 Sa int M ary 's O ffice: 309 Haggar, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 284-5365 1994-95 General Board Editor-in-Chief Jake Peters Managing Editor Business Manager John Lucas Joseph Riley .NOJOF News Editor ...... David Tyler Advertising Manager...... Eric Lorge N Q A N ^ Viewpoint Editor...... Suzanne Fry Ad Design Manager ...... Ryan Maylayter (JOINS WWG A Sports Editor ...... George Dohrmann Production Manager ...... Jacqueline Moser QAW UM t.. c q WVJM? Accent Editor ...... Mary Good Systems Manager...... Don Kingston Photo Editor ...... Scott Mendenhall Observer Marketing Director...... Tom Lillig fU G K T ... Saint Mary's Editor ...... Elizabeth Regan Controller ...... Kristen Martina

T he Observer is the independent newspaper published by the students of the University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary’s College. It does not necessarily reflect the policies of the administra­ tion o f cither institution. The news is reported as accurately and objectively as possible. Unsigned edi­ torials represent the opinion of the majority of the Editor-in-Chief, Managing Editor, News Editor, Viewpoint Editor, Accent Editor, Photo Editor, Sports Editor, and Saint Mary’s Editor. Commentaries, letters and Inside Columns present the views of the authors, and not necessarily those o f The Observer. Viewpoint space is available to all members of the Notre Dame/Saint Mary's com­ munity and to all readers. The free expression of varying opinions through letters is encouraged. Observer Phone Lines Editor-in-Chief 631-4542 Business Office 631-5313 Managing Editor/Viewpoint 631-4541 Advertising 631-6900/8840 Sports 631-4543 Systems/Marketing Dept. 631-8839 News/Photo 631-5323 Office M anager 631-7471 Accent/Saint Mary's 631-4540 Fax 631-6927 Day Editor/Production 631-5303 E-Mail [email protected] General Information 631-7471 Unix [email protected]

Let t e r to the E ditor ND Family should embrace all members, including Rita Dear Editor: convicted, and executed John in your your “sister”? these tears have not been the result of “Notre Dame Family” is a concept in own minds prior to his trial, and have It escapes me how, regardless of the selfish thoughts. Of course he was which 1 place a great deal of stock. continued to do so since. Rest assured side on which you come down, you could scared, and of course he was worried However, experiences such as the con­ that this acquittal was not a cheap one consider such actions as constituting the about his future. Not one of us in our dem ning of John Rita by many members grounded in some obscure technicality pursuit of justice. After all, isn’t justice right minds wouldn’t have felt similar of this community prior to his trial, as or procedural flaw. Rather, it was the cause that all of this was supposed emotions were we standing in John’s well as the “blood-Iust” reaction by derived from the facts and the evidence to advance? I guess you deemed John a shoes. But his tears have been the prod­ many to this verdict, leave me somewhat of the case, as anyone who attended the “black sheep” of the “family,” and thus ucts of the realization that a young life disillusioned. I have learned, after trial would recognize. unworthy of your compassion, due to the was lost in an accident in which he was spending seven years of my life on this Regarding the lynch mob masquerad­ fact that he was on trial for two horrible involved. He is, has been, and will con­ campus, that “Notre Dame Family” is a ing as an assemblage of responsible and crimes. Never mind the fact that he ve­ tinue to be haunted by that knowledge. term that is too often tossed around by conscientious Notre Dame students that hemently professed his innocence from That fact, however, does not make him some without giving adequate thought to paraded into the court room to make a the outset. In your minds, he was guilty; rather, it serves as evidence that its intended definition. It should be used mockery of John’s legal right to present already guilty and, if you had your way, he is a compassionate and thoughtful to connote a sense of all-encompassing his side of the story—1 was, and remain, the state would not have had to prove person who possesses a healthy con­ camaraderie, fellowship, and unity that especially appalled by your behavior. I his guilt at all, let alone beyond a science. Upon hearing all of the evi­ exists in, and extends to, all members of listened with disbelief as one of those reasonable doubt. So much for the con­ dence, a jury of John’s peers had the this community. In reality, it exists to students described on television how cept of “innocent until proven guilty.” duty of determining John’s guilt or lack some so long as it creates no controver­ Teresa McCarthy had put out some call Yet, I am confident that every one of you thereof. It chose the latter. sy —so long as it does not force them to to arms on the eve of John’s testimony. would want that standard applied to you Unfortunately, the verdict was, to many, take a stand that is less than popular. How proud you all must have felt to if you were charged with two felonies. irrelevant. In the minds of the people, John found this out all too well as have responded with such vigor. I lis­ While I was attempting to listen to John is still guilty. some members of the ND community, tened to this student admit that the John’s testimony, I was forced to try and To those members of the “Notre Dame with little knowledge of the facts, flatly group had attended the proceedings that block out the whispered comments from Family" who deserted John, I offer the turned on him. To those friends and day for the sole purpose of attempting to the gallery, particularly those of three following quote by the late theologian supporters of John, and to all who real­ “shake up” (her words) John, as well as female students seated directly behind Reinhold Niebuhr: “Family life is too in­ ize that “one man’s word is no man’s his attorney, Charles Asher. This agen­ me. Included among those comments timate to be preserved by the spirit of word; we should quietly hear both sides” da, however, was shamelessly carried was the following directed at John: justice. It can be sustained by a spirit of (Johann Wolfgang Van Goethe), the crit­ out under the guise of support for both “You’re going to burn in hell.” As Ilove which goes beyond justice.” For icisms of this letter do not apply. Mara’s family and her memory. write this letter two weeks later, I am those to whom this quote speaks, I I was one of John’s roommates during If support had in fact been the true still incredulous as to the sheer igno­ would submit that justice did in fact pre­ his final two years of law school. I feel agenda, then it would have been a noble rance, immaturity, and irresponsibility vail, and that it was manifested in the fortunate to count John as one of my one indeed, and one to be applauded. surrounding such a proclamation. Is the jury’s verdict. But since your minds will best friends. This was true before Nov. Perhaps I hold an idealistic notion of the closed-minded, judgmental, and holier- doubtlessly remain unchanged, I ask you 13, 1993, and it. has remained true. meaning of “support,” if support were than-thou attitude that abounded in that to consider reaching out and embracing Take it from someone who knows the true motivation, then these people court room on that day, and is so perva­ John nevertheless. He is your “brother,” John—and none of you who have por­would have made it to the court room sive among the radicals of this commu­ and your support would mean a great trayed him as some sort of heartless prior to the final full day. I was present nity, ever going to subside? I would like deal to him; perhaps it would even fur­ sub-human devoid of a conscience do— for several days (since I was a witness, I to say to this person that you are sup­ ther your own healing process too. he is a wonderful person. He is one of was not permitted to attend until I testi­ posed to be an adult, and, as a college Finally, I would like to conclude by the most intelligent, dedicated, caring, fied) and, with very few exceptions, the student, one with a mind open to knowl­ sincerely thanking those to whom this and considerate individuals that I have faces that I saw that day were new. edge and conflicting points of view. By letter does not apply—those that rec­ ever known. He would do anything to This fact serves only to support the con­ making such a comment, you fell woe­ ognized that John was, and remains, help others. He would never do any­ tentions of the aforementioned student, fully short of both a shred of knowledge worthy of your thoughts, prayers, and thing to intentionally harm another per­ not that they were ever doubted. Did regarding the facts and a knowledge of compassion. Those that kept an open son. you simply not understand the gravity of the character of the accused. mind and refrained from judging in the That being said, I have absolutely the proceedings? You tried to take an Let me assure the Notre Dame com­ absence of knowledge. Those that reached the end of my rope with listen­ event that would determine the course munity that no one feels more sorrow recognized that there were two sides to ing to people who don’t know him pub­ of John Rita’s life, and turn it into a cir­ regarding Mara’s death than John. I every story, and that the system must be licly trash him. Specifically, I speak to cus. Did it ever occur to you that the have first-hand knowledge of the allowed to run its course. I know that those of you who, with the aid of the one with whose right to a fair trail you amount of tears that have been shed by John thanks you as well. hearsay and innuendo produced by the tried to interfere, is no less a “brother” him as a result of this horrible tragedy, MICHAEL CASTELLINO irresponsible local media, had tried, as a Notre Dame student than Mara was and, contrary to the opinions of many. N.D. '91/94

D o o n esbu ry GARRY TRUDEAU QUOTE OF THE DAY

MARK, I HEAR THE N5WT- ABSOLUTELY/ ANT? THAT'S AS FOR HIS ILUOULPN'T, THINK BILE m u ...s o mejster slip iutd congress BEEN THE HALLMARK OE PRIVATE EXCEFTHE’S CWWN-0NLY HEREALLY USIN6 THE WORST SMEAR tac ­ HIS PUBLIC UFE EVER SINCE! LIFE, WELL, MAPEITGER- WITHOUT STATE DOES PUT tics sincc nixon in'46! A RECKLESS PISRE6ARP FOR PON'TASK! MANE. PISH TROOPERS. TAXPAYERS UlVTothing contributes more TRUTH, THE PEFAMIN6 OE OP­ HRST! PONENTS AS 1M to the peace of the soul TRAITORS... than having no opinion at all.”

—Georg Christoph Lichtenberg

A FOOTBALL

N O T R E D A M E N othing S pecial

■ Notre Dame’s 17-17 special teams flounder in regular season finale. PAUL STONEHOUSE: His Punting. The Trojans aver­ "A tie doesn’t please anybody. I'm strong leg and a few lucky rolls aged a stellar 48.8. The Irish sure Southern Gal feels the same - page 3 kept the Irish pinned all night a ridiculously silly 32.5. way.” long. -Notre Dame coach Lou Hot*» Twisting in the wind Tie leaves Irish and Trojans wis a different end By GEORGE DOHRMANN Sports Editor

LOS ANGELES It was a sight all too fitting for the run that has masqueraded as the 1994 Notre Dame football season. A good ten minutes after Notre Dame and Southern California fought or stumbled (take your pick) to a 17-17 tie at the Los Angeles Coliseum, Irish coach Lou Holtz was leading his team back on the field. USC coach John Robinson was at one end of the stadium, saluting his seniors with a farewell address to what was left of the crowd. Holtz was huddling his team in the opposite corner, trying to give support to a team that not only failed to extend Notre Dame’s run of 11 straight victories over the Trojans but was in need of moral support. “There was no where to meet here,” Holtz said of the visitors’ locker room. “I looked down into the showers . You tell me where to meet. There were some things I wanted to share and I didn’t want to walk out of here without sharing them.” While Holtz hollered over Robinson’s address and the hooting of the remaining Trojan and Irish faithful, most fans wandered to their cars in disbelief, shrouded in a

see IRISH / page 2 The Observer/Eric Ruethling A trifecta of Notre Dame defenders bring down USC’s Shawn Walters. ■ J o c k S t r ip Holtz handcuffs Irish in final drive LOS ANGELES > T eam doctors con­ firmed that Notre Dame quarterback Ron Powlus has four fully functioning limbs. That’s good news for Irish fans, who feared that his coach had cut off Jason Kelly Powlus’ throwing arm Associate Sports Editor during the final frigid r moments of Saturday’s 17-17 sister- smooch against Southern Cal. It was indeed Holtz who handicapped Powlus, but not with a hatchet. With hand- offs. With more than 90 yards of turf to tra­ verse, and not much time to do it, Holtz inexplicably chose to run the ball on two of four downs. With arguably the best receiver in the nation in Derrick Mayes and a quarter­ back who has proven more than capable of delivering him the ball, it seemed a per­ fect opportunity to fling the ball upfield. If Notre Dame can’t count on the Hail Mary, who can?

see KELLY / page 3 The Observer/Eric Ruethling This time, it was Southern Cal that needed three defenders to drag down Notre Dame tight end Oscar McBride. Tuesday, November 29, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS EXTRA page 2

Ga m e N o t e s ‘Yeah.. .1 think so.’

tie was the most talked about item during Holtz decides to go Saturday’s contest. Temperatures were in the mid forties and swirling winds of over 25 for field goal despite miles per hour dropped the wind-chill into the low 30s. Schroffner’s remark OOOOHHHH NELLLIE: Jackson and fellow By GEORGE DOHRMANN commentator Bob Griese had their fair Sports Editor share of trouble. ABC lost its feed for the end of the first half and for several plays LOS ANGELES during the third quarter. Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz wasn’t sure A main breaker at the stadium was blown himself that he made the right decision down, knocking out ABC’s view. when he elected for a Stefan Schroffner field ABC producer Bob Goodrick solved part of goal try instead of a fourth-and-two attempt the problem by borrowing a feed from Prime at the USC 20-yard line. Ticket, which was taping the game for a A little over six minutes remained in the delayed broadcast. With Prime Ticket sup­ game and Holtz elected to go with plying the view, ABC still needed to supply Schroffner despite the kicker’s answer of some audio. Ticket’s Tom Kelly and Craig “yeah. . .1 think so,” when Holtz asked if he Fertig started the second half but were soon felt he could make the kick. cut off. Jackson and Griese tried calling the “Maybe I should have gone for it,” Holtz game by telephone but the audio was muf­ said. “The players wanted me to but the fled. ABC resorted to John Saunders doing whole thing was that with six minutes to go his best play-by-play from the studio in New in the game, get a two-score lead. That’s York. what we were trying to do. It was the second time ABC fumbled dur­ “Had we gone for it and not made it, then ing an Irish/Trojan matchup in Los Angeles. they take it down and score and went for In 1986, ABC missed John Carney’s game- two, we would have lost. . You’ve got to gowinning field goal in a 38-37 Irish win. with the percentages.” BUTTER FINGERS: Charlie Stafford The percentages didn’t help when dropped what could have been a huge play Schroffner’s kick skied low and USC’s Israel for the Irish offense in the second quarter. Ifeanyl blocked the kick into the arms of Pinned at it’s own two-yard line Notre teammate Sammy Knight who rambled to Dame looked to Stafford on a post pattern to the Notre Dame 16-yard line, which led to give them some breathing room. USC’s tying score. Quarterback Ron Powlus lofted a perfect “I still think it was the right decision with pass into Stafford’s arms but the senior wide the facts at hand not the results,” Holtz said. receiver allowed the ball to slip through JUST LIKE INDIANA: It was a fine fall day with nothing but green in front of him. in South Bend. The problem? The game “I was so wide open,” Stafford said. “I was The Observer/Eric Ruethling was in Los Angeles. worried about running and forgot about Lee Becton led the Irish running attack with 157 yards. The temperature for Notre Dame’s 17-17 catching the ball.”

Notre Dame. But Johnson’s offensive line never gave 0 GRADED POSITION ANALYSIS Irish him the chance. He was off the mark on continued from page 1 first down, sacked for a loss on second, and Q u a r t e r b a c k B+ then tripped over a teammate on third. A With the running game clicking, Ron Powlus could be the quarterback he should strange feeling of senselessness. A tie? A USC punt rolled to the Irish eight with less have been able to be all season long. Not spectacular but solid nonetheless. tie? Few things could be so cruel. than a minute to play. Notre Dame tried a Maybe could have avoided a few sacks by throwing it away, but showed tough­ few plays in the closing seconds, a dossier “A tie doesn’t please anybody,” Holtz ness on the run. which including a pair of draw runs for Lee said. “This is disappointing. I’m sure Ru n n in g B a c k s A - Becton. Closing seconds. Mountains of Southern Cal feels the same way.” This game showed just how important Lee Becton and Ray Zellars are to this yards before field goal range. Run the “We didn’t come here to play for a tie,” team. How many times did Becton break the first tackle to reach the stick. draw? This one was called a bit early. USC coach John Robinson said. Johnson was 15 for 29 for 187 yard with Zellars didn’t really get it going on the ground, but his receptions were crucial. Both teams had a chance to place a dif­ a touchdown and an interception. He was e c e iv e r s ferent cap on the contest but when the R B booed by fans when Robinson introduced opportunity arose both the Irish and the The key drops of Charles Stafford and Oscar McBride stand out. Solid blocking Trojans let them flutter away with the the senior. and the expected contribution of Mayes were there though. “I guess it’s better to tie than to lose, but brisk Southern California wind which gust- O f f e n s iv e L ine B+ as seniors we didn't want to go out with a ed from 20-25 m.p.h. for most of the game. The running attack finally had teeth this week due in large part to play of this tie,” Johnson said. “It stinks.” The Irish seemed to have the best chance crew. Sure, Becton made holes where holes didn’t exist but for the most part, the to put the Trojans away when Stefan Irish quarterback Ron Powlus closed the Irish controlled the line of scrimmage, and the ball. Schroffner lined up for 37-yard field goal day 13 of 22 for 115 yards with one scoring D e f e n s iv e L ine B+ with 6:43 left in the game and Notre Dame strike and no interceptions. He also ended Oliver Gibson again showed a surprising little speed burst in getting to Johnson a leading 17-10. But this gap of opportunity the game with an all-too fitting remark. “A few times. This group applied constant pressure, culminating in the last USC closed quickly, filled by a 6-foot-6 moun­ f tie,” he said as he ran off the field. possession. tain of maroon and gold named Israel Notre Dame nearly doubled USC’s time of Ifeanyi. The Trojan linebacker blocked the L in e b a c k e r s B kick which safety Sammy Knight scooped possession, more than 38 minutes for the Jeremy Sample’s last regular season game was a memorable one. Three solo Irish to 21:30 for the Trojans. Despite poor into his arms and carried to the Irish 16. tackles, a key sack and another tackle for a loss is a decent day’s work. Wynn Four plays later tailback Shawn Walters field position, the Irish grounded out and Cobbins contributed their fair sharein holding Tailback U. to under 100 ya: Js yardage on the Trojan defense. Becton led pounded in from the one-foot line. on the ground. the way with 156 of Notre Dame’s 226 “I thought I hit it good.” Schroffner said. yards on the ground. S e c o n d a r y C + “I thought I got it up." Frosh Ivory Covington found himself in the right place at the right time. Notre Dame’s plunder and Walters’ score Becton led the charge on the ground in the early going, and Derrick Mayes sup­ Unfortunately, the same could not be said for the man assigned to Keyshawn presented the first chance for the Trojans to spell out a different conclusion to the plied the air support. Johnson. During an 80-yard drive during the sec­ game, but Robinson elected for a Cole Ford S p e c ia l T e a m s F ond quarter, Becton rumbled over the left extra point instead of a two-point conver­ Disgusting, disgraceful, dispicable, and disastrous. Clearly, this area cost the side for 28 yards and Powlus found Mayes sion attempt. Irish the win. Punting, blocking on field goal attempts, and lack of return game for 18 more. Becton tacked on six more “I was afraid if we missed a two, we has hurt the Irish all season long. This time, it killed them. yards to the USC 22 and then Powlus hit wouldn’t get the ball back," Robinson said. Ray Zellars in the endzone for his 19 C o a c h in g B But opportunity number two arose when Once again, pretty good defensive gameplan, as it held the Trojans to essentially Robinson’s squad did get the ball back. touchdown pass on the year, a Notre Dame just 10 points. Questionable call on the field goal attempt, but if it is not blocked, Notre Dame couldn’t move the ball on the single-season record. The Irish built a 17-10 third quarter lead the Irish win. The simple reminder that this was Notre Dame/USC seemed to ensuing possession, and aided by a 29-yard motivate enough. punt by Notre Dame’s Chris Wachtel, the on a one-yard plunge by Powlus, after a 17-yard catch by Mayes put Notre Dame at verall rade Trojans took over just short of midfield O G 2.77 the USC three. with 2:22 showing on the clock. An F doesn’t help your overall GPA all that much. It didn't help the Irish on the It w as a golden opportunity for USC sig­ Schroffner did connect on a 29-yarder to field either. Continued improvement pretty much all around, but 17 points is still give Notre Dame a 3-0 lead early which nal-caller Rob Johnson to shake the voices too few if this team is to be considered anything but a failure. which have engulfed him after every big was quickly countered by USC’s 34-yard game he has played. Going into the contest scoring drive which ended in a Johnson -TIM SHERMAN he was 0-5 as a starter against UCLA and pass to Johnny McWilliams. page 3 The Observer • SPORTS EXTRA Tuesday, November 29, 1994 It’s ju st n o

g o o d Irish kicking game continues to be the team's achilles heel By JASON KELLY pretty well. I’m pretty sure it Associate Sports Editor would have gone through the uprights,” Schroffner said. “It LOS ANGELES was definitely a momentum It has been an all-too visible change, just one of those facet of the 1994 Notre Dame plays.” football team. Southern Cal’s Sammy Knight A good kicking game is a returned the blocked kick to the quiet kicking game, one that Notre Dame 16 and the Trojans makes extra points and field ultimately scored the game- goals with regularity, occa­ tying touchdown. sionally even one that wins a “I still think it was the right game. decision with the facts at hand, But this year’s Irish team has not the results,” Holtz said, try­ become a revolving door ofing to deflect criticism that sur­ The Observer/Eric Ruethling lesser evils. Stefan Schroffner rounded his decision to attempt TOP: Placekicker Stefan became the latest to bring the the field goal instead of going Schroffner approaches the Irish kicking game under un­ for it on a fourth-and-two situa­ kick out of the hold of friendly fire during Saturday’s tion. Charles Stafford. 17-17 tie with Southern Cal. Regardless of whether or not Notre Dame led 17-10 with it was the right decision, the about five minutes remaining outcome only enhanced Notre RIGHT: Punter Chris Wachtel when Schroffner was asked to Dame’s kicking woes, which struggled mightily in the brisk kick a 37-yard field goal that, if first became magnified when Los Angeles air. The walk-on converted, probably would have the Irish missed three field averaged just 32 yards per boot. secured an Irish victory. goals in a 21-14 loss to “I asked him ‘Can you make Brigham Young in October. it’ and he said ‘Yeah . .. I think When Scott Cengia missed an punting problems, too. Brian so,’ " Holtz related. extra point that would have Ford recently lost his job to Schroffner released what he given the Irish the lead late in Chris Wachtel, who averaged felt was a good kick, but it was the game against Florida State, just 32 yards in his six punts low enough for leaping Trojan Irish kickers came under even Saturday, often offering the defender Israel Ifeanyl to knock more scrutiny, which is prob­ Trojans good field position. it down. ably what led to the fallout “I was worried about the “I felt I could make it, I was from Saturday’s misfortune. kicking game,” Holtz said. “And confident. I felt I hit the ball Notre Dame has had plenty of it was a reality.” 0 STATISTICS Kelly SCORE BY QUARTERS PASSING - Notre Dame: Powlus 13-22-115-0 TD. Notre Dame 3 7 7 0 17 Southern Cal: R. Johnson 15-29-187-1 TD. continued from page 1 Southern Cal 0 7 3 7 17 RECEIVING - Notre Dame: Mayes 5-70, Mosley 3- 21, Zellars 3-19 TD, McBride 1-3, Becton 1-2. TEAM STATS ND USC Southern Cal: K. Johnson 6-114, McWilliams 4-34 Instead, Holtz instructed Powlus to hand the 1 First downs 21 15 TD, Barnum 3-23, Hervey 1-10, Cashman 1-6. ball to Lee Becton who twice ran up the middle Rushes-yards 53-226 26-87 TACKLES - Notre Dame: Magee 6, Davis 6, Gibson Passing yards 115 187 4 (1 sack), Wooden 4, Sample 3 (1 sack), Cobbins 3, while time ran off the clock. TEAM RECORD POINTS IOUS Comp-att-int 13-22-0 15-29-1 Grasmanis 2, Moore 2, Nau 2, Taylor 2, Covington 1 Without a timeout, the Irish offense had to i Return yards 47 97 (1 int.). Southern Cal: Williams 10, Kopp8 (1 sack), 1. Nebraska (38) 12-0-0 1523 1 Fumbles-lost 2-0 2-0 Herrin 8, Knight 8, Small 7 (1 sack), Herpin 6, Keneley rush just to get off a final, feeble play, a long Penalties-yards 1-4 2-20 6, Russel 5 (1 sack), Cunnigan 4, Jefferson 3 (1 sack), pass attempt that fell between Mayes and a few Third down conversions 9-18 3-10 Phillips 3, Bonds 2, Kelly 2, Ifeany 1 (1 FG block). 2. Penn St. (23) 11-0-0 1509 2 Possession time 38:30 21:30 Trojan defenders. Not much of an opportunity for the offense to INDIVIDUAL STATS 3. Alabama(1) 11-0-0 1426 3 execute a viable hurry-up offense. Not much of RUSHING - Notre Dame: Becton 26-156, Zellars 12- an opportunity to win the game. 4. Miami 10-1-0 1346 5 43, Powlus 11-20 TD, Kinder 3-9, Stafford 1 (minus 2). Southern Cal: Green 14-63, Walters 9-42 TD, R. It was reminiscent of the only other tie in the Johnson 3-(minus 18). Holtz era at Notre Dame, a 17-17 deadlock 5. Colorado 10-1-0 1308 6 against Michigan two seasons ago. He took a lot 6. Florida 9-1-1 1209 4 of heat for his conservative, run-oriented of­ SCORING SUMMARY fense on the final drive of that game. 7. Florida St. 9-1-1 1186 7 But this time, Holtz spent more energy FIRST QUARTER explaining his entirely rational decision to kick 8. Texas A&M 10-0-1 1095 8 ND: 28 yard FG by Stefan Schroffner at 9:32. a field goal on a fourth-and-two situation with (11 plays, 70 yards, 5:28) more than five minutes left in the game, than Key Play: Ray Zellars’ 13 yard run for a fifth consecutive first down. 9. Auburn 9-1-1 1057 9 his play-calling on the final drive. Notre Dame 3, Southern Cal 0 10. Colorado St. 10-1-0 969 10 Stefan Schroffner’s blocked field goal certain­ SECOND QUARTER ly turned the tide, ultimately leading to 11. Kansas St. 9-2-0 945 11 USC: Johnny McWilliams 6 yard pass from Rob Johnson at 4:49 (Cole Ford Southern Cal’s game-tying touchdown. kick). But Notre Dame’s final drive turned stom­ 12. Oregon 9-3-0 918 12 (6 plays, 34 yards, 2:22) achs. Key Play: Rob Johnson's 23-yard pass to Keyshawn Johnson on third down. Holtz is a man who likes to take life by the 13. Ohio St. 9-3-0 755 14 Southern Cal 7, Notre Dame 3 throat, once jumping out of an airplane just to say he did it. But Saturday, with the game— 14. Utah 702 15 ND: Ray Zellars 11 yard pass from Ron Powlus at 1:01 (Stefan Schroffner 9-2-0 indeed the season—on the line, he wouldn’t O C

The Observer/Eric Ruethling The Observer/Eric Ruethling Quarterback Ron Powlus questions the advice of coach Lou Holtz. Trojan tailback Shawn Walters eyes a held Germaine Holden.

FROM THE lENS Notre Dame 17 USC 17 Los Angeles Coliseum November 26, 1994

The Observer/Eric Ruethling The Observer/Eric Ruethling Ron Powlus is wrapped up by a Trojan defender. Shawn Walters is stuffed at the goaline during the second half.

The Observer/Eric Ruethling

The Observer/Eric Ruethling Ray Zellars is tucked backwards during the first half. Southern Cal quaterback Rob Johnson found himself on the ground quite frequently Saturday. Tuesday, November 29, 1994 page 9 Gold, Frankincese, Caffeine...Is it a and Nerf Friend or a Foe? Every once in a while: my tie caveman, By RYAN J. GRABOW Jolt Cola - 67.2, Mountain Dew of one overdosing on caffeine is grandma goes to a Pantera “Stink,” to N.R.E.M.T. ______, - 56.6, Dr. Pepper - 50.6, Diet very great, and the side effects concert, children around the my date, her Coke - 46.0, Pepsi 36.2, Diet can be devastating to a student world join hands and sing, my r o o m m a te s With the end of this Semester Pepsi - 36.0, Coke Classic - trying to learn a semester’s cat has kittens, and some poor w e r e e n v i­ upon us, it is assured we’re all 33.6. worth of material in one night. soul, perhaps on a dare by her ous and cool beginning to prepare for the Caffeine (mg) in a 6 oz. cup: Irritability, anxiety, abdominal buddies, decides to invite Mr. was my mid­ impending threat of finals. In Coffee -105, Espresso - 200 pain, increased urination, nau­ Kazlauskas (aka “me”), the d le n a m e . order to survive this week and Caffeine (mg) in a 6 oz. cup of sea, restlessness, muscle Lithuanian Nightmare, to a Stin k ca m e a half of hell, many of us will be tea: Salada - 49, Bigelow - 47, spasms, and heart palpitations dance. I like dances. Dances c o m p l e t e Kris Kazlauskas relying on heavy duty doses of Lipton - 46, Darjeeling - 38. are commonly experienced are good. People like to dance. with prehis­ Accent Columnist Mountain Dew, coffee, cappuc­ Caffeine (mg ) in one tablet: after ingesting too much caf­ With each other. By them­ toric tools cino, or even caffeine pills to Vivarin - 200, No Doz - 100 feine. selves. With wolves. and a little trigger on his back gets us through those long days I don’t claim to be a Gerardo that, when pressed repeatedly, and nights of study we enjoy so What it does? Responsible Use... What to on the dance floor, and to be gave Stink incredible “running much. If you’re one of the many Do. honest, I’d rather sit by the action.” planning to live on caffeine dur­ Caffeine affects the body by cold cut tray, snap my fingers, Basking in the glory of ing finals week, here’s some increasing the release of adren­ There’s no special formula to hum to the music, and eat “Stink,” I probably slipped a new s for you: aline, increasing the rate of avoid OD’ing on caffeine. In or­ those little green olives with little, but my date became the chemical reactions in cells, and der to reduce the risk of over­ the red things in the middle. proud owner of a Jordan What is it? most importantly, blocking the dose symptoms, there’s one But as an Observer columnist, Knight (NKOTB) action figure. affect of adenosine (neurologi­ Rule of Thumb: Do not con­ my fame precedes me, and I Actually, there wasn’t much Caffeine is a naturally occur­ cal suppressant) in the brain. sume more than 300 mg of caf­ scarcely evade the scrutinizing action to him, so I guess he ring stimulant found in coffee feine, 6 cans of soda or 3 cups public eye. Thus, I bust a was just a “figure.” And beans, tea leaves, cocoa beans, The benefits of caffeine are of coffee, per day. If your toler­ move. though he may not have had and kola nuts. One of the most commonly known. Better con­ ance is high, limit yourself to Yet, the thrill of a dance, moving limbs, he was still commonly ingested drugs in the centration, increased alertness, 600 mg, half a pot of coffee or a apart from sharing an bangin’ tough in my book. world, caffeine can be found in and faster reaction to stimuli twelve pack of your favorite enchanting evening with a coffee, tea, most Sodas, choco­ are experienced 15 to 30 min­ soda. In addition to watching wholesome, young lady, is the It took a while, but I knew late products, and many com­ utes after the consumption of a the amount you take, increase opportunity to purchase the that I would do it sooner or mon over-the-counter drugs. caffeinated beverage and these your consumption of water. traditional “gift.” It could be later. I bought a little imitation flowers, and maybe that’s Nerf crossbow. It was a sensi­ what your date likes. Yet, if ble gift, and though lacking on you fall prey to the Flowerama the creativity, I actually propaganda of this world, the bought it for myself. You see, I challenge is sidestepped- the was kind of hoping that my challenge to find a gift that date would not like the gift, says as much about you as it and at the end Of the night I does about your date, the would tell her that she was not m opportunity to find a tangible worthy of my generosity, 0Q momento of the spiritual unity whereupon I would take the you will share as a “couple” on gift back. Unfortunately, she that particular night. With this played with it all night, and it in mind, I make the pilgrimage was a bitter struggle to smile to Toy-R-Us usually on the through my disappointment. Friday afternoon before the ( dance. I took my roommate with me to pick out the next gift, and Upon entering Geoffrey after a debate, we put back Giraffe’s holy of holies, it is the horse necklace and bought imperative to resist the urge to a pinata. The gorgeous cre­ jump at the first good thing ation was a bull of some sort, you see. The gift search is a and we decided to fill it with a lengthy process, and it bag of Starburst® fruit chews. requires extensive browsing To add a bit of tastelessness, through the store. You do not we filled the bull from the rear find the gift- you must let the end. Last I heard, the bull was gift find you. If that takes an given a permanent spot on the hour-and-a-half, then so be it. mantle, between pictures of O I think the late Ayatollah ma and pa. I was definitely said it best, or maybe it was proud of that one. H the entertainer formerly But the most recent, and k known as Prince, “You cannot certainly most mature pur­ W rush your emotions. Let them chase, came a couple of flow, fast or slow, with the weeks ago. At a loss for ideas, steadiness of a river. Only then I ventured into the doll sec­ will your gift be as pure as tion, pretending that I was Rocky Mountain spring looking for a present for an w ater.” imaginary sister. I found a Because I have lived by baby that spoke Spanish, but these words, rarely have I thirty bucks was a little steep. picked out a gift that made me Time was running out, and I unhappy. I have also found was feeling the heat- but I that through experience I have delivered. When I greeted my become a stronger gift buyer. date, I presented, with great To prove my point, allow me enthusiasm and a touch of to journey through a small list cockiness, the Joey Lawrence of gifts that I bought over the action doll. She loved the gift, X last couple of years. and I knew she would. After k I began with buying doll’s all, this teen heartthrob came clothes for my date, and I am with a little leather jacket as ashamed. She had no dolls, well as different clothes for and the gift took not only my him to wear. WHOA. money but my pride as well. The World Wrestling But alas, the past is the Federation merchandise had past, and faced with this chal­ all been marked down on lenge once more, I can only account of the federation’s tell you that I’ve already found becoming defunct, and the next gift- and it’s a doozie. The following is a list of popu­ effects usually last from 2 to 6 Keeping yourself hydrated will instead, I bought a crappy gift. I won’t tell you what it is lar name brand products and hours. not only help keep you alert exactly, but it’s about a foot their caffeine content: (dehydration causes you to be However, I made a suc­ tall, and when you press her Too Much Caffeine. W hat tired and sleepy), but it will cessful follow-up effort with a tummy, she starts to rap. I just Caffeine Content - How much Happens? also decrease the severity of “Land of the Lost” action fig­ hope that they’re not sold out is in there? some caffeine’s negative side ure. When I presented the lit- by Friday. Producing such desirable ef­ effects as well. Good Luck and Caffeine (mg) in a 12 oz. can: fects on the body, the possibility Stay Healthy. page 10 The Observer • SPORTS Tuesday, November 29, 1994 ■ NFL ■ NBA Niners dump New Orleans Spurs struggle, but defeat Timberwolves By DAVE GOLDBERG and capped the scoring with a Associated Press Timberwolves, who got their straight at home. Associated Press 43-yarder on a slant to backup Nate Singleton. biggest point total in four "They didn’t fold the tents SAN ANTONIO NEW ORLEANS That was enough to negate games, have won only one of tonight,” Elliott said. “They just Against a team with only one The put Tyrone Hughes’ 86-yard return their 13 games. kept coming after us. We are victory, the San Antonio Spurs a punctuation point on the ob­ of a fumble by "We were much better going to have to overcome some had some trouble getting up to vious Monday night — nobody for the Saints (4-8) and a sec­ tonight,” Minnesota coach Bill of the things we are going play the Timberwolves. in the NFL but Dallas is close to ond-quarter fumble by Young Blair said. “We got out there through now to become the cal­ The Spurs had to outlast them. at the Saints’ 12 that held the and played as good as we can iber of team we want to be.” M innesota’s fourth-quarter The Niners became the first Niners to a 20-14 lead at half- play. I don’t think San Antonio Isaiah Rider scored 23 points rally to beat the Timberwolves team to clinch a playoff spot time. believes they played as good as and Rooks and Doug West had 92-88 Monday night behind Monday night by overcoming a San Francisco now has won they can play. But we played 18 points each for the David Robinson’s 24 points. couple of mistakes that would 10 or more games for 12 tough and the Spurs got out of Timberwolves. Christian “It’s always difficult to get up kill mere mortals to beat New straight seasons and qualified this with the win.” Laettner added 10 points. and concentrate on a game like Orleans 35-14 as for the playoffs in 11 of them, Robinson became the second- Minnesota used a 10-4 run to this," San Antonio coach Bob threw for 281 yards and four missing only in 1991 despite a leading scorer in Spurs history open the third quarter to close Hill said. “Som etim es losing a touchdowns. 10-6 record. with a free throw with 6:37 left within 53-50 on Howard game like this is a better lesson It gave them: This year’s team, however, is in the third quarter. That was Eisley’s two free throws with for the team. But we have to be — Their 11th NFC West title one rebuilt by the signing of a his 10,291th point, moving him 8:23 left. happy we won the game. in 14 years; half-dozen veterans to bolster a past James Silas on the Spurs Minnesota is a very capable — Their 12th straight season defense that can stop Dallas. scoring list. But the Timberwolves turned group. I thought they played of 10 wins or more, The latest newcomer, Tim But Robinson has a long way it over nine times in the third hard tonight.” — Their 11th playoff berth in Harris, got a sack Monday night to go to catch George Gervin, quarter and the Spurs used an Trailing 70-58 heading into 12 years. in his first game under a con­ who’s No. 1 with 23,602 points. 8-0 run to pull away to a 70-58 the fourth quarter, the "We couldn’t get them tract that pays him $5,000 each Vinny Del Negro added 19 lead at the end of the third Timberwolves pulled to 84-81 stopped, ” Saints coach Jim time he dumps the quarter­ points, Sean Elliott 16 and quarter. on Sean Rooks’ layup with 2:34 Mora said of a team that con­ back. Avery Johnson 13 as the Spurs Del Negro was 7-of-7 from the remaining. verted 11 of its 15 third-down The Niners led 20-14 at the snapped a two-game losing field in the first half as the But San Antonio, which made opportunities. half, but it might have been streak and won for just the Spurs had a 49-40 lead at half- only five field goals in the final "They’re the best offensive more if not for those two San third time in their last eight time. quarter, iced the game by hit­ team in football, the best Francisco fumbles. gam es. Minnesota never led after ting 11 of 12 free throws in the offense I’ve ever seen. ” But Hughes also contributed San Antonio improved to 23-3 Elliott converted a layup with final 12 minutes. The The win kept the Niners (10- to San Francisco’s scoring, against Minnesota, including 11 9:28 left in the opening quarter. 2) on top of Dallas (10-2) for fumbling a punt on his own 7 the home-field advantage on late in the first quarter, a play ■ NBA their inevitable course toward a that led to the Niners’ first TD. third straight NFC title gam e. San Francisco took a 3-0 lead San Francisco, which won for on its first possession on Doug Seattle surpasses sluggish Pacers the seventh straight time, Brien’s 40-yard field goal. By JIM COUR ing their last three in a row. more active and put up some would get the home field if the The Niners’ made it 10-0 with Associated Press Seattle came back to the numbers in the first quarter to teams are tied because it beat 10 seconds left in the first peri­ the Cowboys two weeks ago. Tacoma Dome, its home this get us going.” od on Young’s TD pass to Jones TACOMA, Wash. Young, who had completed season, after weekend wins in Seattle’s other all-star, Shawn after Hughes’ fumble and Following a sluggish start, the 68.2 percent of his passes San Antonio and Houston. Kemp, agreed that the Sonics’ appeared to be heading for a Seattle SuperSonics are finally entering the game, was 24 of All of a sudden, a tentative 27-21 lead after the first quar­ 17-0 lead when Young fumbled looking like the team that won 30 as he hit four TD passes in a club that had lost its confidence ter was the game’s turning as he was scrambling to the an NBA-best 63 games last sea­ game for the fourth time this is showing signs of being the point. Saints’ 12 and Jimmy Spencer son. season. The Niners, despite same team that terrorized op­ recovered. With Gary Payton scoring a their mistakes, totally dominat­ ponents with their ball-hawking “Good first quarters seem to One play later, Jim Everett hit season-high 28 points and Sam ed, outgaining the Saints 461- defense. The Sonics had 13 be the key for us,” Kemp said Michael Haynes for 52 yards to Perkins coming off the bench to 222 and keeping the ball for steals against the Pacers, four after his 16-point, 13-rebound the San Francisco 36, leading get 20, the Sonics beat the more than 38 minutes. by Payton, and blocked a sea­ effort. "When we get out in eventually to Mario Bates’ 3- Indiana Pacers 118-99 on He threw first-half touch­ son-high nine shots. front early, opponents have to yard TD run that made it 10-7. Monday night. downs of 4 yards each to Brent “Everything starts with me,” adjust to us instead of the other But ’s 45-yard After a 3-4 start that included Jones and John Taylor, found said Payton, the Sonics’ defen­ way around.” kickoff return put the ball at a 27-point loss at the Boston Jones again from 6 yards out sive-minded point guard who If Payton and Kemp play well, the Saints’ 49 and it took Young Garden on Nov. 16, the Sonics on a drive that consumed 9:02 sat out the fourth quarter. so do the Sonics, coach George seven plays to make it 17-7. have won five out of six, includ- at the start of the second half “After Boston, I felt I had to get Karl said.

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL But Notre Dame settled down B ball in time to squelch the rally. “It was ragged but interest­ continued from page 16 ing,” MacLeod said. ’Bama odd team out of top slot It gets more interesting from sophomores Matt Gotsch tonight when 1-2 Indiana visits and Marcus Young helped off­ By PAUL NEWBERRY ings. The Tide meets No. 6 And though he may be in the the Joyce Center for an 8 p.m. set a 26-point torrent from AP Sports W riter Florida in the Southeastern minority, he doesn’t buy the tipoff. Valpo guard David Redmon. Conference championship game argument that a playoff would Despite their early-season TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Crusaders’ freshman Bryce on Saturday, with the winner put too many additional de­ struggles at the Maui Classic, Two years ago, everything Drew, last year’s Indiana Mr. heading to the Sugar Bowl to mands on the players. which included losses to Utah worked out fine for Alabama Basketball who was heavily meet seventh-ranked Florida and Arizona State, the Hoosiers under the bowl coalition. The recruited by Notre Dame, State. “I wouldn’t have a problem represent an important mea­ Crimson Tide kept on winning scored 14 points in his college Coach Gene Stallings and his with it,” he said. “We already suring stick for the Irish. and wound up with the national debut. But a solid defensive players believe they can sway play 13 games. What’s one If Notre Dame competes well championship. effort from Justice kept him enough pollsters to their side by more? If someone is blessed against Indiana, it will inject This season, the path to No. 1 from doing more damage. winning those two games, and enough to go on to the next confidence that could carry isn’t so clear. Alabama could “Justice can channel you they may have a point con­ level (NFL), you’re going to play them to a better season than finish 13-0 again and not even where he wants you to go,” sidering their last two victories 16 anyway. Why not prepare expected. share the title. Drew said. were over No. 9 Auburn (the yourself for it?” The Hoosiers’ trademark suf­ Notre Dame opened a 20- Tigers' only loss in the last two focating defense sucked the life A playoff system would give point lead midway through the seasons) and 16th-ranked Stallings feels differently. out of the Irish last year and third-ranked Alabama a chance second half, but Redmon Mississippi State. “Somewhere along the line, sent them reeling to one of to render the polls meaningless, drained four 3-pointers in the you’ve got to say they play their worst seasons in recent settle all the debate on the final 11 minutes to keep the Neither top-ranked Nebraska enough games,” he said. “If memory. field. But the idea doesn’t have game close. (12-0) nor No. 2 Penn State (11- two or three teams finish unde­ A talented freshman class much support around “We didn’t plan (to shoot 0) has to run that kind of sea­ feated, you’ve got to vote for compliments veterans Alan Tuscaloosa. more 3-pointers) at halftime, son-ending gauntlet. somebody. There’s nothing Henderson and Brian Evans. “It’s too time consuming,” of­ but when we got down we “If we go undefeated, we’ll wrong with a couple of teams But Notre Dame offers an fensive tackle Kareem McNeal started calling specific plays to win it,” offensive guard Jon tying for it. I see nothing wrong improved, if inexperienced, said. “It’s kind of confusing the set up 3-pointers,” Redmon Stevenson said confidently. with having two or three unde­ lineup that craves this kind of way it’s set up now, but I said. “I hit a couple and they Still, Alabama faces the feated teams.” test. wouldn’t want a playoff kept coming back to me." longest odds of the three major “You dream about games like because of the time it takes Redmon’s hot hand, coupled contenders for No. 1. Nebraska Brown and quarterback Jay that,” Garrity said. “A packed away from school. It’s already with some ragged Irish play, and Penn State have only their Barker would like to see a dif­ house, a team like Indiana. It hard enough to keep up in kept Valparaiso coming back. bowl games remaining, and ferent version of the current should be a lot of fun. ” school and a playoff would just they already have all but one system, something along the make it that much harder.” first-place vote. lines of the bowl alliance that goes into effect next year but “The season is long enough as “You’ll never know what you incorporating all of the teams it is,” agreed defensive tackle could have done unless you — even those from the Big 10 ND leers compete in L.A. Shannon Brown, “especially at play the best,” safety Willie and Pac-10. this time of year when we all Gaston said. “Everyone feels “Out of our conference, the By MICHAEL DAY to knot the game at one. have finals coming up. People Nebraska and Penn State are a top bowl is the Sugar Bowl,” Sports W riter______Unfortunately for the Irish, tend to forget the whole pur­ lot better than us. But till we Brown noted. “Why couldn’t it Andrusiak’s goal served as a pose of what we re here for, play each other, we’ll never be the Rose Bowl if that gave us Just when it seemed things wakeup call for Maine. The and that’s to get an education.” know. It’s just a matter of who the chance to play for the na­ couldn’t get worse for the Black Bears scored three There are still two games to they want to have it.” tional title against somebody Notre Dame hockey team, goals in the final nine minutes go before Alabama (11-0) has Gaston would prefer the else? I don’t know why it’s so they did. to secure the victory and set to concern itself with the rank­ teams settle things themselves. set in stone.” Over the weekend, the Irish up a title game with Boston dropped a pair of close games on Sunday. against talented Maine and Following the tight win, Tempe Princeton squads at the Great Maine coach Shawn Walsh iDear Angela, Western Freeze-Out in Los praised the play of the relent­ continued from page 16 Angeles. Notre Dame’s less Irish squad. record fell to 3-10 heading “Notre Dame outworked us Happy Birthday! the Irish would be in con­ into this weekend’s matchup tonight and the game was tention for a bid if Florida won with Michigan. much closer than the score because Sugar Bowl officials Despite coming up short, the indicates," said Walsh. “Our were weary of a rematch Irish played perhaps their goaltender won the game for between the Seminoles and the best game of the year against us, but the key was coming H ave a Gators. But a 31-31 tie fifth-ranked Maine on Friday. right back with a goal after between the two teams last “This was a great effort by Notre Dame tied the score." Saturday left the possibility our team and a real heart Notre Dame was unable to open. breaker for us to lose," said carry over their solid play to Great Day! It appeared the Cotton Bowl head coach Ric Schafer. “On the consolation game against was a likely destination for the this particular night, they Princeton on Sunday. The Love, Irish after the 17-17 tie with deserved to beat the No. 5 Irish gave up three first peri­ Mom, Dad, Vincent & the Trojans. But the Fiesta team in the country. Salzman od goals and were never able Bowl had first choice according was outstanding in goal, and to recover. Anthony to coalition rules because the both Jeremy Coe and Terry Buffaloes a higher ranking Lorenz really stepped up After falling behind 3-0, than Texas Tech, who would tonight." junior defenseman Garry have been Notre Dame’s op­ Despite being outplayed and Gruber removed the goose ponent in Dallas. outshot 11-8 by the Irish in egg in the Irish scoring col­ The Irish will receive $3 mil­ the first period, the Black umn with a long range goal English as a lion for appearing in the Fiesta Bears took an early 1-0 lead with just 3:37 remaining in Bowl which will be televised by on a goal by Dan the first period. The Irish NBC. Shermerhorn with just 33 sec­ were unable to maintain the Second onds to play in the period. momentum and fell behind 4- 1 heading into the final min­ The score stood at 1-0 for utes of the second period. Language nearly two periods before the Notre Dame’s second goal Please, Irish offense finally got on the came late in the second peri­ INTENSIVE PROGRAM OF STUDY scoreboard. With just 10 od when Gruber found right Recycle The minutes remaining in the wing Tim Harberts wide open at Indiana University South Bend third period, freshman left for his tenth goal of the sea­ wing Lyle Andrusiak rebound­ son. The score closed the gap Improve active use of written and spoken English ed a shot by center Jamie to 4-2, but the Tigers once Understand verbal and non-verbal differences Observer Ling and slid the puck past again answered the call with in communication between cultures Bear goaltender Blair Allison a score to extend their lead to Develop and improve listening, speaking, reading 5-2. and writing skills After having several shots Receive individualized attention $$$$$$$ M ak e M o n e y on goal stopped by Princeton January 9 through May 12,1995 goaltender James Konte, C hristm as & Su m m e r V acations Andrusiak cut the Tiger lead 9 a.m.1 p.m. Monday through Friday to 5-3 on a power play early B e Y o u r O w n B o ss in the third period. However, it wasn’t meant to be for the IUSB Continuing Education Irish, as Princeton closed the I f you are interested , P lease C all : 1700 Mishawaka Avenue door with a back-breaking KiRA 284-4308 goal midway through the final period. Call 237-4261 for information D eanna 284-5166 page 12 The Observer • SPORTS Tuesday, November 29, 1994

C o lleg e F o o t b a l l NFL FOOTBALL ‘The Genius’ retires from Stanford Steelers dominate AFC By ROB GLOSTER Stanford in 1992. conference Monday he had Associated Press But the Cardinal slipped to 4- been talking with Leland for By ALAN ROBINSON their previous nine visits to the 7 last season and went 3-7-1 the past four or five weeks AP Sports Writer West Coast. STANFORD, Calif. this year. There were other about his future. “We’re going to find a way to Bill Walsh, who returned to distractions this season, “1 had hoped to do better this PITTSBURGH win," Steelers coach Bill Stanford "to find my bliss" including criticism of his year, but I have learned to live The toughest stretch of their Cowher said. “I don’t care if it’s after coaching the San coaching style by a few under­ with these things,” Walsh said. schedule is turning out a lot 3-0 or if the score becomes 34- Francisco 49ers to three Super classmen and fallout from his "They are not in my mind rougher on the rest of the AFC 31, we’ve got to find a way to Bowl titles, resigned Monday derogatory comments about shameful or a factor in failure. than it is for the Pittsburgh win." after two straight losing sea­ other coaches — such as Notre I never worked harder than I Steelers. The Steelers are doing just sons. Dame’s Lou Holtz, whom he have here.” In their last three games, the that, winning four in a row and Walsh, who had two years called “a little spoiled brat" — Leland said Walsh’s return to Steelers (9-3): seven of their last eight despite remaining on a five-year con­ in a book about Walsh and his Stanford three years ago —Took apart Buffalo to win a quarterback mini-contro- tract, will become a special team. helped build the national repu­ their sixth consecutive Monday versy, a much-debated wide assistant to Stanford athletic tation of the Cardinal football night game and enhance their receivers rotation, a month­ director Ted Leland. Asked two weeks ago program, and said Walsh was reputation as one of the NFL’s long injury to Barry Foster and The departure of Walsh, who whether he would return in directly responsible for the best prime-team teams. a 13-quarter streak without a turns 63 Wednesday, had been 1995, Walsh said he was $26 million in donations to —Six days later, confounded touchdown by the offense. rum ored in recent w eeks. He happy at Stanford but left Stanford athletics last year. Miami’s Dan Marino, sacking So much attention has been often seemed distracted this open the possibility he would Leland said getting Walsh to him four times while beating focused on the Steelers’ faults, season, and repeatedly had not be back. come back to Stanford in 1992 the Dolphins 16-13 in overtime it’s almost been overlooked that trouble remembering the “1 said when I came back I was like searching for a — a victory that team president winning Sunday in Cincinnati names of his players and was going to find my bliss," he physics professor and ending Dan Rooney, who has watched would give them their first five- opponents' players during his said. “I guess the guys that up with a Nobel laureate. NFL games for a half-century, game winning streak since news conferences. paint the Golden Gate Bridge Walsh smiled and rolled his called one of the most exciting 1983 and maintain home-field "I just felt that this was an about 200 feet up, that’s their eyes in embarrassment. he could remember. advantage for them throughout appropriate time to move to bliss. This is what 1 do, and I Four of Walsh’s former assis­ —Proved they could win on the playoffs. another stage of my life," don’t want to leave Stanford. tants are now NFL head the West Coast with a convinc­ They are tied with Cleveland Walsh said. "Anyone who Unless there’s a grouping of coaches — Dennis Green of ing 21-3 win over the Los for the AFC Central lead, but looks at my chronological age people that want to look for Minnesota, of Angeles Raiders, only their sec­ the Steelers currently own can understand that. 1 love alternatives, which is always San Francisco, Mike Holmgren ond in 18 years over what was tiebreakers over the Browns football and have thrived on it. possible.” of Green Bay and Sam Wyche once their biggest rival. The and the Chargers, the AFC's But the job of head coach is an But Walsh said at his news of Tampa Bay. Steelers had won only two of other two 9-3 teams. exhausting job, and at this stage in my life it’s time for somebody else to do it." 1 fa Leland said Walsh now will focus on fundraising, as well as creation of a coaching development program and a Conversation on the sports research institute at Stanford. But Walsh said he’ll of Notre Dame also be available to advise his successor. Leland, an assistant coach under Walsh at Stanford in the late 1970s, said a nationwide search for a new coach already has begun. Terry Shea, the current offensive coordinator, is expected to be among the candidates. The Catholic Walsh returned to Stanford three seasons ago after com­ piling a 102-63-1 record in 10 years as coach of the 49ers, and Liberal Catholicism: including crowns in 1981, 1984 and 1988. He was elected to the Pro Football What's at Stake? Hall of Fame in 1993. He spent three years as a pro football analyst for NBC, through the end of the 1991 season, before deciding to return to coaching. Walsh, whose first head Peter Steinfels coaching job was at Stanford in 1977-78, when he led the team to consecutive bowl vic­ Senior Religion Correspondent tories, led the Cardinal to a 10-3 record and a win over Penn State in the Blockbuster The New York Times Bowl in his first year back at

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Council Travel Hesburgh Center for International 1 1 5 3 N. Dearborn Chicago, IL 6 0 6 1 0 Studies Auditorium 312*951*0585 Call for a FREE Discussion period to follow. Student Travels magazine!' E ------^ x u i x u w______. I1 Tuesday, November 29, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS page 13

C ollege F ootball

Notre Dame Bowl coalition sends out bids vs. By RICK WARNER Last year, the No. 2 coached against his boyhood w Associated Press Cornhuskers lost to No. 1 team. Colorado Florida State 18-16. “Either way, we’ll get a great cFlestn‘Bowl Tempe, Arizona It’s official. Based on past performance at game,” said Sugar Bowl execu­ Top-ranked Nebraska will the Orange Bowl, Miami (10-1) tive director Troy Mathieu. play No. 4 Miami in the Orange should be favored over “One way, we get an undefeat­ Nebraska Bowl, No. 7 Florida State will Nebraska (12-0). The ed team with a legitimate shot meet the Alabama-Florida win­ Hurricanes are 62-1 on their at the national championship. vs. ner in the Sugar Bowl, and home field over the past The other way, we get to finish Texas Tech will face No. 21 decade, while the Cornhuskers a fantastic game that started Miami Southern Cal in the Cotton have lost five straight at the last Saturday.” Miami, Florida Bowl. Orange Bowl, including three to Southern Cal (7-3-1) and The matchups were Miami by a combined 76-33. Texas Tech (6-5) may need announced Monday, six days “To play Nebraska here in the directions to get to the Cotton before the original date sched­ Orange Bowl is a goal we’ve Bowl. The Trojans have never Florida State uled by the bowl coalition. had all year,” said Hurricanes played there, and the Red vs. Bowl officials announced the coach Dennis Erickson. “We’re Raiders are making their first pairings early because they happy to have the opportunity trip since 1939. Alabama/Florida didn't anticipate major changes to play one of the great teams Other bowl matchups: Rose in the rankings after Saturday’s in country.” (Penn State-Oregon); Citrus New Orleans, LA Southeastern Conference cham­ The Sugar Bowl selected (Alabama-Florida loser vs. Ohio pionship game between No. 3 Florida State (9-1-1) to play the State); Gator (Tennessee- Alabama and No. 6 Florida. SEC cham pion, even though it Virginia Tech); Sun (Texas- Texas Tech. There could have been a shake- sets up a possible rematch North Carolina); Peach (North up if Alabama trounced Florida against Florida (9-1-1). The Carolina State-Mississippi vs. Cotton Bow and moved up to No. 1, but that Seminoles overcame a 28-point State); Hall of Fame Classic seemed highly unlikely. deficit in the fourth quarter (Wisconsin-Duke); Freedom Southern Cal “If there was any chance of Saturday to tie the Gators 31- (Arizona-Utah); Independence M that happening, we would have 31. (Texas Christian-Virginia); Dallas, Texas waited,” said Keith Tribble, “If that (rematch) happens, Copper (Oklahoma-BYU); executive director of the we’re billing it as ‘Overtime and Alamo (Baylor-Washington Orange Bowl. “But since we the Sugar Bowl,”’ bowl presi­ State); Liberty (Illinois-East Penn State don’t think it will, we decided dent Chuck Zatarain said. Carolina); Holiday (Michigan- to make it official and give The alternative is an intrigu­ Colorado State); Las Vegas vs. everybody more time to plan ing matchup between Alabama (Central Michigan-UNLV); their trips.” (11-0) and Florida State. Carquest (South Carolina vs. For the second straight year, Seminoles coach Bobby Bowden West Virginia or Boston PASADENA Oregon an undefeated Nebraska team grew up in Alabama and College); Aloha (Kansas State TOURNAMENT will play for the national cham­ dreamed of playing for the vs. Boston College, West OF ROSES Pasedena, CA pionship in the Orange Bowl. Crimson Tide, but he has never Virginia or Syracuse).

a als, while the Irish have a well worth the trouble. Farce Fiesta. Irish coach Lou Holtz had a i i Notre Dame needed just one lot to say last season about set­ continued from page 16 more win to reach the lowest tling things on the field, logic standard in sports. Seven vic­ that seemed to disappear Coalition cousin like the Sun tories and this all would have Monday as he justified the deci­ Bowl, or nowhere at all. But the been a moot point. sion to accept the Fiesta Bowl fine print provides for this bid. Fiesta farce, and everybody But at 6-4-1, unranked Notre involved is happy. Dame’s automatic bid to a ma­ Holtz insisted that his team jor bowl was amputated. deserves this opportunity, de­ It will be the people who Without a leg to stand on, the spite the fact that teams like aren’t involved wearing the Irish used their national appeal Michigan, Boston College and sour faces this holiday season. as a crutch to hobble into a Brigham Young, just to name a “There really aren’t that major bowl. few more, are playing in bowls many teams available,” Fiesta How refreshing it would have that Notre Dame would never Bowl spokesman Shawn been if Notre Dame officials consider gracing with its pres­ Schoeffler told the South Bend had respectfully declined the ence. Tribune. “The number has Fiesta Bowl’s offer and urged “I am not embarassed about dwindled.” the game’s representatives to taking this team to the Fiesta invite one of the many more de­ Bowl, ” Holtz said. Try telling that to Arizona or serving teams. He should be. North Carolina or Southern Cal Observer File Photo or Duke, just to name a few. All Or if Rev. E. William Bobby Taylor and company to face the fifth ranked Buffaloes in Tempe.are teams with better records Beauchamp, the priest in and better rankings—if not bet­ charge of playground profits, ter reputations—than Notre hadn’t shunned the Sun Bowl, Dame. essentially deeming the If you see news Toastmaster’s International presents: Yet those teams will play in Coalition’s so-called “second- bowls named after car rental tier” bowls unworthy of an happening, call companies and malleable met- Irish appearance. But none of that happened. The Observer at the one, Notre Dame instead chose to freeload at the Fiesta Bowl. 631-5323 the only, The school will receive millions of unearned dollars for its trip to Tempe, a profit that makes any public relations problems V\W Kirk $3 5 f o r Vice President of Student Affairs Jfrirtg ■ ■ ■ # 30* # — ® D Presentation and Question and Answer session ^ $ 4 1 9 Unlimited Tanning Price indudes round trip airfare from Chicago, trans­ fers and 7 night hotel accommodations based on quad occupancy. Taxes are not included. Around the Corner Counci Travel from Sam ’s Club Tuesday at 7:00 1153 N. Dearborn, 2nd Floor SuqStudio271-ISUN 131 DeBartolo Hall Chicago, IL 60610 312*951*0585 Area's Ne (as usual, pop/soda and snacks provided) Call for availability, prices, and other Spring Break destinations. Friendliest Salon page 14 The Observer • SPORTS Tuesday, November 29, 1994

In t e r h a l l F o o t b a l l Offenses control in women’s Blue squad unable to handle Gold’s interhall all-star battle second half comeback in men’s game By MICHAEL DAY open for 30 yards, Jackobice Sports Writer added her second touchdown of By JOE VILLINSK1 Gold’s first score was set up first half, ” Yelovich stated. the game on a nine-yard run to Sports Writer as Fisher’s Mike Carroll caught With 1:12 left in the half, an­ Sometimes football defies all give Gold a 20-6 advantage. logic. a 25-yard pass from Farragher other Knight, Dan Kraft, inter­ Although they failed to add the On the Tuesday night before The 1994 women’s interhall on the sidelines for their second cepted a Chad Harrison pass conversion, Gold took the 14 Thanksgiving, after a good por­ season was the year of the first down in a row. After a and returned it 30 yards to give point lead into intermission. tion of the student body had dominating defenses. Opposing pass interference call, Bundick the Blue a 12-0 lead at half- already dispersed, some of in- scored on a hand-off to cut the time. Another noteworthy offenses were forced to take a “We executed really well in terhall’s best stuck around to score to 12-8 with 8:00 left. performance was made by backseat, as points were hard the first half, ” said Byrd. I was provide one of the best games Dave Bozanich, who had three to come by and shutouts were surprised we could move the of the season. “We kept working hard and interceptions in the first half. seen with uncanny regularity ball as well as we were able to From the opening ceremonies started to find a nice rhythm,” throughout the year. in the first half.” involving the color guard, to Farragher said. “We had too many defensive However, defense was a miss­ However, the blue team came WNDU sportscaster Chuck “The penalties were the breakdowns in the second ing element in last Tuesday’s to life in the second half, and Freeby engineering a short biggest thing that hurt us,” half,” Off-Campus’s George interhall all-star game, as the the Gold offense closed up shop touchdown drive, to a great Blue head coach Tony Yelovich Reider said. Gold team outslugged their after a dominating 30 minutes comeback by the Gold squad, said. “They managed to hurt In between the first and sec­ Blue counterparts 20-18 in a of football. Blue capped two the first ever interhall all-star our rhythm." ond quarters, Freeby, who battle of two suddenly offensive scoring drives with touchdown game proved to be a success. donned Joe Montana’s No. 16 heavyweights. passes from McNeill to The first half was just the op­ for his brief appearance at Donnelly and wideout Michelle “I just thought it was a great It b ecam e obvious from the posite as the Blue all-stars quarterback, managed to lead Drury. interhall game,” Gold running start that this was not going to dominated from the outset. the Blue team to a touchdown back Mike Norbut said. Keenan’s Colin Rittgers made from the 10-yard line in four be another low scoring, defense “We came together in the sec­ What made the game even two of his five first-half catches plays. Facing a fourth and five, dominated grudge match. ond half,” said McNeill. “We better for Norbut and the rest from Planner’s Scott Lupo on Freeby hit Mitchell for the were kind of disorganized on of the Gold all-stars were the the second drive of the half to score to complete his challenge. On the first play from scrim­ both sides of the ball in the first sixteen unanswered points they key the first score. From the 3- mage, Gold quarterback Julie half, but I thought we really scored in the fourth quarter as yard line, Rittgers’ teammate “There wasn’t a glitch in the Byrd threw a perfect strike to improved as the game went they rallied to defeat the Blue Ben Mitchell scored up the mid­ whole game,” Commissioner wideout Ann Jackobice, and on.” squad 16-12 at Loftus. dle to give the Blue an early 6-0 Marty Ogren said. “Everyone Jackobice tore through the Blue After forcing a Gold punt, secondary for a 60-yard touch­ advantage. pulled together and it was spec­ Blue took over on their own 40- Following a fumble recovery down and a 6-0 lead. Gold “We executed well the entire tacular.” yard line with just over three by Sorin’s Alex Scheidler at the stretched the lead to 7-0, as minutes remaining. However, blue 37-yard line, a fellow Byrd added the conversion on a Gold linebacker Shelly Screaming Otter, Jeff quarterback keeper. Dillenburger dashed Blue’s Farragher, found Fisher’s Dan hopes and secured the victory McGinty for a first down. Not to be outdone, the Blue for Gold by intercepting a Alumni’s Matt Mammolenti fol­ GET THE squad engineered a five play, McNeill pass in the final lowed with a 15-yard run to the 60-yard drive on their first pos­ MEDICAL minute. Blue 7-yard line. session of the evening. SCHOLARSHIP Quarterback Marce McNeill Both teams enjoyed the op­ “We started double-teaming completed all three of her pass­ portunity to compete in the all- the nose guard which gave us YOU NEED. es on the drive before tailback star game and are confident some room to run up the mid­ Sara Donnelly capped it off that the game will become a dle,” Gold head coach Chuck with a 12-yard touchdown run. tradition in interhall football. Hurley said. Blue failed to convert on the “It was definitely a great Two plays later, Norbut If you’re a medical stu­ point-after attempt, and it idea,” said Byrd. “I really en­ scored the game-winner with would cost them in the end. joyed it, and it was a great way 3:10 left as he took the hand-off dent, you have enough on to meet the best players from and followed Matt Bundick’s After losing the ball on downs your mind. Today’s Air Force the different teams.” block into the end zone for the on their second possession. score. offers a scholarship program that Gold put together a pair of Indeed, the stars were out in touchdown drives right before can greatly reduce your financial full force on Tuesday night at “The team hung together well the half to bury the Blue squad Loftus field. In the end, the as a unit throughout the game,” in a hole that would prove to be burden. Participation is based on Gold team sparkled just a little Gold assistant coach Joe Yonto too deep to recover from. brighter. said. competitive selection. Get more Gold, consisting of players from Badin, Lyons, Pangborn, information with no obligation. Howard, Walsh, B.P., and Call Cavanaugh, moved the ball 48 Happy Birthday yards on seven plays on the first of the two scoring oppor­ tunities. USAF HEALTH PROFESSIONS

Byrd, one of the heroes in TOLL FREE Lyons’ championship season, 1-800-423-USAF once again put the exclamation point on the drive with a 13- yard touchdown pass to receiv­ er Jill Satanek. On the ensuing conversion, running back Trish Sorenson scampered five yards to raise Gold’s lead to 14-6. Gold wasn’t through yet. our BEST After M.T. Kraft found Satanek nd Mom & Dad Too) TOMORROW NIGHT! Frontcourt N O T R E DAM Women’s Basketball v s . Fifth-ranked combo PURDUE WED., NOV. 30 • 7:30 P.M. Joyce Center Main Arena FREE ADMISSION! with student ID Tuesday, November 29, 1994 The Observer • TODAY page 15 FOUR FOOD GROUPS OF THE APOCALYPSE DAVE KELLETT THE FAR SIDE GARY LARSON 'UJfv+ret-T S ee Us ■Fa i k e b ., "BEFone Moo ... "Ju st.-. Q a lle O ••• Ubu • - ■ ) N ■ • • T o ■ - ■ F a t h e r ? , Let fV|E ... H ovi -Movf-...S e (YXBSTER... >A^ T w n VJe 'h e /u-.-if-V .

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A LOT OF PEOPLE DoNT I LIVE ACCORDING 10 ONE NUATS TOUR £.I HAME PRINCIPLES, BUT / DO.' PRINCIPLE, AND PRINCIPLE 7 I ’M A WGHUi PCANOPLED I NEVER LCOK OUT PERSON' DEVIATE FOR NUMBER FROM, IT. ONE. \

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1990 Universal Press Syndicate DILBERT SCOTT ADAMS “The Evolution of Employmentand Labor Markets in Mexico, 1982-1992" will be the topic of a lecture by YOU SU BM ITTED THE. 2 THE OTHER BIDDERS Enrique Dussel Peters of the University of California, San LOWEST DID TO RUN WOULD LOVE TO KNOW Diego and Universidad Autdnoma de Mexico (UNAM.) It OUR NEIL) TECHNICAL S HOW YOU PLAN TO i will be held today at 12:30 p.m. in C-103 Hesburgh TELL T H E M Center for International Studies. SUPPORT HOTLINE, 1 HANDLE TWELVE 1 TO CALL M E M ISTER DOG BERT I THOUSAND CALLS A V)t 1 “American Political Culture, 1870-1900” will be the V & -----x DAY BY YOURSELF. topic of a lecture by Charles W. Calhoun, visiting / L j f I Lecturer from East Carolina University, today at 4:15 (J/ \ I ! p.m. in 199 De Bartolo. This lecture is presented by the * V\ © Department of History as part of the De Santis Lecture Series. s r w y ------^ ____ 1 \ “Politics of Islamic Fundamentalism in the Middle ...... b 1 East” will be the subject of a lecture by Dr. Gehad Auda, CROSSWORD Senior Researcher at the Center for Political and Strategic Studies at Al-Ahram Foundation, Cairo, Egypt. This lecture will be held today at 4:15 p.m. in Seminar ACROSS 35 Tyrant Amin 61 "Get ready for ! 1 3 4 5 6 5 16 11 12 15 36 The British hard times!" ’ Room C-103, Hesburgh Center. 1 "All d o n e " ■ 6 M u s e u m 's 68 Having a liking 14 8 N in a o l ja z z m a r b le s for " 14 ‘Strangers in 16 17 The music of Mozart and Beethovenwill be dis 37 Sales spiel 69 Give-away: Var. the Night" 70 Allergy cussed in a lecture by Charles Rosen, a pianist, in the s in g e r 39 RCA products 16 sufferer's bane Department of Music Lecture Series. The guest lecture 40 “Rough ride is Actor Jack of 71 Nuclear treaty ■ '' “City Slickers" a h e a d ! " 2 0 21 22 23 26 27 28 will be held at 4:30 p.m. today in Annenberg Auditorium. 16 “W ait a m in u te!" 4 3 ------jiffy ” _ 29 30 31 33 - 35 18 M e m b e r of 44 Old Testament DOWN Effective Interviewing Workshop:The single most C o n g . p r o p h e t ■ * “ ■ 36 38 39 important part of the employment process is the inter­ 19 A dot in the 4 5 ------c u m la u d e 1 Reproof sound 2 H urry ■ ” view. This workshop focuses on the newest interviewing o c e a n 46 R. E. Lee, e.g. 40 41 42 3 Suffix with techniques used by employers and will cover the types of 20 The Rail Splitter 47 Printers' widths meth- or hex- 23 Declaration of 48 Now available 43 questions typically asked, verbal and non-verbal behav­ interdepend­ 4 Bugle solo so J e k y ll's ■ " ■ " iors, and some general do's and don’ts. It will be held e n c e s Eye problem 46 .. 49 counterpart today from 7-8 p.m. in the Foster Room in LaFortune. 25 Bridge feat 6 Satirical, maybe ■ " ■ 52 O c e a n 53 29 Bergen of 7 Tin S p a r ta 50 This workshop will be presented by Kitty Arnold, _ "M u rp h y 53 Tiny 8 Comedian Mort " ” Director of Career and Placement Services. 54 55 56 57 56 59 60 B row n" 54 T u to r 9 Nasty racket 32 Wall St. 5 8 m an o p e r a to r ? ■ 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 The Music Department Sponsors Abend Musique. re g u la to r (unanimously) 10 S to re s Gregorian Chant, Medieval polyphony and Medieval 11 Que. neighbor 68 69 l 2 S g t.,e .g . _ ■ Organ Music are to be performed tonight at 10 p.m. in ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 13 Nighttime, in 70 the Basilica of the Sacred Heart. This music from the p o e try E R 1 ■ Catholic heritage will be presented beautifully among the B A S R A c L O G 15 Letter endings: Puzzle by Harvey Estes A N acoustics and architecture of the church. The concert is O N T O P 1 H O W E 1 E L A bbr. 31 "Two mints 52 Bashful 61 Kitchen meas. 1 N D O U B L E O R N O T H G 17 "Flying Down to " 55 Little: Suffix 6 2 J im a free and open to the public. M 1 R A G E E N D O T o E 32 B lo c k 56 Time spent in 63 Toothpaste, A M A s S E R A 20 Like certain 33 Logical line, seemingly perhaps poker hands D O U B L E E N T E N T E beginning 57 Atlanta-based 64 Frequently M 21 P o p p y c o c k B O R N A I R s 1 A 3 4 p a ls n e tw o rk 65 Tide's retreat 22 “Oh, to be in A L O T P A R T Y O G R E 38 Debtor's letters 59 Bauxite and 66 Actress Notre Dame T E N B E L T B E N T B ro w n in g 4 1 Site of 60 s °*hers T h o m p s o n D O U B L E H E A D E R S 24 Bottommost s e rv ic e so Aid and 67 Perfect rating North Dining Hall South Dining Hall s A L E, X R A Y a r e a 42 Inform (on) ^ ^ „ _ _ Bourbon Baked Ham Chicken Fajitas E M B A L M K O N G D A B 26 Actor John 49 Word with Get answers to any three clues Vegetable Calzone Beef Stew With Biscuits D O U B L E 1 N D E M N 1 T Y 27 Make progress m o th e r o r yy touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- Rice Valencienne Mushroom Quiche 1 T L L ■ L 1 E U ■ A R N 1 E 28 B o n e r T E L E >- 1 E S R A S P s 30 Performed s i Luc/s landlady 5656 (75$ each minute). Saint Marys For daily menu call 284-4500

STUDENT TENNBY VARSITY TENNIS TEAMS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30 FREE OF CHARGE ECK TENNIS PAVILION 4:00PM NO ADVANCE REGISTRATION NECESSARY EMPHASIS ON STROKES

631-6100 F o o t b a l l 1994

Irish, Trojans fit to be tied

S ee S p o r t s E x tr a SPORTS page 16 Tuesday, November 29, 1994

Football Despite record, Irish Fiesta Bowl bound

(and Notre Dame) seemed to have ers like Salaam, (quarterback) ■ J o c k S t r i p Holtz not overly everyone back and we just thought Kordell Stewart and (receiver) they were the best team we had to Michael Westbrook they are an excited about play Colorado,” said Shawn explosive team.” Notre Dame’s Schoeffler, spokesman for the Fiesta Despite their record, Holtz feels his facing Colorado Bowl. Irish deserved the chance to play in Fiesta Bowl For whatever reason, Irish coach a Jan. 2 bowl. “I’m not embar­ By G EORG E D O H R M A N N Lou Holtz was happy with the invita­ rassed,” Holtz said. “I think by the Sports Editor ______tion. way we played the last few games of invite a farce “We are excited about the op­ the season we showed that we can As crazy as it may sound, especially An invitation arrived portunity to go to Tempe and to the play with any team in the country.” with Saturday’s humbling, stumbling Monday, requesting Fiesta Bowl and to play a great team There is sure to be some backlash and somewhat disgusting tie to USC, the pleasure of Notre like Colorado,” Holtz said. from the press concerning Notre the Notre Dame football team is bowl Dame’s company at a Holtz was made aware of the Fiesta Dame’s place in one of the tier one bound. F ie sta on Jan . 2 in Bowl's invitation late Sunday bowls. “We will just have to wait and The Irish (6-4-1) were extended a Tempe, Ariz. evening. He told his team of their see how the game turns out. I think bid yesterday to play in the Fiesta The RSVP was destination Monday afternoon. “I we deserved it, but we’ll have to see. Bowl on January 2 against the fifth- almost immediate. don’t know if they were excited. “I’m excited, but I don’t think you Jason Kelly ranked Colorado Buffaloes in Tempe, Notre Dame was too None of the players have been to can get too excited about playing a Associate Sports Ariz. it was announced at a press polite—or too Arizona for a bowl and it is a great team like Colorado. They have the Editor conference in the Joyce ACC. pompous—to turn opportunity for them.” potential to embarrass us.” Fiesta Bowl officials were part of a down such a special The fifth-ranked Buffaloes will not Notre Dame’s bowl destination conference call with Notre Dame request. only feature likely Heisman Trophy depended on the move of the Sugar Athletic Director Dick Rosenthal and Colorado will be the guest of honor, winner Rashaan Salaam and his 2, Bowl who have apparently decided bowl coalition representatives when bidding farewell to coach Bill 046 yards on the season, but the to match Florida State against the the decision was made to select the McCartney and probably celebrating game will mark the final appearance winner of the SEC Championship Irish over teams such as North Rashaan Salaam’s Heisman Trophy. of long-time Colorado coach Bill game next weekend. Either Florida Carolina, Arizona and Virginia Tech. That’s company Notre Dame doesn’t McCartney who surprisingly resigned or Alabama will face the Seminoles “The runners-up from the Big East deserve to keep. last week. in New Orleans. It was thought that and the Atlantic Coast Conference This season the Irish belong in some "They will be playing with a lot of had really beat themselves up a bit. emotion,” Holtz said, “and with play­ see TEM PE / page 11 see FARCE/ page 13

MEN'S BASKETBALL Irish win opener, Hoosiers await By JASON KELLY that happens against Associate Sports Editor Valparaiso. But he was just one of several Pat Garrity has plenty of rea­ bright spots for the Irish sons to be proud of his premier Sunday. Notre Dame finished performance. with four players in double fig­ TIPOFF In just 17 minutes, Notre ures and junior guards Keith [Tonight at 8 p.m. at the Joyce ACC Dame’s freshman forward Kurowski and Ryan Hoover— scored 18 points to lead the expected to be the team’s offen­ Irish to a 77-69 season-opening sive catalysts—weren’t among | Indiana leads 39-18 win over Valparaiso. them. JASON KELLY'S PICK Garrity torched the Crusaders “It’s good to get that kind of Indiana by 11 with 8-of-12 shooting and also production on a day when OUTLOOK grabbed seven rebounds, num­ (Kurowski and Hoover) aren’t The Hoosiers are hurling after a lackluster bers that Notre Dame desper­ showing in the Maui Classic, but they still hold razor sharp,” Irish coach John a clear edge over the Irish in talent and ately needs. MacLeod said. experience. Alan Henderson will have to be handled inside and. il left open, Brian Evans “It might have helped that I Eleven points and seven could light up the Irish from the outside like was playing against a guy who Valparasio did for a slretch in the second hall assists from senior point guard Sunday. Notre Dame had plenty of bright spots was 6-6, ” said the 6-foot-9 Lamarr Justice and ten apiece in its season-opening win over the Crusaders. Balanced scoring, ball protection, tenacious The Observer/ Eric Ruethling Garrity, who obviously knows defendse at times. But Indiana, though not Senior co-captain Lamarr Justice dunks against Valparaiso not to overemphasize anything exactly itself early this season, is not exactly see B-BALL/ page 11 Valparasio either.______

IRISH HOCKEY of note. . .

Notre Dame’s hockey team fought hard at the Womens Volleyball received a bye Great Western Freeze-Out in Los Angeles. for the first round of the NCAA SEE PAGE 11 tourney after a tough loss to USC. Notre Dame Hockey