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Script woes plague 'Betty' Master Plan buildings open !Jespile its all-star cast, 'Nurse Belly· is Saint Mary's Welcome Center and Dalloway's Thursday not a good mol'ie, according lo Clubhouse. part of the Campus Master re1•iewer Mall Caccamo. Plan. near completion. SEPTEMBER 14, Scene + page 17 News+ page 3 2000 THE

The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's VOL XXXIV NO. 17 HTTP://OBSERVER.ND.EDU Trip to Auschwitz awakens Notre Dame students

know how to us<' tlw nwmorv By NATE PHILLIPS 0 f it to pro Ill otP a grr~a t<• ;. News Writer undnrstanding among pPoplc of diiTnrent religions and cui­ Several Notre~ Danw students turPs." and faculty nwmbPrs rPcnntly Signnr prnsPntnd tlw oppor­ travelrd outsidP thn cocoon of tunity to his rlassns and askPd nveryday lif<~ on campus to revisit thn horrors of thn those interPst<'d to writP a llolocaust. short <'Ssay. dntailing .nxartly why tlwy wnn• intPrnstnd in The group. organiznd by attnnding thn ron f<•rnnrc. J.P. Notre~ Damn thnology professor Drnvlin<', Colln<'n Flood. Tnrry Habbi Michael Signnr. attrndPd Welch and Kat<' Diaz W!'r<' lh<' a 10-day r.onfnrnnc.P at thn most notorious Nazi dP.alh four studPnts chos<'n. "I had a numb<'l" of studPnts camp, Auschwitz. in l'oland. that wantnd to go," said Sigrwr. Tlw confnrc~ncn's goal was to "I was blown awav bv tlwir promoln rni'IPrtion and dia­ <·ourag<' and <·omn;itn;Pnt to logu!' b<'twPnn .lnws and r <' p rr• s <' n t Am<' ric an Christians on tlw atrocitins of Catholicism at this intnnation­ tlw llolocaust. al roni'Pn•nr<•." Signnr. tlw sponsor of thP "I wantPd to go bPcausP I trip, got tlw idna for a ron fpr­ savv th<' nPrPssity for mor<' <'nrn l'ivn ynars ago whi]P in Christian-Jcwish dialogue•," Poland on a lncturP tour. said WP!rh. "I wantPd to lwlp Signnr mnl a GPrman prinst. on in tlw rPconriliation bPtWI'Pil his tour that was working th<• two rl'ligions." toward rnc.onriliation b!'LwnPn Sigrwr's wifP. BPtty. and tlw­ Polish and Gnrman youths ron­ ology profnssor l~lizabl'lh r<•rning thn llolocaust. Part of Gropp!' also attcnd<'d tlw ron­ thn prinst's work includnd fprnnc<'. forming discussion groups to Tlw group. which IPI't SPpt. I build a grc~ater undnrstanding and rnturnnd Snpt. 10. spcnt bntwenn mnmbnrs of lhn scvPral days touring small younger gnnnration. Polish towns. "I thought that it was a gnmt Members of the Notre The students wrrn rnquired idea," said Signnr. "It srcmnd to mad s

Discussions address Unknown man assaults student

later. Thn stud1~11t ynars-old. six fnPl tall and By MOLLY McVOY PxplainPd that shn could nnar 165 pounds. It is role of ROTC on campus S.1int Mary's Editor not recall what happnn<~d bnli1wnd that lw drivns a to her bnlwnnn lhn limn of 1 1) 1J4 rnd Pontiac Crane! studnnls to try and l'ind common An unidnntifiPd Saint ByTIM LOGAN 10:30 p.m. whnn shn Am with nilhnr an Ohio or ground. Mary's student has allngnd St:nwr .'H.tt'fWrirt:r arrivnd on campus and Missouri licnnsn platn. HO']'(: studnnls at thn evnnt said that shn was assaultnd 11:51 p.m. whnn security C:hh\bnk nxplainnd that it What is thn place of HOTC on a that thn qunstion of how to rnmain nnar thn Madnlnva parking found hP.r. is not clnar whnthPr thn Calhol ir u n ivnrsi ty cam pus? trun to on<~'s Catholic faith whiln lot on Monday 1wening. Shn told sncurity thn sus­ studnnt will pn~ss c:hargns This is tlw qtwstion which a galh­ snrving in lh!~ military was som!~­ The stud

page 2 The Observer+ INSIDE Thursday, September I 4, 2000

INSIDE COLUMN THIS WEEK AT NOTRE DAME/SAINT MARY'S Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Out the door + Lecture: "Haec in + Lecture: "Chicana +Lecture: "A Bird's Eye + Film: Special Srnwning Biology," Dick Jensen. Artists at Saint Mary's," View of Opthalmology" by of' "Black Orpheus,"

ll snnms as though tlwrn is nothing lnll to 7 p.m., Carroll Auditorium. Julie Tourtillotte, noon. William I lurd. 8 a.m .. 1 Ol 1 ::~0 p.m .. AnnenbPrg touch on tlw Pntin~ rampus. No matter how carefully I wash my han.ds or take precautions +Theater: "As You Like It" 303 Haggar College DeBartolo llall. Auditorium. Snite to avoid filth something happnns to stop my by William Shakespeare. Center. + Book signing: Hudy Museum. progrl'ss. ll is diffkult to avoid being perpntual­ lv r.ontaminatPd. 7:30p.m .. Washington llall. +Theater: "Bye Bye Ruettinger, 9:30a.m., + Film: "Orf'nu," dimrted · I!PcPntlv. I was at tlw Brazil." 9 p.m .. Snite llammcs Bookstore. by Carlos Diegues. 4 p.m., sink of' th;, wonwn's rnstroom washing my Museum. Snite Museum. hands as anotiH~r pnrson nxitPd lwr stall and imnw­ diatt>lv lwadnd tm·vard the door to walk out of thn rnstroom. Slw didn't pass OUTSIDE THE DOME Compiled from U-Wire reports "(;()," collect $200 and she didn't PvPn walk to thr sink and act as if slw was wash­ Helena Payne Suspect assaults 13 Penn State women in dorm ing lwr hands. Bathrr. without any prPtPnsn. shl' UNIVEHSITY PAHK. Pa. where the assault took pl students who live in the dorm ing individual room doors. top on so I couldn'tusn long slneves to open the door. I had to touch tlw knob and I didn't like it. I walkPd down thr hall a little annoyed and tlwn stoppnd in front of tlw doorknob outside INDIANA UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA of my two-room doubiP anticipating another dilc~mma. I wendel soon touch the doorknob. which irwvitablv would continuP the distribu­ President halts Knight discussions Penn reviews BYOB alcohol policy tion of gPrms ail over thn dorm. In dnfnnsP of tlw l'nmaln that le~f't thn bath­ BLOOMINGTON. Ind. PIIILAI>I\LPIIIA room without washing lwr hands. I know that Indiana University presidnnt Myles Brand made one Citing the ind'fectivPnnss of' the "bring your own bewr" slw could havP bePn on the way to lwr room to of his first appearances on the Bloomington campus policy. the administration is set Wednesday to propose wash hPr hands in tlw sink. but. evrn so, what Tuesday sinrP Sunday's firing of former basketball removing thP BYOB rompon(mt from the University of about tlw statn of lwr doorknob'! It would be coach Bob Knight. Brand presided over the University Pennsylvania's year-old alcohol policy. Whon Penn justlikn minn, rontaminatnd until shr, dPeided Faculty Council's first mooting of the semoster. Before implemonted its new alcohol policy- with sweeping to usP lwr Lysol. beginning the meeting. Brand told the assembled educational. disciplinary and social changes to tlw cam­ Tlw CPntnrs for l>isPasn Control and group hn nxpncts the controversy over Knight to die pus culture- last fall. officials said that BYOB was orw l'revPntion haw a usc>r-friPndly wnb sitn down. "We need very strongly to get the Bloomington method they would use to curb underage drinking. But (www .cdc.gov/nr idod/op/hand washing. htm) campus fows bark on lr.arning." he said. "Athletics a year later. officials havn derided that the~ ruiP just about handwashing that reminds pnopln that. has taken on a bigger life of its own." Brand was doesn't work. BYOB rules state that Pvery 21-year-old "In addition to rolds. some prntty serious dis­ scheduled to give a State of the University address attonding a registered on-campus party - which PasPs-likn hPpalilis A. meningitis. and infec­ after thn Faculty Council meeting. The speech was inc:lude fraternity parties and most other Pvnnts orga­ tious diarrlwa-ran nasily bP prevnnted if' peo­ cane:eled and was rescheduled for Oct. 10. Brand is nized by official campus groups - (:ould bring a six­ ple> makP a habit of washing tlwir hands." scheduled to discuss the state of arts and humanities pack of be{~r with tlwm and then retrinve the alcohol I won't say that I got inf'nctnd with anything at IU and around thP nation. During the comment and from the bartender during tlw course of the evening. "It as sPrious as tlw above diseasPs. but I was tak­ question portion of the meeting. James Sherman. c:o­ wasn't that the whoiP polie:y was a failure. it was that ing Vie~ks rough syrup last weekend. sncrc~tary of the Faculty Council and president of the the oxpectation that peoplP would be arriving at thc> I'PopiP who liSP toilPts should usc watnr and Bloomington Faculty Council. took a moment to door with th1~ir own six-park in hand was not nwt," soap. It's not a difficult task and it only takPs address thn Knight situation. Univnrsity Alcohol Coordinator StPphanin lves said. I 0 seconds. Many rom plain about getting (~olds or f'ood poisoning. but the numbPr of thnsP sickrwssPs would dPcreasn sharply if more pen­ piP wnrn carnful about washing their hands. TakP LimP to bP c:onsidnratn to others and to LOCAL WEATHER NATIONAL WEATHER voursnlf'. Your doorknob. f'riends. and immune ~ystnm will thank you. 5 Day South Bend Forecast AccuWeatllcr"l forecasl for daytime conditions and h1gh temperatures The AccuWeather<" forecast for noon, Thursday, Sept. 14.

H L '/'he 11ieu•s expressed in the Inside Column are those• of the author and not necessarily tho.'w of The Ohserl'er. Thursday Q, 66 51

TODAY'S STAFF Friday ~65 41 News Scene Erin LaRuffa Mart Nania Saturday ~ 61 46 BOs--b Helena Payne Graphics FRONTSo ( :ou rtney Boyle ...... Dana Mangnuson Sunday ~ 66 48 CD 2000 AccuWeathar, Inc. COLO WARM STATIONARY Sports Production ®©DDDDDDPt•••urfl: Tim Casey Noah Amsradrcr High low Showers R•ln T-atorma Flurrle. Snow Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Viewpoint Lab Tech Monday ~ 70 50 V~a AssociiJtfld Pr•u l'ar ( )ricw~ki Erncsro Lacayo Atlanta 81 64 Denver 84 48 New York 75 64 Boston 66 61 Detroit 61 52 San Francisco 70 57 Charlotte 81 61 Los Angeles 86 63 Seattle 73 52 Th,· llh><·n·,·r (l'\1'~ ~'1'1 2-4000) is puhlishrd Munday thrnu~h Frid.1y 4,9,~4Q.Q {) ~ u Chicago 63 50 Miami 93 77 St. Lours 66 54 t'XI."t'pl dunn!! l'X,llll .111d v.u:.uwn pc.'r10ds. Tht' Ohserver is mh('r of dtr Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Dallas 90 70 Nashville 73 63 Washington DC 73 64 As!t.nn.nt•d Prt'S!t.. All n.·prodm:tion n~hrs .Jrl' n:scrvcd. Vta Assoctaled Press GraphicsNer ----l

1 Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ CAMPUS NEWS page 3 1 Two major Master Plan projects near completion

By JESSICA NEEDLES By MOLLY McVOY Ncw.s Wrircr Saint Mary's Editor

Newcomers to Saint Mary's The two most visible steps in ran now avoid gr,tting lost on Saint Mary's 10-year building campus by visiting the new project known as the Master Wei<:omr, Center. Plan are nearly completed with Tlw Cen trr, originally sr,hed­ the opening of the Welcome uled to be n•adv in late August. Center and the new Dalloway's opened Wednr~day with a full Clubhouse. staff' to provide directions and The clubhouse will open for ansW!'r questions. The only student viewing today from work ldt for the building is 3:30 to 5 p.m., the first time landscaping. the building has been open to "It's pretty much on sched­ the public. ule." said Keith Dennis, vice ''I'm thrilled," said Keith pr<'sidnnt for Financn and Dennis, vir,e president for Administration. "It was intend­ Finance and Administration at ed that it would be open in the College. "Both the Welcome August. so we arP a little bit Center and Dalloway's are just bPhind. but not much." wonderful buildings." "It's basically open now." said The clubhouse is scheduled Linda Timm. vice presidrnt for to be r,ompleted by Sept. 28 StudPnt Affairs. "It's just when The Welcome Center and to be in full operation Oct. vou'rp wailing for ]the! furni­ 1, acr,ording to Dennis. iurP and such vou'vn ordered, at Saint Mary's will The clubhouse will have a vou into L!l{expPdrd ddays function similar to that of the you can't do anything about." help visitors find their old Dalloway's coffeehouse. ThP WPicomP Center. posi­ way around campus The future of the old structure, tionPd on the campus so that it which is lor,ated near Holy will bP thP first visibk building and learn about the Cross Hall, is still to be deter­ to n<'wcom<'rs. provides an mined. opportunity for people unfamil­ College. Although built very dosely to iar with Saint Marv's to learn the specifir,ations of the old morn about the campus and its building, the new clubhouse history. Photos by has a larger kitchen and "ThP Welcome Center is the improved bathroom facilities. It first plarP that proplr, [would Dorothy Carder also is more structurally stable visitr when they arr, new to thr. than the original building. campus to get a sPnse of the "I think the lor,ation is really place." said Dennis. "The histo­ an improvement," Dennis said. ry display is up and it's just "The kitchen is also now a full wonderful." blown convertible kitchen." In addition to a history room. Sodexho, the business that the CAnter contains videos and provides dining hall services on othPr forms of recreation. It is campus, will run the new also opr-n to any current stu­ building. During the hours that dents who may be curious Sodexho is not staffing the cof­ about the history of Saint feehouse; a student-run coffee­ Mary's. house service is expected to The building also is the new operate. home for the din~c:tor of securi­ The new clubhouse came in tv. Hichard Chlcbek. and the wake of some controversy sur­ i~formation switr,hboard has rounding the old clubhouse. been relocated there. The Congregation of the Holy "! think the building is rr,ally Cross was concerned about the nice." Chlebek said. "It's a step noise the old clubhouse gener­ in thP right direction for the ated, and the College was con­ College. Tlw centPr should be a cerned about the stability of symbol of Saint Mary's hospital­ the building's strur,ture. The ity." College then decided to indude Thr Wrlcome CAnter is part of a new clubhouse as part of the the Campus Mastr.r Plan. a 10- Master Plan. year building and renovation In addition to food services, plan the College began con­ the clubhouse will serve a struction on last year. number of purposes for the The Welcome Center will students. Final planning for the have an official dr-dication r,ere­ usage and staffing of the club­ mony in early November. when house is still underway. tlw Board of Trustnr.s will meet at Saint Mary's.

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"It was really interesting to see things they would rather the others students' perspec­ not. Auschwitz tives." said Diaz. ROTC "Participation in the mili­ Assault continued from page I Thc~ conversations mainly continued from page I tary can mean participation continued from page I focused on the way different in unjust and immoral acts by Catholic just war stan­ tlwy were just bPginning to have countries dealt with the be." alleged incident. has bnen dards," Storer said. a dialogtw about il. The confer­ llolocaust and the struggle To begin the dialogue. posted at various locations He called on the HOTC Pnee was really a first for people between Christians and Jews in Zilligen and Shawn Storer on campus. program to require its stu­ to come togethPr with an objec­ Poland. of Pax Christi spokr about Chlebek is c~n!:ouraging tiVP perspPrtive. without placing "I really saw pPoplc~ [with] little just war theory and paci­ dents take a class on just students to be aware of any war teaching. to encourage blanw on pach otlwr." undPrstanding of each other and fism. respectively. unusual activity on campus On Monday they arrived at of llw llolocaust c.ome to a deeper Zilligcn told of onn pad­ them to considnr these and to avoid walking alorw. issues. /\uschwllz I. llw sitP of' llw con­ understanding of themselves and fist student who changed "If you observn any suspi­ f'NPncP. Tlwv tourPd thP c:oneen­ different cultures," said Signer. his views after visiting thn And he said that combat is cious bnhavior. please rPport antithetical to the messagn tralion ra n{p bP f'orP a ll!~n ding Though many in thn group llolocaust Musnum in it to security," Chlebek said. of the Bibln. IPctures din•c·lly outside of' tlw canw away from thn experinnce Washington, D.C.. and the lie is also asking studPnts "Killing one's enemy ramp. with a greater importance the military to come to security bnfore makes it impossible to livn That night. understanding plays in protncting the livr.s trying to handle disputns on Jesus' commitment to love thP group "I really saw people [with] of' themselves and rights of 1\mr.ricans. their own. them," Storer said. slept outsidP little understanding(~/' and the world and inno!:ent virtims "If you·rr~ having a domes­ But the focus of the event thP ramp's around them. abroad. tic dispute with your each other and ofthe was not either side of the gau~s in a the "awaken­ "The harsh reality of boyfrinnd. drivP ovnr to snc·u­ debate, it was to foster dis­ house that llw Holocaust come to a ing" also raised what he had snen had rity and ask for thnir assis­ cussion between people on prisorwrs built dePper understanding morn questions changed his mind." Zilligen tancn," hi' said. "That will both sides. When the gath­ f'or a c;erman in the students' said. dncreasn your chancPs ol' (~/'themselves and ering broke up into small ol'licPr. minds humani­ The marine. who majors bPing assaultc~d." groups. mixes of HOTC stu­ "Visiting d{[(erent cultures. " ty's radical in governnwnt and theolo­ The Snrurity Dnpartnwnt is dents. Pax Christi members. Auschwitz evils. gy. discussnd how Catholics asking that anyorw with "I thought and the uninvolved. discus­ was ovPr­ Michael Signer in the military should information regarding thP wlwlming and after a week I rnmain faithful to just war sion 11ourished. The groups allPged assault rontart tlw Notre Dame theology professor talked for nearly an hour. Vl'r\' inf'orma­ would know theory. which sets out a security oflicn at 2H4-~000. tivc~ at thP what hap- series of guidnlines which going long after the meeting sanw time." pened and must be met for a war to was closed with a llail said WPirh. "I had no idea so why it happened," said Flood. be acc:eptable. Thr.se Marv. many pPoplP bPsidt>s Jt>ws suf'­ "I just walked away with a includn noncombatant This was just the first of' f'pn•d in 1\usrhwitz. It af'feded so greater interest in the subject immunity and military several discussions about many JWopiP." and more qtwstions than I had actions rnmaining in pro­ HOTC which Pax Christi will On Tuesday, llw group toured when I arrived." portion to the goals of the hold this semester, and orga­ Auschwitz II. /\usrhwitz l's sister The group all expressnd their war. among other things. niznrs said it was a success. ramp and location of many of' tlw appreciation towards Notre And he said that fighting "It was very cmcouraging. mass executions. Tlw studrmts Danw f'or funding such a trip. for the rights of others. like very hopeful to be abln to saw llw historiral aspt>cts of' the "I hopn that WB can continue pacifism. was a form of come together as Catholir:s ramp and wen• exposPd to many this program and give other love. and hold a certain under­ of' t.lw horrors that oc·c·urTPd. studPnts tlw opportunity to Storer presented the paci­ standing of how wn are to Towards tiH' Pnd of llw wePk. nxperience this," said Signer. fist argunwnt. 1\nd. pointing live in the world," said Slwila SJWakers from around the world "NotrP Danw is the only place to the 1\m!~ric:a's dropping of McCarthy, a loader of thn spoke about tlw lloloraust's whore undergraduates can do the atomic bomb on peace group. impart on llwir liws. SignPr gave sonwthing like this." said Diaz. lliroshima. thn My Lai mas­ Zilligen agr!'!'d. a spt'Prh about /\nwriran and "It rPally shows thr school's sacre in Vietnam and onn­ "I think it wrnt real well." .IPwish thPology after tlw war. commitment to us. sided devastation in tlw Gulf' he said. "It got a lot of people and studPnts had nightly round­ "It was an expPrienc:e that War. he said that even to think about things they tab)!' disrussions about their everybody should sc!~ and it is faithful officers arn some­ weren't thinking about thoughts with students from something that everyone needs times compelled to do before." Poland and (;ermany. to c~xpnrienee."

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WORLD NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON

Bomb strikes Jakarta building: A car bomb ripped through an underground garage in the Jakarta Stock Exchange building Wednesday, injuring at least 23 people and pos­ sibly trapping others in choking smoke, police said. Jakarta police spokesman Lt. Col. Nur Usman said the blast came from a parked car and that authorities were trying to determine what type of explosive was used. "It could be a grenade, a bomb, or something electrical," he said.

France removes land mines: France has eliminated land mines from its weapons arsenal and should press other nations to do the same, a report said Wednesday. France won high marks from the National Commission for the Elimination of Anti-personnel Land Mines for destroying its arsenal of more than 1 million land mines by Dec. 20, 1999.

NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS

Hurricane off U.S. weakens: Hurricane Florence weakened into a tropical storm Wednesday afternoon, a day after being blamed for at least two .deaths in North Carolina. Florence, which had sustained winds of 70 mph, could regenerate into a hurricane when it stops spinning in place off the southeast United States and moves east over warmer waters, AFP Photo forecasters said. "Over the last couple of days President Bill Clinton delivers a speech in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., Wednesday. it's been mostly stationary, which has brought His speech appealed to Congress to pass hate crime legislation. some of the cooler water to the surface, which has caused its weakening," said Eri.c Blake, meteorologist at the National Hurricane Center Clinton supports hate crime bill in Miami. by strengthening the law whatever comments were ordinary acts of violence. Deputy killed during exercise: A Associated Press and providing state and made yesterday." "I don't think any of us sheriffs deputy was killed by a gunshot during local prosecutors the tools "The Congress has an believe we can ever root a SWAT team drill that was supposed to have Armed with more data they need to enforce it," obligation to move on it it out just by punishing been run with dummy ammunition. Authorities showing hate crimes often Clinton said in a statement this year," Lockhart said. people," Clinton said. were still investigating Wednesday how the live go unreported, President released after the vote. "I Clinton convened an "The most important round got mixed in with the blanks used for Clinton on Wednesday urge House and Senate event at the White House thing is that we do have training. Clackamas County Deputy Bill appealed to Congress to conferees to act swiftly on to release a new report the tools we need to take this legislation so I can that shows information on a strong stand before Bowman. 36. was killed Tuesday at a mock city pass hate crimes legisla­ tion. "Only Congress can sign it into law." hate crimes sometimes is these things spread even constructed at the National Guard's Camp Rilea do what really should be However, congressional not forwarded to the FBI. wider." training center. He had been a member of the done here," he saiq. sources who spoke on con­ Victims of hate crimes The President directed special weapons and tactics team for two years Only minutes later, the dition of anonymity said tend not to report them Attorney General Janet in the county outside Portland. "It was a tragic House agreed in a non­ Senate Majority Leader and sometimes police lack Reno to work with state accident, and nothing more than that," chief binding vote to make the Trent Lott told Clinton at sufficient training to han­ and local authorities over deputy Pat Detloff said. hate crime legislation part the White House on dle such cases, according the next three months on of a defense appropria­ Tuesday the hate crimes to the study, written by a plan to improve hate tions bill. "Today, with this provision would not be Northeastern University's crimes reporting. MIT settles in death dispute: The bill, we as a society say made part of the defense Center for Criminal He was joined by bill. Justice Policy Research Sherialyn Byrdsong, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has that we will do everything we can to protect people According to one source, and by the Justice widow of Ricky Byrdsong, agreed to pay $4.75 million and endow a schol­ from these heinous acts, Lott told Clinton, "we'll Research and Statistics a former Northwestern arship in a settlement with the family of a that we will not rest until talk about it somewhere Association of University basketball freshman who drank himself to death at a 1997 Americans are free from else, Mr. President," possi­ Washington, D.C. The coach killed in a 1999 fraternity mitiation. Scott Krueger's parents, all violence," said House bly as part of another bill. Justice Department's hate-motivated shooting Bob and Darlene Krueger, said they reached Minority Leader Richard White House spokesman Bureau of Justice rampage, and Laramie, the agreement, announced Wednesday, after Gephardt, D-Mo. Joe Lockhart said Statistics paid for the Wyo., police investigator two days of meetings with MIT president The House vote was 232- Wednesday's vote was a report. David O'Malley, who han­ Charles Vest. 192. strong statement of sup­ He said a hate crime is dled the 1998 slaying of "This historic legislation port for tougher hate "an even more dangerous gay college student will help fight hate crimes crimes laws, "regardless of kind of infection" than Matthew Shepard.

Market Watch 9/14 Dow 11,182.18 +51.05 China slams U.S. on missile defense jON~S Composite ();; Volume: Chinese Foreign Minister Tang supremacy and thus a typical 1;522 Associated Press 905,024,896 Jiaxuan also criticized American example of the Cold War mentali­ UNITED NATIONS policies on international interven­ ty." China urged the United Nations tion and human rights. Such a system "will only bring Nasdaq: 3893.89 +44.38 on Wednesday to step in and stop With the historic U.N. Millennium serious negative consequences to the United States from deploying a Summit behind them, nations aired the security of the whole world," NY$£: missile defense system, saying the their concerns and hopes in the he warned, calling on the United S&P 500: 1484.91 +2.92 "dangerous" proposal could be two-week ministerial debate at the Nations to "take necessary mea­ detrimental to world peace. General Assembly which opened TOP 5 VOLUME LEADERS sures to stop this dangerous devel­ The comments by Chinese Tuesday and continued opment." COMPANY/SECURITY $GAIN %CHANGE PRICE Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan Wednesday. China, as well as Russia, has CISCO SYSTEMS (CSCO) >4.14 >2.43 61.31 were countered by a speech from Tang, the Chinese foreign minis­ opposed the missile shield plan, INTEL CORP (INTC) -5.68 -3.68 61.25 Belgium's foreign minister, who ter, attacked the proposed U.S. which President Clinton earlier this KNIGHT TRADING (NITE)) >22.5 +6.62 .16.06 said the NATO country was not missile defense system, saying it "is month decided not to authorize, CHASE MAN HAT CR (CMB) -4.02 -2.12 50.69 opposed to such a missile system if essentially aimed at seeking unilat­ deferring the decision to his suc­ DELL COMPUTER (DELL) -3.17 -1.18 36.25 it contributes to stability. eral military and strategic cessor. page 6 The Observer+ CAMPUS NEWS Thursday, September 14, 2000 SoiDe colleges drop SAT requireiDent BOARD OF GOVERNANCE dent SAT score. Dickinson was to challenge a student beyond her By MARIBEL MOREY dropped from "highly competitive" to ability," she explained. SMC holds off News Writer "less competitive" in college ranking "It's a good idea to have SATs as a magazines after its first year with standard because everyone comes At S o'clock in the morning on cer­ this policy. Since then, however, from different schools," said Kathy Revue decision tain Saturdays, classrooms across the Dickinson has regained its place Bekhit, a sophomore science pre­ country an~ cluttered with rows of among "highly competitive" colleges. professional major. making a final dncision By AMY GREENE identical desks. lligh school juniors Even though Dickinson managed The Notre Dame admissions office without ever seeing a and seniors wait outside with their to remain among ranked colleges, does find a connection between News Writer show." calculators. pencils and IDs. nervous­ Notre Dame and Saint Mary's will scores and academic success. Thr. forum will ulti­ ly anticipating the 500 bubbles they The decision to move not be leaning in this direction any "We look at 200 students who have the Keenan Revue off mately decide the f'utum will have to fill in. To some students. time soon because, according to both scored 1500 or above and 200 stu- Saint Mary's campus of the Revue and mem­ the SATs are part of the college schools, SATs are dents who are will be halted for now, bers of both Saint process. but this is no longer the case a good indicator of above 1200. Mary's and Keenan will filr students applying to 2S5 ac:c:redit­ but will resumr. follow­ how a student will "It's a predictor of doing When freshman ing the 2001 show, the be rcpmsfmtnd. ed American colleges and universi­ perform during well at Saint Mary's. We grades are fin­ After last wr.r.k's meet­ ties who have eliminated standard­ Board of Governance fi·eshman year. ished, there are ing with Keenan repn~­ ized testing requirements. would never want to said Wednesday. "If you make it more 3.8s in the The Board discussed sentatives. Nagln said, Such universities include Indiana optional, who's challenge a student first group than in "They told us that if they State University, Wayne State last week whether the going to submit it? beyond her ability. " the second event would continue to arc pushed ofT this cam­ University. City University of New Of course. th!l ones group," said pus there will no longer York. Middlebury College and be performed on Saint who scored high," Mundy. Mary's campus due to be a Keenan Hevue Dickinson College. said Bob Mundy, Mary Pat Nolan Unlike many because ofl'unding." Six years ago, Dickinson chose to the controversial reputa­ director of internal Saint Mary's director of admission students, Tom tion the show has devel­ make SAT scon~s an optional part of operations in the Smith. also a the application. oped over the years. In other BOG news: Notre Dame sophomore sci­ Representatives from "Dickinson has always downplayed +The Student undergraduate admissions oftice. "I ence pre-pt·ofessional major, the Board met with Diversity Board is in the SATs. We've always seen those 'A' don't see any piece of the application believes that the test did measure his studr.nts in high school who have tr.st Keenan Hall last week to process of' improving dropping, and the higher the SAT academic abilities. discuss plans for the handicappr.d accessibili­ anxiety and don't test well, and we score, the more likely you are to do "Standard testing is an accurate tell tlwm that it's ok," said Kristy annual Revue. It was ty around c:ampus. well here." and necessary means of evaluating decided that student + The Counseling and Lnach. associatf~ director of admis­ Mary Pat Nolan. director of admis­ high school students," he said. body president Crissie sions at Dickinson. "They like that Carner Development sion at Saint Mary's, agrees. Both Notre Dame and Saint Mary's Renner and vice presi­ Center has created a and it makes them more interested in "This is the only type of standard­ stress that scores are only a part of Dickinson." dent Michelle Nagle will new program called Job ized information a committee would the process. sit in on the Keenan Direct. Students will br. Students have the option to submit have on a student, and I honestly "We don't even have a formula for their scorns when they apply to Revue Censorship Board able to submit resumes don't think many schools are going accepting- it's not even that scien­ to help decide which to be put on file and Dickinson. Some students who did away from the SAT option." tific," said Nolan not submit their scores have had the skits will be performed allow employers across Leach agrees that most schools Another consideration has to do this winter. opportunity to attend schools other­ the country to· review cannot eliminate these standardized with the fact that students come A student forum to them. Thr. Center is wise unaccessiblr. to them. exams. from different parts Qf the world. "I lad we had their SAT sc:ore and discuss the Hevuc will be also holding the annual "At bigger universities. they need With students of different cultural delayed until after this Career Showcase on only bBing in the 900s, it would have SAT scores because of the sheer and linguistic backgrounds, one probably jeopardized the decision. winter's show. Henner Nov. 9. Students can quantity of applications. I don't think standard American exam such as said. meet Saint Mary's grad­ They would probably be on thr. wait­ it would work at another institution," the SAT poses a problem. ing list," said Leach. "We will be preview­ uates and othr.r suc­ he said. "I grew up with two languages, ing everything and cessful employers and For ranking purposes. Dic:kinson Nolan is also concerned that with­ and my parents couldn't have only reports the SAT scores submit­ believe a forum is most arc "givPn an exciting out the scores, students would be taught me English as well as your appropriate after the opportunity for possiblr. tr.d to the institution. misplaced in the College. parents could. Even stuff like that Because of this discrepancy Keenan Hevue," said c:areer choices," said "It's a predictor of doing well in affected me on the SAT," said Henner. "J would feel counsr.lor, Dave br.twc~nn tlw rnported average stu- Saint Mary's. We would never want Bekhit. very uncomfortable Wilkeson. Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month 2000! September 15th to October 15th is National Hispanic Heritage Month! During this month, America celebrates the Hispanic cultures, achievements, and heritage by commemorating Indepen­ dence Day for Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua on September 15th, Independence Day for Mexico on September 16th and El Dia de Ia Raza on October 12th. Initiated by the U.S. Congress as Hispanic Heritage Week more than 20 years ago, the celebration has grown and expanded to a month in 1989.

.Marfathf San .Miflu~l & &t;·n ~/avoP Brown Bag lnauflurafion of Discussion Hispanit H~rffafl~ (\/ght Multicultural Student .Month Programs & Services 5:00 p.m. SMC 12:00 p.m. SMC 5:30-7:30 p.m. Lemans Hall Room 210 LaFortune Lemans Hall INTERCULTURAL CENTER @ Fieldhouse Mall Monday, September 18th Multicultural Student Programs r and Services (MSPS) focuses on Thursday, September 14th Wednesday, September 20th sponsored by La Alianza, the Institute for Latino sponsored by La Alianza ensuring the retention and success sponsored by La Alianza and La Fuena of historically underrepresented Studies, and the Kellogg Institute and La Fuena students and provides opportuni­ ties for all students to explore Is­ sues of diversity, personal iden­ Luncheon w/ tity, multicultural education, and )> Cafecito con Interrace leadership development. Renee Moreno l:l with ulnterracia/ Relationships in Staff: Jf leche The Bfspanle Alumni Iris Outlaw, Director the Hispanic and Latino MullirulturalAffairs Board and Diversity Educab'on RAYBLANCO Commun1 't' 1es n Ray is the founder of the New York Renee is a Professor in UCLA~ Kevin Hula, Asst. Director Chapter of the Hispanic Academy of Leadership Development and Dinner and Discussion Chicano Studies Research Center Student Programming Media Arts and Sciences Center for Social Concerns Adela Panagos, Coordinator Friday, September 29th 7:30p.m. Academic Enrichment and 12 p.m Student Success LaFortune Ballroom - October 4th 5:30 to 7:00p.m. LaFortune Ballroom Phone: 219/631-6841 September 27th Fax: 2191631-3162 sponsored by MSPS, sponsored by MSPS and La Alianza sponsored by MSPS, the HA ofND, and the www.nd.eduf-omsa La Alianza and La Fuena Institute for Latino Studies --- -~~----~--~--~- ---· ~- ~~------~----~----~~-~~ -~--~-~------~--

Thursday. September 14, 2000 The Observer+ CAMPUS NEWS page 7

STUDENT SENATE Senators: Punish alumni for selling Nebraska tickets

to, thny arc in disbc­ By lAURA ROMPF linl' and shock," ho Assisrant New.• r:ditor said. "They aro in dis­ belief that the alumni Punishing alumni who rns<\ll could sell their tickPts t h <' i r tick ds would s <~ n d a and shocked that they nwssag<' that rurrnt's \Vnt'kPnd next vear." know they are sell­ said Pangborn Jlall se.nator outs and they know Kaillyn Dudl<'y. "It's lnss likPly thny did wrong." he pan•nls would sPll lhnir tick­ said. "The team nts. and iJ' that was clone, thn fought well and I alumni would rnalizn they know this wenk thny miss<'cl llwir rhanc<' to attend will fight again." a big ganw." SPnators agrP<~d this would In other senate LISA VELTE/The Observer sPnd a rlPar nwssagn to alum­ news: Dillion Hall senator Brendan Dowdall discusses the large number of Nebraska fans as the Cornhuskers ni and possibly stop llw prob­ + The committee on faced the Irish Saturday. Senators proposed making tickets to next year's game against Tennessee l<~m of ticknt rPsnlling. academic affairs said "ThP trag<'dy this wnekend thny are waiting to available to parents, meaning less would be available to alumni, many of whom sold Nebraska tickets. wasn't th<' gamn. it was that hear back from Susan wn lost our stadium." said Robnrts, thn academic 30-minute lunch break when provides service to many stu­ also in place at North Dining Dillon llall snnator Brendan dfdegate to the academic students could at least get dents, to discuss alternatives. Hall, which should make the !)owdall. council, to set up a meeting to Grab 'N Go. + The committee on residen­ pasta room easier to maneu­ I~SPN and thn Associated discuss the possible loss of a + The committee on tial life met with dining hall ver in. Finally, the committee l'rnss had storins about thn study day during finals week University affairs has com­ employees and were informed informed the senate that two numbPr of' Nebraska fans in in the fall 2001 semester. They pared phone rates with those that the Web site. new cold drinks - milkshakes Notn• Dam<' Stadium. Dowdall arc also looking into altering of other schools and. is meet­ www.food.nd.edu, has nutri­ and Microblasts, a drink simi­ notnd. the Tuesday/Thursday class ing with Broadwing, the long tional facts for dining hall lar to Dairy Queen's Blizzards "From th<• playnrs I talknd schndul<' to allow students a distance phone company that foods. A new system of lines is - are available at Recker's.

Thursday, September 14 5:30p.m. Mariachi San Miguel and Inauguration of Hispanic Heritage Month, Fieldhouse Mall 7:00 p.m. William Coughlan Book Talk and Signing, Hammes Notre Dame Bookstore 7:30 p.m. Play, ':.4s You Like It'; Washington Hall* 8:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m. Open Rec Lacrosse, Court 1, RSRC 8:30 p.m.-Midnight ND Express Billiards games open, LaFortune Student Center 9:00p.m. Acoustic Cafe, LaFortune Student Center Huddle 10:30 p.m. Movies, "Gone in 60 seconds'; DeBartolo 101 * and ''28 Days'; DeBartolo 155*

Friday, September 15 5:00 p.m. Murray Sperber Book Talk and Signing, Hammes Notre Dame Bookstore 6:15p.m. Flipside Golf Outing, Meet at Library Circle* 6:30 p.m. Football Pep Rally, Joyce Center 7:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. Open Rec Badminton, Court 2, RSRC 7:30p.m. Play, ·~s You Like It'; Washington Hall* 8:00 p.m. Movies, "Gone in 60 seconds'; DeBartolo 101 *and ''28 Days'; DeBartolo 155* 8:30 p.m.-Midnight ND Express Billiards games open, LaFortune Student Center 9:00p.m. La Fun Coffeehouse featuring the jazz music of The Pat Heiden Quartet, LaFortune Ballroom 9:00p.m. Cinema at the Snite, "Bye Bye Brazil', Snite Museum* 10:30 p.m. Movies, "Gone in 60 seconds'~ DeBartolo 101 * and ''28 Days'; DeBartolo 155*

Saturday, September 16 7:30 p.m. Play, ·~s You Like It'~ Washington Hall* 8:00 p.m. Movies, "Gone in 60 seconds", DeBartolo 101 *and "28 Days", DeBartolo 155* 9:00p.m. Cinema at the Snite, "Bye Bye Brazil'; Snite Museum* 10:30 p.m. Movies, "Gone in 60 seconds'; DeBartolo 101 *and "28 Days"r DeBartolo 155* *Denotes admission charge for ND/SMC students This calendar is compiled by the Student Activities Office. Programs are subject to change without notice. For up to date info check out the ND calendar, Today@ ND at www.nd.edu or call Student Activities at 631-7308. To add an event to further calendars, ease send the details about the a to [email protected]. page 8 The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT Thursday, September 14, 2000

student union HAPPENIN6§

WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 11-17

Movies: Gone in 60 Seconds. 28 Days. 9/14. Thursday. 1 01 • 155. DeBartolo 1030PM. Tickets: $2. 9/15. Friday. 1 01. 155. DeBartolo OBOOPM & 1 030PM. 9116. Saturday. 1 01. 155. DeBartolo OBOOPM & 1 030PM.

Acousticafe. 9/14. Thursday. LaFortune Huddle 0900PM-1200AM.

Pep Rally. 9/15. Friday. JACC 0630PM.

Mini-Golf w/ AipSide. 9/15. Friday. Library Circle 0615PM. Tickets: $2.

WEEK OF SEPTEMBER IB-i!!4

La Alianza and La Fuerza Latin Flavor. 9/18. Monday. SMC 0500PM. ISSA Presents American Culture through Music Dance Party. 9/21 Thursday. Alumni Senior Club 0500PM-0700PM.

Movies: Road Trip. Wizard of Oz (Dark Side of the Rainbow) 9/21. Thursday. 101. 155. DeBartolo 1030PM. 9/22. Friday. 101. 155. DeBartolo OBOOPM & 1 030PM. 9/23. Saturday. 101. 155. DeBartolo OBOOPM & 1 030PM. Tickets: $2.

Acousticafe. 9/21. Thursday. LaFortune Huddle 0900PM-1200AM.

Hayride Campfire w/ FlipSide. 9/22. Friday. Ubrary Circle 0730PM. Tickets: $2.

FUTURE EIIEI\IT!i "Cafechito con Iache" w/ Ray Blanco. 9/27. Wednesday. LaFortune Ballroom 0730PM.

Los Angeles Guitar Quartet. 9/28. Thursday. Hesburgh Library OBOOPM.

In Hall Dances. 9/29. Friday. PW, Morrissey, Cavanaugh, Walsh, Alumni, Fisher, McGlinn 9/30. Saturday. Farley, Pangborn, Keough, Knott, Sorin

Founders' Day Carnival. 1 0/5. Thursday. TBA TBA. Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ CAMPAIGN 2000 page 9 Cheney: News has beco01e trivial Gore platform focuses

hours - that really have noth­ mechanism. now it's a media Associated Press ing to do with the. election or the mechanism, discussing trivia. on education issues CHAND HAPIDS. Mich. fate of America or how the cam­ It's a source of some frustra­ paign ought to be decided." he tion." of Lewiston High teachers Don Hcpublican vice presidential Associated Press candidatn Dick Cheney lashed said. "The way that works While acknowledging the and Susan Jalbert. Twelve­ serves to distract everybody and importance of press freedom. year-old daughter Marissa lent out at news organizations LEWISTON, Maine Wednesday. saying they focus to take the focus off the basic Cheney said there should "be him her study room for the issues that we ought to be con­ some degree of accountability AI Gore rolled off a bor­ night, N'Sync posters and all. too much on "absolutely trivial rowed sofa bed at 6 a.m. and issues" during election cam­ cerned about." with respect to how they per­ "Getting a diploma is not the Cheney said many complex form during the course of an into an 18-hour grit-to-glitz end of an 'education, but just paigns. jumble of campaigning. Cheney. speaking to a busi­ issues such as taxes, the Social election." the beginning," the vice presi­ Security system. Medicare and He chided reporters whose Before dent said at the school. "We ness club during a campaign the Boston swing through western military work is critical need to make college educa­ readiness are of elected offi­ ferry ride, tion and skill training avail­ Michigan. said intense competi­ "... Now it's a media the wharf­ tion among news outlets appar­ difficult and cials for being able for a lifetime." time-consum­ mechanism, discussing Monday-morn­ side rally In his education debate with ently has changed the way that and the $1 campaigns arn covered. even ing for jour­ trivia. It's a source of ing quarter­ Republican rival George W. nalists to backs. m iII ion Bush. Gore hopes to prevail when compan~d with election frustration. " supper coveragP done only a few years report on. "It's always with proposals to make up to "It's much fascinating for concert $10,000 in tuition expenses ago. with James Tlw nPed to produce stories easier, Dick Cheney me to watch Gore tax deductible and to offer a frankly. to and see that Taylor, the credit to people without for a growing number of vice presidential candidate Democratic Int1~rnet-based n11ws sites and cover some of ·those of us enough income to benefit from presidential nominee spent 24-hour cable television news the trivial who get in the the deduction. eight hours hustling around channels may be partially stuff that from time to time arena, put our names on the Also included in the $170 rPsponsiblr. for changing the seems to dominate (campaign ballot, go out and slug it out Lewiston High School's chalk­ billion additional federal dusty classrooms, pushing his way journalists ~~over cam­ news coverage) .and we get one every day for something we spe .~ding that Gore has pro­ paigns. Chenr.y said in response of these feeding frenzies." he believe in, spend all of our time campaign proposals to make posed for education over 10 to a question from the audience. said. "But it is unfortunate being critiqued by people higher education more acces­ years, is a 401 (k)-styled sys­ "So you end up with absolutf'­ because what happens is. it who've never been in the arena, sible and affordable. tem letting parents - and ly trivial issues dominating an does not lead tn informed never will get in the arena, sit in Fifty-five days to the elec· working professionals eyeing entire (news) cycle or maybe debate and dialogue. It nwans the bleachers and do well sec­ tion, Gore's day began after advanced degrees - a tax­ two cycles - an Pntire 24 or 48 you've got this huge news ond-guessing." four hours sleep at the home free, inflation-protected nest egg for tuition. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Teaching an hourlong American history class under the gaze of news cameras, Gore anxiously - but with no flubs - helped students with questions on everything from voting age changes to an Elvis letter on patriotism. ''I'm glad I picked one I hap­ pened to know," he quipped. taking a question on how vice presidents were selected in pre-Electoral College days. In another classroom. Gore. fatigue etched arDund his eyes. took a desk under a pic­ ture labeled "Prehistoric Man." He put a rambling, wistful twist on his proposal for "a national expectation" that YOU'RE FOCUSED. schools bring parents in at the beginning of each school year to sign agreements on disci­ pline standards and encourage YOU'RE involvement in the life of the DETERMINED. school. IJghtinglrisb.com AND YOU The Marketplace HAVE NO IDEA LOW WHAT YOU'RE student DOING. Airfares Find everything you need to Gathering information for grad school can be Eurailpasses know about grad school at absolutely mind-boggling. At Petersons.com, you'll www.petersons.com/campus find detailed information on programs, student loan information, online practice tests and online More Than applications. Go to Petersons.com. And un-boggle that brilliant mind of yours. 100 Departure Cities

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Calendar of Events World Youth Day: August 28-September 18 103 Hesburgh Library Bringing it Home Freshmen Retreat #30 Sign-up Targeted Dorms: Badin, Keenan, Lewis, by Fr. Bill Wack ,esc O'Neill, Pasquerilla East, St. Edward's, Morrissey, Walsh, and Zahm "At the end of this World Youth Day, as I look at you now, at your young faces, at your Sunday. September 17. 1:30 pro genuine enthusiasm, from the depths of my heart I want to give thanks to God for the gift of Keenan-Stanford Chapel youth, which continues to be present in the church and in the world because of you." Spanish Mass Thus Pope John Paul II concluded his homily at a Mass in a huge field just outside Rome Presider: Rev. Felipe Morel with two million young people from all over the world a few weeks ago. He spoke in glowing terms about how youth and young adults are stepping up more and more and embracing the Sunday. September 17. 7:30 ,pm Gospel of peace and love. Looking out over the vast throng ("a carpet of humanity", in his Montgomery Theater own words), the Pope was visibly moved and thanked us for coming and for following Christ. Mricentric Spirituality: I was privileged to attend WYD in Rome this month with several students from this Sankofa Scholars Honors Assembly community. We had been planning and praying for this trip since before last Christmas. We wanted to go for ourselves and for our school. We joined people from over 160 countries and Tuesday. September 19. 7:00 pm added our voice to theirs in a single song of praise to God. We went as pilgrims, not as Badin Hall Chapel tourists. We left renewed and challenged, ready to carry the message to all parts of the globe. Campus Bible Study And what was the message? ''Today you have come together to Simple: Christ loves you. PopeJohn Tuesday. September 19. 7:00 p.m. Paul said, "Yes, dear friends, Christ declare that in the new century you Siegfried Hall Chapel loves us, and he loves us forever! He Confirmation Session # 1 will not let yourselves be made into loves us even when we disappoint tools of violence and destruction; you him, when we fail to meet his expec­ Wednesday. September 20. 10:00 pm tations for us." We, for our part, need Walsh Hall Chapel will defend peace, paying the price to accept that love and let it trans­ Interfaith Christian Night Prayer in your person if need be." form our lives. It should move us to share love with others, to live as Jesus lived, to make moral choices and - Pope John Paul II to the 2 million young people stand up for the Gospel. gathered in Rome this summer for World Youth Day. This love demands a response. Twenty-fourth Sunday We cannot simply stand back and in Ordinary Time wait for others to lead. The youth are not just the future of the church. We are the church now. Again and again in his three major speeches, the Pope challenged us with words that Weekend Presiders were direct and non-apologetic. He wasn't suggesting anything; he was stating a fact: "Today you have come together to declare that in the new century you will not let your­ Basilica of the Sacred Heart selves be made into tools of violence and destruction; you will defend peace, paying the price Saturday, September 16 Mass in your person if need be. You will not resign yourselves to a world where other human 30 minutes after game beings die of hunger, remain illiterate and have no work. You will defend life at every mo­ Most Rev. Robert N. Lynch ment of its development; you will strive with all your strength to make this earth ever more Bishop, St. Petersburg. Florida livable for all people." When the Pope spoke of a "[N]ew martyrdom, the martyrdom of those who are called to Sunday, September 17 Mass go against the tide in order to follow the divine Master," the roar of the crowd rivaled that 8:00a.m. heard in the stadium last Saturday. They Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, c.s.c. IO:OOa.m. wanred more. They chanted and yelled ''Dear young people of the century Rev. Richard V. Warner, c.s.c. and waved and sang. It was a pep rally now beginning, in saying 'yes' to 11.·45 a.m. for Jesus- unlike anything I've ever seen Rev. Thomas P. Doyle, c.s.c. before. Christ you say 'yes' to all your The overwhelming success ofWYD noblest ideals. I pray that he will showed that the Pope is right on target Stepan Center about a couple of things: Young people reign in your hearts••• Have no fear Saturday, September 16 Mass are trying hard to be faithful, they are of entrusting yourselves to him! He 45 minutes after game willing to give over everything for Christ, Rev. John A. Herman, c.s.c. and they want to be challenged. will guide you, he will grant you the The Spirit is at work in the world, strength to follow him every day moving hearts to respond lovingly to Scripture Readings and in every situation." for this Coming Sunday God's initial act of love. The enthusiasm and faith seen a few weeks ago in Rome 1st Reading Is 50: 5-9a is not a fluke; it's a sign of the times. - Pope john Paul II, World Youth Day 2nd Reading Jas 2: 14-18 And here in our little part of the world Gospel Mk 8: 27-35 we can - and will - stand up for the Gospel. "Dear young people of the century now beginning, in saying 'yes' to Christ you say 'yes' to all your noblest ideals. I pray that he will reign in your hearts and in all of humanity in the new century and the new millennium. Have no fear of entrusting yourselves to him! He will guide you, he will grant you the strength to follow him every day and in every situation."

0\MPUS IV11NI5TRY Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ NATIONAL NEWS page II Judge frees scientist Wen Ho Lee Clinton, Lazio battle

"but I survived." embarrassed our entire nation Associated Press Lee, 60. pleaded guilty to a and eac:h of us who is a dtizen fiercely in first debate single c:ount of mishandling of it." J\LBUQUEHQUE. N.M. nuclear secrets as the govern­ Lee, a Taiwanese-born natu­ waved in her face. she told Nine months after he was ment all but abandoned its ralized U.S. citizen, read a Associated Press branded a threat to national him "that was a wonderful ~:rumbling c:ase against the for­ statement in c:ourt in which he performance." security and put in solitary BUFFALO, N.Y. mer Los Alamos sc:ientist. admitted using an unsec:ure ''I'm not asking you to conlinement. Wen llo Lee was In the first debate of their Under the terms of the plea c:omputer to download a admire it, I'm asking you to set free Wednesday with an bargain, he national­ Senate campaign, Hillary apology from a judge who said sign it." he shot back. was sen­ defense docu­ Rodham Clinton repeatedly The televised debate, mod­ lhl' government's actions "The last nine months attacked Republican Rep. tenced to 278 ment onto a erated by NBC's Tim Russert, "pmbarrassed our entire Rir,k Lazio on Wednesday as days were pretty tough for me, tape. He said was aired on NBC stations nation." too con- essentially but I survived." he knew his across the state. In a sign of Support1~rs chnen~d as a servative the time possession of the wide interest the raee has smiling LPP ld't tlw courthouse for New served since the tape out­ generated, it also was aired alongsidn his family and attor­ Wen Ho Lee Y o r k . his arrest side of the later on the cable new net­ neys. 111' thankPd his support­ L a z i o I a s t former Los Alamos scientist top-sec:ret work MSNBC. PI's and said. "''m very happy responded December. area where Clinton was asked if she felt to go homn with my wifn and by trying Lee had he worked she should apologize to the children today." to link the b e e n was unautho- American people for mislead­ With a chuckle, he added: first lady charged with 59 counts of rized. ing them during the Monica "ThP nnxt few days. I'm going to the breaching national security Lee agreed to cooperate with Clinton Lewinsky scandal, when she lishing." policies and faced life in prison if con­ the government and tell them blamed her husband's trou­ A l'ew hours later, the victed. Fifty-eight of those everything he knows about and even diminutive. graying scientist bles on "a vast right-wing counts were dropped. seven missing tapes. the peccadilloes of her hus­ conspiracy." was swampPd by a erowd of band. "I sincerely apologize to you, The government said that the "Obviously I didn't mislead about 150 supporters in the The often sharp exchanges Or. Lee, for the unfair manner fate of the tapes was para­ anyone. I didn't know the bal'k vard of his neighbors. included one where he in whkh you were held in cus­ mount and that Lee's willing­ truth and there's a great deal who ~avl'd flags and signs and walked to her side and tried tody by the executive branch." ness to explain what happened of pain associated with that," sang "For Il1~·s a Jolly Good U.S. District Judge James to them was the turning point unsuccessfully to get her to FPIIow." she said. "That was a very Parker said. in 2-month-old plea disc:us­ sign a pledge to bar soft painful time for me, for my "Th1• last nine months were money from their c:ampaigns. Parker said thP Departments sions. Lee has said the tapes family, for our country. prl'lty tough for me," hP said. After having his pledge of Justice and Enrrgy "have were destroyed. Lazio responded by saying "blaming others .. . has become a pattern for my opponent." He also reacted sharply to Clinton's attempts to link him to Newt Gingrich. the conservative former House speaker. "You, of all people. shouldn't try to make guilt by association." he said. "Newt Gingrieh isn't running in this race. I'm running in this race. Let's talk about my record." He declared at one point that Clinton's educ:ation record as first lady in Arkansas was dreadful and "1 don't think we need that Little Rock record in the Big Apple." Both the first lady and the congressman had sought to lower expectations before the debate - she saying she had never done it before and Lazio saying that while he had been in politieal debates. "this is a different league." Analysts said the stakes were highest for Lazio. the still little-known congress­ man from Long Island. in what was the first of three planned televised debates. "l-Ie's got to prove hP can fight in the heavyweight divi­ sion," said Maurice Carroll. head of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, before the debate. "ShP doesn't have to do much of anything except not screw up." After thinking for a moment, he added. "She's got to be niee." Across the state. reaction was mixed. "Everybody who would like We didn't become Fortwur' magazine's America's Most to slap her. raise your hand," Admired Company* by accepting the status quo. We got there by Dave Overbeeke, e-Business said Arthur Deruve, 66, of Yonkers. who watched the hiring and training confident graduates with the courage to think Leader of GEAircraft Engines debate at the Sons of Italy in innovative and revolutionary ways. will talk about Business to Lodge in White Plains. No other corporation can match the diversity of oppor­ But others said the first Business e-Commerce. lady did well. tunities at GE. Because we have small company attitudes with "I think that Mrs. Clinton large company strengths, we set no limits, no boundaries. You September 15th 10:30AM 12:00 PM overall made a better show­ can move from industry to industry, discipline to discipline, ing. I think she ac:tually answered questions more and never leave G E. direetly. Mr. Lazio was very We're a leader in every business we compete in, and Jordan Auditorium, evasive," said Craig Goldstein we're looking for leaders like Thanh who will take us even Mendoza College of Business of New Paltz, a registered independent who was unde­ further. Start your career by visiting our website now. An Equal cided on who lfe will vote for. Opportunity Employer. "I think she's ex(:eptionally bright," added Phyllis Granat. an undecidPd voter Learn about us at ,, , " , from Manhasset. "She's a far www.gecareers:com "'" better debatPr but shn has a We bring good things to life. long way to go before she convinces me to vote for ------GE Aircraft Engines· GE Appliances • GE Capital Services· GE Corporate Research and Development· GE Industrial Systems . her." GE Global eXchange Services • GE Lighting· GE Medical Systems· GE PlastiCS· GE Power Systems· GE Supply· GE Transportation Systems· NBC '2/21/00 r------~·------

page 12 The Observer+ CAMPAIGN 2000 Thursday, September I 4, 2000 Gore associate unexpectedly receives Bush debate plans

to tiH' FBI to dPlPrminP wlwther cials where• Llwv ran deal with in during Bush debatP sessions. Gore's debatn prqmrations "To tiH' docunwnts and tapr wPrr thPm appropriatPiy." according to two I>Pmocratic do so would dishonor a grPat "illPgally obtainPd from thP Fabiani said Gore's staff did lawyers who spoke on condition Anwrican tradition of orwn and \\',\SIIfN(;ToN Bush campaign." said CorP not know for cnrtain whethPr of anonymity. honnst dPbates." .\ packagP containing donr­ spokPsman Llw parkagP was ThP parkagc (;ore chairman William l>aiPy nwnts and a vidPotapP rPlating M a r k a hoax or actual "Clearly, this is came with a post­ c:aiiPd Bush chairman l>on to <;PorgP \V. Bush's dPbatP Fabiani. Bush campaign mark from Evans to notify him about tlw pn·paralions was rnystPriously something that "Clearly. matPrial. Austin. TPxas. packagP. clPiivPrPd to a CorP conl'idant should not have been this is Downev. howev­ home of Bush's Bush spokPsman Ari J:fpisrlwr \Vpc!Jwsday. Tlw 1:B1 was askPd somnthing er. h·as told sent to me." headquarters. said: "We would likP to rPViPw to inwstigatP. that should associatPs lw is Thr. rPturn thn matnial. Our attorrwvs It was unciPar wlwtlwr thP not havP c· o n vi n c· P d t h P addn~ss included haw askPd to r<>vinw il." • matPrial was lf•gitimatP. Tom Downey bPPn SPnt to matPrial is lt>git­ a sender's namP Bush rommunirations dir<'t'­ To 111 llm\'111' v. a for nw r ron­ former Congressman Ill (' • imatP, in part but Downey did tor Kar<>n llugh<'s said tlw cam­ gn•ssman wht,·has bPPn hPiping Gore l>own<>y berausr lw saw not rPcogniz<' it. paign is not conducting an tlw vicP prPsidPnt prPparP for said in a l~ush in what his attorney said. intPrnal invPstigation lwcausP dPbatPs against llush. tunwd statPnwnl. "I haw dirnrtPd that appParPd to lw a rnork d<>batP "Using thnse matPrials was people who had "JpgitirnatP tl11• matPrial ovPr to his lawv<'r. all of tlw matPrials be tunwd with St>n. Judd GrPgg. 11-N.II.. llP\t'r an option." said Downny. Tlw attornPy gavP tlw pack.ag.• ac:c:t>ss" to Llw LapPs wPrP V<'ry ovPr to law Pnforcement ofTi- who is sPrving as (;on's stand- who had been playing Bush in few. ·--·------

Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ NATIONAL NEWS page 13 Judge: Buchanan is Reform nominee Selma readies for

Law Party r,andidatP- and also said it would appeal that move. Associated Press would seek broader support. too. "We're moving ahead dynam­ "This is a huge victory for the first black mayor LONG BEACII. Calif. ically with what WP- hope will Reform Party and our cam­ A California judgP- deelared be a very high-profile r,am­ paign," Bay Buchanan. the can­ Associated Press But after watr,hing many !'at Buchanan the true Hr.form paign," he said in a telephonP­ didate's sister and r,ampaign Selma citizens r,elebrate Party presidential nominP-e on interview. r,hairwoman. said of Perkins' vir, tory in city WednPsday. dealing another "The Reform Party that we Wednesday's ruling by the SELMA, Ala. streets late into eler,tion s<~tback to rival John Hagelin. knew and loved under Ross judge. "This decision, together The former segregationist night, Smitherman said Superior Court Judgr. .lamPs Perot has been killed." he said. with the Federal Election ousted as mayor after 36 Wednesday that he believes Wright ordr.rPd llagelin not to Th<~ judge's ruling r,ame one Commission ruling, settles onr,e years in office on Wednesday the r,ity still has a bright campaign as tlw party's nomi­ day after the Federal Eler,tion and for all that Pat Buchanan is offered enr:ouragement to future. nr.P. and llagr.lin said hn would Commission (FECI in the nominee of the Heform the man who will ber,ome the "His biggest problem will honor that ruling, both in Washington said in a prelimi­ Party." city's first blar,k mayor. say­ be getting the white business California and nationwide. In nary ruling that $12.6 million Wright ruled that when the ing "blacks r,an govern as community to ar,cept a blar,k tlw nwantimn. his lawyr.r said in federal campaign funds party;s national r:onvention well as whites." mayor. He's going to have to hP would sr.Pk to dr.lay the belong to Bur,hanan. split in two in Long Bear,h last Voters overwhelmingly include the white community !'orr<' of thr. ruling while Final FEC approval. expected month, the far:tion aligned with rejected Joe Smitherman's in his plans, but I think he appr.aling it. Thursday, would authorizfl the Bur,hanan r,onducted the prop­ bid to seek a 1Oth term and realizes that," Smitherman llagolin said lw would contin­ TrP-asury to send Buchanan a er convention in keeping with chose James Perkins as his said. UP to campaign as thr. Natural r,her,k, though Hagelin's r,amp the party's r,onstitution. successor. Smitherman. 70, Perkins, who takes office was elected mayor in 1964, on Oct. 2. denied requests for about six months before interviews on Wednesday. authorities attacked voting But residents welcomed the rights marr,hers on Selma's change and doubted the elec­ Edmund Pettus Bridge. tion of a black mayor would "If he becomes his own cause white flight. man, I believe he will be a "Change is good. Perkins is very good mayor," a fair man. I don't think Smitherman said of Perkins. there will be an exodus. UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICES "Blacks can govern as well Where are people going to as whites. Mr. Perkins is just go?" said Michael Hayes. a as smart as I am." Selma store owner. During the campaign, "The truth is, in this town. is seeking energetic and motivated Smitherman had upset the blar,k and white, we're going opposition by remarking that to live and die together. As city government would soon as everybody under­ students interested in serving on the become all black and busi­ stands that. the better off we nesses would leave town if will all be." said Hayes, who Perkins won the election. is black. STUDENT WELLNESS ADVISORY BOARD Aryan leader Butler

Applications are due challenges judgement FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 against supremacists

For more information and an Associated Press COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho application please go to Aryan Nations leader Richard Butler on Wednesday filed a notice of his intent to appeal last week's $6.3 million judg­ ment against his white supremacist sect. The move was expected to delay by at least two weeks the http:/lwww .nd.edu/ .-..uhs/swab/ court-ordered seizure of property from the group's northern Idaho compound near Hayden Lake, Kootenai County Sheriff Rocky Watson said. Butler, his organization and its corporate entity, Saphire. Inc .. were found negligent in selecting and overseeing securi­ ty guards who assaulted a mother and son. Victoria and Jason Keenan. outside the compound in 1998. A copy of the appeal notice, which Watson sent to reporters, indicates Butler did not post an appeal bond that ~======~=====;;=:=:==:=:::::::::::======~~w~o~u~l~d_:s~h~i!;_el~d~A~r~va~n~N~a~t~io~n~s property from seizure pending the outcome of the appeal. On the notice. Butler states that he is exempt from paying various filing fees due to indi­ A perfect meeting place gence. A handwritten portion says the appeal to tho Idaho throughout the weekend. Supreme Court is expected to be based on "all issues." Plaintiffs lawyer Kenneth Open Friday and Saturday D.Iring Howard, reached at his Coeur d'Alene home, said he expect­ ed to prevail in any appeal. ND. Home Football Weekends. Morris Dees, the r.ivil rights lawyer who led the plaintiffs' legal team. has said he expected the judgment to Everyone Welcome bring a quick end to the Aryan Nations and its racist, anti­ Semitic message. A court order giving the Live Music Fridays, 2 - 6p.m. sheriff's department authority to seize assets was signed Grilled Burgers, Brats, Tuesday, and Watson had and Other Specialties indicated he planned to begin removing property from the compound in thP next few Cold Beverages & Spirits davs . Butler has been ordPred to 60" Screen TV's appear at an Ort. 1 3 hParing to testify under oath about his .•.•.•.•.w.w.wn.·.~-~~- assets. Fully Enclosed Tent 'W!e onis rf!n,t •.•.•.•.•,•.•.•,•,•.•.•,•,•.•,•, ·.·.·· ...... ·.· .. · ...... ·,•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.·.·.•.•.·.~·.·.·.·.······· Visit The Observer Online. next to the N.D. Bookstore. 631-2000 http://observer.nd.edu VIEWPOINT THE page 14 OBSERVER Thursday, September 14, 2000 THE OBSERVER Further praising Notre Dame P.O. Box Q. Non< Dam<. IN 46'iS6 024 Smuh Dinin~ Hall. Non< Darn<. IN 46556 Although it may be unfashionable to kind, thrifty, charitable and most of those line as the replacements for Arnaz. EDITOR IN CHIEF write good things about Notre Dame, I'm other Boy Scouty-type things (I left out As an alumnus and long time fan, I am Mike Connolly going to continue to do so, until someone obedient). Another part of this guy is disappointed that so many Notm Dame MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER takes away my ink pen (sorry to put in a Mike Tyson on a bad day. While I was people traded their fan loyalty for a few Noreen Gillespie Tim Lane reference to the Dark Ages, but, people watching this guy's valedictory interview pieces of silver, but I was very pleased to my age actually with ESPN, I got a phone call and muted hear that the people in green sounded ASST. MANAGING EDITOR OPERATIONS MANAGER used them in for­ the volume- watching him, without louder than I've heard in a long time. Chris1ine Kraly Rrian Kessler mer days). hearing his words, is pretty frightening. Although it must have berm painful for Within the past This is not a guy you want to cross. the players to pull themselves NEWS EDITOR: Anne Marie Mattingly week. a college to And he claims he doesn't know together to do their salute to th1~ VIEWPOINT EDITOR: l.ila Haughey the north of us, what "zero tolerance" means! I student body, I was very proud SPORTS EDITOR: Kerry Smith which I won't name can tell him what it means­ of them for that and nxceeding­ SCENE EDITOR: Amanda Greco here (but which has Earth to Bobby: It means what ly proud or our students for SAINT MARY's EmTOR: Molly McVoy a lot of cows graz­ you've been preaching for the r·esponding as though the PHOTO EDITOR: Elizabeth Lang ing on their campus past four decades. It means Irish had defeated and not and pPople actually blowing a gasket when some­ merely tied, the 'Huskers. ADVERTISING MANAGER: Pat Peters Cappy Gagnon AD DESIGN MANAGER: Chris Avila get academic credit one says, "Whazzup Just so I won't appear to SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATOR: Mike Gunville for milking them) Knight'?" be bashing every eollegn in WED ADMINISTRATOR: Adam Turner enrolled two foot­ Notre Dame is not a per­ my praising of Notre . ball stars with dubi­ Gappy's fect place, but we don't Dame, let nw say some­ CONTROLLER: Bob Woods Corner GRAPHICS EDITOR: jose Cuellar ous citizenship hon­ recruit players out of the thing about our opponents. ors. Both players felony courts and we don't At the end of every game, were football stars. have hoopsters demanding my top Stadium Usher CONTACT Us Both also wern chargPd with sexually the ousting of the Personnel arc asked to giv1~ OFFICE MANAGER/GENERAL INFO ...... 631-7 4 71 assaulting a 13-year-old girl. The one Chancellor. And we didn't .~'iliL:?l~!!!!!"~~ a rating for the visiting FAX ...... 631-6927 bring in Handy Moss, even AI>VF.RTISING ...... 631-6900/8840 player was admitted after he pled no -~~~'tf,~S;:~~~~ team. on a "1-10" scale. I [email protected] contest (guilty) to a reduced charge; the though he might have been ..., also factor in thn !kid love! EDITOR IN CHIEF ...... 631-4542 other player is arguing to withdraw his worth a few wins and the conduct I obs1~rve. both day MANA<;ING EDITOR/ASST. ME ...... 631-4541 statement that the sex was consentual. prior coach was willing to of game and on the previous BL/SINESS 0FFICE...... 631-5313 As bad as these college admissions were adopt him. day's Stadium walk through. NEWS ...... 631-5323 (I suppose they had to hurry before While we didn't get the win Nebraska's traveling party observcr.obsnews.1 @nd.edu Tennessee or Florida State grabbed we wanted on Saturday, I could and fans became the fifth eon­ VIEWPOINT...... 631-5303 them), what was worse were the com­ not be more proud of the Irish secutive Big 12 school to earn tho observcr.viewpoim.1 @nd.edu ments from the Vice President of after the 21-21 Nebraska tie. I saw utmost respect of Stadium Ushers SPmrrs...... 6.~ 1-4 543 University Relations: "We admitted more hitting, passion and will to win and Notre Dame fans, following Baylor. observer.sporrs.l @nd.edu (these young men) because we thought than I can remember. I also made up my Kansas, Oklahoma and Tnxas A&M. It is SCF.NE...... 631-4 540 they deserved an educational opportuni­ mind that I don't want Anthony Denman an honor to be one of the hosts when col­ observer.scene.l @nd.edu ty." and Hocky Boiman to ever become mad leges of this caliber visit the great1~st ml­ SAINT MARY'S ...... 631-4324 Hight. And, how many other predatory at me. lege program on the greatest campus in observcr.smc.l @nd.edu assailants, who can't pass and throw, are There were heroes all over the place the county. Go Irish. PHOTO ...... 631-8767 they recruiting'? If I were that V.P., I'd be (none of whom have I ever seen in hand­ SYSTEMS/WED AI>MINISTRATORS ...... 631-8839 asking for a big raise, after being fon:ed cuffs.) Julius Jones and Joey Getherall Cappy Gagnon, '66, wonders ({ to compromise my integrity in such a brought back memories of "The Hocket." "Swimwear Illustrated" will be writing THE OBSERVER ONLINE way. It was great to see both our defense and 1 any follow-up stories about college \'isit our Web site at http://obsavrr.ndrdu for daily Contemporaneously, a little south of our special teams being a weapon. admissions. upt!Jtcs of campus news, sports, features and opinion here, there has b1wn turmoil on the The offense is showing signs of coming The views expressed in this column are columm, as well as cartoons, reviews and breaking news campus of one of the other top universi­ together. If Arnaz can gain over 100 those of the author and not necessarily Ji·mn the Associated Press. ties in the country. It seems that this col­ yards, against the top team in the coun­ those of71ze Ohseruer. SURF TO: lege, for the past three decades, has had try, with a broken arm, I wonder how weather l(>r up-to-the movies/music l(>r a coach with a split personality. Part of good he can really be. And I think Gary, lllilllllC f(>ft"GL'i[S weekly student reviews this guy - tlw biggest part, perhaps- is Matt. Carlyle,and Brandon will do just

advertise li>r policies online features lor spe­ and rares of print ads cial campus coverage

archives co search li>r about The Observer LETTER TO THE EDITOR .micles published a tier to meet the edimrs Jnd August 1999 staff

POliCIES Generalizations are generally wrong The Observer is the independent, daily newspaper published in print and online by the students of the While Geoll' Hahie points out some humorous aspects of rap as a benchmark to judgn the rest of punk music on, or a coun­ University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary's music in his Sept. 12 column (Hap music thrives, despito try fan with the Dixie Chicks and a rock !'an with Matchbox 20, Collt·ge. Editorial content, including ;\dvenisemems, is absence of any logic), it is unfair to pin all "rap artists" as hip-hop fans would implore Mr. Hahie and others to look nm [.\Overned by policies of the administration of either merely entertainers and not to give them rightful credit as beyond what was being force fed at the nightclubs, tho dorm imtitution. The ( )bserver reserves the right to refuse artists. parties and what was on MTV, in order to lind out what hip­ ~u.ivcnisc:mt'IHS hi1sed on content. Hahie's critique on his narrow and limited examples of rap hop really is. The new' is r<-poned

DILBERT SCOTT ADAMS QUOTE OF THE DAY

E 0 '! 0.. I DON'T NEED TO BUT LOOK! THE ® CHECK IT EVERY STUPID MONKEY ..E"' "The government is the only known vessel '0 MINUTE. I CAN HIT MY KEYBOARD !'l that leaks from the top." 0 WITH HIS FOOT! u "' James Reston journalist VIEWPOINT THE Thursday, September 14, 2000 OBSERVER page 15

POLITICAL FACE-OFF Discussing the future of Social Security Securing Social Security's Rejuvenating Social Security sets future for working people model for active government

This summer I lived with a wonder­ plan to reform Social Security. He There is a simple lix to all the problems in ernment bonds alone yield four percent and ful Hussian family in Moscow. My suggests privatizing the program by our country. Simply throw money at them. in the long run a diversified portfolio yields Bussian parents, one a former scien­ diverting Social Security taxes into Is your association unorganized? If so, at least six percent. With all these other tist in tlH1 spare program and the private investment accounts. The take a few trillion dollars. options that the individual investor has. othnr a physicist, are now retired. problem with privatizing Social Are you looking for a solution to a prob­ why let the government sit on Social This well-mlucat­ Security is that the government lem? Don't attempt to Security with a two percent yield? Pd couple is Lisa would be less able to maintain the be efficient and logical, Greg Kelly By privatizing Social Security the yield on scrapping by on Demidovich . system's inherent fairness. Instead instead take 2.3 trillion Andy Harms the current funds would increase greatly. personal savings. of paying a certain percentage and dollars of taxpayers Social Security will not only be guaranteed odd jobs (like receiving a defined benelit, workers money. That will keep. for our generation, but our children as well, College College hosting Amnrican could make identical contributions the program afloat Republicans without increasing taxes or wasting budget studtH1tsl and a Democrats throughout their working years, for a while. surplus. small pension but because contributions would This is exactly AI Gore will tell you that investing Social from llw govnrn- go to different investments or what AI Gore and Security in this manner is risky and there­ ml'nt. Watching them struggle, I companies, workers would end the Democratic party would have you fore we should not do it. Gore would like to rnalizPd how lucky Americans are to up with very different balances believe. The same party that wants scare the American public into thinking that haw an efTective retiremnnt savings when they retire. This would to raise your taxes, since they know only rich people invest wisely. Luckily, that plan. hurt low income workers who how to better spend the money it is not a reality. Voting for candidates who will pro­ require the current progres­ than you, would like to fix the If AI Gore is not willing to take a risk as tPd our Social Security system is

LETTER TO THE EDITOR Disappointed by disparaging comments

It is truly disheartming to sit down and read a column team that could compete at any collegiate level, hands be a part of, we are thoroughly disappointed in the man­ written by a Saint Mary's student that eompletely bashes down. ner and tactlessness through which our team was por­ a Saint Mary's College sports team- especially on game It's an insult for these athletes to be told that they "lack trayed. day. basic skills and depth." Our entire team may not have How does this support Saint Mary's Pride and athletics Today the SMC volleyball team played our home open­ the stellar talent that a few individuals on the team do, in general? Our challenge to students on both campuses Pr against Kalamazoo Coll<~ge in the midst of an artide but they most certainly don't "lack basic skills" either. is this, believe what is written about our team or come that portrayed our team as possessing elementary level Our record is not reflective of the team we are and and watch the truth in action. You just might be sur­ skills. As athl<~tes at SMC we choose to play solely for the once again it's insulting for anyone to assume that just prised. lov<1 of the game- nothing morn and nothing less. We because our record is 0-7 at the very beginning of our an~n't scholarship players, we don't get any perks for season that this will reflect the two months of competi­ Victoria Butcko being on thP tnam and the recognition we get on a broad tion we have left. 0-7 means nothing to us -we may be LeMans Hall spectrum for our commitment and dedication is minimal. winless for all technical purposes but each game has Angie Meyers But this doesn't matter to us because we lind sclf-satis­ been a step towards victory for our team. We have· heart Holy Cross Hall l'action and motivation in a sport that we devote our­ and desire that could rival any school at any level and we co-caprains Saim Mary's volleyball ream snlves to whole-heartmlly. The column that appeared on would rather have a losing record and play with heart Seprember I 2, 2000 Sept. 12. was false, assuming that athletic skills and tal­ than a winning record lacking the passion. ent an' absent from our team. There arc members of our As co-captains of a team that we love and are proud to M c e E

page 16 Thursday, September 14, 2000

MOVIE REVIEW Excess subplots make 'Gun' misfire

tial attempt to r.apturn the girl (named By JUDE SEYMOUR Hobin) is unsuer.nssful. It is however StTne Movie Criric Hobin's desire to nscapn thn un-rnlentlnss watchful nyn of lwr two hired security "Tlw Way of tl11• Gun" is tlw directorial guards (Tayo IJiggs of 'Tim Best Man" and dl'lnrt of ( :liristoplwr Md)uarrin, t.lw writnr Nicky Katt of "Boiler Hoom") that turns of I 9 1J5's surpris!' woml!'r, "Tiw Usual into a strokP of good luck for tim kidnap­ Suspncts." Knowing tlw intricatn way that pnrs. Securing hnr, thny make dnmands for "Sus]wrls" was put tog!'tlwr plar!'d lolly $15 million. I'XJll'l'tatiolls on this mm·iP. Unl'ortunatPly. If tlw moviP \Vas just this sirnph\ it might Md)uarri!' triPs to providP too many sto­ have bePn a littln too f(mnulaic f(ll" a rngu­ riPs. which IPaVP tlw lar movingoPr. It is audil'ni'P mon• l'on­ McQuarrie's mistakn, l'usPd than PlllhraiiPd. "The Way of the howevnr. to dnluge tlw Tlw storv l'l'ntPrs plot with snv!'ral sub­ around two kidnappPrs. Gun" plots that rangn from "1\lr. l'arkPr" tHvan thn absurd to tlw unin­ l'h iII i PP~' of "Cr:tll'l teresting to the excit­ lllt!'ntions") a11d "Mr. ing: a "bagman" l.o11gbaugh" (BPnicio (.lames Caan. infamous ow of fiue shamrocks I >PI Toro of tl11• afor!'­ for his rol11 as Sonny lliPntioll!'d "Till' l 1sual Corleorw in "The Susperts"l. l'ark!'r a11d Director: Christopher McQuarrie Godfather") is intro­ l.ongbaugh annot111cn Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Benicia dured; a subplot with Parlv o11 that thPY have tho pregnant girl's doc­ mm:kinpah 's fl)(,l) western "Tiw ransom of this girl. cars rPplacing the rnd blanket of the mata­ bP won ovPr by this roln. Wild Bunch," which providns guns as \VPII BPing nssPntially irwxpPril'nrPd, tlwir ini- dors (in this case, the kidnappers). Using "Tiw Way of the Gun" has a lot going f(w as a morn gratifying story.

VIDEO PICK OF THE WEEK Winslet and Keitel add intensity to impassioned 'Smoke!'

has-bnnn obscurity Lnonardo DiCaprio ness that is disturbing, 1-mehanting and becomes quitn intPnSI) and is so visually By MATT NANIA snems to belong in these days. darkly comic. arresting as to be spnllbinding. Assisr.uH Seen,· 1-:diror FortunatPiy, Winslet didn't sink with the Thn bulk of the film centers on the nxit The pnrl'ormant:ns of KnitPI and WinslPt ship. strategy and the back-and-forth tension, are the high points of thn film. sincn the It's comforting to sen a talentnd aetor "IIoly Smoke!" is tlw entrancing story of sexual and otherwise, between KeitPI and b11st sc11nns arc thn subtln mind-gamns rProvPr from tlw precarious heights of two zealots on a collision course with Winslet. they play on nach otlwr. llHtss-markPt succPss. After "Titanic," fate. Buth. playml by Winslet, is a young Keitel's eharaeter hen~ Winslnt is extraordi­ audiPili'I'S WPrP JWrfectly prnparNI to Australian who finds what she believes to is basirally a sequel to his "Holy Smoke!" nary in hnr role. JHI'­ condPmn KatP Winslet to the same pit of bn thn path to enlightenment through the role as Winston Wolf, the snnting an inspirnd influpnee of a Guru while on holiday in ean-do "deannr" in "Pulp enrorn to lwr I CJIJ way to an ending that Osear nominations. outback. is all about redemption. "Somnthing really happPnnd lwrn." says Things go according to plan. No mattnr The screenplay for "lloly Smoke!" was Winslet's eharactPr rwar thn film's PIHI, what Huth rlaims with regard to hnr writtnn by .Jann Campion and lwr sistnr and slw could bn spnaking for llw vinwPr nl'w-founcl rPiigion. KeitPI's character Anna, and covers somn of the thnmns that as wnll. I>Pspitn Campion's wavering ltlllP, knows morn. It's his intnllnet vnrsus lwr appnar in sud1 other .Jann Campion films lwr rnliancn on nasy did11is and eartoon nmotion. as "The Piano" and "A Portrait of a Lady" charactnrizations, lwr hnautil'ul shots that It's also his main supnriority and his - f'orbidden passion, the war b11twnl'n go nowlwrn and a tacknd-on nnding. tlw pia('(~ in tlw pownr seat vnrsus her youth mnn and women and thn sex and spiritu­ l'ilm works. By llw tinw it's ovl'r, thl' and lwauty and vulrwrability; you can be ality combo. vinwer has nxpl'riPncPd sonwthing: somn­ Photo courtesy ol M1ramax P1ctures sun' llw pownr positions an~ going to bn T-hn film is occasionally f'unny. almost thing complnx and forcPful. sonwl.hing Jane Campion's "Holy Smoke!" con­ rt•vpr·snd. Tlw balanrl' of pownr turns slapstick at times. and at otlwrs quill' many mueh bnttnr films rwwr approarh. tains two daring performances from wlwn I' ..J. falls undnr Huth's seduction, harrowing in its dnpiction of cruPlty, "floly Smoke!" is availabiP on vidl'o Kate Winslet and Harvey Keitel. Jnading llwm both on a dnscent into mad- weaknnss and bntrayal. And it eventually and is, without a doubt. worth rnnting. M E

Thursday, September 14, 2000 page 17

MOVIE REVIEW Poorly-scripted 'Betty' lacks focus

Thn hit men follow her because shP By MATT CACCAMO was a witness to their crime, even if Scene MDvie Critic sho doesn't know it. Tlw film bocomes two storios that Without a doubt, "Nurse Betty" is a don't belong in the same script diiTPrl'nl typP of movin. It's not very togntlwr. The first is of Betty's post­ good. but it is diiTnrnnt. traumatic trip to Los Angeles and her l'l'l'haps it's lwst to start with the ensuing relationship with thn soap storv. Th<' film rPnters on Bettv opPra star. ( llPriPP ZPllwPgPr), a · This part of the film SWPPt. young waitress "Nurse Betty" doesn't work in large who finds happinPss part because of and PsrapP from hPr Zellweger's perfor­ abusivP marriag<' in a mance. She, in a sense, t~·pirally ridiculous plays the same ehanu:- soap OJWra. out of live shamrocks ter that she's played Without n~v<'aling too ever since "Jerry murh of t1 11 • <·orn·olutPd Director: Neil LaBute McGuin~." While she pI o 1 that fo II ow s. Starring: Renee Zellweger, looks grownup, she Zr•llw<'g<•r's animal of a acts like a young, husband is kill<'d by a Morgan Freeman, Chris Rock naive girl waiting to be Photo courtesy of USA Films f'ath<'r-son hit man andGregKinnear swnpt away in a Chris Rock (left) and Morgan Freeman play a father-son hitman team intent on !Pam play<'cl painfully romantic flurry. tracking down Renee Zellweger's Betty character, who witnessed a murder. by Morgan FrPnman and Chris Hock. In reality, she's meant to play a In tlw mix-up that follows. Betty dri­ delusional young vvoman who has scenes suffer because of it. The problem is that it's very difficult VI'S from Kansas to Los Angeles to sadly lived her married life through The other half of the film follows to figure out what the director, Neil !'inc! tlw soap oiwra character (Greg the television. Zellweger never gets a Hoek and Freeman as they travel LaBute, is trying to comment on. He Kiruwar) shl' has fallen in love with. handle on Betty's character, and her across the country in search of Betty. most glaringly ridicules the degree to These two are never on screen with­ which the American public gets out the other through the entire wrapped up in soap operas, the worst movie, so it is best to judge their per­ of television. formances as one. In that sense, their This message could have worked, eollect_ive performance fails miser­ but LaBute goes over the top in trying ably. Instead of watching a father-son to rhake it funny and, in the process, hitman team, one gets the l'enling of loses the truth behind it. llis film ends watching Freeman coach Rock on how up being neither a comedy nor a to act. sharp social commentary. Hoek is terribly out of place in a film This film is particularly disappoint­ that doesn't allow him to be funny. ing because it came to theaters this He's a comedian, after all. Freeman, past week riding high off a spring pre­ on the other hand, is too classy an release that earned it the top screen­ actor to be stuck lecturing Rock for writing prize at the Cannes Film two hours. He becomes more of a Festival. Usually success at Cannes baby-sitter than a hitman. translates into critical success and, Tli e only redeeming performance often times, box-office success in "Nurse Betty" offers is that of American movie theaters. "Nurse KimHHtr. lie somehow rises above a Betty" will most likely fail that test. poor script and limited screen time to In the end, "Betty" falls short where effectively portray a rich, egotistical last year's "American Beauty" suc­ soap actor who finds a strange joy in ceeded to great effect: making a playing along with Betty's delusional scathing and sometimes humorous behavior. Despite the character he comment about the below-the-surface plays, Kinnear gives the only believ­ sickness of an American society all able performance in the film and fur­ too interested in sex, violence and Photo courtesy of USA Films thers his successful transition to the fantasy. Instead, "Nurse Betty" is a In "Nurse Betty," Renee Zellweger plays a delusional waitress who fantasizes big screen. film that makes its actors look bad about a popular soap opera star, played by Greg Kinnear. "Nurse Betty" is a black comedy. and leaves its audience unsatisfied.

Box OFFICE "The Watcher" topped last weekend's dismal 8-IO box office with a low f Sept. $9.1 million, pushing Movie Title ahead of the other Weekend Sales Total Sales newcomer, "Nurse Betty," which earned 1. just $7.2 million. The The Watcher $ 9.1 million $ 9.1 million third major release, 2. Nurse Betty $ 7.2 million $ 7.2 million the gun-toting "The Way of the Gun" 3. Bring It On $ 6.8 million $ 44.8 million crashed in at a very 4. The Cell $ 3.6 million $ 51.3 million disappointing ninth. Industry experts have 5. Space Cowboys $ 3.3 million $ 78.8 million declared last weekend 6. What Lies Beneath $ 2.8 million $ 142.4 million to be slowest week- end in North America 7. The Art of War $ 2.5 million $ 2 5.1 million since Super Bowl 8. The Original Kings of weekend at the end of January. Thankfully, Comedy $ 2.4 million $ 31.9 million the universally 9. The Way of the Gun $ 2.2 million $ 2.2 million praised Cameron Crowe film "Almost 10. Highlander: Endgame $ 1. 9 million $ 9.1 million Famous" has a limited opening next week, Source: Yahoo! .,. which should help bol- ster receipts. Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures page 18 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, September 14, 2000

AMERICAN LEAGUE Ageless Ripken's 4 hits lead Orioles to 9-4 win

strong innings to beat the A's to get to see Pedro." Indians who loaded the bases on Dave runner past second basn and got Associated Press for the third time this season, as manager Charlie Manuel said in Martinez's bloop single. He then one that far only twice. In th!) the won. his crowded officn. "We're going mtired Carlos Delgado on a foul first . .Juan Encarnacion doubled AHI.INGTON "I don't enjoy fa<:ing these to go after Pedro tomorrow." popup and Brad Fullmer on a with one out. but was stranded Cal Hipknn had four hits and guys at all." said Milton, 0-3 in Colon (13-8) allowed two soft liner to second. both on when Bobby lligginson flind out rookie Chris Birhard drove in four previous starts. "(Jason) earned runs and six hits in . and Juan Gonzalez was called five runs as tlu~ Baltimore Giambi pn~tty much owns me. seven innings. In his last start. out on strikes. Oriolns beat tlw Texas Hangers EVf~rybody in that lineup hits me Colon was leading 3-1 and need­ White Sox 1, Tigers 0 In the sixth. Brad Ausmus sin­ 9-4 Wednesday night. good, nvnn the left-banders. It's ed one out to get through the gled and advanced on a sacri­ llipkPn's first-inning single Jim Parque combined with not a team I like facing." seventh when he told Manuel he fice, but that rally stallnd wlwn gaw him :~.0[i4 hits. moving him two relievers on a five-hit Jacque Jones homered and was tired. shutout. leading the Chicago Encarnacion grounded out and past Hod Carew into 1 Sth place drove in three runs as the Twins lligginson lined out. on tlw r.arPPr list. Hipken later White Sox to a victory ovnr the stopped thnir three-game losing moved past Hobin Yount for Yankees 3, Blue Jays 2 . stmak. Hoger Clemens gave the New Frank Thomas and Ilarold 12th plarP in all-time doublos Gil Heredia ( 14-1 I). who with [iS4. York Yankees conf'idnnce. Baines hit back-to-back doublns Angels 8, Devil Rays 4 pitched a complete game in his Mariano Hivr.ra gave them wor­ with two outs in the first inning Hookie Adam Kennedy hit a Birhard has nitH' honwrs and prnvious start, lasted just four 26 Hills in 42 games since he ries. for the only run the White Sox thn~e-run homnr - his sncond innings Wednesday. lie allowed Clemens. on another of the needed as they won for the fifth <:onser:utivn three-HBI ganw - was arquirnd in a trade with tho four runs - three earned - on St. Louis Cardinals on July 29. dominating streaks that have time in seven games. and Darin Erstad drove in two Pight hits. marked his career. won his Parqur. (12-6) gave up live hits runs as the Analwim Angels raJ­ ... Birhard hit a two-run double "If I miss location, I'm going to in tlw lirst. a two-run single in ninth consecutive decision, over seven innings, only the sec­ lind from four runs down for a get hurt and that's exactly what pitching shutout ball into the ond time in his last nine starts victory over thf' Tampa Bay th1~ third and add!'d a saeriliro happnnnd," Heredia said. "It's flv in the fourth. flp also was hit eighth inning to lead the New that hr. has gone at least seven. Devil Hays. frustrating. A loss like this takes York Yankees. He struck out four and walkod Hamon Ortiz ((J-5) allowPd by a pitrh in tlw sixth. it toll on you. We've had good Rivera. though. had a shaky none. four runs - thn~e eanwd - Tflf' Oriolt~s won for tlw lirst starting pitching until today." tim!' in six ganws at Texas this eighth and a shaky ninth bd'ore ThP IPft-hander. who has bePn and six hits in six-plus innings. season. holding on. inconsistent since the All-Star lie walked three and struck out l'at Happ (H-I I I allownd four Indians 10, Red Sox 3 "It doesn't bother me at all." break. won for only the third six. runs and l'ivP hits ovPr [i 2-3 With Pedro waiting in the Hivr.ra said. "I feel strong. I feel time in 11 starts. fie was 8-2 One night aftPr bning hnld hit­ innings. fie had lost livl' of' his wings, the Indians needed healthy. I am healthy. That's the with a 3.81 EHA in the first half. less through four innings by pnwious six dnr.isions. Bartolo Colon to pitch like a No. bottom line. There are going to and 4-4 with a 5.01 EHA sincn. Tampa Bay's Bryan Bekar. BaltimorP s<·or!'d thme limns I startm·. be games like this. You just bat­ Bob Howry pitchnd a hitless Anaheim managed only onP hit in thP lirst ofT rookiP Hyan Glynn And instead of complaining tle. and like today. come out eighth and Keith Foulke worked through the f'irst four against (5-4) on Hichard's two-run dou­ about his shoulder being son), ahead." a perfect ninth for his 30th save Cory Lidle - Kennedy's loadon· ble and Brook Fordycp's BBI his knee aching or his defense While he dominated in con­ in 35 chanct~s and eighth in a bunt single in tlw third. singiP. deserting him. that's exactly verting 44 of 49 save ehan<:es row. But tlw AngPls nruptPd for liw AftPr Texas got a run in tlw what Colon did. last year. this season batters JefT Weaver (9-14) took the runs in thn f'il'th to takf' a 5-4 st•rond on Bill llasPlman's Hill Colon pitched seven strong have bnr.n able to foul on· pitch­ loss. Detroit's seventh in eight lead. knocking out Lidle 12-(,) doubiP. Hirhard's two-run singlP innings and Manny Hamirez es to stay alive and bloop hits games. Weavnr gave up onP run with l'ivP ronspcutive onf'-out in thP third madP it [i-1. Busty homered and drove in four runs. over the infield. on four hits and two walks. hits. GrPPr hit a two-run doub!P in lnading the Indians to a critical "Hr.'s struggled a littln bit as of striking out three in seven ThP right-hander walked Troy tlw BangPrs third. victory over the Boston Heel Sox. late," Toronto manager Jim innings. <;taus before giving up B1~ngiP Tlw Orioles rhasPd Glynn in Tlw victory moved Cleveland 1 Frr.gosi said, "but hn 's a pretty Parquc and Weaver were fac­ Molina's doubln and Kennedv's tlw fourth on Hipkpn's HBI sin­ 1/2 games ahead of Oakland good . and he made the ing each other for the first time ninth . Benji c;il a-nd glP. Birhard's sacrifice fly off and three up on Boston in the pitches he had to make." since the fight-marred game Hrstad followed with c.onsP<·u­ reliewr .Jonathan Johnson made AI. wild-eard race. And the tim­ Hivera's. problem Wednesday April 22 at Comiskey Park wlwn tivn doubles. tying tlw seem•. it 7-:{. ing couldn't have been better for was that his shoulder was flying 11 playPrs and coachl'~ wl're and Orlando Palmoiro's sing!P Tnxas rut tlw dPikit to 7-4 in the Indians- Pedro Martinez open in his motion. ejected. up tlw middln cfpfivnn•d Erstad the sixth on Hil'ky f.pcfep's run­ will start for the Heel Sox on "He was a littlP f'rustratPd The White Sox rnduced th1~ir with the go-ahead run. scoring triple Thursday night. after the game." Yankees man­ magic numbnr to dinch tlw AL ThP Angels inrreasPd tlw Martinez is H-0 in his career ager said. Central to 12. margin to S-4 during a thl'l'<'­ against Cleveland and will be Clemens {13-G) left af'ter Jose Chicago lnl't finlder Chris run sixth that included HBI sin­ Twins 7, Athletics 6 pitching in Jacobs Field for the Cruz Jr. doubled leading ofT the Singleton robbnd Damion Easley gins by Erstad and (;il, who had Eric Milton dm~sn't like pitch­ first time since April 30 when he eighth. Mirkey Morandini sin­ of' a home run with one out in three hits. Kennody. who was ing against the Oakland hit Hobcrto Alomar and was gled Cruz home and Shannon the third. with a perfectly timod walk1~d intentionally, took third Athletics. flp'fl tako the results. susp!mdr.d for five gam1~s. Stewart singled. leaping catch at the eight-foot on Gil's hit to right and c.ontin­ though. "Tomorrow's tho rubber Jeff Nelson struck out Alex fence in left-center. ued home when Stev1~ Cox mis­ Milton ( 13-9) pitched 5 113 match and all of you are going Gonzalez and in rame Hivera, The Tigers did not advance a played thn ball for an error.

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Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 19 MAJOR LEAGUE - Canseco settles into role as Yankees' DH

Tampa Bay. in the world to a bum, washed ter, but Torre made it sound as Williams and Paul O'Neill. Associated Press He was 3-for-3 with three RB!s up," he said. ''I've been through if the 36-year-old player is a Canseco hasn't ·been to the and three runs scored in so much in the game, more shoo-in because he's a power playoffs since 1990, when he NEWYOHK Tuesday night's 10-2 win over probably than anybody else." threat. helped Oakland go to the World In a corner of the NflW York Toronto. and was back in the Yankees manager Joe Torre "Even when he doesn't swing Series for the third straight year. YanknBs' clubhouse. Jose lineup at designated hitter was surprised when his general the bat," Torre said. He was "shocked" to find out Cansnco got up from his chair, Wednesday night. manager, Brian Cashman, As a DH. Canseco partly fills that the Yankees had claimed and made a proclamation. "I didn't expect to play today. I claimed Canseco, a move made the void caused by Darryl him, giving him another shot at ''I'm going for the record," he don't take it for granted," to prevent him going to a team Strawberry's season-long sus­ postseason play. said. "Most DL trips with 500 Canseco said before the Yankees could later battle pension. Strawberry hit three "I want to be in the lineup home runs." Wednesday's game. "You have for the AL pennant. homers against Baltimore in the every day," he said. "I want to CansBco. who has 446 homers players here who arc everyday It's turned into a pleasant sur­ 1996 playoffs, and two in the help the team, day in, day out. and 11 stinLo.; on the disabled list. players and do a great job at it." prise. adding pop to an offense postseason last year. one against I'm a proven power hitter. If I'm is hitting .289 with. six homers Humble one moment. he can that's slumped in several Texas, another against Boston. not in the game, I don't feel I'm and 18 HBis in 76 at-baL'i since be among baseball's most boast­ stretches. Canseco says he Torre also remembered how contributing." Aug. 7. when the YankBes ful the next. doesn't know if he'll be picked Strawberry pinch hit and walked If not for injuries, Canseco, not daimed him on waivers from ''I've been from the best player for the 25-man postseason ros- against Greg Ken Griffey Maddux in the Jr. and Mark eighth inning of "''ve been from the McGwire, last year's best player in the might be the Do you want to go to World Series world to a bum, person aiming opener, giving washed up." for Hank Disney World? New York two Aaron's on and no outs career home as it overcame Jose Canseco run record of a 1-0 deficit to Yankees' DH 755. His bio is Enter the Notre Dame beat the Braves like a trip vs Navy SUB contest 4-1. through a so you can win the "As opposed to Darryl, where medical dictionary. Darryl is definitely one-sided as Canseco fractured his left hand Student Travel Package to facing right-handers (only), in 198 9, had a protruding disc in that includes: Canseco has played every day," his back in 1990. a sore shoulder Torre said. in 1992. a torn right elbow liga­ A Two-person gift certificate That makes it likely both ment in 1993, a groin strain and for N D vs Navy game tickets, Canseco and Glenallen Hill will rib injury in 1995, a strained hotel accomadations, and be on the postseason roster, with right hip flexor and a ruptured one DHing and the other pinch disc in 1996, back spasms in two-day Disney World hitting. David Justice will be the 1997, a herniated disc in 1999 Theme Park Passes! third , joining Bernie and a strained left heel this year. Look for us on September 13th & 14th at the Dining Halls and in Lafortune NFL It's S2.00 to buy a ticket & you may buy as many chances as you'd like Former Jet Gastineau sentenced to prison

assault in October 1998. So, Associated Press he was ordered to spend a year in a treatment center but NEW YORK Former Jets star Mark left after about four months, Gastineau was sentenced prosecutors said. Wednesday to 18 months in Gastineau's lawyer. Sharyn jail for failing to complete an Stein, asked the judge to give anger-management course the former defensive lineman another chance to straighten after hitting his estranged wife. out his life. "He's a changed man," she said. Gastineau admitted in May that he had violated terms of But Manhattan criminal his probation following a court Judge A. Kirke Bartley guilty plea to misdemeanor told Gastineau, "I have given you beyond a second and third chance." • The problems grew out of Gastineau's flouting of a 1998 court order of protection to stay away from his estranged wife., Patricia Schorr. She obtained the order after the 6-foot-5 Gastineau. who was 270 pounds during his football career, hit her and

~ threatened her with a glass cocktail table. ~ Campus Shoppes- S.R. 23 - 219.243.9446 ·~r·. In April this year. Bartley '!!' ordered Gastineau to spend a year at the Hope Christian t... ._ ...... ·:·:. .J Center, a Bronx treatment facility. If he failed to finish We have TONS of posters, the program. the judge said. Gastineau was "surely" going regular and subway size, to jail. .. On Aug. 22. the 43-year-old to decorate your rooml Gastineau walked away from the program after threatening another resident. Assistant ~ ...... District Attorney Angela Albertus said. In court Wednesday, she reminded the judge of his warning to the .. $2.00 OFF. former football star. Gastineau. who played for the Jets for 10 years and Posters retired in 1988. had previous­ ly been found guilty of assault in 1984 and was sentenced to orbitrecords.com ...... ~ orbitused.com three years' probation in 1993 on drug charges. page 20 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, September 14, 2000

- NFL Williams will play Patriots rotate linemen tr.ed. start of tlw soason." lklichick despite foot injury Associated Press The Patriots' ofl'ensivc linr. said. "You just don't walk in. so blockr.d poorly in an opnning I think it's a littl<1 bit ol' a FOXBOHO. Mass. 21-16 loss to Tampa Bay. New procc~ss." season game. The high ank!P. New England's Drew Bledsoe England's line improved in Trying to inncasn mobility Associ•tcd Press sprain he suffernd in that will never be mistakPn for Steve Monday night's 20-19 loss to the has bcPn a process for BlcdsoP. game botherP.d him for weeks. Young, a quarterbac.k who New York Jets. as coach Bill who realizes lw'll ncvnr be a NJ·:W OHLEANS lie also was slownd by a weavcd through dn!'enders as a Br.lichir,k eontinur.d to rotate running thnmt likc Minnesota N!'w Orlnans Saints running hyperextended elbow and turf runner and picked them apart players while seeking tlw bnst quarterback Dauntc CulpnppPr. baek Hicky Williams thought toe. with pass<~s. combination. who facns tlw Patriots on lw had bruisnd his foot in tlw IIi s I at c s t injury did not But if the lumbering Bledsoe Hight tar.klr. Grant Williams Sunday. first ganw of till' sPason. It spark anxiety. howevnr. keeps getting slammnd to thn didn't think the changes dra­ BIPdsoP has bcc•n working on was painful. but hn kept play­ "I prartir,ed all week," ground. he r.ould end up like matically a!Tec:tcd thr. line's improving his footwork with ing. Williams said. "It didn't stop Young. who retired after last r,ohcsiveness. But thn linn quarterbacks coach Dick Turns out. Williams actually me from doing anything so I season following his fourth r,on­ allowed two sacks wh<~n the Bchbcin. rhippPd a bonn in the foot. It's wasn't worried about it." eussion in three years. Patriots were trying to ovnrtakc "Dons it mean I'm going to still painful. but he still plans Going into Sunday's game. ''J'vp always subsr.ribed to the New York on their last drivn. become a scrambling quarll•r• to kN~p playing. Williams is No.7 in thP. NFL in philosophy that. as a po<~ket Williams and left tarkl<1 Bruce bar.k?" Blcdsoe said. "No. I "It's not that bad; it's noth­ rushing. eighth in thn NFC in passer. I've got my spot in thn Armstrong. a 14-ycar veteran. think Pvnrybody rncogniws that ing I'm worried about." total vards from sr,rimmage. por,ket and my linemen need to missed most of training camp I have sonw limitations in that Williams said WPdnesday. "I Although Williams has not know where I am and I still with physical problPms. In his area. But tlwrn an~ limns wlwn havPn 't missPd a praetir.e. I rushed for 100 yards this sea­ believe that that's true," searr,h for consistency against I can buy a little bit mon• tinw haven't miss1•d any work. I'm son - he had 50 yards on 24 Bledsoe said Wednesday. "It the Jets. Belkhick startPd Sale and trv and makl' sonwthing not going to miss a game." carries against San Diego last makes it easier for them to do lsaia. a guard who he had out or" a play that's broken Tlw 19

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page 22 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, September 14, 2000

NATIONAL LEAGUE Maddux blanks Marlins for second straight shutout

Bruce Chen (7 -21 got the win into effect last Friday. first career complete game. place Atlanta in the Nl. East and Associated Press despite pitching just live innings Jim Edmonds followed with a In his last outing. against the 41 U2 ahead of /\rizona for the ATlANTA and allowing the Expos to take a single. and he and pinch-runner , Bell walked wild card. (;reg Maddux pitchP.d a four­ 5-2 lead. Guerrero's two-run Placido Polanco scored on Will four and gave up live runs in 1 With one out in the 1Oth. Mike hitter for his second consecutive homer in the first ended Chen's Clark's double. 1-3 innings. Bordick singled off Juan shutout as the Atlanta Braves streak of 20 2-3 scoreless The Pirates tied it in the first Chris Stynes had a two-run Acevedo (3-7). Joe McEwing blanked the Florida Marlins 4-0 innings. on Keith Osik's two-run double. horner and Sean Casey drove in then hit a popup to shallow cen­ Wednesday night. Chen gave up seven hits and Both runs were unearned two with a single and a sacrifice ter and slammnd his bat to thn The Braves. who snapp1)d a walked two. lie ended his of because of second baseman fly. ground. But there was confusion thrPe-gamn losing skid. main­ four no-decisions and gave him Craig Paquette's two-out error. The Heds batted around in thn between Mark J.orntta tairwd a two-game lead over his lirst victory since Aug. 6. Infield grounders by Ankiel third. scoring four runs. to and center fielder Marquis Nnw York in tlw NL East. Th1~ Lira (4-61 made an emergency and J.D. Drew scored runs in chasP. Jamie Arnold {0-31. who Grissom. and the ball fell in !'or Mets beat Milwaukee 4-1 in I 0 start after Trey Moore felt stilT­ the fourth for a 4-2 IP.ad. Ray allowed five runs on seven hits a single. innings. ness in his shoulder. Lankford had an RBI single in and a walk in 2 2-3 innings. "I called for thn ball about the Maddux I 17-SI pitched his Lira. who had pitched an the fifth and Mike Matheny hit a Chicago took a 1-0 lead in the same time he did," Grissom third shutout of the season in inning out of the bullpen during sacrifice fly to make it 6-2. first when Eric Young walked. said. "lie just couldn't get out of running his scoreless streak to Monday's doubleheader. worked Edmonds singled in a run in stolP. second, advanced to third the way and I pulled up because 22 2-3 innings for his third four-plus innings. He gave up the sixth and on Ricky Gutierrez' sacrifice I didn't want to run into him." straight win. It was his fifth six runs and 10 hits. hit a two-run homer. his 12th, in bunt and scored on Sammy One out later. Payton hit a wmplete game and 99th of his In the lifth. Lira hit his second the seventh. Dunston came into Sosa's double to left field. first-pitch slider over thn fence career. homer of the sP.ason to give the the game to replace Lankford, Shane Andrews led off thP. in left-center !'or his I 4th The l'our-tinw NL Cy Young Expos a 5-2 lead. who slightly strained his right second with his 11th homer, his horner. winner faced only 29 batters. Lira IP.ft in the fifth after the hamstring running to first base first since May 11 after bning on Payton pumpnd his fist and giving up singles to Henry lirst four hitters reached base. on a single. the disabled list more than three yelled out. "YP.ah. baby!" aftPr Bodrigu1~z in the fifth. Luis capped by Bolen's triple and an Adrian Brown hit BBI singles months with a herniated disk the ball clean~d the wall. llis Castillo in tlw sixth and pinch­ HBI single by Burrell that tied it in the fifth and seventh for that required surgery. teammatns rushed out of' the hitl!H· Mark KoLo.;ay in thP. ninth. at 5. Pittsburgh. The Pirates had the dugout and mobbed him. letting and a doubln by Mike L!JWP.Il in bases loaded with nobody out in Mets 4, Brewers 1 out two weeks of frustration. tlw nighth. lie also hit Mike Cardinals 9, Pirates 5 the eighth but got just one run After putting New York in an "I thought I got out in front of Bedmond with a pitch in tlw Mark McGwire. hobbled by a when John Wehner grounded early hole with a misplay in the it and he was going to catch it." third. Hodriguez and Kotsay sore knee, grounded a single into a double play. field. Jay Payton atoned before Payton said. "But then it started wl'rP Prased on double plays into the lnft-field r.orner that it got too late. _carrying. It donsn 't matter how and Cas Lillo was caught stnaling. started a two-run l'irst inning Reds 13, Cubs 3 Payton scored the tying run in wn win the ganws. WI' nePd any Maddux threw SIJ pitrlws. (>0 and sent St. Louis over Benito Santiago had !'our hits the ninth inning and hit a game­ win we 1·.an get right now." !'or strilws. got 12 groundball l'itl-;burgh. and Hob BP.Il made a strong case winning thme-run homer in thr /\l'ter managing only four hits outs. slrurk out !'our and walked Tlw Cardinals rompleted a for returning to the starting I Oth as the struggling M!'ts ral­ in eight scornless innings 110111'. thren-ganw swrep and cut thnir rotation as Cincinnati beat lied to brat Milwaukee. against Jel"f D'Amico, Payton !Pel Tlw llravPs srorl'd a run in magir numbrr for dinrhing thr Chicago. "I didn't want that mw ball to o f'f' tlw n i n t h w i l h a d o u b I n tlw SP<'o!HI wlwn Chipper Jorws Nl. Central to six over Santiago drovP in !'our runs. be the determining factor," against Curtis l.<>skanir and brokP an 0-J'or-1 :~ slump with a Cincinnati. including a two-run homer. and Pavton said ol' Hie hie Sexson's movPd to third on a groundout. single. took scrond on a walk to Pittsburgh lost its l'ifth in a Alex Orhoa also had four hits for nr"st-inning flyball that fell "Thn guy who really changPd Andres <;alarraga, third on a fly row. the Heds. brtwePn him and Lenny llarris the whole gamP was Payton." to right by Brian Jordan. and Hick Ankicl (9-7) matched his Bell !7 -71. demoted al'ter fail­ for an error that lnd to thP onlv BrPwnrs manager Davey I.op<>s sron~d on KPith l.orkhart's sac­ career high !'or with ing to complete the second run until the ninth. · said. "lie hits tlw ball tlw otlwr rilirn fly oil Byan I>PmpstPr ( 12- 1 I in 6 2-3 innings. I)() has two inning last Wednesday. started After waiting night innings. way in tlw ninth inning. That 101. wins in his last 10 starts. both in place of Scott Williamson. Payton made sure it wasn't. was a good piecn of' hitting." ovl'r Pittsburgh. who has two broken toes in his leading the Mcts to tlwir second AftPr Mikn Piazza struck out f'o r t l11• f'o u r-t h tim~~. Bob in Phillies 15, Expos 5 McGwire. listed in the starting right foot. straight win after starting the Ventura lined a doubll' to ll'f't Srott l!oiPn hit t1..vo triples and linPup as the Cardinals' short­ Bell allowed six hits, walked month 2-8. Nnw York entered finld. Ventura had bnPn in a 2- a doubll'. driving in thn~n runs stop and No. 2 hitter. singled off three and strurk out six in his the day two games behind lirst- f(n·-31 slump. as l'hiladPiphia lwat thn Todd Hitrhic (8-S). t\lontn·al. Thn ball rolled into the cornnr Pat llun·pll honwrPd and also and would have been a double drovP in thrnP runs for the for most players. MrGwire is l'hillins. who f'inislwd with 19 slowed by patrlla tendinitis in hits in t.hPir higlwst-scoring his right knee. a condition that ganw of' tlw sPason. sidelined him for morl' than two Vladimir· CuPJTI'ro hit his :Hth months. h o nw run I' or Mont r P a I and Bncausc MrGwirc is unabl<~ to pildlf'r Fnlip!' Lira also connnrt­ play in the liPid. manager Tony Pd. l.a Bussa has manipulatPd his II II Bol!'n, who bPgan tlw ganw linPup to gnt him to the plate in with only tlm•p triples this sea­ the first inning of six consecu­ son. tripled to spark a live-run tive road ganws. The slugging New Meetings for lil'lh inning. Tlw l'hillies addPd first baseman is 2-for-5 with a !'our mon• runs in tlw sixth. honw run since tlw plan went Students and Young Adults.

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Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 23 I l j NASCAR ..,. lI Winless Waltrip will race for Earnhardt tea01 in 2001 I

"The pressure is on him to Since Earnhardt Jr. has two a Busch car since 1982, but is Cup next season, Earnhardt Associated Press win," Earnhardt said. "But why wins this season and Park has giving it up next season in said. he hasn't won a race yet is cir­ one, Waltrip said he realized favor of three Winston Cup "There will be other opportu­ MOOHESVILLE, N.C. cumstantial. He has a lot of what would be expected of cars. nities for Ron," Earnhardt said. Winless in 454 Winston Cup credits to his name and the mix him. Waltrip now leads all Since the engines and setups "I just felt that going with Mike racos. Mir:hael Waltrip is is there, so he is definitely active drivers with the most differ between Busch and was the best thing to do. I was exp1~cting to finally find his way going to be a winner." starts without a victory. Winston Cup cars, Earnhardt more comfortable with a veter­ to Victory Lane as an employee Waltrip, younger brother of "I can't tell you how great I said he wasn't able to gain an. I don't like to wait too long of Dale Earnhardt lnr:. three-time Winston Cup cham­ feel," Waltrip said. "The track anything by having a Busch to win." Waltrip. ranked fifth on the pion Darrell Waltrip and a 15- record here with Dale Jr. and car. Now that the third team Earnhardt and Waltrip had all-time list of racing futility, year NASCAR veteran, will join Steve Park being successful, I will be a Winston Cup car, he discussed merging earlier this becanw the third Winston Cup Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Steve think we're going to be a win­ said all three teams can season, but no deal was ever drivPr in ThP Intimidator's Park as drivers for DEI. ner before too long." exchange information. worked out. Waltrip then garage Wndnesday when Earnhardt, a seven-time The move signifies an end to Ron Hornaday, who now dri­ agreed in July to a one-year Earnhardt announr,ed he Winston Cup champion, drives Earnhardt's 18-year associa­ ves the Busch car for DEI, contract extension with his would nxpand his team in his Chevrolet Monte Carlo for tion with the Busch Grand wasn't considered to stay in the current owner, Jim Smith of 2001 . Richard Childress Hacing. National Series. DEI has fielded car when it moves to Winston Ultra Motorsports.

NFL Reed steps in for injured Westbrook

"We looked at him in the pre­ Associated Press season, he showed good quick­ ness," Turner said. "He separat­ Federal-Mogul believes it. takes vvell-educated. ASHBURN, Va. challenged employees to achieve real corporate ed from people underneath, and Andre Reed will get a chance he's obviously an experienced success. This is vvhy F-M places college graduates to show he can still play when joining our team into exciting positions vvithin guy. You go with a guy who's a grovvth-focused vvork environment based upon Washington plays Dallas on played in games, and who's our Core Values of teamvvork. mutual respect. and Monday night. made plays." trust. It's also the reason vve offer exceptional "Everybody thought I was Reed did much of that in employee training. competitive benefits. a gone, that I kind of jumped Buffalo, where he played from progressive vvork/life balance and business culture ship," said Reed, the receiver 1985 to 1999. He had 941 recep­ designed to promote success on the job and who signed a reported one-year, tions - second behind Jerry throughout your personal pursuits. $500,000 I Rice's NFL I deal with the record of 1.214 Career Fair Redskins on "The coaches are l ·Tuesday. SepteiT1ber "19th & VVednesday. - and 13,095 ~ l September 20th. Tuesday. confident I can step receiving yards, I I Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. "The coaches in and do the job." the fourth-high­ are confident est total in NFL I I can step in history. The and do the Andre Reed seven-time Pro job, and Redskins receiver Bowl selection l Let's succeed together that's what played in four I'm going to Super Bowls. d 0. " He caught 52 Washington acquired the 16- passes for 536 yards last season. year veteran after Michael But his performance was over­ Westbrook went down with a shadowed by the emergence of season-ending knee injury Eric Moulds (65 catches, 994 Checlf out more about the... Sunday in a 15-10 loss to yards, seven touchdowns) and Detroit. Redskins coach Norv Peerless Price (31 catches, 393 Turner said Irving Fryar will yards, three touchdowns). Reed Sacrament of Confirmati step into Westbrook's starting asked to be released after the role, and that Reed will be used season with a year left on his I in three- and four-wideout sets. contract, and the Bills put him I Are you a baptized Catholic who has received Albert Connell is the other on waivers with Bruce Smith l starter. and Thurman Thomas. I their first Communion but has never been Confirmed? I I I ' i j I Are you wondering whether you need to be Confirmed I to get married in the Catholic Church? I Entry-Level l I Would you lilfe to prepare for Confirmation with other Notre Engineering Opportunities Dame students who are dedicated to growing in their faith? The Metropolitan Water ReclaJIUlti.on District of Greater Chicago is one of the largest Bnd most efficjent wastewater treatment agencies in the world. The District is seekina qualified individuals in It's not too late to join the the fields of Civil. Electrical, Env1roJUnental. Confirmation Preparation Program! Mechanical and Structural Engineering. Please stop by our booth during the College of Engineerine Cucer Fair being held on September 20m and 21"' and talk with members o! our Engineering and Human Resources Siegfried Chapel Departments about exciting arid rewarding on Tuesday, Sept. 19th career civil service opportunities with the District. and to arrange an interview. Tile Dislrict at 7:00pm will be conductin~ interviews on September 21st. A copy of your college transcript a.nd resu:rne are requested. For more info: ~ All positions are located in the Chicago metro Fr. John Conley, CSC or a~ area at one of our seven treatment plants or at 6 our main office located just west of Michigan Amy Seamon at 631-3389 · .. Ave. or stop by the office of Campus Ministry If you are unable to attend the Career Day please in 112 Badin Hall with any questions. call us at (312) 751-5100 or visit our website at vvv.rw.m~Tdgc.dst.il.us. An Equal Opportunity Employer lVl/FID

·~ ... 'W':, -...... ,,...... ------... -·--·------~------. ·-· -·- page 24 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, September 14, 2000

OLYMPICS NFL IOC confident in Sydney plan Terunates say Aikinan problems." ning the show." Associated Press Meanwhile. Samaranch said Samaranch said he was his wife, Maria Theresa. was ill unaware of the report and r,ould will return Sunday SYDNEY. Australia and would not travel to Sydney. not comment. Sydney is ready to put on a He invited Fraser. who won four "We are not very worried." he Associated Press great show that won't be tar­ Olympic gold medals and four said. "We are used to read. to nished bv the transport prob­ silver medals in swimming in see rumors. and so on that are IHVING, Toxas lems and ·taekv street look of the the 1960s. to be his guest at not true." Troy Aikman's teammates believe he'll be back in thr 1996 Olympics. IOC Atlant~t Friday's ceremony. Samaranch said a test for the starting lineup for the Dallas Cowboys' next game. president Juan Antonio "She accepted." he said. "She banned drug EPO - which Coa.ch Dave Campo, however. wasn't ready after .i ust mw Samararwh said Thursday. will be the Olympic first lady." boosts endurance by stimulating practice to say for sure that Aikman will be the starting At a news conference on the Fraser has been one of the the production of red blood cells quarterback Monday night at Washington. eve of' his final games as most frequently mentioned can­ - has been "successful as a "He looked good today." Campo said. "We're very fortunatP International Olympic didates for the honor of lighting deterrent" since it was intro­ to have an extra day. That gives us a little bit mon~ !Walua­ Committee leader. Samaranch the Olympic flame, but that now duced for out-of-competition tion time." also announced he was inviting appeared unlikely. controls before and during the Aikman returned to the practice field Wednflsday for the Australian swimming icon Dawn The Salt Lake City bribery Sydney Games. first time since suffering his eighth r,areer concussion in the Fraser to sit with him at Friday scandal boiled over again at IOC Critics say the test is ineffec­ season-opening 41-14 loss to Philadelphia on Sept. 3. lie night's opening eeremony - meetings this week, with Utah tive because it detects the use of split snaps with Handall Cunningham during the nearly two­ apparently ruling her out as the organizers warning the IOC to EPO going back only a few days. hour workout. final torchbearer. brace for the release of thou­ while another test - bypassed "Troy's Troy. He came out there. threw the ball around UndPr often hostile question­ sands of pages of documents by the IOC - could trace the and looked like his old self," said tight ond Dave LaFleur. ing. Samaranch also defended related to the government inves­ drug back as far as 28 days. Center Mark Stepnoski said Aikman didn't say anything the IOC's anti-doping Pll'orts and tigation. "The most important thing for about headaches and seemed like himself during thn work­ his intervention on behalf' of Samaranch said the IOC us is to make sure the first tests out. Olympic~ officials accused of w o u I d we do stand up to "I don't exper,t him not to play," tight end Jackin Harris criminal activity. work with the barrage of said. "It was good to see him back out there. moving around "Sydney is ready." Samaranch "Sydney is very Salt Lake legal challenges I and throwing the ball." said. "The IOC is very much sat­ different from Atlanta. organizing expect will arise," Campo wouldn't say if Aikman and Cunningham would isfied and confident that committee The look of the games said IOC vice continue sharing time in practice this week. and wasn't rom­ arrangements are in place for a president president Dick mitted when he would decide who will play at Washington. Vfll'Y highly successful games. is fantastic. " M i t t Pound. head of Cunningham completed 24 of 34 passes for 243 yards and The enthusiasm of the people is Romney to the new World three touchdowns while replacing Aikman at Arizona. I outstanding. The weather see if the Juan Antonio Samarach Anti-Doping "I don't have a timetable. I'd like to have everything-done should be line." documents IOC president Agency. "Science by Thursday, but obviously you can't do that all of thn time." "Sydney is very dill'erent from J can be may improve over Campo said. "We have an extra day. so we'll wail and son Atlanta." hf' added. "The look of screened time so we can and make a decision when it's good to make a docision." the games is fantastic. with ban­ for any false information ahead get a better reach back" Aikman refused to talk to reporters. which is not unusual rwrs and so on. But wait until of their release. Samaranch also faced several on Wednesdays at the Valley Hanch practice facility. liP Oct. 1 to know my impression of "To attack members of the questions about Mohamad spoke Monday. saying that he intendod to play this week. the games." IOC only with rumors not facts "Bob" Hasan, the IOC member "The plan is to play this week. go through the week of Samaranch and the IOC were -we cannot accept." he said. from Indonesia who is under practice and see how things go. But right now that's the idoa. critical of' the "look of the One member. Lambis detention in Jakarta awaiting unless symptoms occur throughout the w1111k once wr, gnt out games" in Atlanta. where parts Nikolaou of Greece. said the IOC trial next week on corruption and start working out." Aikman said Monday. of the dtv were taken over by should move its 2002 general charges. Aikman had nausr,a and headaches after suffering tho lat­ street ve~dors and out-of-con­ assembly from Salt Lake to Samaranch wrote to the est concussion in his 12-year NFL career. During individual trol commercialism. Tight Lausanne. Switzerland. But Indonesian president earlier this restrictions werP placed on such workouts last weok. Aikman had heada!'.hes which he rhar­ Samaranch said, "The session of year on behalf of Hasan. The acterized as "minor." but said he had no othor recurring activities in Sydney. Februarv 2002 will b1~ in Sal1 Indonesian government criti­ effects. Like Atlanta. Sydney has Lake City." cized Samaranch this week for After practic;e Wednesday. Campo said he wasn't awaro of Pxpericnced problems with the Samaranch, who steps down trying to get Hasan released to Aikman having any morn headaches sinc:e then. Olympic transport system. in July after 21 years as roc attend the Sydney Games. Dozens of drivers quit the bus president. was asked whether service, saying they were angry he would attend the Salt Lake about working conditions and Games. timetables. "If I am invited, yes," he said. OKTOBERFEST- 2000 But Samaranch said he had "I am waiting for an invitation." been assured by Sydney Samaranch was asked about a Olympics Minister Michael report from a corruption watr,h­ "Fun for Sponsored by Knight that "transport will not dog group called Transparency be a problem during the International. At a news r,onfer­ games." ence Wednesday in Berlin. Peter German-American "Every games is the same." Eiger. chairman of the group, Samaranrh said. "At the begin­ said, "On the eve of the Olympic ning we havo transportation Games. it is worth recording National Congress problems. Yes. they have prob­ that some of the leaders of the the lnms. I think they are solving the bribe-scarred IOC are still run-

whole family" OutreachND at the University of Notre Dame September 16 *LIVE ENTERTAINMENT: AL NOWAK+ HIS EDELWEISS Meeting Thursday at 8:30. ORCHESTRA *GERMAN FOOD AND DRINKS SERVED ALL NIGHT *FESTIVAL QUEEN New Members Welcome *SOUVENIRS *ENTRANCE DONATION: $7.00 (FOOD NOT INCLUDED)

.., For information go to: DFV GERMAN CLUB www.outreachnd.org 1541 PRARIE AVENUE or contact: SOUTH BEND, INDIANA Doors open at 6:00 p.m. - Close at 11 :00 p.m. [email protected] Reservations not necessary but can be made at 291-5186 For more information, call 272-8163 Thursday, September I 4, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 25

I I I NFL I WOMEN'S SOCCER -~ I I I I I Bush brothers star in pros, college I Hawkeyes suffer injuries, I I was out there making plays. make plays. He finally did it I By SCOTT WALLIN Whenever you're making Saturday night. I don't think it make changes to lineup Cemral Florida Future plays, it's fun. I just went out was really a surprise. It was l I and focused on what I had to just a matter of when he was wasn't in any kind of soccer OVIEDO. Fla. do. working on my technique. going to do it." By LAURA PODOLAK shape when she came back," It was a pretty good week­ working on my alignments. It matters little to Chizik who The Daily Iowan Logan said. "Her injury is defi­ l I end for the Bush brothers. going out there and just think­ starts, but he said it's impor­ nitely a loss to the team." D1win Bush. a member of the ing about making big plays. tant to the players to achieve In addition to the start of the The loss of players to injury St. Louis Rams. returned a "It gave me a lot of confi­ that status. Each cornerback Big Ten season this weekend, has caused a couple of the fumble 15 yards in the fourth dence to let me know I can go will see an equal amount of the Iowa women's soccer team players to engage in a kind of quarter for a touchdown to out and get the job done. I just game time, so Chizik makes it faces another challenge in the game of musical chairs to help help his team defeat Seattle, have to go out and perform simple: whoever performs the e a r 1 y fill in the vacant spots. The 37-34. every game." best gets to start the next going of two most noteworthy changes His younger brother Davin Defensive Coordinator Gene week. Bush has no problem the.2000 have been the shuffling (pronounced Day-vin) also Chizik, who oversees the sec­ with this approach. season around of senior Linzy helped his team. the University ondary, said Bush had the sort "(Chizik) said you just have Wolman and sophomore of Central Florida, win a of evening everyone felt he to go out there and make the injuries. Jamie Jorgensen. game. was capable of having. Bush's best of it and make plays," Since Wolman began the season Bush had an interception, career has been steady, yet Bush said. "That's all he's con­ t h e as a forward and sometimes a five pass breakups and a unspectacular. He started 11 cerned about. lt makes both of begin­ midfielder, but when ·the forced fumble. He also had a games last year and made 39 us go out there and play even ning of defense started to thin out nifty special tackles and harder because both of us the sea- Jorgensen before the St. Louis game on teams play "! enjoyed it because six pass want to start. lt makes us want son Aug. Sept. 10, Logan looked to whr.n he breakups, one to go out there and make 25, the Hawkeyes have seen Wolman to fill in at a defen­ walked the I was out there more than he something happen." three of their starting defend­ sive position. fine linP making plays." had Saturday. Besides the competition fac­ ers go down with injuries. "Linzy has been the biggest betwnen the Chizik says tor, Chizik also likes the atti­ First it was freshman Katie change. lt is a give-and-take end zonn and consistency tude he sees from his corners. Poole, who suffered a season­ situation. We lose a lot with 1-yard line Davin Bush always has Bush has maintained a positive ending stress fracture in her her in the back because we after fielding UCF cornerback been Bush's outlook even if he has to battle foot, and will probably red­ lose an attacking dimension, a UCF punt. biggest hur- an inexperienced underclass­ shirt this season. but she gives us what we need With the ball dle, but he men for playing time. Attitude, Next, it was sophomore in the back," Logan said. in his hands saw that Chizik said, is half the battle. Teesa Price, who suffered a Wolman said that the most and his momentum carrying change in fall camp when he "Davin's always been a great second-degree MCL tear in important thing is "to keep the him into the end zone, he was making plays on a regular kid to work with," Chizik said. her knee during a routine rhythm going" as players go flipped the ball backward basis. Although sophomore "He's always done everything slide tackle in the Utah State down with injuries. whern a teammitte downed it Asante Samuel opened the I've asked him to do." game. "All I care about is that we to bury Northwestern State at season starting at strongside Kruczek also has been "It was a freak soccer acci­ are doing good. Whatever its 3-yard line. That play cornerback. Bush earned the impressed with Bush's mature dent. She caught it just right. helps the team," Wolman said helped UCF ding to a 9-0 lead No. 1 job against approach to the game this sea­ Something just had to give, about her position switch. as thn Demons were forced to Northwestern State and has it son. and it happened to be Teesa's The other solution has been run out the clock to halftime again for Saturday's game at "His personality changed," knee," coach Wendy Logan Jorgensen, who was slotted in after their drive stalled. Akron. Kruczek said. "I don't know said. a midfield position at the It was a performance coach "He's always had the ability what it is. He changed And finally. the last blow beginning of the season. She Mikr. Kruczek dubbed as to do some very good things," overnight. I really enjoy being was to Lindsey May, who went didn't see much action there Bush's finest at UCF. With Chizik said. "I think competi­ around him. He's grown up down with a foot injury in the because when Poole went Bush being a fifth-year senior tion always creates the best in and it's gratifying to see that." game against Iowa State last down in the first game of the corm~rback. he knows time is people. I have good competi­ Bush also has his big brother Friday. season, the team looked to running out to duplicate that tion going on at that position to offer feedback and they talk In addition to losing these Jorgensen to fill the gap in the frat morr times. but Saturdav right now. He's a guy who's often. In fact. Bush called him three key players. Joni back. gaVP him quitP a boost. · made plays in praetice and we in Seattle after Saturday's Anderson, one of the Jorgensen said that the two "That was a lot of fun," Bush continuously talk about being game to offer the details of his Hawkeves' defensive leaders positions are not extremely said. "I Pnjoyed it because I able to, on a consistent basis. evening. last season, suffered a foot different, so the change was injury last spring. Anderson not difficult for her. has yet to see the field this "The biggest difference is season because of the nagging the fact that you don't get to injury. see the goal and get into the "Her injury in the spring offense. Defending our goal is slowed down her conditioning more what I am worried this summer, and so she about," Jorgensen said. Recycle the Observer.

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAMS 201 Security Buildlna: Notre Dame, IN 46556-0397 T: (219) 631-!1881 Fn: (:!19) 631·!1711

JEHl!SJILEM INFORMATION MEETING With Fr. David Burrell, C.S.C. Julliet Mayinja, Assistant Director International Study Programs

I .7J!"O.N•JA.Y SEPTEMBER. 18, 2000 4:45P.M. 214 DEB!lRTOLO I I I I I ALL ARE WELCOME! l - I I ' ---~ ~-- ~--~

page 26 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, September 14, 2000

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL NFL Martinez to pitch amid Kicker faces Raiders in showdown

of camp. which is what I injury for tlw first time. Associated Press didn't want," ho said. "That's !<:lam. who sharns thP N I;L racial controversy why I was a littlo upsr1t." record with a (d-yard fiedd DHNVIm In his final mooting with goal. brokn two bonns in his the visitors' bullpnn madn vul­ Joe Nednny isn't asking for Grudon on the day lw was lownr baC'k whnn he was llat­ Associ a ted I' rcss murh. lin donsn't need to gar rPmarks to him bef'orn cut. Ncdnny told tho coach tnnnd on a kickoff' rl'turn kirk tho gamn-winning f'inld CLEVELJ\N D Game 5 of' the J\LCS in 19!JH. that he looked forward to Sunday against J\tlanta. MartinPz managed to block goal or even makP an impact defeating him in the future. "It was the way I landPd J\s if thPrn wasn't enough against the team that bad blood btJtWePn l'ndro out the crowd and pitched six "I remembr1r that," Grudr1n morn than anything elsn." lw' rnlnase~d him nearly three no-hit innings last Octobnr as said Wodnr1sday. "I would said. "I f'Pit something go in Marti1wz and thP CIPveland weoks ago. the Heel Sox complnted thnir just tell Jor1, the feoling's my bark and I trie1d to gnt up Indians. now this. J\s his formnr boss. J\1 improbable comeback from a mutual." and couldn't get up. My right MartinPZ Davis. would sav: "Just win. 2-0 def'ie·it to beat tlw Indians Nodnoy's history with tlw .leg was kind of numb." r P v o a I P d baby." · and advanc1~. Haidors gained him instant Wlwn Brone:os train<'~" StevP o n J\f'ter his first practicn with Martinnz dismissnd the cnJdibility with Broncos J\ntonopulos arrived on tlw WndnPsday tho Denver Broncos on that as hP taunts as fans caught up in thn coach Mike Shanahan, who f'inld. !<:lam fnarnd tlw worst. nxcitPnHmt of rooting for the Wednesday. Nednny insistnd was firod by Davis four "I told him. 'I !'an't f'ePI my got rPady hi' has no scorn to SPttln with Indians. games into his socond sPason right IPg. I !'an't movP it." lw to pitrh in the Oakland Baidnrs but "It's normal in sports to as a head coach. said. "liP was just trying to r n I i P f for madn it dear that lw would have• your fans in your honw­ Sine:e his departure, kPnp mP calmed down. I t lw B os ton loVP to beat Davis and coach town gPt on the visiting play­ Shanahan is !J-1 against tho knnw it was my back. I knPw BPd Sox Martinez Jon Gruden. d u r i n g Prs. That's how I takn it. Thcv Oakland. it wasn't anything in my ll'g. I just said somr things becaus;1 llis chancn will romn (;a Ill(' f "I think I havo a bond with just !'ouldn't movn it." s () Sunday whnn the Broncos 11- they knew I could probably Coach Shanahan." NPdnPy J\ftnr !wing taken to thP tho AL playoffs at Jawbs Finld 11 play at Oakland (2-01 in an boat up on thn CIPvnland said. "lie hospital. l~lam last Clt'tobnr. lw was showPrPd early AFC Wnst showdown. Indians." Martinnz said. s a i d . II' a rn I'd he· with rarial slurs bv sonH' fans "I want to bn able to walk "I don't pay attPntion. I 'You'ro not "/ tDant to be able had frartur<'d and rt't'PivPd wnn ks, 6-to-H. H- to-1 2. so I Pedro Martinez 0 n release in May only to f'ind unrPal. It was first impression by converting gue~ss it just dnpnnds on how Thursday himself' held captive in thP first tim!' Red Sox pitcher two 53-yard field goals in my body rc~acts to it. I just Oakland until he was cut J\ug. night. he'll practice Wednesday. Elam want to gnt on tlw f'inld as I ewPr hPard 27. surh things make his first spoke publicly about his fast as I can." start at Cleveland sincn April "They let me go at tho end and I hf~ard them hnre in Clnve Iand." 30. whon he was njPeted for lt's th<• se•cond tinw in thron hitting Indians socond hasP­ yoars that a pitcher has man Hoberto Alomar. arrusPd fans sitting in thP Martinez was suspondnd for right-fl

avid We•lls. then rn tali a tP a f'te r ClPvtd and's Charles Nagy hit Boston's Jose tD with tlw NPw York Yankons. Offerman. N said Indians fans sitting near Lmver,;itv -~ol Notre Dame ,Mendoza cOllege of Business Lecture Series Cu-"Jl"""m·cd hy the ;\lcnduza Cul!cgc uf ';Ill" inc•;,; & hllp:/ /"" ".ntf.,•tlu; -lmtalta/m~:th.r/~fll'al.~•· J>riccwalcrhc>usc('uupc•·s fuundulum

Debbie Ballou (Professor of Management, UNO) September 1 "Overview of Current E-commerce Issues"

September 15 David Overbeeke (Gen. Manager E-business, GE Aircraft Engines) Got Sports't!i "Business to Business E-commerce" ·:··> ·-:-e:. September 29 Geoff Robertson (Vice President of Engineering, mvp.com) "Starting a B2C Company"

call 1~4543~:, Michael Cullinane (Chief Financial Officer, divine interVentures) October6 "How to Value an E-business"

October 27 Rick Spurr (Senior Vice President, Entrust Technologies) "Internet Security Threats and Measures to Deal with Them"

CoUeen SulUvan (Dir. of Information Systems, Alltel Communications) November3 "Data Warehousing and Mining for Building Business Intelligence"

November 10 Reuben Slone (Vice President of Global E-business, Whirlpool) "Supply Chain Management"

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.. "'~-;.,.-•••-.,.- .. :'"..."":".~.::."" ---- -.• ~ ::·- - 4 -.-. "";, --";'-:-" --.----.---I page 28 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, September 14, 2000

I I I ..._ NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL COLLEGE SPORTS

I' I I Knight says goodbye to Indiana Commitee approves

and in every other way far out­ before you have given to bas­ Associated Press number the people that have ketball. I'll be very proud of you gambling legislation agendas that don't involve the for doing that." BLOOMINGTON, Ind. students first of all." A university spokesman called Bob Knight bid farewell to ------sponsors in both chambers Knight was fired three days it "an awfully gracious speech." Associated Press but is drawing much of its key Indiana University. saluting after he grabbed and berated "Students have always been cheering students and urging support from Hepublicans. freshman Kent Harvey, who important to him, and I'm glad WASHINGTON Backers say the integrity of them to forget about the fresh­ had called out, "Hey, what's up, they got to see him tonight," IU A bill to outlaw betting on man who amateur sports is at stake. Knight?" a greeting Knight vice president Christopher college sports advanced "This is a chance for played a regarded as disrespectful. Simpson said. "Twenty-nine through Congress on part in the Congress, in the last hours of Several players threatened to years is a long time. There were Wednesday, winning approval this session, to do something coach's fir­ transfer after Knight was fired, some highs and lows, but I cer­ in the House Judiciary ing. good for a cause many but all of them decided to tainly didn't take offense at Committee. Americans really love and "Let that remain when assistant Mike anything he said." The 19-9 vote approved the kid be a appreciate, and that's college Davis, who had recruited many Neither did the students, who measure to ban betting on sports," said Hep. Lindsey student of them, was selected interim greeted Knight with applause amateur sports, a type of and let Graham, R-S.C., a sponsor of coach by athletic director and cheers as he approached gambling practiced only in the bill and its chief proponent him get on K ht Clarence Doninger on Tuesday. the platform at the edge of with life," n 1g Nevada. The Senate on the Judiciary Committee. Knight urged the students to Dunn Meadow and then kissed Commerce Committee. Knight Opponents of the measure continue supporting the team his wife, Karen, as she dabbed approved similar legislation in say almost all of the gambling said Wednesday night. "This and the new coach. her eyes with tissue. April. thing, believe me, had hap­ on college sports - 98 per­ "When you go into Assembly "I hope that's not inappropri­ Rep. Shelley Berkley, D­ cent - occurs illegally, out­ pened to me long before that Hall for the first game this year. ate physical contact," Karen Nev., whose district includes situation took place. That kid is side the reach of Nevada casi­ I want you to remember what Knight said, drawing laughter. Las Vegas, said opponents will nos. not responsible for my not your moms and dads. your Forward Tom Geyer called now turn their effort<> to keep­ coaching at Indiana, and make Frank Fahrenkopf Jr., who brothers and sisters, your aunts the kiss "the most touching ing the bill from reaching the lobbies for casinos as presi­ sure you understand that." and uncles and friends that part" of Knight's appearance. floor in the final weeks of the The pp,acef'ul crowd at Dunn dent of the American Gaming have been in those seats before "People don't see that side of 1 06th Congress. Association, called the bill "a Meadow was estimated by you have coach. It's just Rep. J.C. Watts of police at about 6.000. Some stu­ cosmetic response to serious meant to sad that they had Oklahoma, the House GOP campus gambling problems." dPnts watchPd from the roof of our basket­ to wait until conference chairman. said a f'ratprnity house across the The committee voted down ball team. "This is a great now," Geyer said. Wednesday he still does not a substitute bill offered by street. Others climbed trees And I want One banner in think the bill will get passed that ringed the meadow, the university." Hep. John Conyers, D-Mich., you to the crowd read this year. But the measure is that would have created an sitfl of many c:ampus protests in mean the "Free 29 years of proving stronger than many the 1960s and '70s. Many hoist­ Amateur Sports Illegal same thing Bob Knight IU junk," but predicted. Gambling Task Force and ed signs of support for Knight. to this bas­ most signs sup­ When it was introduced in who was fired Sunday for vio­ former Indiana head coach doubled penalties for illegal ketball ported Knight: January, some supporters betting on sports. lating a zero-tolerance behavior team," he "Politics + a acknowledged passage was policy imposed by university The committee debated said. punk + cowards unlikely. Republican Sen. John another amendment offered president Myles Brand. "People railroading of a McCain of Arizona gave the Knight never mentioned by Hep. Asa Hutchinson, R­ change over the years. and that great man" 000 "Career victories, bill momentum by adopting it Ark., to expand the proposed Brand by name, and he took changes situations, for good Knight: 763, Brand/Doninger: as a cause soon after aban­ I only a few brief jabs at the ban to outlaw all sports bet­ I and for bad, but don't let the 0" 000 "Bring back Bobby" 000 "My doning his presidential cam­ administration in his 20-minute ting. as requested by profes­ I' - student body, the energy, the degree is from Knight school." paign, and the NCAA enlisted sional baseball, basketball, I talk. enthusiasm the student body Colin Banta, 19, a freshman I prominent college coaches. football and hockey. "This is a great university," has had for basketball, please from Griffith, said Knight made Retired North Carolina t he said. "Trustees, administra­ But Hutchinson withdrew I don't let that change. If you his point with the administra­ coach Dean Smith, college I tions, faculties change ... but the amendment at the request want to do something to tion "in a subtle way .... To basketball's career victory of Graham, who said he sup­ this university has really stood remember me by, do that. most people here, they would leader, visited Capitol Hill on the test of time. because the ported the idea but did not Continue the same energy, the have been on his side no matter Tuesday to push for the bill. want to complicate the com­ really good people that take same enthusiasm the students what." The measure has bipartisan care of you in the classroom mittee vote.

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Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 29 MEN's GoLF White Sox discover Ratay wins medalist honors fountain of youth Youth movement. Frank Thomas hadn't Special to The Observer Rebuilding. A new direction. topped 20 home runs since When used in the world of 1997. He is currently leading Notre Damn junior Steve pro sports. these terms bring the league in both home runs Hatav had a strdlar 1999 fall to mind franchises such as the and runs batted in - no small S!)ilS;>n and opened the 2000 Milw- feat for a man who won back­ campaign in similar fashion over aukee to-hack Most Valuable Player th1• wnnkrnd by sharing medal­ Brewers, awards in 1993 and '94. ist honors at the 2000 Badger Tampa The youth movement was Invitational. hrld at thn par-72. Bay Bucc­ perhaps the biggest question 6.SSS-yard Univnrsity Hidge Golf aneers mark as the team dropped Coursr. and Los former all-stars as rapidly as Hatav's four-under 212- Angeles the Bears receiving corps back!)d. by matching 22Ss from Clippers. dropped passes. Young out­ sPnior Alex Kent and sophomore Obviously fielders Carlos Lee and llrandon Lunkn landed Notre one can Noah Magglio Ordonez are provid­ DamP in a fourth-plar:P finish at under­ Amstadter ing more consistent power tlw 1 S-team !WPnt. six strokes stand the than the local power compa­ bPhind Toledo. !lost Wisconsin backlash ny. finislwd first at S60, six shots that the Sifting the The bullpen is perhaps the alwad of Penn State. Chicago Diamond league's deepest- no small .. "StevP had a solid tourna­ White Sox thanks to the heavily criticized nwnt." said Lunkn. "It was a manage- trade in 1997 that netted the good f'irst tournamnnt. It was ment received that fateful day team closers Keith Foulke and windv. and thn coursr was back in 1997 when they will­ Bobby Howry, as well as setup hard~ so I think we can ingly entered a movement man Lorenzo Barcelo. improvP." towards "youth." Perhaps most impressive Hatav - whose 1999 fall sea­ In one day, the Sox gave up has been the team's maturity. son in .four rwnts with thn Irish their top two starters, their Despite huge success early on, inc lu d !~ d a me d a Iis t f'i n ish . a closer, and Harold Baines­ the young team has worked runn1~r-up showing and a fifth­ Mr. White Sox who is still pro­ through injuries to its top two plac!' finish - opPnPd play on ductive in his 20th season in , the trade of its start­ Saturdav with rounds of 71-70 the big leagues. ing and inconsistency for a oi1P-strokr cushion on As expected. the team strug­ among its young starters. I'Pnn StatP's Matt Abbott while gled even more in 1998. Frank Following the dismantling of the Irish used steady rounds of Thomas lost his ability to hit both his World Champion 2')(>-29:~ to stand in fourth place for power. no staff ace Bulls and contending White !wading into Sunday's final emerged, and fans stopped Sox within a nine month peri­ round. Hatay then finished with coming to the amazingly od. Jerry Reinsdorf was about a 71 but Wisconsin's Jim Lemon uninviting Comiskey Park. as well-regarded in Chicago as usPd a closing (> 7 to !'.atc.h him Junior Steve Ratay shot a four-under 212 to tie for medalist Tears came to my eyes as I AI Capone. Now, the man for a tiP atop tlw leadnrboard. honors at the 2000 Badger InvitationaL saw my childhood hero­ looks like a genius. Batav's 212 total ties for tlw Gold Glove third baseman Fans were calling for the sPcotH.l-best S4-hole score in Notre Dame's final-round 292 while Lunke shot 76-74-72 to Robin Ventura- trade his retirement of Schueler after Notre• l>anw history. trailing only yielded an SS1 total (+17). the each finish tied for 23rd. at 222. black White Sox pinstripes for years of disappointing teams. Llw four-undPr 209 postPd by ninth-best 54-hole score in team Freshman Peter Rivas (New the blue of the New York Now the fans praise his Jpfr Connell at thP 1997-9S history and the fifth-best in rela­ Orleans, La.) had a solid debut Mets. shrewdness. Marshall Invitational. Hatay's tion to par. Among the more to his Irish career, carding three The next season yielded At the moment the team has four-under showing tins the noteworthy teams defeated by 75s to finish tied for 29th at 225: more of the same. A porous the best record in the major Irish S4-hole record for best the Irish was pernnnial national Senior Adam Anderson (83-81- left side of the infield allowed leagues. All but one position score• in rPlation to par. equaling power Arizona State (885). 76/240) rounded out the Notre as many balls to go through as player will either hit .300 or tlw mark snt by thre!' othPrs. Knnt used three rounds of 7 4 Dame contingent. George W. Bush's mouth emit­ slug at least 20 home runs. ted allowed stupid comments. The pitching staff has holes, Once again. my beloved White but still has performed well Sox lost more games than they enough to win. won. playing another mean­ The team that looked head­ ingless season in front of ed to the basement is entering empty seats. the playoffs. After years of Then came 2000. coming out to watch the team The team appeared eerily struggle. l will be in the stands When the game is on the line, similar to the sub-.500 clubs watching this team succeed. It of the past two seasons. They is all the sweeter for myself were able to unload two strug­ and other longtime fans devot­ gling starters for an error­ ed to this team. We watched we're there for you! prone shortstop in Jose Baldwin and Sirotka as they Valentin and a struggling shuffled between Chicago and starter named Cal Eldred triple-A Nashville. We • whose elbow was apparently watched all-star second base­ held together by staples. man Durham struggle to learn Oh yeah. after the first week to play defense. of the season GM Ron We remember the then Schueler solved plugged the unknown Ordonez coming up defensive hole at third base from the minors in 1997 and with a journeyman converted hitting a long home run first baseman named Herbert against St. Louis. How can we Perry who runs a dairy farm forget Lee coming to the in the offseason. majors to play left field. hav­ From the team that once ing never before played the signed Michael Jordan. fans position. have learned to expect the As George Burns said in unexpected. This season, they those old "Oh. God" movies, have done perhaps the last everything has two ends. You thing any fan could have cannot have hot without cold. dreamed of- they are win­ good without bad. The joy in e FREE Checking • Low-Interest Student Loans ning. watching this team succeed We're not talking winning a truly comes from years of e Convenient ATMs e FREE Visa Check Card series here and there from watching the club fail. The another cellar-dweller. This last White Sox title came in • FREE Internet Banking e Great Rates on Auto Loans team swept a seven-game 1917 - back when Burns was road trip from American almost as young as I am today. League powerhouses in The countdown has started. Cleveland and New York. Oct. 3 I will be there. My team The questionable pitching will be back in the playoffs. staff? Following a career in Like a father wat!:hing a child which he was consistent only grow into an adult. I will be in his inconsistency, James standing proud watching the Baldwin developed into an all­ Sox- no longer a squad of star. Mike Sirotka went from a struggling youth, but a full­ ~ .500 pitcher to the staff ace. fledged contef!.der. 19033 Douglas Road Eldred - the poster boy on @ NOTRE DAME the Staples catalog - was tied The views expressed in this WID[I Notre Dame, IN 46556 -­ FEDERAL CREDIT UNION for second in the league in column are those of the author Independent of the University For People. Not for Profit 800/522-6611 www.ndfcu.org wins entering the halfway and not necessarily those of mark in the season. The Observer. page 30 The Observer+ SPORTS Thursday, September 14, 2000 Irons continued from page 32

sophomore defensive Pnd Hyan Hobnrts said. "lin's a really proud guy. lin lows football. lin's out tlwre roaching. lin's not in full pads but lw's wParing his helmet and hn out tlwrn supporting nvnry­ body." Irons said lw has no choice but to support his tPammatl~S. "I know how hard they've worked and tlw commitment they put into preparing for this gamn," lw said. Irons knows how hard his team­ matns vmrkPd because he workml just as hard. liP spPntjust as many hours in tlw wPight room. lin ran just as many wind sprints and lw swPatPd through tlw sanw two-a­ day surnnwr prartin~s. HPforn the injury. lw could inspir<' and IPad his tnamrnatns with his nxtra physical efTort. Now lw has to lead with his words and his spirit. "For nw. I just havP to takn a dif­ fprent approarh in my role as a captain," lw said. "In the past I havp bnPn abiP to IPad by example. Now I haw to lr>ad with !'motion bv Pnrouraging my tPammatPs and · gl'lting r>vnrybody focused and rPady to play." l>avir> added: "Crant Irons has been tlwrP PVPry sncond. Obviously he hasn't had pads on and he's not practicing butlw's just been trenwndous." You wouldn't nxpPct any less from a lnader like Grant Irons.

The opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and LIZ LANGfThe Observer not necessarily those of The Senior co-captain Grant Irons cheers on his team from the sideline during the season-opening win over Texas A&M. Irons is Ubsen1er. likely sidelined for the remainder of the season with a dislocated shoulder.

• COLLEGE REPUBLICANS Informational Meeting

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... I. ). 1 I Thursday, September 14, 2000 The Observer+ TODAY page 31

TOM KEELEY THINGS COULD BE WORSE TYLER FOURTH AND INCHES WHATELY -

REMEMBER, CLASS_ YOU ARE ONLY ALLOWED ONE SHEET OF NOTES FOR THIS TEST

Fox TRoT BILL AMEND

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Fall Swing .'>'tet•e Hatay shared medalist honors as the Irish men's golf team finished fourth at the 2000 Badger In t•italion al. PORTS page 29

page 32 OBSERVER Thmsday, September 14, 2000

VOLLEYBALL Irish offset weekend losses, top Valparaiso 3-0

By RACHAEI. PROTZMAN SpomWrilt"r

Hounring bark from a tough loss to No. I NPbraska. thl' wompn's vollnvball tnam camn bark strong to shut out Valparai:..,o Tunsday. ThrPP ronsPrutivn lossns to tlw 'lluskPrs. No. 7 UCLA and No. 17 Michigan Stall' providNI tlw Irish with thP motivation to put away thn CrusadPrs in only thrPP ganws. slamming tlwm 1~-7. l:i-1{. and l:i-]. "I t h i n k that V a I par a is o is a to am that w ~~ thought WP rould biHtt. but it ddinitnly gavn PVPrvonn on tlw tnam conf'idnnrn going into this WPPkPnd." junior Marrin Bomhark said. With a slow start in gamn orw. Valparaiso was abiP to takP a (J-3 !Pad lwf'oru tlw Irish ol'fnnso wokP up with tlw lwlp of' sPnior Christi (;irton and llomhark. who CIJrnbirwd to sron· SI'VI'n points in a row. Junior 1\lalinda (;oralski IPd NotrP Damn with Pight kills and f'ivl' blorks. Notn• l>anll' •·ontinuPd its domination in tlw s••rorHI ganw. Parn ing a 7 -I !Pad bPI'orn falling npart just Pnough to allow tlw Crusadnrs to nar­ row tl11• gap with l'ivP straight points. Tl11• Irish rPsporHIPd lall' in lhl' gamn. allowing Valparaiso to srorn just two rnon· bel'orP (;irton '--1 snrurPd IIH• win with IIH' last four points on two kills and two blorks. "In tl11· third ganw tl11· [Pam did a vnry good job l~lsh of' roming out with PxrilPnwnt and playing at a high li'VI'I against a tPam likl' that," Bomhark said. In ganw thr•·P a!'lion Notn• llanw's Pntin• rostPr got

FOOTBALL Irons finds positive aspect to injury, lost playing time

This was supposed to be thn that he expected big things all part of the adversity. I look ents and praying about it, I that I can't lnad by nxampln year that Grant Irons thn solid from him this year. at this like a challenge." truly believe things happen for through my play but that football player bl)came Grant ''I've always had something Tho challenge of replacing a reason," he said. "llopnfully donsn 't stop mn from lnadi ng." Irons thn AII-Anwrican. This to prove." the senior captain Irons has been lost in the shul'­ things will work out in the It would take .a lot morn than was supposed to be tlw ynar said. "There is nobody that lle of Arnaz Battle's injury and future. I understand injuries an injun)d shouldnr to stop • that tlw expects more things from me the questions at quarterback. arc part of the game. I just Irons from leading. mnrP nwn­ than myself. I just need to go But Bob Davie and the rest of have to recognizp, that." Athletically. academically. tion of his out there and provo to myself the Irish know how important The injured senior captain emotionally and spiritually. narnu sent and my family." Irons is to this team. could be complaining and Irons embodins lnadnrship. shivers Instead. becausn of an injury. "You lose Grant Irons. who is bemoaning his lost season. lin At the end of the Nebraska down quar­ 2000 will be the year Grant -you know. someone that has 1~ould be sulking and bitter game, Irons was at tlw front of tl~rback's Irons the football player been overshadowed because of about his unlucky brnak. the team when thny raisnd spines. bncomes (;rant Irons the Arnaz," Davie said. "If the But that's not what a lnadnr their helnwts to thn student Beg is tPacher. Grant Irons tho men­ Arnaz situation wouldn't hav1~ would do. section. With his orw good arm, ( Philbin tor. Grant Irons the cheer­ happened. it would be huge "Now I am unabh~ to play lw nncouragnd his classmates lwld up his Mike Connolly lnader. right now, talking about Grant and be out then~ on thn linld to scream ovc~n loudnr in pkturn "I am going to turn a nega­ Irons. For our football team, it with my teammates," Irons appreciation l'or their !.Pam's and told a tive into a positive and make is huge. So that's a 1:hallonge." said about his now roll) on thn efforts. national Outside tho best of tho situation," he Irons is taking this sntback in team. "But I still have the "Grant is out tlwrr~ with us," tnlnvision looking in said. "This is life. Things in life stride, however. opportunity to encourage my audien1:n aren't always perfect. This is "Mter talking with my par- tP-ammates. It's hard to know see IRONS/page 30

at Olivet vs. Washington Volleyball Samrday, 12 p.m. 'W Sarurday, 12 p.m. SPORTS Lady Seminol Classic -c .. ATA at Tallahassee, Florida • Friday- Saturday vs. Purdue at Syracuse Saturday, 12 p.m. Saturday, I p.m. GLANCE ~\.:~