2002 NATIONAL LETTER-OF-INTENT SIGNEES Eighteen high school seniors signed national letters of intent with plans to enroll at the University of Notre Dame in August 2002 and play for the Irish football squad. The eighteen players come from 10 states - Pennsylvania (4), California (4), New Jersey (2), Texas (2), Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan and Minnesota. As listed by position, the Irish add to their roster five defensive linemen, four offensive linemen, two tight ends, two defensive backs, two running backs, two wide receivers and one — though many of the players played multiple positions in high school and could move to other spots once they arrive on campus. Among the 18 players are: * One member of the Parade All-America team - defensive lineman Derek Landri (Concord, Calif.), who was rated the top lineman by Parade. * Two members of the USA Today prep All-America first team (Landri and wide receiver Maurice Stovall of Philadelphia, Pa.) and two members of the second team (defensive lineman Travis Leitko of The Woodlands, Texas, and offensive lineman Bob Morton of McKinney, Texas). * Five players rated among the top 100 nationally by the Chicago Sun-Times - Leitko (22nd), Stovall (32nd), Landri (51st), Frome (91st) and Morton (98th). * Two players rated among the top 101 on the CNNSI.com list of top national prospects - Landri (5th) and wide receiver Rhema McKnight (La Palma, Calif.). * Two players rated on The Sporting News Hot 101 list - McKnight (41st) and Landri (48th). Among the 18 are eight players who attended the Notre Dame football camp in the summer of 2001 - offensive lineman James Bonelli (Ventura, Calif.), defensive back Jake Carney (Louisville, Ken.), tight end Anthony Fasano (Verona, N.J.), tight end Marcus Freeman (St. Paul, Minn.), running back Jeff Jenkins (Ann Arbor, Mich.), Leitko, offensive lineman Jamie Ryan (Tamaqua, Pa.) and defensive lineman Dan Santucci (Chicago, Ill.).

2002 University of Notre Dame Football National Letter-of-Intent Signees

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Hometown (High School) 71 Bonelli, James OL 6-6 285 Ventura, CA (St. Bonaventure) 31 Carney, Jake DB 6-0 180 Lexington, KY (Catholic) 88 Fasano, Anthony TE 6-4 237 Verona, NJ (Verona) 87 Freeman, Marcus TE 6-4 240 St. Paul, MN (Cretin-Derham Hall) 75 Frome, Chris DL 6-5 240 Saugus, CA (Newhall Hart) 32 Jenkins, Jeff RB 6-0 195 Ann Arbor, MI (Huron) 66 Landri, Derek DL 6-2 275 Concord, CA (De La Salle) 97 Leitko, Travis DL 6-6 250 The Woodlands, TX (The Woodlands) 94 Mattes, Brian DL 6-6 250 Larksville, PA (Wyoming Valley West) 5 McKnight, Rhema WR 6-2 190 La Palma, CA (Kennedy) 76 Morton, Bob OL 6-4 305 McKinney, TX (McKinney) 2002 12 Olsen, Chris QB 6-4 220 Wayne, NJ (Wayne Hills) 62 Raridon, Scott OL 6-7 285 Mason City, IA (Mason City) NOTRE 30 Richardson, Mike DB 6-1 180 Warner Robins, GA (Warner Robins) DAME 51 Ryan, Jamie OL 6-5 285 Tamaqua, PA (Marian Catholic) 93 Santucci, Dan DL 6-5 250 Chicago, IL (St. Patrick) Spring 25 Schiccatano, Nate RB 6-3 220 Coal Township, PA (Southern Columbia) Football 21 Stovall, Maurice WR 6-5 205 Philadelphia, PA (Archbishop Carroll)

58 2002 NATIONAL LETTER-OF-INTENT SIGNEES * Bonelli (bo-NELL-ee), James (OL, 6-6, 285, Ventura, CA) - Offensive lineman of the year for Ventura County Football Coaches Association Small School team ... named to CalHiSports.com California Small School all-state squad ... named to Ventura County Star all-county team and all-California Interscholastic Federation Southern Section team ... honorable mention pick on Las Vegas Sun Super 11 team ... named to Long Beach Press-Telegram Best in the West team ... helped team to three-year record of 42-0 and back- to-back CIF Southern Section Division XI titles, including 14-0 record as senior in ’01 ... helped St. Bonaventure to 56-16 triumph over Cerritos Valley Christian in ’01 championship game ... ranked as top blocker for record-setting St. Bonaventure running back Lorenzo Booker ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. * Carney, Jake (DB, 6-0, 180, Lexington, KY) - Named to Kentucky Associated Press all-state squad as defensive back ... named to Louisville Courier-Journal all-star squad on defense ... made 35 tackles, three , one recovery, one sack, two tackles for loss and broke up four passes as senior in ’01 ... caught 14 passes for 238 yards and five touchdowns as receiver ... had one kickoff return for a TD and led team with 254 kickoff return yards ... helped team to 12-1 record and regional final berth ... one of 22 seniors named to 2001 Class of the Commonwealth by Lexington Herald-Leader ... made 55 tackles and intercepted five passes as junior in ’00 when he earned all-city honors ... finished as Lexington Catholic career leader in interceptions (10), interceptions returned for TDs (three), season kickoff return yards (489), career kickoff return yards (871), career TD kickoff returns (four) and longest kickoff return (93 yards) ... chosen for U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio ... born in Long Beach, Calif., and also lived in Colorado Springs, Colo., with his father in the Air Force ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. * Fasano (fuh-ZAN-oh), Anthony (TE, 6-4, 237, Verona, NJ) - First-team New Jersey all-state pick by Newark Star-Ledger ... helped team to New Jersey state title among Group 1 schools ... caught 78 passes for 1,460 yards and a county-record 23 touchdowns as senior in ’01 ... finished with 42 career TD receptions (a county record) ... caught 42 passes for 744 yards and 12 TDs for 9-1 team as junior in ’00 ... had 168 career catches for more than 2,500 yards ... made 69 tackles on defense as junior ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio ... won New Jersey Group I state title in javelin at 185-1 in ’01 in first year competing in that event ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. * Freeman, Marcus (TE, 6-4, 240, St. Paul, MN) - Caught 20 passes for 300 yards and three touchdowns as senior in ’01 ... helped team to unbeaten regular season and 11-1 overall record as senior including berth in Minnesota Class AAAAA playoffs that ended in 15-13 quarterfinal loss to Alexandria ... started several games as defensive end as sophomore, then moved to tight end as junior ... had 16 catches, four for TDs, as junior in ’00 ... from same high school as cousin and current Irish linebacker Rashon Powers- Neal ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. * Frome (rhymes with chrome), Chris (DL, 6-5, 240, Saugus, CA) - First-team California all-state selection as defensive lineman by Los Angeles Times ... rated 91st player nationally by Chicago Sun-Times ... second-team pick on Las Vegas Sun Super 11 team ... named to Long Beach Press-Telegram Best in the West team ... second-team all-state pick in ’01 as offensive lineman as selected by CalHiSports.com ... made 62 tackles, 15 tackles for loss and five sacks as senior defensive lineman in ’01 ... had career totals of 190 tackles and 22 sacks ... started on both offensive and defensive line for team that finished fourth in state in CalHiSports.com ratings after 13-0 season in ’01 ... played left offensive tackle for team regarded as having best prep passing offense in Southern California ... selected as conference lineman of the year and California Interscholastic Federation co-defensive player of the year ... helped team to third of three straight CIF Southern Section Division III crowns in ’01 by virtue of playoff wins by 48-7, 38-9, 35-7, then 42-13 over Valencia in title clash ... first player to start both ways for three seasons in 13-year tenure of Newhall Hart coach Mike Herrington ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio. * Jenkins, Jeff (RB, 6-0, 195, Ann Arbor, MI) - Rushed for 1,427 yards and 21 touchdowns as senior in ’01 ... helped team to 9-2 mark as senior ... attended Community High School, an academic alternative school, but played at Huron ... captain of Detroit Free- Press Division I honor team ... rushed for 1,451 yards and 20 TDs as junior and finished with more than 2,900 career rushing yards and 49 scores ... named player of the year by Ann Arbor News ... first-team Associated Press Class A all-state choice ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. 2002 * Landri, Derek (DL, 6-2, 275, Concord, CA) - First-team USA Today prep All-American ... Parade prep All-American who was NOTRE rated as top lineman on Parade squad ... rated fifth on CNNSI.com list of top 101 prospects ... listed 48th nationally on The Sporting News’ Hot 101 list. . . rated 51st player nationally by Chicago Sun-Times ... first-team pick on Las Vegas Sun Super 11 squad ... named DAME to Long Beach Press-Telegram Best in the West team ... first-team offensive lineman on Student Sports All-America team ... California Spring Mr. Football State Player of the Year selection by CalHiSports.com ... first-team all-state selection and State Lineman of the Year for ’01 by CalHiSports.com ... had 55 solo tackles, 75 assists and 9.5 sacks as defensive lineman (in 32 quarters of play) as senior in ’01 on Football defensive unit that gave up only six touchdowns all season ... helped team to 12-0 record as senior on squad that was consensus national prep champion. . . helped De La Salle to California Interscholastic Federation North Coast Section 4A crown (for 10th straight year) by virtue of 54-15, 45-0 and 48-13 victories in playoff action ... his De La Salle team won Student Sports national championship for third time in four years ... a starter in 37 straight games to end his career, while helping De La Salle improve its overall winning streak to a national high school record 125 consecutive games by end of ’01 season - including 10 straight unbeaten seasons ... became third De La Salle player to win state-player-of-the-year honor, following D.J. Williams in 1999 and Amani Toomer in 1991 (other winners include John Elway, Marcus Allen, Charles White, Pat Haden, Mike Garrett) ... made 80 tackles, 17 sacks and knocked down 12 passes as junior in ’00 ... also a three-year starter on offense. * Leitko (LIGHT-ko), Travis (DL, 6-6, 250, The Woodlands, TX) - USA Today second-team prep All-American ... rated 22nd player nationally by Chicago Sun-Times ... made 96 tackles, 11 tackles for loss, seven sacks, two fumble recoveries, one fumble caused, one blocked field goal as senior in ’01 ... rated one of top 100 players in Texas by Houston Chronicle ... Houston Chronicle first-team all-Greater Houston area pick ... first-team all-Southwest defensive lineman by Student Sports ... had 70 solo tackles, 30 assists, three fumble recoveries, three caused and 12 other tackles for loss as junior in ’00 ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio ... from same high school as ’00 and ’01 Note Dame captain and defensive end Grant Irons ... also competed in wrestling and track (discus) ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. 59 2002 NATIONAL LETTER-OF-INTENT SIGNEES * Mattes (MATT-iss), Brian (DL, 6-6, 250, Larksville, PA) - First-team Pennsylvania all-state pick at defensive end as junior in 2000 ... made 70 tackles, with 13 sacks and nine tackles for loss, plus two blocked kicks on defense in ’01 ... also caught 34 passes as tight end for 400 yards and two touchdowns as senior, after 31 catches as junior in ’00 and 20 as sophomore ... had 74 tackles, 10 sacks, 11 tackles for loss as junior on defense ... averaged 18 points and 11 rebounds in basketball as junior ... played in U.S. Army All- America Bowl in San Antonio. * McKnight, Rhema (RAY-muh) (WR, 6-2, 190, La Palma, CA) - Rated as top player on Long Beach Press-Telegram Best in the West team ... rated 28th player nationally by CNNSI.com and Student Sports ... rated 41st on The Sporting News Hot 101 list. . . named to Las Vegas Sun Super 11 squad ... caught 20 passes for 395 yards and four touchdowns as senior in ’01 ... rushed for 1,483 yards and 21 TDs as senior ... also completed 50 percent of his passes for 451 yards and two TDs as quarterback most of ’01 season as team lost in second round of playoffs ... caught 62 passes for 1,142 yards and 15 TDs as junior in ’00 while leading team to California Interscholastic Federation South Section Division VI semifinals ... started at wide receiver and free safety as junior, also returning four punts for Ds in first five games ... never played organized football until becoming a starter as high school sophomore at Kennedy. * Morton, Bob (OL, 6-4, 305, McKinney, TX) - Second-team pick as offensive lineman on USA Today prep All-America team . . .named to Dallas Morning News all-area team as senior offensive linemen in ’01 ... rated 98th player nationally by Chicago Sun-Times ... did not permit a sack in ’01 and led way for team that averaged 6.6 yards per rush ... rated one of top 100 players in Texas by Houston Chronicle ... three-year starter at McKinney ... also can deep snap ... named to Texas High School Coaches Association first- team academic all-state squad for Class 5A ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio. * Olsen, Chris (QB, 6-4, 220, Wayne, NJ) - First-team New Jersey all-state pick by Newark Star-Ledger ... threw for 1,900 yards and 24 touchdowns with only five interceptions as senior in ’01 ... earned first-team New Jersey all-state honors ... his 10-2 Wayne Hills team fell to Ramapo in New Jersey Group III state title game ... completed 98 of 152 passes as junior in ’00 for 1,887 yards and 22 TDs ... played for his father Chris Sr. in high school. * Raridon (RARE-uh-done), Scott (OL, 6-7, 285, Mason City, IA) - Gatorade Player of the Year in Iowa for 2001. ... first-team Iowa Class 4-A all-state selection by Des Moines Register ... helped Mason City to first playoff berth since 1985 ... caught 40 passes for 432 yards and five touchdowns as tight end during senior season in ’01 ... 19 of his 23 third-down receptions were good for first downs ... capable of handling long-snapping duties ... rated as player to watch in state of Iowa on preseason basis for ’01 by USA Today ... caught eight passes for 84 yards as junior in 2000 ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio ... son of former Notre Dame strength and conditioning coordinator Scott Raridon, a former offensive tackle at Nebraska who was a graduate assistant coach at Notre Dame in 1986, then took over the strength and conditioning position the next two seasons. * Richardson, Mike (DB, 6-1, 180, Warner Robins, GA) - Caught 15 passes for 180 yards as senior in 2001 ... rushed 70 times for 361 yards and nine touchdowns, despite missing four games in ’01 with ankle sprain. * Ryan, Jamie (OL, 6-5, 285, Tamaqua, PA) - Played in only four games as senior in ’01 due to blood clot in his neck ... made 110 tackles and 11 sacks as junior in ’00 as defensive tackle ... three-year starter who was regular on both sides of the ball as senior ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. * Santucci (san-TWO-chee), Dan (DL, 6-5, 250, Chicago, IL) - Rated one of top 100 players in Chicago area by Chicago Sun- Times ... had 50 tackles, 15 tackles for loss and nine sacks as senior in ’01 ... also played at tight end, averaging 15 yards per catch ... helped team to 7-4 record including a playoff victory, coming off 2-7 finish in ’00 ... special mention pick on Chicago Tribune all-state team ... named to Catholic League Metro White all-league team by Chicago Tribune ... started both ways as junior in ’00, catching 25 passes, eight for TDs, and making 60 tackles and 10 sacks ... attended Notre Dame summer football camp. 2002 * Schiccatano (shick-uh-TAN-oh), Nate (RB, 6-3, 220, Coal Township, PA) - Helped Southern Columbia team to title games of Pennsylvania Class A playoffs in both ’00 and ’01 ... rushed for more than 1,000 yards and 21 touchdowns as senior in ’01 on 14- NOTRE 1 squad ... rushed 18 times as junior for 1,380 yards and 22 TDs ... caught 16 passes in ’00 for 300 yards and four TDs ... recorded 30 tackles and one on defense as junior ... also played receiver, safety, linebacker and backup quarterback in ’01 ... played DAME in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio. Spring * Stovall (STOW-vall), Maurice (WR, 6-5, 205, Philadelphia, PA) - First-team USA Today prep All-America pick ... prep All- Football American on senior team selected by Student Sports ... named co-Catholic League Player of the Year by Philadelphia Daily News ... rated 32nd player nationally by Chicago Sun-Times ... caught 31 passes for 743 yards and nine touchdowns as senior in ’01 for Philadelphia Catholic League Blue Division champion team ... returned four punts for TDs in ’01 and returned five of his 11 interceptions for TDs as free safety on defense - with those nine return TDs a city record ... caught 19 passes as junior, finishing Carroll career with 50 catches for 1,176 yards (23.5 average) and 15 TDs ... helped team to 39-3 record and two division titles in three seasons ... played in U.S. Army All-America Bowl in San Antonio.

60 2001 FINAL STATISTICS Record Overall Home Away Neutral USHING All Games 5-6 4-2 1-4 0-0 R Yds Yds Att. Yds. YL Net /Gam. /Car. TD LP Date Opponent W/L Score Attendance Julius Jones 168 750 32 718 65.3 4.3 6 59 Sept. 8 at Nebraska L 10-27 78,118* Carlyle Holiday 156 861 195 666 60.5 4.3 2 67 Sept. 22 Michigan State L 10-17 80,795* Tony Fisher 78 413 29 384 42.7 4.9 4 55 Sept. 29 at Texas A&M L 3-24 87,206* Terrence Howard 48 168 8 160 14.5 3.3 3 12 Oct. 6 Pittsburgh W 24-7 80,795* Ryan Grant 29 121 11 110 22.0 3.8 1 16 Tom Lopienski 10 65 2 63 5.7 6.3 0 33 Oct. 13 West Virginia W 34-24 80,795* Mike McNair 5 15 0 15 1.9 3.0 0 8 Oct. 20 USC W 27-16 80,795* Arnaz Battle 3 17 9 8 1.1 2.7 0 17 Oct. 27 at Boston College L 17-21 44,500* David Givens 7 16 10 6 0.6 0.9 0 5 Nov. 3 Tennessee L 18-28 80,795* Jared Clark 1 5 0 5 2.5 5.0 0 5 Nov. 17 Navy W 34-16 80,795* Jason Murray 2 3 0 3 0.4 1.5 0 3 Nov. 24 at Stanford L 13-17 51,780 Nicholas Setta 1 0 3 -3 -0.3 -3.0 0 0 Dec. 1 at Purdue W 24-18 68,750* Matt LoVecchio 18 32 49 -17 -2.4 -0.9 0 9 * - Sellout Team 4 0 48 -48 -9.6 -12.0 0 0 Notre Dame 530 2466 396 2070 188.2 3.9 16 67 Opponents 416 1752 297 1455 132.3 3.5 10 71

Score by Quarters 1 2 3 4 OT TOT Avg. PASSING NOTRE DAME 44 57 54 59 0 214 19.5 Yds. Opponents 74 46 41 54 0 215 19.5 Effic. Cmp. Att. Int. Pct. Yds. /Game TD LP Carlyle Holiday 93.58 73 144 7 50.7 784 71.3 3 47 Matt LoVecchio 77.40 34 69 4 49.3 287 41.0 1 24 David Givens 171.80 1 2 0 50.0 29 2.9 0 29 Notre Dame Opponents Team 0.00 0 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 FIRST DOWNS 188 177 Jared Clark 0.00 0 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 Rushing 115 69 Arnaz Battle 242.80 1 1 0 100.0 17 2.4 0 17 Passing 59 87 Notre Dame 89.00 109 218 11 50.0 1117 101.5 4 47 By Penalty 14 21 Opponents 113.66 137 274 14 50.0 1899 172.6 13 70 TOTAL PLAYS 748 690 TOTAL OFFENSE 3187 3354 PASS RECEIVING Average Per Play 4.3 4.9 Avg. per Average Per Game 289.7 304.9 No. Yds. Game Avg. TD LP TOTAL RUSHING PLAYS 530 416 Javin Hunter 37 387 35.2 10.5 1 42 RUSHING YARDAGE 2070 1455 David Givens 33 317 31.7 9.6 0 21 Yards Gained Rushing 2466 1752 Julius Jones 9 57 5.2 6.3 1 21 Yards Lost Rushing 396 297 Omar Jenkins 7 111 10.1 15.9 1 47 Avg. Per Rush 3.9 3.5 John Owens 6 79 7.2 13.2 1 21 Yards Rushing Per Game 188.2 132.3 Arnaz Battle 5 40 5.7 8.0 0 15 Rushing Touchdowns 16 10 Tony Fisher 3 -4 -0.4 -1.3 0 0 PASSING YARDAGE 1117 1899 Gary Godsey 2 50 4.5 25.0 0 26 Atts/Comp/Int 218-109-11 274-137-14 Tom Lopienski 2 17 1.5 8.5 0 17 Ryan Grant 2 7 1.4 8.5 0 5 Average Per Attempt 5.1 6.9 Carlos Campbell 1 32 6.4 32.0 0 32 2002 Average Per Catch 10.2 13.9 Carlyle Holiday 1 17 1.5 17.0 0 17 Average Per Game 101.5 172.6 Ronnie Rodamer 1 7 1.0 7.0 0 7 NOTRE Passing Touchdowns 4 13 Notre Dame 109 1117 101.5 10.2 4 47 Kickoff Returns/Yards 40/971 29/551 Opponents 137 1899 172.6 13.9 13 70 DAME Average Per Return 24.3 19.0 Spring Punts Returns/Yards 28/282 34/327 SCORING Average Per Return 10.1 9.6 Football Interception Returns/Yards 14/194 11/72 — Conversions— Average Per Return 13.9 6.5 TD Kick Rush Rec. Pass FG-AS DX Pts. Punts/Yards 65/2703 65/2753 Nicholas Setta 0 23-23 0-0 0 0-0 15-17 0 68 Julius Jones 7 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 42 Average Per Punt 41.6 42.4 Tony Fisher 4 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 0-0 0 26 Net Punting Average 36.6 38.0 Terrance Howard 3 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 18 Fumbles/Fumbles Lost 27/12 18/12 Carlyle Holiday 2 0-0 0-0 0 1-1 0-0 0 12 Penalties/Yards 74/626 67/488 Ryan Grant 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Third Down Conversions 68/176 60/159 J Jason Beckstrom 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Third Down Percentage 39% 38% Gerome Sapp 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Fourth Down Conversions 13/22 7/11 Courtney Watson 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Fourth Down Percentage 59% 64% Javin Hunter 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Sacks By-Yards 25-137 26-155 Vontez Duff 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Misc. Yards 39 88 Omar Jenkins 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Time of Possession/Game 32:33 27:27 John Owens 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 6 Notre Dame 24 23-23 0-0 1 1-1 15-17 0 214 Opponents 25 23-25 0-0 0 0-0 14-16 0 215 61 2001 FINAL STATISTICS FIELD GOALS FUMBLE RETURNS Att. Good Long Blocked No. Yds. Avg. TD LP Nicholas Setta 17 15 47 0 Tyreo Harrison 1 0 0.0 0 0 Notre Dame 17 15 47 0 Gerome Sapp 1 39 39.0 1 39 Opponents 16 14 50 0 Notre Dame 2 39 19.5 1 39 Opponents 2 88 44.0 1 81 INTERCEPTION RETURNS No. Yds. Avg. TD LP ALL PURPOSE Vontez Duff 3 37 12.3 0 24 Clifford Jefferson 2 0 0.0 0 0 Punt KO Tot. Yds./ Shane Walton 2 37 18.5 0 24 Rush Rec. Ret. Ret. IR FR Yds. Gm. Abram Elam 2 27 13.5 0 23 Julius Jones 718 57 192 405 0 0 1372 124.7 Carlyle Holiday 666 17 0 0 0 0 683 62.1 Anthony Weaver 1 0 0.0 0 0 Vontez Duff 0 0 80 358 37 0 475 43.2 Grant Irons 1 0 0.0 0 0 David Givens 6 317 0 143 0 0 466 46.6 Courtney Watson 1 31 31.0 1 31 Javin Hunter 0 387 0 0 0 0 387 35.2 Justin Smith 1 33 33.0 0 33 Tony Fisher 384 -4 0 0 0 0 380 42.2 Jason Beckstrom 1 29 29.0 1 29 Terrance Howard 160 0 0 27 0 0 187 17.0 Notre Dame 14 194 13.9 2 33 Ryan Grant 110 7 0 0 0 0 117 23.4 Opponents 11 72 6.5 0 40 Omar Jenkins 0 111 0 0 0 0 111 10.1 Tom Lopienski 63 17 0 11 0 0 91 8.3 John Owens 0 79 0 0 0 0 79 7.2 PUNTING Gary Godsey 0 50 0 0 0 0 50 4.5 No. Yds. Avg. Blocked LP Arnaz Battle 8 40 0 0 0 0 48 6.9 Joey Hildbold 64 2703 42.2 1 59 Shane Walton 0 0 10 0 37 0 47 4.3 Team 1 0 0.0 0 0 Justin Smith 0 0 0 0 33 0 33 3.0 Carlos Campbell 0 32 0 0 0 0 32 6.4 Notre Dame 65 2703 41.6 1 59 Gerome Sapp 0 0 0 0 0 39 39 3.9 Opponents 65 2703 42.6 1 71 Courtney Watson 0 0 0 0 31 0 31 2.8 Jason Murray 3 0 0 27 0 0 30 3.8 Jason Beckstrom 0 0 0 0 29 0 29 2.6 PUNT RETURNS Abram Elam 0 0 0 0 27 0 27 2.5 No. Yds. Avg. TD LP Mike McNair 15 0 0 0 0 0 15 1.9 Julius Jones 18 192 10.7 0 53 Ronnie Rodamer 0 7 0 0 0 0 7 1.0 Vontez Duff 9 80 8.9 0 17 Jared Clark 5 0 0 0 0 0 5 2.5 Shane Walton 1 10 10.0 0 0 Nicholas Setta -3 0 0 0 0 0 -3 -0.3 Notre Dame 28 282 10.1 0 53 Matt LoVecchio -17 0 0 0 0 0 -17 -2.4 Opponents 34 327 9.6 1 39 Team -48 0 0 0 0 0 -48 -9.6 Total 2070 1117 282 971 194 39 4634 421.3 Opponents 1455 1899 327 551 72 88 4304 391.3 KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds. Avg. TD LP Julius Jones 18 405 22.5 0 58 TOTAL OFFENSE 2002 Vontez Duff 12 358 29.8 1 96 Plays Rush Pass Total Yds/Gm. NOTRE David Givens 6 143 23.8 0 43 Carlyle Holiday 300 666 784 1450 131.8 Jason Murray 2 27 13.5 0 18 Julius Jones 168 718 0 718 65.3 DAME Terrance Howard 1 27 27.0 0 27 Tony Fisher 78 384 0 384 42.7 Tom Lopienski 1 11 11.0 0 11 Matt LoVecchio 87 -17 287 270 38.6 Spring Notre Dame 40 971 24.3 1 96 Terrance Howard 48 160 0 160 14.5 Football Opponents 29 551 19.0 0 43 Ryan Grant 29 110 0 110 22 Tom Lopienski 10 63 0 63 5.7 David Givens 9 6 29 35 3.5 Arnaz Battle 4 8 17 25 3.6 Mike McNair 5 15 0 15 1.9 Jared Clark 2 5 0 5 2.5 Jason Murray 2 3 0 3 0.4 Nicholas Setta 1 -3 0 -3 -0.3 Team 5 -48 0 -48 -9.6 Notre Dame 748 2070 1117 3187 289.7 Opponents 690 1455 1899 3354 304.9

62 2001 FINAL STATISTICS DEFENSIVE STATISTICS Tackles Solo Asst. Total FC FR PBU TFL-Yds. Sacks Int. Tyreo Harrison 47 50 97 1 1-0 0 11-22 2-9 0 Courtney Watson 35 41 76 0 1-0 3 13-27 2-10 1-31 Anthony Weaver 33 26 59 3 0-0 3 21-56 7-25 1-0 Donald Dykes 28 20 48 0 2-0 1 2-11 1-10 0-0 Shane Walton 28 15 43 1 0-0 8 7-20 1-6 2-37 Rocky Boiman 16 25 41 1 2-0 0 10-19 4-10 0-0 Gerome Sapp 22 14 36 0 2-39 1 1-1 0-0 0-0 Glenn Earl 21 12 33 0 1-0 0 4-14 2-11 0-0 Abram Elam 18 11 29 1 1-0 5 1-3 0 2-27 Cedric Hilliard 13 14 27 1 0-0 1 8-25 2-17 0-0 Darrell Campbell 12 14 26 1 0-0 0 7-29 3-18 0-0 Vontez Duff 14 11 25 0 0-0 6 0-0 0-0 3-37 Clifford Jefferson 11 12 23 1 0-0 3 2-7 0-0 2-0 Grant Irons 7 15 22 0 1-0 1 5-11 2-8 1-0 Ron Israel 15 6 21 0 0-0 0 1-2 0-0 0-0 Ryan Roberts 10 10 20 0 0-0 0 4-14 3-13 0-0 Andy Wisne 5 11 16 0 0-0 0 2-1 0-0 0-0 Kyle Budinscak 6 7 13 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Jason Beckstrom 8 5 13 0 1-0 2 0-0 0-0 1-29 Justin Smith 8 3 11 0 0-0 1 0-0 0-0 1-33 Carlos Pierre-Antoine 3 3 6 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Matthew Sarb 5 0 5 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Mike Goolsby 2 2 4 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Garron Bible 2 2 4 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Quentin Burrell 1 2 3 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Dwight Ellick 2 1 3 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Preston Jackson 3 0 3 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 John Crowther 3 0 3 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Chris Yura 1 2 3 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Chad DeBolt 2 1 3 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Nicholas Setta 0 2 2 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 David Givens 2 0 2 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Derek Curry 0 2 2 0 0-0 0 1-1 0-0 0-0 Tom Lopienski 0 1 1 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Terrance Howard 0 1 1 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Arnaz Battle 1 0 1 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Jeff Faine 1 0 1 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Team 1 0 1 1 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Joey Hildbold 0 1 1 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Brennan Curtin 1 0 1 0 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Notre Dame 388 342 730 11 12-39 35 100-263 25-137 14-194 Opponents 488 336 824 16 12-88 35 81-282 26-155 11-72

(and in January of 2003!) 2002

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SCHOOLCRAFT, MI EAU CLAIRE, MI 13432 U.S. 131 North 6524 East Main (616) 679-5500 (616) 461-6981

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OPPONENT SE LT LG C RG RT TE FL QB FB TB Nebraska Hunter Black Mahan Faine Milligan Vollers Owens Givens LoVecchio Godsey (TE) Howard Michigan State Hunter Black Mahan Faine Vollers Curtin Owens Battle LoVecchio Lopienski Jones Texas A&M Hunter Black Mahan Faine Vollers Curtin Owens Fisher (TB) Holiday Lopienski Jones Pittsburgh Hunter Black Mahan Faine Milligan Vollers Crawford (FL) Givens Holiday Jenkins (FL) Fisher West Virginia Hunter Black Mahan Faine Milligan Vollers Crawford (FL) Givens Holiday Lopienski Jones USC Hunter Black Mahan Faine Milligan Vollers Owens Givens Holiday Lopienski Fisher Boston College Hunter Black Mahan Faine Milligan Vollers Owens Givens Holiday Lopienski Jones Tennessee Hunter Curtin Mahan Faine Black Vollers Owens Givens Holiday Campbell (FL) Fisher Navy Hunter Curtin Mahan Faine Black Vollers Owens Battle Holiday Lopienski Jones Stanford Hunter Curtin Mahan Faine Black Vollers Owens Givens Holiday Lopienski Jones Purdue Hunter Curtin Mahan Faine Black Vollers Owens Battle Holiday Lopienski Howard

OPPONENT LE DT NG RE OLB ILB ILB CB FS SS CB Nebraska Weaver Campbell Wisne Irons Boiman Harrison Watson Jefferson Dykes Israel Walton Michigan State Weaver Campbell Wisne Irons Boiman Harrison Watson Jefferson Dykes Israel Walton Texas A&M Weaver Campbell Wisne Irons Boiman Harrison Watson Jefferson Dykes Israel Walton Pittsburgh Weaver Campbell Wisne Roberts Boiman Harrison Watson Duff Dykes Sapp Walton West Virginia Weaver Budinscak Wisne Roberts Beckstrom (CB) Harrison Watson Duff Dykes Israel Walton USC Weaver Campbell Wisne Roberts Boiman Harrison Watson Duff Dykes Sapp Walton Boston College Weaver Campbell Hilliard Roberts Beckstrom (CB) Harrison Watson Duff Dykes Sapp Walton Tennessee Weaver Campbell Hilliard Roberts Boiman Harrison Watson Duff Earl Sapp Walton Navy Weaver Campbell Hilliard Irons Jefferson (CB) Harrison Watson Duff Israel Sapp Walton Stanford Weaver Campbell Hilliard Irons Boiman Harrison Watson Duff Earl Sapp Walton Purdue Weaver Budinscak Hilliard Irons Jefferson (CB) Harrison Watson Duff Dykes Earl Walton

GAME-BY-GAME TEAM STATISTICS

NOTRE DAME RUSHING PASSING TOTAL OFF. FIRST DOWNS FUMBLES (No.-Yds.-TD) (A-C-I-Yds.-TD) (Plays-Yds.) (Tot-R-Pa-Pn) (No.-Lost) Nebraska 30-43-1 32-16-2-119-0 62-162 14-4-6-4 3-2 Michigan State 43-156-0 24-13-1-124-1 67-280 18-9-9-0 3-1 Texas A&M 33-70-0 27-12-3-121-0 60-191 12-5-6-1 3-0 Pittsburgh 57-249-3 13-10-0-70-0 70-319 18-12-5-1 2-0 West Virginia 69-345-4 14-7-1-70-0 83-415 23-16-5-2 2-1 USC 53-208-3 14-10-0-138-0 67-346 19-10-7-2 4-3 2002 Boston College 59-233-0 23-12-1-116-2 82-349 23-15-5-3 4-1 NOTRE Tennessee 45-122-1 24-13-1-146-0 69-268 20-11-8-1 2-2 Navy 58-272-3 12-7-1-118-0 70-390 18-13-5-0 2-1 DAME Stanford 43-241-0 20-2-1-64-1 63-305 13-11-2-0 0-0 Spring Purdue 40-131-1 15-7-0-31-0 55-162 10-9-1-0 2-1 Football OPPONENT RUSHING PASSING TOTAL OFF. FIRST DOWNS FUMBLES (No.-Yds.-TD) (A-C-I-Yds.-TD) (Plays-Yds.) (Tot-R-Pa-Pn) (No.-Lost) Nebraska 52-182-2 9-6-0-88-1 61-270 16-10-5-1 3-2 Michigan State 40-124-0 25-14-0-208-2 65-332 16-6-8-2 1-0 Texas A&M 40-133-1 27-15-0-177-1 67-310 17-6-9-2 1-0 Pittsburgh 26-50-0 22-11-3-182-1 48-232 15-5-8-2 2-2 West Virginia 37-179-1 23-9-1-91-2 60-270 15-8-4-3 1-0 USC 33-60-0 30-19-2-230-2 63-290 12-4-8-0 2-1 Boston College 31-199-1 16-7-2-155-2 47-354 14-8-5-1 1-1 Tennessee 34-78-2 29-17-1-228-1 63-306 16-3-12-1 1-1 Navy 45-177-1 18-7-1-123-0 63-300 14-6-6-2 3-2 Stanford 45-199-2 23-8-1-159-0 68-358 20-10-7-3 2-2 Purdue 33-74-0 52-24-3-258-1 85-332 22-3-15-4 1-1

64 2001 FINAL STATISTICS GAME-BY-GAME INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (No.-Yds.-TD) Battle Fisher Givens Grant Holiday Howard Jones Lopienski LoVecchio McNair TOTAL Nebraska 0-0-0 7-38-1 0-0-0 DNP 8-21-0 4-6-0 8-19-0 0-0-0 2-4-0 DNP 30-43-1 Michigan State 1-(-2)-0 17-103-0 0-0-0 DNP 4-7-0 0-0-0 13-56-0 0-0-0 7-(-5)-0 DNP 43-156-0 Texas A&M DNP 7-27-0 0-0-0 DNP 12-23-0 0-0-0 7-31-0 0-0-0 6-(-16)-0 DNP 33-70-0 Pittsburgh DNP 10-55-0 0-0-0 DNP 19-122-1 2-3-0 25-69-2 1-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 57-249-3 West Virginia DNP 22-119-2 1-3-0 DNP 19-130-0 1-2-0 23-92-2 1-1-0 DNP 0-0-0 69-345-4 USC DNP 4-2-0 2-(-8)-0 0-0-0 18-98-1 4-13-1 21-95-1 1-6-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 53-208-3 Boston College 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 1-4-0 22-109-0 9-35-0 23-87-0 2-7-0 2-(-9)-0 0-0-0 59-233-0 Tennessee 1-17-0 11-40-1 4-11-0 6-18-0 12-(-8)-0 0-0-0 10-46-0 1-(-2)-0 DNP 0-0-0 45-122-1 Navy 1-(-7)-0 DNP DNP 3-11-0 11-46-0 12-54-2 24-117-1 2-36-0 0-0-0 3-15-0 58-272-3 Stanford 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 12-67-0 14-44-0 14-106-0 2-15-0 1-9-0 0-0-0 43-241-0 Purdue 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 19-77-1 19-51-0 2-3-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 40-131-1 PASSING (Att.-Comp.-Int.-Yards-TD) Holiday LoVecchio Clark TOTAL Nebraska 8-5-1-41-0 24-11-1-78-0 DNP 32-16-2-119-0 Michigan State 1-1-0-5-0 22-12-1-119-1 DNP 24-13-1-124-1 Texas A&M 13-6-2-73-0 12-6-1-48-0 1-0-0-0-0 27-12-3-121-0 Pittsburgh 13-10-0-70-0 DNP DNP 13-10-0-70-0 West Virginia 14-7-1-70-0 DNP DNP 14-7-1-70-0 USC 12-9-0-133-0 2-1-0-5-0 DNP 14-10-0-138-0 Boston College 17-8-1-74-2 5-3-0-13-0 DNP 23-12-1-116-2 Tennessee 24-13-1-146-0 DNP DNP 24-13-1-146-0 Navy 11-6-1-94-0 1-1-0-24-0 DNP 12-7-1-118-0 Stanford 16-1-0-47-1 3-0-1-0-0 DNP 20-2-1-64-1 Purdue 15-7-0-31-0 DNP DNP 15-7-0-31-0 RECEIVING (No.-Yds.-TD) Battle Campbell Fisher Givens Godsey Grant Hunter Jenkins Jones Lopienski Owens Rodamer TOTAL Nebraska 2-8-0 DNP 1-(-1)-0 7-66-0 0-0-0- 0-0-0 4-38-0 0-0-0 1-8-0 1-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 16-119-0 Michigan State 1-15-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 6-57-1 4-39-0 1-(-4)-0 1-17-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 13-124-1 Texas A&M DNP DNP 0-0-0 2-25-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 8-72-0 1-15-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-9-0 DNP 12-121-0 Pittsburgh DNP 0-0-0 1-(-2)-0 5-39-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 3-23-0 1-10-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 10-70-0 West Virginia DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-10-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 3-37-0 0-0-0 2-14-0 0-0-0 1-9-0 0-0-0 7-70-0 USC DNP 0-0-0 0-0-0 4-49-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 4-77-0 0-0-0 2-12-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 10-138-0 Boston College 2-17-0 0-0-0 DNP 3-21-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 3-46-0 DNP 3-27-1 0-0-0 1-5-1 0-0-0 12-116-2 Tennessee 0-0-0 DNP 1-(-1)-0 9-99-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-8-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-40-0 0-0-0 13-146-0 Navy 0-0-0 1-32-0 DNP DNP 2-50-0 0-0-0 2-13-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 1-16-0 1-7-0 7-118-0 Stanford 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 0-0-0 1-47-1 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 2-64-1 Purdue 0-0-0 0-0-0 DNP 2-8-0 0-0-0 2-7-0 3-16-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 15-7-0 FIELD GOALS (x-missed FG) NEB MSU A&M PITT WVU USC BC TENN NAVY STAN PUR Nicholas Setta 29 43 47 40 21, 42 38, 29 32x, 42 41 41, 32 23, 38 36x, 47 TACKLES Beckstrom Boiman Budinscak Campbell, D. Duff Dykes Earl Elam Harrison Hilliard 2002 Nebraska 1 5 0 0 2 13 DNP 0 11 2 Michigan State 1 2 2 2 2 5 DNP 5 6 1 NOTRE Texas A&M 1 11 3 4 4 7 DNP 3 14 3 Pittsburgh 3 3 0 4 1 2 4 2 6 1 DAME West Virginia 3 4 0 2 3 2 2 5 7 1 USC 0 3 0 2 3 3 5 2 11 1 Spring Boston College 1 5 0 3 0 6 3 1 6 2 Football Tennessee 3 2 2 2 0 DNP 6 2 9 2 Navy 0 2 0 5 4 DNP DNP 5 9 5 Stanford 0 3 1 0 1 7 1 5 15 5 Purdue 0 0 5 3 5 3 12 1 6 4 TACKLES Irons Israel Jefferson Roberts Sapp, G. Walton Watson Weaver Wisne Nebraska 1 9 7 0 1 2 18 8 3 Michigan State 3 9 0 2 5 3 10 3 6 Texas A&M 5 0 3 3 5 5 10 5 1 Pittsburgh DNP DNP DNP 3 3 4 4 5 2 West Virginia 0 0 DNP 3 DNP 2 5 7 1 USC 2 DNP 2 9 4 7 3 1 3 Boston College 1 DNP DNP 0 2 3 4 3 DNP Tennessee 1 0 4 1 8 4 8 6 DNP Navy 3 3 0 DNP 3 7 6 7 DNP Stanford 3 0 2 DNP 5 2 2 8 DNP Purdue 3 0 5 DNP DNP 4 6 6 DNP 65 THE WILLIAM D. REYNOLDS AWARD

THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME PROUDLY PRESENTS HONORABLE JEANNE M. JOURDAN’S THE ILLIAM EYNOLDS WARD TO THE W D. R A RESPONSE HONORABLE JEANNE M. JOURDAN Tender, strong and true. Notre Dame’s alumni who serve in America’s courts have done more than sing these words, we’ve tried Working with youth for the betterment of the quality of life to live them. I am delighted to accept the Wil- liam D. Reynolds Award this year on behalf The Honorable A series of murder cases involving teenagers of all the judges who call this place Notre Jeanne M. Jourdan prompted her to spearhead a community educa- Dame, our alma mater. (’75 JD) of tional awareness program entitled “This is My In 1965, I came to Notre Dame as a faculty Cassopolis, Mich., Neighborhood.” All students in the South Bend wife. In 1975, I had graduated to an alumna is the 2002 recipi- School Corporation participated in the program. of Notre Dame Law School. By 1985, I was ent of the William Also, the area’s hospitals, police forces, lawyers, the mother of Notre Dame alumnae. For nearly D. Reynolds Award leadership, Kiwanis Clubs, the Urban League and two decades, my role in this community has to be presented at WNDU Television all joined the effort to empower been as a judge. halftime of the an- the children of our community to seek peaceful so- The rule of law and the peaceful resolution nual Blue-Gold lutions to conflict. of complaints are not easily achieved for people spring football Through photography, one-act plays, mock tri- whose lives have been caught up in crime, con- game. The award als and a teen forum, school children focused on tempt and conflict. As a nation we rely on is conferred annually on a Notre Dame gradu- the causes and solutions to conflict. judges who are true to the law, whose thirst ate who is doing exceptional work with youth for The Indiana Judicial Center also focused on for justice is strong and whose compassion for the betterment of the quality of life. the project to inspire other judges in their World those who suffer is tender. Concerns for the A graduate of the Notre Dame Law School in Report Annual Survey for its trial advocacy pro- suffering of litigants has inspired judges to 1975, Jourdan’s career as a student was legend- gram and the Notre Dame trial teams have been reach out to the community in projects like ary as she also has five daughters at home - ages ranked first and second in the nation twice in the “This is My Neighborhood,” to initiate court- two to 10 years of age. past decade. sponsored programs for children of divorce and Beginning in 1981, Jourdan served for 17 years Since retirement, Jourdan has remained active to seek the advice of the victims of crime be- as a judge in the St. Joseph County Superior Court, in teaching both in South Bend and around the fore sentencings. The Notre Dame Law School has contributed hundreds of jurist to the court- becoming the first woman to serve in that capacity. country for the National Institute of Trial Advo- houses of America. I am proud to have been a Jourdan is also the first female graduate of the Notre cacy. The opportunity to touch the lives of thou- member of both Notre Dame and the judiciary. Dame Law School to have a daughter follow in her sands of trial lawyers has been Jourdan’s most footsteps. rewarding experience. She believes there is noth- As a volunteer at the Notre Dame Legal Clinic and an adjunct professor at the Law During her service on the bench, Jourdan initi- ing more enjoyable for a judge than to preside School, I am happy to report that today’s Notre ated several court projects including a court devoted over trials conducted by skilled advocates. As a Dame students promise to provide future to drunk driving, a court sponsored rehabilitation volunteer at the Notre Dame Legal Clinic, Jourdan courtrooms with public servants who are ten- program for drunk drivers, a drug court and an edu- is now putting her own trial skills to the test on der, strong and true. cational program for divorcing parents. behalf of clinic clients.

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As you are aware, the tive student-athlete, their parents and/or University of Notre Dame has built a na- friends any benefit, money, gifts, awards or tional reputation as a leader in scholarship, special arrangement without prior approval athletics and sportsmanship that is unparal- from the Compliance Office. leled in intercollegiate athletics. As a part Provide any payment of expense or loan of our winning formula, Notre Dame be- of an automobile for a student-athlete to lieves that following the letter and spirit of return home or to any other location. NCAA regulations is important to the suc- Provide an honorarium to a student-ath- cess of our programs as well as the charac- lete for a speaking engagement. The Com- ter and mission of the University. You can pliance Office must approve all speaking help Notre Dame maintain its long tradition engagements prior to the event. of excellence by being aware of the NCAA Provide free or reduced cost lodging in rules that govern your involvement with our your home to a student-athlete or a student- student-athletes, teams and prospective stu- athlete’s family and/or friends. dent-athletes. While the following informa- Be involved in the recruitment of prospec- tion does not contain all applicable NCAA tive student-athletes. No contact (in person, legislation, it should serve as a guide to as- mail, telephone, e-mail, etc.) should be made sist you in understanding the regulations that by an Athletics Representative with a prospec- govern the activities and actions of Notre tive-student unless an established prior relation- Dame enthusiasts that may impact any of ship exists. Under no circumstances should the our athletic programs. contact be for recruiting purposes. Below you will find basic information that Use the name, picture or appearance of you should be aware of as a friend of Notre an enrolled student-athlete to advertise, rec- Dame Athletics. By becoming familiar with ommend or promote sales or use of a com- these NCAA guidelines, you will be helping mercial product or service of any kind. Per- us to “WIN THE NOTRE DAME WAY”. missible use of a student-athlete’s name, pic- You are considered a ture or appearance must receive prior au- REPRESENTATIVE OF NOTRE DAME’S thorization from the Compliance Office. If you should ever have questions re- ATHLETICS INTERESTS if you: IF YOU ARE CONSIDERED A garding NCAA regulations and rules, Have ever been a member of the Mono- REPRESENTATIVE OF NOTRE DAME’S please contact any of the following mem- gram Club or any former athletic fan sup- ATHLETICS INTERESTS based upon bers of the Compliance Office: port group (e.g., Quarterback Club, Three- the criteria listed above, you MAY: Point Club, Fast-Break Club); Arrange summer employment for a prospec- Have ever made a financial tive student-athlete, provided he/she has Sandy Barbour contribution-to the Notre Dame athletics signed a National Letter-of-Intent with Notre Senior Associate Athletic Director 2002 department or to any former athletic fan Dame and you receive permission from the 112 Joyce Center support group at Notre Dame; Notre Dame Athletic Compliance Office. Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 NOTRE Have ever assisted in providing benefits Arrange employment for current Notre Phone: 219/631-3248 to enrolled student-athlete, their families Dame student-athletes provided you receive Email: [email protected] DAME and/or friends; permission from the Notre Dame Athletic Spring Have been involved in promoting Notre Compliance Office. Mike Karwoski Football Dame’s athletics programs; or Forward information about prospective Associate Athletic Director Have ever been a season ticket holder for student-athletes to the appropriate Notre 112 Joyce Center any sport at Notre Dame. Dame coaching staff. Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 Once you become a representative of Continue established family relationships Phone: 219/631-4107 Notre Dame’s athletics interests, you retain with friends and neighbors. Contacts with Email: [email protected] that identity indefinitely. sons and daughters of these families are permitted so long as they are not made for Chris Reynolds recruiting purposes. Assistant Athletic Director We encourage you to ASK BEFORE YOU 112 Joyce Center ACT. Please contact our Compliance Office Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 prior to engaging in any action that may Phone: 219/631-7358 jeopardize the eligibility of current and fu- Email: [email protected] ture Notre Dame student-athletes. Only with your help can we continue to “WIN THE NOTRE DAME WAY”! 67 UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME soon would have large immigrant Catholic populations. The growth of the University of Notre Dame and the immigrant experience would be inextricably linked. A number of forces were at work in this relationship. The American Dream was com- ing into being, and with it the hope and ex- pectation that, through hard work and edu- cation, children would enjoy greater oppor- tunities than their parents. At the same time, anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic sentiments were open and pervasive in American soci- ety, creating barriers to immigrant Catholic students. Equally strong sentiments among many Catholics regarded public schools at any level as dangerous places where young people might lose their faith. For all these reasons, education-primary, secondary and The University of Notre Dame was founded in 1842 by Edward F. Sorin, a priest of the Congregation higher education-became the centerpiece of of the Holy Cross. American Catholicism. tions still exist. One historian estimates a Though it may not have seemed so at the UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME mortality rate of approximately 80 percent time, this great historical movement of QUICK FACTS among Notre Dame’s contemporary secu- peoples and the creation of the American Founded ...... 1842 lar institutions. Yet Notre Dame survived...” melting pot dramatically enhanced the odds Enrollment ...... 10,301 The University’s survival of those early of Notre Dame’s survival. What still had to Baccalaureate ...... 7,875 years is a tribute not only to the faith of Fa- be decided, however, was precisely the type Postbaccalaureates ...... 2,426 ther Sorin, but also his pragmatism and wit. of institution Notre Dame would become. Faculty/Student Ratio...... 1:12 In the beginning, his institution’s only admis- How could this small Midwestern school Faculty ...... 690 sions requirement was the ability to pay- without endowment and without ranks of Graduation Rate ...... 94 percent some payment, at least, and not necessar- well-to-do alumni hope to compete with Bachelor’s Degree Programs ...... 59 ily in currency or coin; livestock or the ser- firmly established private universities and Master’s Degree Programs ...... 44 vices of a tradesman or some other “in-kind” public-supported state institutions? As in Doctoral Degree Programs ...... 23 payment also were cheerfully accepted. Nor Sorin’s day, the fact that the University pur- were admissions limited by religious prefer- sued this lofty and ambitious vision of its fu- The University of Notre Dame’s institu- ence. Father Sorin’s mission and inspiration ture was testimony to the faith of its leaders- tional mission is to attain the highest stan- were thoroughly and indisputably Catholic, leaders such as Father John Zahm, C.S.C. dards of excellence in teaching, scholarship, but from the beginning he made it clear that As Schlereth describes it: and selected fields of research in a commu- would-be students of any religious persua- “Zahm... envisioned Notre Dame as po- nity of learning where truth is seen to be sion were welcome; indeed, that Notre tentially ‘the intellectual center of the Ameri- informed by belief and where, specifically, Dame’s student body eventually would be- can West’; an institution with large under- the Catholic faith and intellectual tradition come overwhelmingly Catholic was more a graduate, graduate, and professional are celebrated and lived. reflection of American culture than of paro- schools equipped with laboratories, librar- Notre Dame’s founding can perhaps best chialism on the University’s part. ies, and research facilities; Notre Dame be characterized as an outburst of mission- Sorin was equally flexible when it came to should strive to become the University that 2002 ary zeal. How else can one describe the his University’s academic offerings. While a its charter claimed it was.” action of Father Edward Sorin, the 28-year- classical collegiate curriculum was established Zahm was not without evidence to sup- NOTRE old French priest of the Congregation of early on, so too were elementary and prepa- port his faith in Notre Dame’s potential. On Holy Cross who, with $310 cash and three ratory programs as well as a manual labor this campus in 1899, Jerome Green, a young DAME log buildings in various stages of disrepair school, and for several decades the collegiate Notre Dame scientist, became the first Spring in the middle of the northern Indiana fron- program never attracted more than a dozen American to transmit a wireless message. At tier, had the temerity to christen his enter- students in any year. As Notre Dame’s chroni- about the same time, Albert Zahm, Father Football prise the University of Notre Dame du Lac? cler, Father Arthur Hope, C.S.C., has written, John’s younger brother, was designing the Notre Dame at its founding was a name “If (Sorin) was to begin at all, the head of this first successful helicopter and first wind tun- in search of, or perhaps in anticipation of, a new college had to be mightily concerned nel, and was launching the first man-carry- university. The wonder is not so much what about frostbite and empty stomachs. The more ing glider from the roof of a building on the University has become more than a cen- elusive problems of intellectual development campus. The University also had established tury and a half later, but that it survived at would have to wait.” the nation’s first architecture, law and engi- all in those early years of beginning almost If Notre Dame in its infancy was the child neering schools under Catholic auspices. literally from nothing. In his book, “The Uni- of Sorin’s vision and will, its subsequent The debate over Notre Dame’s future was versity of Notre Dame: A Portrait of Its His- growth and development were the products effectively ended in the two decades follow- tory and Campus,” historian Thomas of large and powerful social and historical ing the First World War. In 1919 the Univer- Schlereth of the American studies depart- forces. Just as the University was being es- sity installed its first president to have earned ment has described the odds the University tablished, the first waves of European immi- a Ph. D., Father James Burns, C.S.C., and was up against: grants, overwhelmingly Catholic, were the changes he initiated were as dramatic “Only nine other Catholic colleges ex- reaching America’s shores, and Notre as they were far-reaching. The elementary, isted when Notre Dame was founded but Dame’s location-though seemingly remote- preparatory and manual labor programs that number had grown to 51 by 1861. Pres- in fact put it within easy reach of cities like were scrapped; the University’s first board 68 ently only seven of these antebellum institu- Chicago, Detroit and St. Louis, all of which of lay advisors was established with the goal UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME of creating a $1-million endowment, and Dame’s first flowering as a true University, Some goals are self-evident. The Univer- a national campaign was conducted to the half-century since the Second World War sity must strive at all times to bring new vigor achieve that goal; and the first annual giv- has seen the vision of John Zahm reach full to its teaching and to enhance both the ing program for alumni was launched. With fruition. Father John Cavanaugh, C.S.C., breadth and the depth of the education it this impetus established, between 1919 and began the process after the war by toughen- offers students. At the same time, it must 1933 the University would erect 15 new ing Notre Dame’s entrance requirements, strengthen significantly its graduate pro- buildings and triple the numbers of both its increasing faculty hiring, and establishing the grams and faculty research to make ever students and its faculty. Notre Dame Foundation to expand the greater contributions in the quest for new Also during this period, a new and utterly University’s development capabilities. Then, knowledge. unanticipated element was added to the during the 35-year tenure of Father Theodore But the institutional mission of Notre Dame ethos of Notre Dame, and the University Hesburgh, C.S.C., Notre Dame’s enrollment, reaches beyond these goals. forever after would be a national institution. faculty and degrees awarded all doubled; The higher aspiration of the University That new element was, of course, the game library volumes increased five-fold; endow- is to seek out and assume leadership roles of football. But for Notre Dame and for its ment catapulted from less than $10 million through which students and alumni, fac- legions of ethnic American loyalists-most, but to more than $400 million; campus physical ulty, interdisciplinary institutes, and pro- not all, Catholic-the cliché was true: Foot- facilities grew from 48 to 88 buildings; fac- fessional programs can bring their accom- ball was more than a game. Through its aca- ulty compensation increased ten-fold; and plishments to bear on the most basic and demic program, Notre Dame already was research funding more than twenty-fold. In pressing needs of humanity-for peace and part of the striving of ethnic Americans to addition, two defining moments occurred social justice, for human rights and dig- earn a place in the American mainstream. during this period: the transference of Uni- nity, for ethical conduct in business, sci- Now, even for those who had never and versity governance in 1967 from the Congre- ence and the professions, for a renewal would never attend Notre Dame, the Uni- gation of Holy Cross to a predominantly lay of values in interpersonal and societal re- versity became a symbol, so much so that board of trustees and the admission of lationships, and for a more enlightened its attraction persists literally to this day. women to undergraduate studies in 1972. stewardship of the environment, to name The national recognition football brought Since 1987, when Father Edward Malloy, but a few of the challenges. to Notre Dame was a mixed blessing at C.S.C., assumed the presidency, the Univer- This aspiration is incumbent upon Notre those times when it tended to overshadow sity has continued to grow in stature. En- Dame as a Catholic University. Today, as the University’s growing academic distinc- dowed faculty positions now number more throughout its history, Notre Dame’s po- tion, but overall it has been an almost incal- than 135, the student body is among the sition in American culture mirrors that of culable boon to public awareness of, inter- most selective in the nation, with a third of the Catholic church. The world is very dif- est in, and support of Notre Dame. It may entering freshmen ranking among the top ferent from the one encountered by Father be amusing to speculate how the University’s five students in their high school graduating Sorin on his arrival in this country. The history might have been different without the classes, and the graduation rate annually is tangible barriers faced then by Catholic phenomenon of football, but the University among the four or five highest in the nation, students and scholars have largely been is happy to accept this legacy as is. behind only a handful of Ivy League institu- removed, and today one may find such If the post-World War I era saw Notre tions. The University’s endowment, now students and scholars at Harvard and more than $3 billion, Stanford and Duke, as well as at Notre is the 18th largest in Dame. American Catholics are firmly im- American higher edu- planted in the American mainstream. cation and campus At the same time, the secularization of additions have in- contemporary American society is an undis- cluded new research puted fact, and with that transformation has laboratories, a come a weakening of common values, an graduate student antipathy to belief, and a resistance to the housing complex, very notion of underlying truths. One expres- 2002 residence halls for un- sion of this viewpoint is the contention that dergraduate women a Catholic university is a contradiction in NOTRE (who now comprise terms, that reason and belief are somehow more than 45 percent mutually exclusive. The Catholic intellectual DAME of the student body), tradition and the Western university tradi- Spring DeBartolo Hall, the tion itself stand in opposition to this conten- most technologically tion, as does Notre Dame. Football advanced teaching It is a telling act that throughout Notre facility in higher edu- Dame’s history, and increasingly in recent cation, a 153,000- years, many eminent scholars of various square foot complex faith traditions have made the University for the Mendoza Col- their home simply because they have pre- lege of Business and ferred to work in a community of learning one of the largest where belief is not merely tolerated, but in bookstores in higher fact is celebrated. education. Father Sorin’s dream was predicated on The question for his conviction that a university would be a Notre Dame today is, powerful force for good in this land that he having become a dis- embraced as his own. For Notre Dame, tinguished American Sorin’s conviction remains the inspiration, university, to what the mission and the driving force. The Theodore M. Hesburgh Library and the seven other libraries on campus should it now aspire? contain a total of more than two million volumes. 69 ATHLETIC DIRECTOR KEVIN WHITE Kevin White, one of the most progressive and talented administra- three teams in the top five in the country, four in the top 10, and tors in the intercollegiate athletics ranks, has quickly attached his sig- eight in the top 20 in their respective sports. nature as director of athletics at the University of Notre Dame. White reorganized academic and student services for athletes (as- In fact, his initial year in that position remarkably qualified as the most sembling a task force to increase graduation rates of student-athletes), successful across-the-board year in the history of athletics at Notre Dame. renegotiated the university's radio contracts, built up the athletic de- A career educator and one of the most respected athletic adminis- partment staff, planned the addition of two new women's sports, hired trators in the nation, White previously had been athletic director at five head coaches, and increased the athletic operating budget from Arizona State University, Tulane University, the University of Maine, $16.7 million to $26 million while at the same time turning a $3-mil- and Loras College. He brought a combined 18 years of experience in lion deficit into a $1-million-plus surplus. He also reorganized athletic those positions with him to his assignment at Notre Dame. fundraising and launched a $25-million capital campaign. During his Appointed by Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., Notre Dame's presi- tenure in Tempe, the university allocated $30 million to a series of dent, on March 13, 2000, White became the first Notre Dame athletic athletics facilities construction projects. director to report directly to the University's president -- under the re- With a Ph.D. in education, White has taught classes throughout alignment of athletic administrative responsibilities announced in Feb- his career, including currently as a concurrent associate professor ruary 2000 by Father Malloy. in the management department of the Mendoza College of Busi- White's first year at Notre Dame in 2000-01 saw unprecedented ness as part of Notre Dame's MBA program during spring semes- across-the-board achievement on Irish fields of play: ters (he teaches a sports business course). Known for his close per- * Notre Dame finished 11th in the Sears Directors' Cup all-sports sonal ties with student-athletes, at Arizona State he established a ratings, matching its best-ever ranking in that competition. highly successful life skills program. * Four different teams earned number-one rankings (women's soc- At Tulane for five years from 1991-96, White saw the men's basket- cer, women's basketball, men's fencing and baseball were number ball team advance to postseason play five seasons in as many years. one at some point, and men's lacrosse ranked second). Two Green Wave women's basketball teams played in the NCAA tour- * The Irish claimed a national championship in women's basketball, nament during his tenure -- and three Tulane baseball squads advanced a third-place finish in fencing (a men's and women's combined champi- to NCAA play. He helped bring Tulane into Conference USA, with the onship) and national semifinal appearances in women's soccer and Green Wave beginning play in that league in 1995-96. men's lacrosse. The 15-sport Tulane program featured a $13.5 million budget. White * Sixteen of a possible 22 teams earned national rankings in 2000- helped launch a variety of marketing initiatives, including the 01, including 10 that achieved the highest rating in the history of the department's first multi-media marketing campaign (it earned several program. awards), an expansion of radio broadcast properties and a five-fold His initial year on the job at Notre Dame also featured a handful of membership increase in the Green Wave Club. He reorganized the other noteworthy accomplishments: department, developed a comprehensive compliance program and * He helped the Irish athletic program toward its goal of becoming assisted the university in its development role for a $125 million, 19,000 a top five program in the Sears Directors' Cup all-sports competition seat, multi-purpose arena in downtown New Orleans, with Tulane as by championing the University's plan to add 64 grants-in-aid over the the primary tenant. next four years, in order to give all 26 varsity sports the full NCAA At Maine for four years from 1987-91, White directed a program complement of scholarships. that was widely regarded as the most progressive in the Northeast. * He emphasized the need to remain competitive on the facilities Maine captured conference championships and postseason bids (ei- front by commissioning a facilities masterplan that will provide a long- ther NCAA or NIT) in 1989-90 in five sports -- football, baseball, hockey, term plan for upgrading Notre Dame's athletic physical plant. women's basketball and golf. During those four years, Maine twice * On the academic front, Irish student-athletes enjoyed one of the appeared in the NCAA Division I-AA Football Championships and 2002 most productive years ever in the classroom -- with the football team three times reached the NCAA Hockey Final Four. recording its two highest-ever semester grade-point averages, the men's NOTRE and women's basketball squads posting their best-ever fall GPAs and DAME six other teams posting their highest-ever semester averages during the fall. Then four teams during the spring semester achieved their Spring highest in-season averages ever. Football * The Coaches Association awarded its Aca- demic Achievement Award for 2001 to Notre Dame based on its 100 percent graduation for entering freshmen from 1995. * The NCAA Division I-A Athletic Directors' Association gave one of its four 2000 awards of excellence to Notre Dame's CHAMPS/Life Skills Program * He assured long-term consistency in the Irish coaching ranks by signing Notre Dame head coaches to multi-year contracts. Under White's leadership over four years, Arizona State rose all the way to 11th in 1999-2000 in the Sears Directors' Cup rankings of overall athletic success (compared to a 23rd-place rank- ing the year before he arrived). He saw the Sun Devils win the 1996 NCAA men's golf title and NCAA women's golf titles in '97 and '98 -- in addition to NCAA runner-up finishes in baseball in '98 and women's gymnastics in '99, and a Rose Bowl appearance in 70 football following the '97 season. In 1998-99 the university placed ATHLETIC DIRECTOR KEVIN WHITE In addition to his current role with the BCS (Bowl Championship regional and county championships between 1972 and ’76. He’s a Series), he previously was a member of the Rose Bowl Management member of the Florida High School Track Coaches and Athletes Hall Committee while at Arizona State, was an ex-officio member of the of Fame. Sugar Bowl Committee during his tenure at Tulane and also worked White also spent a year (1980-81) as district administrator for closely with the Fiesta Bowl during his stay in Tempe. athletics and special projects for the Mt. Morris Consolidated School White has served as mentor for an impressive list of senior level District in Mt. Morris, Mich., where he supervised an athletic pro- athletic administrators who have worked for him, then gone on to gram that included 47 teams and 70 coaches in kindergarten become directors of athletics - including Jim Sterk of Washington through 12th grade. State, Tom Boeh of Ohio University, Ian McCaw of Northeastern, Born Sept. 25, 1950, in Amityville, N.Y., White earned his Ph.D. Bruce Van De Velde of Iowa State, Herman Frazier of Alabama- from Southern Illinois University in 1983 with an emphasis on higher Birmingham, Scott Devine of St. Mary's College (Md.), Greg Capell education administration -- and in 1985 completed postdoctoral work of Loras, Tim Van Alstine of Western Illinois, as well as current Notre at Harvard University's Institute for Educational Management. He Dame senior associate athletic director Sandy Barbour, who fol- earned his master's degree in athletics administration from Central lowed him at Tulane. Michigan University in 1976 and his bachelor's degree in business White also has his own weekly, half-hour radio show on ESPN Ra- administration in 1972 from St. Joseph's College in Rensselaer, Ind., dio 1000 in Chicago - and has a pre-game segment on Westwood where he also competed as a sprinter in track and field. He was One's radio broadcasts of Notre Dame football games. awarded St. Joseph's Alumni Achievement Award in 1997. During his coaching career, White served as head track and field White also attended the University of South Florida and St. Leo coach at Southeast Missouri State (1981-82) and assistant cross county College in Tampa, Fla., between 1972 and '76 -- and he took 60 hours and track and field coach at Central Michigan (1976-80). of advanced graduate courses in higher education administration at At Southeast Missouri State (where he also served as assistant ath- Michigan State University between 1977 and '80. letic director), he coached 16 Division I and II All-Americans and was White's wife, Jane, earned a bachelor's degree from St. Joseph's named Missouri College and University Track Coach of the Year in in 1973 and a master's degree in physical education from Central 1982. He served as director of the 1981 NCAA Division II Cross Coun- Michigan in 1977. She also served as head track and field coach try Championship and founded the Semotion Relays, a track event at Central Michigan. that attracted 61 university teams. The couple has five children -- Maureen, who completed a master of At Central Michigan, White coached four Division I All-Americans and fine arts degree at Arizona State in 2000 and currently teaches at one national champion. He served as director of the '78 Mid-American San Francisco City College; Michael, a University of Mississippi gradu- Conference Track Championship, the 1977, '78 and '79 Central Michigan ate and four-year starter at point guard for the Ole Miss basketball Relays and the '77 State of Michigan Special Olympics. team and now an assistant basketball coach at Jacksonville (Ala.) State He began his coaching career at Gulf High School in New Port University; Daniel, a senior at the University of Notre Dame and a Richey, Fla., coaching cross country and track and assisting in football member of the Irish basketball squad; Brian, a high school senior; and and wrestling. He coached his Gulf teams to 19 conference, district, Mariah, a fifth-grader who is a standout in swimming.

Great legacies and traditions combine with the spirit of 2002 academic achievement... NOTRE DAME Proud to support the Spring University of Notre Dame family and Football surrounding community since 1941.

NCUA 574/239-6611 www.ndfcu.org Independent of the University 71 INDICATORS OF EXCELLENCE * Notre Dame is one of just five universities to * Faculty in the Notre Dame theology depart- Highest University Graduation Rates rank consistently both in the top 25 in the U.S. ment have published more than 300 books since Rk.University ...... Pct.* News & World Report survey of America’s best 1965, an output unmatched in higher education. 1. Harvard ...... 97 colleges and the Sears Directors Cup standings * Notre Dame’s Institute for Medieval Studies 2. Princeton ...... 95 of the best overall athletic programs. was the first in the United States, and the Univer- Yale ...... 95 * Computer and information technology re- sity also founded the first publication series dedi- 4. Notre Dame ...... 94 sources at Notre Dame have been ranked among cated specifically to medieval topics. Dartmouth ...... 94 the nation’s best for three consecutive years in the * According to the National Science Founda- Duke ...... 94 survey “America’s 100 Most Wired Colleges.” tion, Notre Dame is one of the top three U.S. * - Graduation rank of all students based on STUDENTS universi-ties in low-energy nuclear physics re- an NCAA survey of Division I universities * Notre Dame’s graduation rate of 94 percent search. (based on 1989-91 entering classes) for all students ranks behind only Harvard and * The University’s biological sciences department Princeton. is an internationally recognized center for research Highest Division I Student-Athlete in mosquito biology and the Center for Tropical Dis- Graduation Rates * The academic profile of the entering Notre Dame undergraduate features a median SAT score ease Research and Training houses the Aedes Ref- Rk. University ...... Pct.* of 1350. Some 35 percent ranked 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 in erence Centre. 1. Duke ...... 91 their high school graduating classes, and 85 per- * The 7,500-acre University of Notre Dame 2. Northwestern ...... 90 cent graduated in the top 10 percent. Entering stu- Environmental Research Center on the Wiscon- 3. Notre Dame ...... 88 dents were leaders in volunteer service, sports, fine sin-Michigan border encompasses woodlands, 4. Stanford ...... 87 and dramatic arts, and student government. ponds, streams and more than 30 lakes. Home 5. Boston College ...... 83 * Notre Dame’s 96 percent retention rate be- to the University’s Jerry Hank Family Program in 6. Virginia ...... 82 tween the freshman and sophomore years is Environmental Studies and the new James B. Hank Vanderbilt ...... 83 among the highest in the country, thanks in large Research Facility, it is one of the premier ecologi- cal field stations in the world. * - Graduation rank of all students based part to the University’s unique First Year of Stud- * Notre Dame’s Department of Accountancy on an NCAA survey of Division I univer- ies program. * Notre Dame graduates are accepted into consistently ranks among the top 10 in the coun- sities (based on 1989-92 entering classes) medical schools at a rate of about 75 percent, try in an annual nationwide survey of accoun- almost twice the national average. tancy department chairs. The University ranks RANKINGS * Notre Dame’s student body includes some seventh in the number of alumni who are part- * Notre Dame’s commitment to academic ex- 700 students from 80 nations around the world. ners of Big Five accounting firms. cellence, values, service and character develop- * The distance learning initiative in the Execu- ment annually places the University among the FACULTY & PROGRAMS tive MBA Program in the Mendoza College of nation’s top 25 institutions of higher learning in * In a survey of some 2,000 leading scholars of Business has been selected as the best in higher surveys conducted by U.S. News and World Re- American religion, two of the scholars regarded as education. port, Princeton Review, Time, Kiplinger’s and the “most important to the field” are Notre Dame histo- * The Department of Mathematics ranks Templeton Foundation. rians Nathan Hatch and George Marsden. Of the among the top quarter among all universities that * Notre Dame ranks as one of the nation’s most two books singled out as “most important for the grant a doctorate in the field. selective universities, joining Harvard, Yale, study of American religion,” one was “The Democ- * Five of the leading marketing researchers Princeton, Stanford, Dartmouth, Brown, MIT and ratization of American Christianity,” by Hatch, the in the nation are Notre Dame faculty members, Rice as the only schools that admit fewer than University’s provost. A third Notre Dame historian, according to a survey published in Marketing half of their freshman applicants and enroll more Jay Dolan, also was cited as one of the leading Educator. than half of those who are admitted. authors in the field. * Faculty members in the Notre Dame chemi- * An influential book from Johns Hopkins Uni- * Carolyn Woo, Gillen Dean of the Mendoza Col- cal engineering department are among the versity Press ranks Notre Dame sixth among 11 ris- lege of Business, has been named one of the 40 “young world’s top 10 most frequently cited scholars in ing private research universities. leaders” of American academe by Change, the jour- the field, according to Science Watch. * Notre Dame ranks first among U.S. Catholic nal of the American Association for Higher Education. * Five professors in Notre Dame’s electrical 2002 colleges and universities in the number of under- * Notre Dame’s School of Architecture offers engineering department are fellows - the highest graduates who have gone on to earn a doctor- the nation’s only fully accredited curriculum in grade of membership - in the Institute of Electri- NOTRE ate since 1920, according to independent stud- Classical architecture and has been described by cal and Electronic Engineers. ies conducted by Georgetown University and the New York Times as “the Athens” of the New Clas- * The wind tunnels housed in the Hessert Cen- DAME Delta Epsilon Sigma scholastic honor society. sicism movement. ter for Aerospace Research are internationally Spring known for pioneering techniques in smoke-flow Notre Dame celebrated the centennial of the Grotto in 1996. visualization. Football * The Notre Dame Law School is rated among the top 30 overall and is among the top five in the quality of the faculty and student satisfaction, according to a Princeton Review survey. * The Law School is the oldest in the nation under Catholic auspices. * The Notre Dame MBA program has the No. 1 business ethics curriculum in higher education, ac- cording to Business Week, and is rated by Forbes among the top 20 in giving students the best return on their investment. * Notre Dame in 1917 became the first uni- versity in the United States to offer a four-year course of studies in foreign commerce, beginning an emphasis on global issues that continues to- day in the Mendoza College of Business. 72 INDICATORS OF EXCELLENCE * The U.S. Department of Energy-supported Dame Bookstore is among the largest in Ameri- Radiation Laboratory on campus has given Notre can higher education. Dame the largest concentration of radiation chem- SERVICE ists in the world, with typically 30 different exter- * Community service is a hallmark of Notre nal institutions represented annually on its re- Dame. About 80 percent of Notre Dame students search staff. Notre Dame was the first American through the University’s Center for Social Concerns university to provide formal training in radiation are active in social service, and at least 10 percent chemistry and it continues to be the principal of each year’s baccalaureate graduating class source of trained postgraduates in the field. spends a year or more in volunteer service, prompt- * Among scientific and technological innova- ing UN General-Secretary Kofi Annan to say, tions historically associated with the Notre Dame “Notre Dame represents much that is best and most campus are the discovery of the formulae lead- generous in the American tradition.” ing to synthetic rubber, the first demonstration of * More than 600 Notre Dame graduates have the aerodynamics of glider flight, the first trans- participated in the Holy Cross Associates pro- mission in the United States of a wireless mes- gram since its inception in 1978. Established by sage, and the first disintegration of the nucleus the University’s founding congregation, the pro- of an atom by electron bombardment. gram engages young lay people in the * Physicists David Bennett and his wife, Sun congregation’s service to the poor in the United Hong Rhie, are developing a new technique to States and Chile. observe extra-solar planets. * Notre Dame’s Social Concerns Seminars, in ALUMNI which undergraduates spend fall and spring * The University’s network of 242 alumni clubs breaks offering assistance in Appalachia and Notre Dame athletes graduate at a rate of 88 – including 22 in foreign countries - is the most other impoverished areas, constitute the most percent, third highest in His Holiness Pope John extensive in higher education. comprehensive service-learning program in Paul II raised Sacred Heart to the title of “Major * With graduates renowned for their loyalty higher education. Basilica” on January 17, 1992.nation. and generosity, Notre Dame annually ranks * The University’s Alliance for Catholic Edu- * Notre Dame has the only operating center among the top five in percentage of alumni who cation (ACE) sends 135 recent graduates to teach for liturgical research and education established contribute. in some 90 understaffed Catholic schools in the by the United States’ bishops. * In the world of business, Notre Dame alumni Southern, Southeastern and Southwestern United * Notre Dame established the first programs serve in chief executive and other leadership States and in South Bend. positions at firms such as Goldman, Sachs & Co.; in law, engineering and architecture at an Ameri- INTERNATIONAL AND OFF-CAMPUS Bank of America; Haggar Company; Mobil Corp.; can Catholic institution of higher learning. STUDIES Morgan Stanley, Dean Witter, Discover & Co.; * Music professor Alexander Blachly was * Notre Dame has the largest proportion of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange; Merck & Com- nominated for a Grammy Award in 1999. students studying abroad of any Top 20 research pany; Marriott Corp.; and Liz Claiborne, Inc. * Marketing professors William Wilkie and university in the United States. * Notre Dame alumni preside as chief execu- Joel Urbany have been recognized by the Jour- * Notre Dame offers 26 international study tive officers at some 20 American colleges and nal of Consumer Psychology as among the programs in 16 countries: Austria, France, Ire- universities. nation’s most productive authors of consumer land, Mexico, Japan, Spain, Greece, Egypt, Aus- * Notre Dame graduates in high-level govern- marketing research. tralia, Chile, Israel, England, Italy, Russia, China mental positions include U.S. Congressmen rep- RESEARCH and Germany. resenting New York, New Jersey, Indiana and the * The first evidence of a new subnuclear par- * Notre Dame’s Keough Institute for Irish Stud- national security advisor. ticle – an exotic meson - was discovered by a ies is the nation’s foremost Irish studies program, * In alumni satisfaction surveys, Notre Dame team of physicists led by the elementary par- and Notre Dame has the most prominent pres- ranks among the top three nationally. ticle physics group at Notre Dame. Long theo- ence in Ireland of any American university. The * Notre Dame alumni hold senior positions at rized, the particle had remained undetected, Keough Institute is under the direction of the dis- some of the nation’s leading media organizations, and its discovery will allow physicists to expand tinguished Irish scholar and novelist Seamus including ABC News, Newsweek, Los Angeles 2002 their understanding of nature at its most funda- Deane and brings the foremost Irish scholars in Times, NBC, Chicago Tribune, Philadelphia In- mental level. the world to Notre Dame as both visiting and quirer, Universal Press Syndicate, PBS, Sports Il- NOTRE * Notre Dame is part of a new consortium of permanent faculty. lustrated, La opinion, and the Poynter Institute for universities constructing the world’s largest tele- * Notre Dame students study the Bible, Middle Media Studies. DAME scope in Arizona. Eastern history and the social and political prob- * Astronaut alumnus James Wetherbee is * The first experimental demonstration of a lems of the Palestinians and Israelis in the Holy Spring deputy director of NASA’s Johnson Space Cen- transistorless approach to computing, called Land at the University’s Ecumenical Institute for ter and has served as pilot or commander on four Football quantum-dot cellular automata, was performed Theological Studies at Tantur, located on a hill- space shuttle missions. by a team of Notre Dame electrical engineering top on the road from Jerusalem to Bethlehem. researchers. The new approach, which will take RESOURCES & FACILITIES * The University’s London Centre programs, years to perfect, could allow for as many as 40 * Notre Dame ranks in the top 20 among all which recently moved into expanded quarters in trillion devices on a four-inch-square chip, com- American colleges and universities in size of en- an historic building on Trafalgar Square, include pared with six million devices on the most ad- dowment (about $3 billion) and in annual volun- some 120 students each semester from each of vanced conventional chip. tary support. Since 1984-85 the University has Notre Dame’s four colleges. * Notre Dame’s Nuclear Structure Laboratory ranked first in the amount of money contributed * Notre Dame’s London Law Centre operates is one of only nine government-designated and uni- annually by parents. It has the largest endowment the only full-time branch of an American law versity-operated accelerator labs in the country. and yearly gift total of any Catholic institution of school located outside the United States. * Two Notre Dame engineers, Bill Spencer and higher learning in the world. * Notre Dame students who choose to study Michael Sain, have developed a new method to * DeBartolo Hall, the University’s 84-class- Down Under attend the University of Notre Dame- protect buildings from violent movement during room teaching facility, includes state-of-the-art Australia, a private Catholic university founded earthquakes and other catastrophic events. computer and audio-visual equipment that makes in 1989 and located in Fremantle. Although there * Notre Dame paleontologist J. Keith Rigby it the most technologically advanced in higher are no financial or legal ties, Notre Dame-Aus- has uncovered what is believed to be the largest education. tralia drew much of its founding inspiration from Tyrannosaurus Rex yet found. * The new 65,000-square-foot Hammes Notre its U.S. namesake. 73 NOTRE DAME STAFF DIRECTORY Football Staff Chris Masters (Ohio Wesleyan ’96) ...... 574-631-7516 Assistant Sports Information Director (Football Contact) ...... Home: 574-287-4459 Head Coach: Tyrone Willingham (Michigan State ’77) ...... 574-631-7475 Alan Wasielewski (Notre Dame ’00) ...... 574-631-7516 Assistant Coaches: Publicity Assistant ...... Home: 574-258-9425 Defensive Coordinator: Kent Baer (Utah State '73) ...... 574-631-7475 FAX Number ...... 574-631-7941 Offensive Coor./: Bill Diedrick (Eastern Washington ’70) ...... 574-631-7475 Administrative Assistant: Susan McGonigal ...... 574-631-7516 Offensive Line: Mike Denbrock (Grand Valley State '86) ...... 574-631-7475 Senior Staff Assistant: Carol Copley Defensive Line: Greg Mattison (Wisconsin-Lacrosse '71) Offensive Line: John McDonell (Carroll College ’81) ...... 574-631-7475 Business Receivers: Trent Miles (Indiana State ’87) ...... 574-631-7475 Tom Nevala (Notre Dame ’90) ...... 574-631-8087 Running Backs: Buzz Preston (Hawaii ’82) ...... 574-631-7475 Assistant Athletic Director/Business Manager Linebackers: Bob Simmons (Bowling Green '71) ...... 574-631-7475 Bookkeepers — Beverly Frecker, Janice Tabb, Lana Taylor, Kristal Tinkham (ClaimsSpecialist) Secondary: Trent Walters (Indiana ’65) ...... 574-631-7475 Tickets and Marketing Football Administrator: Bill Reagan (St. Joseph’s College ’74) ...... 574-631-3927 Jim Fraleigh (Notre Dame ’88) ...... 574-631-8103 Graduate Assistant: Dennis Moynihan (Connecticut ’93) ...... 574-631-7475 Assistant Athletic Director for Ticketing Graduate Assistant: John DeFilippo (James Madison ’00) ...... 574-631-7475 Perry Baert (Indiana ’94) ...... 574-631-7356 Football Intern: Rex Hogan (Austin Peay ’98) ...... 574-631-7475 Manager of Ticket Operations Senior Administrative Assistant: Jan Blazi ...... 574-631-7475 Heidi Uebelhor (Notre Dame ’99) ...... 574-631-7356 Senior Staff Assistants: Julie DeBuysser, Karen Demeter, Heather Phillips ...... 574-631-7475 Ticket Office Systems Administrator Senior Staff Assistant/Receptionist: Ann Niemier ...... 574-631-7475 Josh Berlo (Massachusetts '99) Athletic Director’s Staff Ticket Office Systems Manager Kevin White (St. Joseph's College ’72) ...... 574-631-6107 Maureen McNamara (Illinois ’84) ...... 574-631-7362 Athletic Director Camps and Events Manager George Kelly (Notre Dame ’53)...... 574-631-7277 Shirley Hums (Indiana ’73) ...... 574-631-6825 Special Assistant to the Athletic Director Systems Manager Sandy Barbour (Wake Forest ’91) ...... 574-631-6107 Monica Cundiff (Illinois ’92) ...... 574-631-6159 Senior Associate Athletic Director — Compliance and Administration Sports Promotions Coordinator Missy Conboy (Notre Dame ’82)...... 574-631-5143 Beth Gregory (Providence ’98) Associate Athletic Director — Business and Legal Affairs Sports Promotions Coordinator Bubba Cunningham (Notre Dame ’84) ...... 574-631-7246 Martha Anton, Ann Whitesel, Alicia Rowland (Customer Service Representatives); Associate Athletic Director — External Affairs Julie Deschaine, Carol Gida, Tracy Mattix (Senior Staff Assistants); Jeanne Schultheis, John Heisler (Missouri ’77) ...... 574-631-7516 Sandy Young (Bookkeeper); Judy Zook (Mail Distribution Assistant). Associate Athletic Director — Contest Scheduling, Broadcast Relations, Sports Info. Academic Advising Tom Kelly (Western Michigan ’60)...... 574-631-7185 Kate Halschak (Bowling Green ’76) ...... 574-631-5585 Associate Athletic Director — Facilities and Game Management Director of Academic Services Bernard Muir (Brown ’90) ...... 574-631-6107 Rev. Alfred F. D’Alonzo, C.S.C. (Senior Counselor); Holly Martin, Mary Ann Spence Associate Athletic Director — Student Welfare (Assistant Directors); Peter D’Alonzo, Pat Holmes, Celine Hamilton, Katrina Reynolds, Jim Phillips (Illinois ’90) ...... 574-631-6107 Adam Sargent (Counselors). Program Coordinator—Jean Humeston Associate Athletic Director — Community Relations Brian Boulac (Notre Dame ’63) ...... 574-631-7537 Equipment Assistant Athletic Director – Joyce Center General Manager Liz Muir (North Carolina ’91) ...... 574-631-6601 Jannifer Crittendon (Indiana ’89) ...... 574-631-4606 Director of Equipment Assistant Athletic Director –– Student Development Kathy Speybroeck (’92) ...... 574-631-6601 Mike Danch (Notre Dame ’67) ...... 574-631-5030 Equipment Manager Assistant Athletic Director — Facilities Dave Gilbert (Lake Superior State ’96) ...... 574-631-3628 Jim Fraleigh (Notre Dame ’88) ...... 574-631-8103 Equipment Manager Assistant Athletic Director — Ticketing Henry Scroope (Notre Dame ’97) ...... 574-631-6607 Mike Karwoski (Central Connecticut State ’90) ...... 574-631-4107 Head Football Equipment Manager Assistant Athletic Director — Compliance Chris Bacsik (Notre Dame ’01) Tom Nevala (Notre Dame ’90) ...... 574-631-8112 Assistant Equipment Manager 2002 Assistant Athletic Director — Business Operations Athletic Facilities Staff NOTRE Chris Reynolds (Indiana ’93) ...... 574-631-7358 Tom Kelly (Western Michigan ’60)...... 574-631-7185 Assistant Athletic Director — Rules and Education Associate Athletic Director — Facilities and Game Management Tony Yelovich (Tampa ’64)...... 574-631-4893 Mike Danch (Notre Dame ’67) ...... 574-631-5030 DAME Assistant Athletic Director — Game Management Assistant Athletic Director/Facilities Spring Jody Yelovich (Notre Dame ’93) ...... 574-631-5374 Brian Boulac (Notre Dame ’63) ...... 574-631-8020 Assistant Athletic Director — Employee Services Assistant Athletic Director/General Manager — Joyce Center Football Eric Guerra (New Mexico State ’97) ...... 574-631-9367 Tom Blicher Assistant Life Skills Coordinator Operations Manager – Joyce Center Juli Schreiber (Senior Administrative Assistant to Athletic Director), Darlene Borlik Joe Sassano (Notre Dame ’55) ...... 574-631-7724 (Coordinator of Student Services), Mary Jane Elias (Coordinator of Office Services), Programs Manager — Joyce Center Kathy Maloney (Coordinator of Athletic Services), Mary Pantzer Jim Murphy ...... 574-631-5035 (Coordinator of NCAA Compliance), Cindi Sykes (Coordinator of Business Services), Crowd Control Supervisor — Joyce Center Carol Gida (Senior Staff Assistant). Dan Brazo (Michigan State ’58) ...... 574-631-7081 Sports Information Athletic Facilities Manager John Heisler (Missouri ’77) ...... 574-631-7516 Robert Thomas (Lincoln ’73) ...... 574-631-7081 Associate Athletic Director/Sports Information Director ...... Home : 574-277-3523 Superintendent of Notre Dame Stadium Bernadette Cafarelli (Notre Dame ’83)...... 574-631-7516 Senior Staff Assistant—Kathy Maloney Associate Sports Information Director ...... Home: 574-273-2390 Loftus Sports Center Staff Tim Connor (Ohio University ’82) ...... 574-631-7516| Charles “Lefty” Smith (St. Thomas ’51) ...... 574-631-5020 Assistant Sports Information Director ...... Home: 574-273-1038 Director Lisa Nelson (Texas ’92) ...... 574-631-7516 Assistant Sports Information Director (Football Contact) ...... Home: 574-273-2973 Pete LaFleur (Notre Dame ’90) ...... 574-631-7516 Assistant Sports Information Director ...... Home: 574-231-0578 74 NOTRE DAME STAFF DIRECTORY Medical Staff Senior Staff Assistant –– Bev Greider ...... 574-631-3383 Dr. Jim Moriarity, Dr. Patrick Leary ...... 574-631-7100 Men’s and Women’s Fencing Dr. Rebecca Moskwinski, University Physicians Head Coach: Yves Auriol (Lycee de Toulouse ’55) ...... 574-631-6820 Dr. Willard Yergler ...... 574-631-7100 Assistant Coach: Janusz Bednarski ...... 574-631-6820 Director of Sports Medicine Program Senior Staff Assistant — Pat Ham ...... 574-631-5101 Monogram Club Men’s Golf Bill Scholl (Notre Dame ’79)...... 574-631-8219 Head Coach: John Jashinsky (Toledo '83) Executive Director of the Notre Dame National Monogram Club Director of Golf Operations: George Thomas (Purdue ’50)...... 574-631-5907 Rev. James Riehle (Notre Dame ’49) ...... 574-631-5450 Women’s Golf Executive Director Emeritus, Athletic Department Chaplain Senior Staff Assistant — Cathy Brown Head Coach: Debby King (Florida Atlantic 'xx) ...... 574-631-5907 Assistant Coach: Tom Hanlon (Notre Dame ’49, ’51) ...... 574-631-5907 RecSports Ice Hockey Richard O'Leary (SUNY-Cortland ’70) ...... 574-631-5100 Director of Intramurals and Club Sports Head Coach: Dave Poulin (Notre Dame ’82) ...... 574-631-5050 Sally Derengoski (Indiana ’81) ...... Director of RecSports and Fitness Assistant Coaches: John Micheletto (Dartmouth ’90) ...... 574-631-5227 Kara O’Leary (Saint Mary’s ’89) ...... Assistant Director - Rec Service Andy Slaggert (Notre Dame ’89) Jennie Phillips (Butler ’90) ...... Assistant Director - Fitness Senior Staff Assistant — Pat Ham ...... 574-631-5101 Jeff Walker (Southern Colorado ’87) ...... Assistant Director - Intramurals Men’s Lacrosse Dave Brown (Slippery Rock ’71) ...... Assistant Director Head Coach: Kevin Corrigan (Virginia ’81) ...... 574-631-5108 Senior Staff Assistant — Lana Wright Assistant Coaches: Kevin Anderson (Loyola of Md. ’93) ...... 574-631-5108 Strength and Conditioning Staff David Campbell (Gettysburg ’00) Mickey Marotti (West Liberty ’87) ...... 574-631-7890 Senior Staff Assistant –– Bev Greider ...... 574-631-3383 Strength and Conditioning Coordinator Women’s Lacrosse Heather Mason (Cincinnati ’95) ...... Asst. Strength and Conditioning Coord. Head Coach: Tracy Coyne (Ohio Univ. ’83) ...... 574-631-4719 Tony Rolinski (Penn State ’91) ...... Asst. Strength and Conditioning Coord. Assistant Coaches: Danielle Gallagher (William & Mary ’89) ...... 574-631-4717 Ken Croner (Butler ’97) ...... Strength and Conditioning Coach Director of Women's Lacrosse Operations: Eric Wachter (Notre Dame '97) Lon Record (Lock Haven '99) ...... Strength and Conditioning Coach Senior Staff Assistant — Doreen Secor ...... 574-631-4840 Athletic Training Staff Women’s Rowing Jim Russ (Ball State ’74) ...... 574-631-7100 Head Coach: Martin Stone (Saint Mary’s, CA ’89) ...... 574-631-3071 Head Athletic Trainer and Physical Therapist Assistant Coaches: Pam Mork (Wisconsin ’94) ...... 574-631-3071 John Whitmer (Western Michigan ’66) ...... Associate Athletic Trainer Joe Schlosberg (Northwestern ’00) Mike Bean (Southwest Missouri State ’89) ...... Associate Athletic Trainer Senior Staff Assistant — Doreen Secor ...... 574-631-4840 Chantal Porter (Iowa State ’94)...... Assistant Athletic Trainer Men’s Soccer Doug Boersma (Purdue ’97) ...... Assistant Athletic Trainer Audra Bowen (Valdosta State ’97) ...... Assistant Athletic Trainer Head Coach: Bobby Clark ...... 574-631-5146 Tricia Matasyk (Purdue '99) ...... Assistant Athletic Trainer Assistant Coach: Brian Wiese (Dartmouth '95)...... 574-631-8038 Skip Meyer (Central Connecticut State ’74) ...... Assistant Athletic Trainer Mike Avery (Westmont College '90) Tony Sutton (East Carolina ’82) ...... Assistant Athletic Trainer Senior Staff Assistant –– Bev Greider ...... 574-631-3383 Michael Miller (Ball State ’95) ...... Assistant Athletic Trainer Women’s Soccer Video Head Coach: Randy Waldrum (Midwestern State, TX ’81) ...... 574-631-8431 Tim Collins...... 574-631-7750 Assistant Coaches: Amy Edwards (Tulsa ’92) ...... 574-631-8431 Video Systems Technician Barbara Chura (Connecticut ’92) Assistants: Steve Horvath Senior Staff Assistant –– Bev Greider ...... 574-631-3383 Coaching Staffs Softball Head Coach: Deanna Gumpf (Nebraska ’92) ...... 574-631-8845 Baseball Assistant Coach: Charmelle Green (Utah '91) ...... 574-631-4778 Head Coach: Paul Mainieri (St. Thomas, Fla., ’82) ...... 574-631-6366 Assistant Coach: Kris McCleary (Notre Dame ’99) ...... 574-631-9125 Assistant Coaches: Brian O’Connor (Creighton ’93) ...... 574-631-6366 Senior Staff Assistant — Doreen Secor ...... 574-631-4840 2002 Dusty Lepper (Toledo ’96) Men’s Swimming and Diving Senior Staff Assistant — Doreen Secor ...... 574-631-4840 Head Coach: Tim Welsh (Providence ’66) ...... 574-631-7042 NOTRE Men’s Basketball Assistant Coach: Matt Tallman (Catholic ’95) ...... 574-631-8455 Mike Brey (George Washington ’82) ...... 574-631-5222 Diving Coach: Caiming Xie (Beijing In. of Phys. Ed. ’85) ...... 574-631-7020 DAME Head Coach Senior Staff Assistant — Pat Ham ...... 574-631-5101 Spring Associate Coach: Sean Kearney (Scranton ’81) ...... 574-631-5357 Women’s Swimming and Diving Assistant Coach: Anthony Solomon (Scranton ’87) ...... 574-631-5359 Football Assistant Coach: Lewis Preston (Virginia Military Institute ’93) ...... 574-631-4805 Head Coach: Bailey Weathers (Indiana ’82) ...... 574-631-8455 Director of Basketball Operations: Rod Balanis (Georgia Tech ’93) ...... 574-631-5358 Assistant Coach: Josh Skube (Indiana ’98)...... 574-631-8455 Administative Assistant — Stephanie Reed (Notre Dame ’99) ...... 574-631-5222 Diving Coach: Caiming Xie (Beijing In. of Phys. Ed. ’85) ...... 574-631-7042 Senior Staff Assistant — Karen Wesolek ...... 574-631-6225 Senior Staff Assistant — Pat Ham ...... 574-631-5101 Women’s Basketball Men’s Tennis Head Coach: Muffet McGraw (St. Joseph's ’77) ...... 574-631-5420 Head Coach: Bob Bayliss (Richmond ’66) ...... 574-631-6113 Assistant Coach: Carol Owens (Northern Illinois ’90) ...... 574-631-5420 Assistant Coach: Billy Pate (Mississippi State ’92) ...... 574-631-6113 Assistant Coach: Kevin McGuff (St. Joseph’s, Ind. ’92) ...... 574-631-5420 Senior Staff Assistant — Sue Molnar ...... 574-631-6929 Assistant Coach: Coquese Washington (Notre Dame ’92) ...... 574-631-5420 Women’s Tennis Director of Basketball Operations — Heather Clay (Indianapolis '99) ...... 574-631-5420 Head Coach: Jay Louderback (Wichita State ’76) ...... 574-631-5149 Administrative Assistant — Geri Lucas ...... 574-631-5420 Assistant Coach: Liz Barker (Wake Forest ’94) ...... 574-631-6929 Cross Country/Track and Field Senior Staff Assistant — Sue Molnar ...... 574-631-6929 Dir. of Cross Country and Track: Joe Piane (Loras ’69) ...... 574-631-6135 Volleyball Women’s Cross Country Coach, Assistant Track Coach: Head Coach: Debbie Brown (Arizona State ’82) ...... 574-239-6307 Tim Connelly (Notre Dame ’83) ...... 574-631-6989 Assistant Coaches: Steve Hendricks (Ball State ’90) ...... 574-631-5985/5987 Assistant Coaches: John Millar (Western Ontario ’78) ...... 574-631-4871 Robin Davis (Northern Arizona '79) Scott Winsor (Loras ’87) ...... 574-631-8491 Senior Staff Assistant — Doreen Secor ...... 574-631-5101 75 Presented by

Saint Joseph Regional Medical Center, Inc. is proud to sponsor the 2002 Blue-Gold Spring Football Festival. Saint Joseph Regional Medical Ceter is the largest healthcare system in North Central Indiana. It brings together more than 3700 people, partners with nearly 700 physicians, and represents more than $37 million annually in community initiatives and care for the poor. We serve nearly one million people living in eleven counties in north central Indiana and southwestern Michigan.

The roots of Saint Joseph are planted deep within the community. Our founders, the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross and the Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ, trace their histories of service to our community well back into the 19th century. Our faith-based traditions guide us as we move ahead dedicated to meeting the healthcare needs of our communities located throughout the region.

A strong regional presence encompassing primary care, community-based hospital care, and tertiary care is a key element of Saint Joseph Regional Medical 2002 Center’s vision. Being able to provide the range of services together will provide NOTRE the opportunities over the long haul to meet the healthcare needs of those we DAME serve more economically and efficiently. We bring together the resources of two strong traditions blending them into one organization committed to meeting Spring community health need with services including: Football Acute care hospitals in South Bend, Mishawaka and Plymouth Our Lady of Peace Hospital Transitional Care Center Edison Lakes Medical Center Saint Joseph Physician Network Saint Joseph VNA Home Care Healthy Family Centers in South Bend, Mishawaka and Saint Joseph Health Centers in South Bend and Plymouth

The media partners for the Blue-Gold Spring Football Festival are: 76 WDND-ESPN Radio 1620 and WHME TV-46 Become a Part of the Family. Membership in the Notre Dame Club of St. Joseph Valley is open to anyone who has interest in the University of Notre Dame. YOU NEED NOT BE AN ALUMNUS TO JOIN! In addition to helping us provide academic scholarships to Notre Dame for deserving young men and women from Michiana, benefits of membership include:

■ RECEIPT OF OUR QUARTERLY CLUB NEWSLETTER ■ PARTICIPATION IN CLUB PROGRAMS & ACTIVITIES ■ SPECIAL NOTICES OF NOTRE DAME EVENTS

Renew your membership or share this with a friend! Support our Scholarship Trust 2002 Notre Dame Club of St. Joseph Valley Membership Form P. O. Box 111, South Bend, IN 46624 ¥ Voice mail: South Bend 239-6761 or toll free (888) 294-1590 Website: http://alumni.nd.edu/~ndc_stjv/ ¥ E-mail: [email protected] ❒ Emerald Member Ð $100 ❒ Shamrock Member (Classes ’96-’01 or over age 65) Ð $20 ❒ Gold Member Ð $50 ❒ Additional Contribution to Club Scholarship Fund ❒ Blue Member Ð $35 ❒ Full-time ministry Ð $5 minimum donation

Name ______Class Year ______2002 NOTRE Address ______DAME City, State, Zip ______E-Mail______Spring Football Spouse’s Name ______Home Phone ______

Employer ______Work Phone ______

Address ______Fax ______

City, State, Zip ______Your Title/Position ______

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Please make checks payable to Notre Dame Club of St. Joseph Valley. 77 ONLINE PRINT Instant online access to daily 21 Colorful issues, published updates, expanded coverage weekly during the football FollowFollow youryour IrishIrish allall and interactive features. season, monthly after the seasonseason longlong inin thethe IrishIrish SportsSports Report.Report. season. Visit www.irishsportsreport.com oror callcall FOR ONLY 800.457.3533 today!

BOTH ISR PRINT AND No. 1 In The Nation in Coverage of the ONLINE. NOTRE DAME FIGHTING IRISH Subscriptions sent 2nd Class Mail. For faster 1st Class Delivery during football season, add $12/year. For faster 1st Class Delivery all year, add $22/year. (All rates valid in U.S. only. Inquire about International Rates.)

2002 NOTRE DAME Spring Football

John Mitchell 70 West Madison Suite 300 Chicago, IL 60602 (800) 488-4280 (312) 827-6667 (312) 984-4695 Fax [email protected]

78 BOVERI MURPHY RICE RYAN & LADUE, LLP ATTORNEYS AT LAW GO IRISH! Kevin Kruggel, CPA Mark D. Boveri* (’85 L) Class of ’82 Patrick D. Murphy (’85) ✝ Charles P. Rice (’85, ’88 L) Jeff McGowan, CPA Shawn P. Ryan*✝ (’88, ’91 L) Class of ’85, ’89 John D. LaDue* (’90 L) John D. Falvey KRUGGEL, LAWTON & COMPANY, LLC Certified Public Accountants

✝ *ALSO ADMITTED IN MICHIGAN ALSO ADMITTED IN ILLINOIS THE PLAZA BUILDING ELKHART OFFICE SUITE 200 53633 COUNTY ROAD 7 210 SOUTH MICHIGAN ST. ELKHART, IN 46514 SOUTH BEND, INDIANA 46601 (574) 264-2247 400 Plaza Building (574) 230-4011 Fax (574) 266-0965 210 South Michigan Street • South Bend, IN 46601 Fax (574) 289-4087 574.232.0300 • 574.675.0300 • 574.232.0400 Fax Website: www.bmrrl.com Visit our website: klcpas.com

2002 Tim McBride NOTRE Class of ’75 227 W. University Drive (near Menard’s) National Sales Representative DAME 277-7273 • Mishawaka ¥ Spring Matt Althoff Football 214 N. Niles Avenue Class of ’97 280-4824 • South Bend Sales Representative ¥ Try our delicious subs or deli trays 2606 North State Road #39 3-foot subs available! ¥ LaPorte, Indiana 46350 ¥ 219.362.4551 800.634.2433 / Fax 219.324.3271

79 2002 NOTRE DAME Spring Football

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