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• Columnist Kevin Patrick gives his slant on • Tired of the Clinton scandal? Movie Scene's this weekend's 31-30 victory over Purdue in video pick, "All the President's Men" takes you back Monday Viewpoint. to the last time impeachment was a possibility. SEPTEMBER Viewpoint • 9 Scene ·11 28, 1998 THE

The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's VOL XXXII NO. 24 WWW. ND.EDU/- OBSERVER PSA lobbies for nondiscrimination changes

By TIM LOGAN sent to the Board of Trusteos for [Notre Dame! and how a faculty Assistant News Editor final approval. That would be member can teach," said Law in the most powerful oflice in the describing the body to student The Progressive Student University administration to senators. Alliance kicked off a signature which the issue has risen. If the addition is supported at drive on Friday to demonstrate Between today and Oct. 8, the today's meeting, it would most student support for the addition PSA plans to continue gathering likely be approved. predicted of sexual orientation to the student support for the addition, Law. If it is rnjected, however. University's nondiscrimination according to president Aaron the issue can still be placed on clause. KrHider. The organization, along the Council's agenda by the Nearly 400 students signed with several other groups, Faculty Senate, which has the the petition, which was avail­ intends to continue its signature "right of agenda" to assign able on Friday in the dining drive and has tentative plans for issues to tho body. But. the road halls and LaFortune student a rally to demonstrate backing would likely be easier if the eentf)r. for the issue. Executive Comrnittnc approves The signaturn driw~ is intend­ "This is a good start," said the addition. ed to put pressure on the Kmider. "We're well on our way "If it comes out positively Academic Council's Executive towards showing significant stu­ through the committee, then I Committee, which is meeting dent support." would expect the Academic today to discuss the addition of The Council is comprised of Council to pass it," he said. sexual orientation to the administrators and leaders of The Executive Committee is University's nondiscrimination the four colleges and the archi­ chaired by University President elause. The Committen will tecture school. It also has one Father Edward Malloy and has decide the agenda today for the student representative, Frank 10 other members. Oct. 8 Academic Council meet­ Law, the Academic Delegate in Last May, the faculty senatn ing. the Oflice of the President. unanimously approved the reso­ The Observer/Patnck Quigley If the Council supports the "[The Academic Council! over­ luton supported the addition of Freshman Paul Ranogajec collected signatures at South Dining Hall to addition to the nondiscrimina­ sees everything that governs sexual orientation in the nondis­ support the addition of sexual orientation to the nondiscrimination clause. tion clause, the issue will be how a student can go through crimination dause. ND publishes handbook for disabled students

By lAURA ROMPF Notn~ Danw available to all Nl'w~WiirL'I qualified studnnts. It is a place wlwre studnnts with disabilities NotrP llanw has publislwd a have access to the same oppor­ nPW handbook railed "Studtmts tunities and !'ace the same intel­ With llisahililiPs: Building a lectual challenges as all otlwr l'artnl'rship in !·:qual AtTnss to students," Malloy added. l.narning." Tlw handbook ineludes a gen­ "This handbook is dt•sigrwd to eral ovorvinw and description of providP you with inf(mnation on Notre Damn's Ol'lice for Studnnts how studPnts w i t h art• assistPd Disabilities at Not 1'1' and tlw ser­ llamP, vices that it through a ol'fers. It also Lhrl'n-part has an exten­ partrwrship: sive resource The Observer/Lauren O'Neill tlw !'acuity, . section that Students take part in bilingual Mass yesterday at SMC as part of Spanish Heritage Month. tlw Of'lkn l'or provides infor­ Organizers hope to establish a regular Spanish Mass similar to the program at Notre Dame. StudPnts with mation and I l i sa hi I i t i ~~ s suggestions for and tlw stu­ assisting stu­ dPnts with a dents with a SMC celebrates bilingual Mass disability," variety of dis­ NORA KULWICKI statPd a lt~ttnr abilities. By know another culture !we writt«m to !'ac­ Specific News Writer would I gain a bnttl~r scnsn of uity by strategies are college unity." Barbara Walvoord. dirnctor at given l'or support and instruc­ Hocio Hod riguoz calls God Maria Oropeza. dirnctor of by a different name than th1~ Karwb Cnntl'r. Scott tion of studnnts dealing with Multicultural Affairs, also !lowland. Program Coordinator visual and hearing impairments, many of her Saint Mary's and stressed the importanee of at thn Oflkn for Stud1mts with limitations of mobility and dex­ Notre Dame peers. learning about another cul­ l>isabilitins and .lonllnn terity. speech impairments, "My God is Dios; when I ture through the worship of Conrardy. Program Coordinator attention deficit disorder and hear Dios, I hear my God. It's Muticultmal Affairs and by La God. atthn Karwb Cnnll~r. leaming disabilities. the same thing las the English Fuerza. "This is something more "Throughout our history, "As with all of our students, word] but l feel closer to I lim The bilingual mass has than just a Latino mass. It Notrn llame has thrivml as an we strive to offer students with when I say Dios," said ignited discussion about its recognizes that we arc all mlucational environnwnt when~ disabilities equal access to Hodriguez, president of La importance among both called [together! in commu­ Fuerza. studnnts n~ceivn carnl'ul attnn­ opportunitills for intellectual, Latina and non-Latina nion and fellowship," Oropeza tion and nurturing. Our commu­ spiritual. and personal growth This expression of spiritual women. said. "God made us different nity takns grnat pridP in warmly at Notre Damn." said Patricia culture was celebrated on "It is more important for and those differences should nmbmdng its nnw nwmbm·s and O'llara, Vice President of Sunday at Saint Mary's with a people who are not Latina to be celebrated." atwnding to their nnt~d - mind. Student All'airs. bilingual (Spanish and go [so as tol learn about Along with the sharing of body, and spirit," said Father "I believe that this handbook English) mass. The mass was another culture," said sopho­ cultmes, a sense of belonging Edward Malloy, president of the serves as an important resource organized as part of activities more Kathy Fech. "It might is also vital, especially to Univnrsity. for our efforts to work in part­ surrounding Spanish Heritage feel a little awkward but we "In keeping with this tradition, nership with students with dis­ Month by the Office of would grow ... By getting to see MASS I page 4 we have long sought to make abilities," O'Hara concluded. ------~~p~ag~e~2~======~~~~~~~~~T~h~e~O~bs~e~rv~e~r~·~I~~S~I~[)~E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~M~o~n~d~a~~~S~e~pt~e~m~b~er~2~8~,~1~9~98 l • INSIOE COLUMN f Stalkers utside the Dome t Compiled from U-Wire reports f Someone is out to get me. ~ Now I don't normally consider myself para­ noid, but several events have led me to believe Bill will keep agents from approaching athletes on campus someone is out to deluge my person with LANSING, Mich. "This has ber.n an issue for 10 ! annoyance. On-attributed------­ Professional agents could have a years," he said. "But the value of flowers, weird phone tougher time approaching college that event has helped propel it." calls, missing items, shad­ athletes on their campuses, under Profit said athletr,s can be some­ ows in the night: My life is two bills passed by a comfortable what at fault when dealing with turning into a bad rerun margin in the state House Thursday. agents, but added punishments for of a USA Network TV · One bill would allow colleges to the athletes are unfair when agents drama. order agents off campus if they are face no penalty. La Femme MacKenzie. discovered trying to negotiate with "This brings the agent or the Dateline: Valentine's athletes. If an agent were to return booster into equal standing with the Day, 1997. This is the Heather MacKenzie to campus after being ordered off Profit said. "Bad agents are sneak­ school. program and student," he day that usually lends us Assisram Managing onee, they could be arrested on tres­ ing into study halls and sneaking said. marginally-cute-but-oth- Editor passing charges, under the second into dorms. They serve a legitimate The bills, which passed 60-32 and erwise-unremarkable bill. role in the process, but there's a 66-24, were met with some opposi­ young women to dress entirely in black, lock Both bills were introduced by state time and a place." tion by legislators who thought ath­ our doors and close our blinds to the sicken­ Hep. Kirk Profit, D-Ypsilanti. He The bills have gained momentum letes from smaller schools could be ingly euphoric love-stricken air outside. But accused some agents of using uneth­ since the suspension of University of punished. this day was different. This was the day I got ical tactics to get athletes to sign Miehigan football player Marcus Ray State Rep. Kwame Kilpatrick, D­ flowers. contracts. NCAA rules forbid players last week. Ray was suspended for Detroit, said he supported the inten­ They were beautiful, those flowers; red and to interact with agents, but punish associating with an agent. The inci­ tion of the legislation but thought yellow, with ribbons spilling down the side of only students if interaction takes dent is under investigation. parts of it were unfair. the vase. It was enough to make me believe in place. However, Profit said the bills "I thought it was overboard." said love again. "Bad agents are putting coaches at passed Thursday were not a result state Rep. Kwame Kilpatrick, Until! read the card. "Love, your left-handed risk, they're putting players at risk," of Ray's suspension. Detroit. secret admirer from Carroll Hall." Now, no normal girl minds having a secret admirer, especially on V-day. But the notes continued well past the holiday, culminating in a grisly • UNIVERSITY OF SouTHERN fwRmA • YALE UNIVERSITY discovery in my mailbox: My admirer had sin­ Hurricane forces evacuation Police investigate violent party isterly ripped off the cover of a textbook from a class we apparently had together and written TAMPA, Fla. NEW HAVEN, Conn. his love letter on the back of it. Now, I'm sure All USF campuses were closed effective 6:30 a.m. Friday Yale police are continuing to investigate Marc Hoffmann this dude was trying to be charming, but dese­ due to Hurricane Georges, after an announcement by and Adam Seidman for allegedly not cooperating with crating a German foreign policy book, however President Betty Castor Thursday. All classes and events police at a party in the Davenport College Cottage on Sept. much it deserved it, was not the way to cap­ scheduled for the weekend have been canceled. Twelve 4. The police said Seidman pushed one officer and verbal­ ture my heart. USF buildings are designated as American Red Cross shel­ ly confronted another officer. But several students at the So after a few weeks of avoiding dark places ters. though none have opened yet. Hillsborough County's party said that when police arrived, an officer shoved and and screening my phone calls, I finally let my emergency operations team will meet at 6 a.m. Friday to swore at Hoffman after Hoffman spoke to the crowd with paranoid mind rest at ease: apparently my assess the need for opening shelters. Even if the campus a microphone. Because the incident is still under investi­ stalker had found newer, more receptive flesh does not sustain a direct hit from Hurricane Georges, gation, Acting Yale Police Chief James Perotti said he to send bookcovers to. But events in the last flooding may become a problem. Three USF buidlings would not comment directly on the allegations of improp­ week have reincarnated my paranoia. flooded during Sunday's heavy rains, and with the possi­ er police conduct. He said the department has received no Imagine my surprise to find that someone bility of 5 to 10 more inches of rain, more buildings could formal complaints about police behavior that night. One had figured out my voice mail password and be waterlogged. Campus residents are being encouraged student at the party, Valerie Cadet, said, "[Hoffmann] was changed my message. Instead of my chipper to leave, according to Tom Kane, director for Residence talking on the microphone when the cop shoved him." voice informing callers that "Heather and Services. Residents of the Village Housing complex could Cadet also said the officer "was not being professional. He Diane are not here to answer your call," there be moved to other residence halls, Kane said. Students was hurling insults." The insults included profanity, Cadet was an evil voice screaming, "Learning to read have been encouraged to act with caution. said. was fun and exciting until I read AYN RAND'S ATLAS SHRUGGED!!! THAT PILE OF ... " Well, you get my drift. I had a lot of explain­ • UN!VERS!TY Of RICHMOND • UN!VERS!TV OF PENNSYLVANIA ing to do to the Stanford Office of Graduate Admissions who had called expecting to hear Football player charged with assault Racism plagues history department my sweet voice and had instead been greeted RICHMOND, Va. PHILADELPHIA, Penn. by schizophrenic man telling them his not-so­ A University of Richmond football player was arrested While everyone in Penn's history department is talking positive view on Objectivism. I just hope they early Sunday morning and charged with misdemeanor about a black graduate student's 1997 racial discrimina­ weren't Rand-oids. assault and battery of his 19-year-old girlfriend. tion charges against a white professor, they certainly But it doesn't stop there. Shortly afterward, I Sophomore Jonathan Malcolm Wilfong, 19, of aren't talking to the press. Originally an American threw my ID on my desk. After leaving the Harrisonburg, Va., was arrested at 5:30 a.m. Sunday by Civilization grad student, third-year grad student Kali room to take care of some personal business, it Sgt. John Jacobs of the University of Richmond police Gross transferred into the history Department in 1996 was gone. Then, I found a page cut out of a department. Jacobs responded after police received a call after the University terminated the /\mCiv program. magazine stuck to my door. The words? that a man and woman were fighting, he wmte in a crimi­ Because of department policy, she was forced to take 'Heather Does Heroin' in screaming red letters. nal complaint filed in Richmond juvenile and domestic History 700- a course designed to teach first-year grad­ They're trying to implicate me. They have relations district court. According to the complaint, uate students how to do primary source researeh - my voice mail passeode, my 10, my reputation. Wilfong was bleeding from his lower lip and the woman, despite having already taken a similar course in the And the University knows about it. You know Jenni Schultz, of Harrisonburg, Va., had bruises and AmCiv department. In June 1997. Gross. who took History that email we got the other day warning us to scratches on her neck. both upper arms and right cheek. 700 with then-first-year Professor Margaret Jacob, filed change our passcodes from our boyfriends' Schultz, Wilfong's girlfriend of three-and-a-half years, racial discrimination charges against Jacob after she got a middle name to something even God couldn't said she and Wilfong went to the University Forest "B+" in the class. Jacob declined to comment. "[Gross] remember? I know. I know, everyone got the Apartments after he returned from the football game in came and told me that she thought Jacob had given her a email. But don't you see? It was aimed at me: Rhode Island. grade based not on the work she'd done." They just didn't want me to freak out, so they made it seem like everyone is in danger. I did find my ID the other day: It was hiding • SOUTH BEND WEAHlER • NATIONAL WEATHER under my Peace Corps application. And the voice-mail hacker was my next-door neighbor. 5 Day South Bend Forecast who figured out I had used the same passcode AccuWeather(l!,l forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures from last year. But I sort of like the conspiracy The Accu-Weather®forecast for noon, Monday, Sept.28. theory that I've developed; it adds spice to the boredom of the days between games. Maybe being stalked isn't so bad after all. H L The views expressed in the Inside Column are those of the author and not necessarily those of The Observer. Monday (f 70 64 • TOOAY's STAFF Tuesday 1!2 73 60

News Scene Wednesday d:::=1 83 62 Bill U niowski Mike Varegas Noreen Gillespie Graphics Thursday 1!2 65 65 Finn Pressly Jenny Schaaf Sports Production Bill Han M. Shannon Ryan Friday Q, 68 63 :;-,.}'/";} ·- ·· ... ,~/ , ...... Viewpoint Lab Tech Spencer Stefko Dave Laheisr Albany 70 58 Columbus 77 58 Miami 92 79 Atlanta 83 70 Dallas 92 73 Minneapolis 73 50 Boston 70 68 Denver 48 Nashville The Observer (USPS S99 2-4000) is published Monday rhrough Friday Q_Q,~4.8Q~~u 87 86 68 Baltimore 80 66 Hartford 75 62 Sacramento 69 56 except during exam ;md vacation periods. The Observer i~ a member of Showers T-storms Ram Ff~r;ies SiloW Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Chicago 76 56 Indianapolis 76 57 Santa Fe 81 57 che Associated Press. All reproduction riglus are reserved. V1a Associated Press Graph1csNet ------... ------Monday, September 28, 1998 The Observer • page 3 ---- CAMPUS NEWS------Women's studies lecture focuses on NAWCHE By MEGHAN DONAHUE oxporionc

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page 4 The Observer • CAMPUS NEWS Monday, September 28, 1998 "[The Spanish mass] brings has a unique style of worship. While Latinas can attend reg­ Oropeza. Mexico back to me," Rodriguez The celebration incorporates ular Spanish services at Notre Father Neary shared Mass said. Olt [reminds me of] being song throughout the whole ser­ Dame, many people feel a semi­ Oropeza's sentiments. home. [It was a] hard transition. vice while the music employs regular bilingual or Spanish "[It] continued from page I brings together two cul­ ) "It is important for us to have distinctive rythms. mass at Saint Mary's would b<: tural experiences, [even! draw­ Latina students. The difference the ability to celebrate our cul­ "[The music! is comforting. It beneficial to the entire eollege ing in students who aren't between the English and ture - the way we first learned has a different flavor," said community. Spanish," he said. "They take Spanish celebrations may cause to praise. [It is]like a first love." Father Patrick Neary, Director "It would be niee if we could something from eaeh other. some Latinos to feel spiritually Aside from the language dif­ of Campus Ministry at Notre help more of our students grow This enrichment adds to the disconnected. ference, the Spanish mass also Dame. in their faith here," said color of college and faith life." Circle K allows· students .. to serv By KATI MILLER joined in the annual Volunteer in News Writer the Preserve Day with their. Spic~r Lake Nature Reserve Service is an integral part of clean-up. Students spent two many Jives at Notre Dame: In hours on Sun .• September 20 fact, students desire to serve removing graffiti, weeding gar­ others has helped make Notre dens and planting seeds. Dame's Circle K club the largest Matt Banach, the club presi­ Amoco will be interviewing on in the world, even though this is dent for this year, said that only its fourth year in operation. Circle K also plans to sponsor a Circle K is an international campus wide service we Kiwanis organization made opening up the. projects.so September 30 and October 1. of college students who . the entire Notr(:l service to their c Notre Dame's Circle :1< club had 13lmem· hers last year We invite you to a reception for and performed 4,000 hours of service; the club expects B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. Chemical Engineering an increase to around 200 members this and year and plans to do about 1,500 hours of service each B.S. Mechanical Engineering students on month. .. ".The Circle K club at. Notre Dame members with weekly s • Tuesday, September 29; 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Room 206 opportunities in the South ings e .. . . community. Circle K sponsors dents sign up for the projects approximately 25 projects each they want to participate in that of the Center for Continuing Education Building. week, including Boys and Girls week, and transportation to and Club, the Humane Society, the from all projects is provided Center for the Homeless. Reins through esc vans. of Life, Headstart. the Juvenile The club also enjoys social Justice Center, Dismas House, activities sueh as bowling. bar- nursing homes and many others. . becucs, and sporting events, giv­ Refreshments will be provided. Each project has a commision­ ing members a chance to relax er who acL<; as a liason between and reward themselves for the the community organization and work they do. the Circle K dub. Some of the Jordan Curnes, vice president projects, sueh as Headstart, of service for Circle K, says the Earn one credit require students to organize dub lets members "escape from while learning in a city ... continue the tradition crafts and games for the chil­ t11e bubble of Notre Dame" and dren they work with. Other pro· provides students with a good jects, like the Logan Center, perspective of the real world. focus more on building relation­ Curnes feels that Circle K is ships and simply becoming unique because "it allows me at tiiends with people in need. the end of the day to say 'Wow, I In addition to the weekly pro­ really made a difference, I really jects. Circle K also participates in did something'- you can't real­ several larger p•·ojects through­ ly say that about accounting out the year. The dub recently homework."

The urban plunge program is a 48 hour course, which allows students to experience poverty and injustice in an urban setting ... to date, over 3,000 students have participated in the urban plunge. Wed., Oct. 7 As a participant, you will be able to choose from approximately 50 cities which host 7:30p.m. Notre Dame, Saint Mary's and Holy Cross students. Some of these cities in the past

Thurs., Oct. 8 have included: 7:30p.m. Albany New Orleans Atlanta Memphis Fri., Oct. 9 7:30p.m. Brooklyn Nashville Harlem Seattle Sat., Oct. 10 Baltimore Phoenix 7:30p.m. Washington Honolulu Sun., Oct. 11 Los Angeles and many more sites 2:30p.m. As a participant, you will join a 30 year tradition which has gained national attention Playing at and served as a model of experiential learning that has been adopted by a number of Washington colleges and universities nationally. Hall There will be an information session on September 28th at 8:30 at the CSC Reserved Seats $9 • Not I but the city teaches. - Socrates I Seniors $8 All Students $6 FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, CONTACT the Center for Social Concerns @ 631-5293 or visit our website: http://www.nd.edu:80/-ndcntrsc Tickets are available at LaFortune Student Genter Ticket llttice. MasterCard and VIsa orders cai/63J.812B Application Deadline --Friday, November 6 ~~--~------~~------~------~------~------~------~~~----~----~

Monday, September 27, 1998 COMPILED FROM THE OBSERVER WIRE SERVICES page 5

• \IVORlD NEWS BRIEFS • GERMANY S. Korea exports cows to North

SEOUL 1\ South Korean civic group shipped I 04 milk mws to hungnr-stricken North Korea on (_ Sunday. 1\ 3,000-ton freighter arrives in the North's Nampo port on Monday, said officials i at tlw Ministry of Marine /\ffairs and Fislwrios. TlH~ r.ivic group lwutsaranghoi. nwaning an association for neighborly love, plans to sPnd t)(> mon• milk eows and 2:~ tons of stork fppd llPXt month. In Jurw. llyundai l'ourHlPr Chung Ju-yung gave North Korea :iOO cattlP as a gift during his visit to the North. South KorPa has given North Korea $:~!i2 million in food aid sincn the communist country turrwd to llw intPrnational communi­ ty to fl'l'd its 22 million people in 199!i. North 1\:on•a has suffpr('(l din• food shortages after thr!'P years of disastrous W!'atlwr that aggra­ vatl'd prohiPms rausPd by irwflkinnt eoopera­ tivl' farming tPrhniquPs.

Drought worsens in Cyprus

Lf<:FK/\H/\ ThP sign on a hill overlooking tlw nearly empty rPservoir lwhind l.Pikara Dam warns: "Swimming is prohihitPd." That may be all that is funny about tlw seven~ water shortage gripping this island at tlw eastern end of tlw MPditPJTanean. Drought has parched Cyprus for threl' yPars. l(•aving vital governnwnt AFP Photo rnsPrvoirs at just f> percent of capacity and Supporters of Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democrats celebrate his victory over Helmut Kohl. authoritiPs l'ac!'d with tht~ prospeet of water running out hy year's end without substantial rains. TIH· shortage was exacerhattHl by n~rord tPmpl'ratun~s in .July and 1\ugust. /\t Elections in Germany topple Kohl orw point. tlw mercury hit II 0 degrees, push­ The defeated Kohl will be remem­ ita!, and the switch from the trusted ing water consumption even high~w. Some ASSOCIATED PRESS bered best as the chancellor who uni­ German mark to the Europtlan com­ farms art~ already deserted for a lack of fied communist East Germany with the mon currency, the euro. water. Hain-fed res(~rvoirs, like the one BONN lH'hind tlw Lelkara Dam near the southern Gerhard Schroeder and his Social West in 1990, after the fall of the Kohl. 68, looked tired and sad as he port of Limassol, have btHH1 reduced to Democrats won national elections Berlin Wall. com:eded defeat. muddy puddles. Sunday, ushering in tho first change of "This is a hard evening for me, and government Germany has seen after for us all," Kohl told his supporters. " ... Factions clash in Sri Lanka 16 years of conservative rule under I wish Herr Schroeder the best of luck Chancellor Helmut Kohl, the West's 'THIS IS A HARD EVENING and a successful time in office." He COLOMBO longest-serving leader. FOR ME, AND FOR US also announced he would not run for re-election as chief of his party, likely (;ovnrnnwnt solclinrs clashed with Tamil The new. 54-year·old chancellor will ALL •••• I WISH HERR Tignr rdwls Sunday in a battle for a strategic be tlul {irst of his generation. rooted in making way for his protege, Wolfgang highway in nortlwrn Sri Lanka. leaving at the leftist movements of the 1960s, to SCHROEDER THE BFST OF LUCK Schaeuble, to succeed him. lnast 49 lighlPrs dPad, the military said. The lead Europe's biggest nation. Schroeder supporters streamed into AND A SUCCFSSA.JL TIME IN the streets of' Bonn, holding balloons dPad inrludP

AssociATED PRESS 110 mph, was expected to smash the Lehmann, 23, a German air force Dow Gulf Coast late Sunday or early student at the Pensacola Naval Air AMEX: Monday. Its course wobbled a bit Station. lie was among the last peo­ 639.99 NEW OHLEANS }ONES -2.31 The Big Easy was decidedly uneasy during the day, giving hope that a ple leaving Florida's Perdido Key. Nasdaq: Sunday as New Orleans prepared for slight deviation to the east could More than 300 deaths had been 8028.77 1743.29 its worst nightmare hurricane - a spare New Orleans the worst of the blamed on the hurricane in the +23.25 massive storm that could sit over­ devastation. Caribbean. NYSE: head for days, driving Lake Intermittent downpours started Forecasters said up to 25 inches of 515.68 Pontchartrain over its levees and Saturday night along the Gulf Coast rain could fall on New Orleans, cou­ ~ -0.91 submerging the city. and continued Sunday night. Waves pled with a storm surge that could S&P 500: crossed beachfront roads in drive millions of gallons of water up 1044.75 "We're just waiting for the trigger Composite Mississippi, including four-lane U.S. the Mississippi Hiver toward the city. I I +2.03 Volume: to be pulled," said Lt. Col. Honnie +26.78 805,700,000 Jones of the Louisiana State Police. 90. Twenty-five-foot waves clipped In a city that averages 6 feel below off fishing piers along Alabama's sea level and bordered by swamps, MOST TRADED STOCKS Thousands didn't wait for Hurricane Georges to arrive. They coast. High surf on top of a 5-foot tidal lakes and the Mississippi - the ntMI1ANY nrKrH 1K, (')tANCjr S CjA!N I'IUCJ storm surge threatened to undermine results could be catastrophic. lr.w4.•llcr' tiruup lllV -IJ..Ib ·O.IKH 40.25 fled, turning Interstates 10 and 55 t 'mnpaq l'umpull'r' U"l! +:UJK +1.00 :id.$0 the foundations of beachfront homes Georges was the most serious ltkdi-Cnl.l Cu. KO -O.KK -U.SUU S6.1H75 into bumper-to-bumper processions. l.IM~l' \ot.mhwtt.m L~tll -2.55 -I.IH75 -IS ..i12.\ on barrier islands along the Florida storm to threaten New Orleans since M.llll'lllll :-A AT ·0.62 .o.IK75 .!O.(Xl More than 1.5 million people were N.Jihm.,h.ml; l'urp "'B +J.ol(l + 1.H7$U 56.00 Panhandle. High winds knocked out 1969, when Camille slammed into the l.l!h:orp en +0.75 +0.7500 100 ..\0 ordered or urged to leave New 1\,11\kl\llll'fl\:ol 1\AC +4.26 +2.5625 b2.6H7S power to at least 30,000 customers in coast of Mississippi and Louisiana, lil•nrr;JI Elcl'lrlc tiE +1.61 +1.:025 83.0625 Orleans and coastal areas and the MicrullT\•Ch MV +t\.47 +2.62$0 3:·1.625 city's streets were quiet and mostly the New Orleans area. causing flooding as far north as empty. "I would be scared if I were in New Virginia and West Virginia and killing The storm, with sustained wind of Orleans right now," said Joerg 259 people.

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page 6 The Observer • CAMPUS NEWS Monday, September 28, 1998

• SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Johnson: sex-selection • • a moral question The Diversity Program of By MATTHEW SMITH of the tests regarding this The College of Business Administration News Writer procedure were done on ani­ mals, not humans, and this presents a lecture by Last week, a sex-selection could also provide different, procedure was announced unfavorable results. that has raised ethical ques- Data on the success of the tions from the public and has procedure has varied, but it received mixed reviews from seems to be at around 85 per­ the scientific community. cent for a female baby and 65 Although similar procedures percent for a male. "If a cou­ have been going on in under- pie who wants one sex gets ground labs the other, across the that couple country, the may put the Assistant to the President & latest data baby up for showing the 'IF A COUPLE WHO WANTS adoption, or Assistant Director for Cross Cultural Ministry procedure to ONE SEX GETS THE even have an be safe has abortion," caused a OTHER, THAT COUPLE MAY J 0 h n s 0 n on number of PUT THE BABY UP FOR explains. "To mainstream ADOPTION, OR EVEN HAVE help select a clinics to balanced spring up AN ABORTION.' family, with Diversity at Notre Dan1e offering it. ALAN JOHNSON one girl and N o t r e BIOLOGIST one boy, the Dame biola- procedure A Can1pus Ministry Perspective gist Alan might not be Johnson has a good idea." been following the issue He sees a positive use for closely and seems to prefer it, however: "It's usefulness Date: Wednesday, September 30, 1998 reserving judgement on the comes when trying to avoid issue until further research sex linked diseases that may Time: 4:00 - 5:00pm can be done. be at risk for certain cou- "All evidence we have seen pies." Place: COBA 161 indicates that the procedure Because the procedure is safe." he said."But one seems safe, Johnson feels the doesn't know until we have issue is a moral one and • Refreshments will be served seen more long-term data. probably shouldn't be regu­ The sample size of the test lated by the government. He was small, so one doesn't admits that "the people Chandra Johnson directs the African Spirituality Program, a know if a larger sample will should provide input," show more birth defects or regarding the new technolo­ cross cultural initiative for African-American students which other problems." gy, and more research should she developed and implements on campus. He also points out that some be done. • •

COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION CARDINAL O'HARA LECTURE SERIES

ON BUSINESS ETHICS

BO\NEN

Notre Dame Center for Ethics atrd Religious SRB Values in Business Students lor Responsible Business ------~-----~~----.------~~------~------~--~-~------"'1 I

Monday, September 28, 1998 The Observer • CAMPUS NEWS page 7 ------~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~~-- • NEWS ANAlYSIS ' Johnson: sex-selection needs further research By MATTHEW SMITH from the public and has the latest data showing the Johnson has been following the cent for a female baby and 65 News Writer rncnived mixed reviews from procedure to be safe has issue closely and seems to pre­ percent for a male. "If a couple the scientific community. caused a number of main­ fer reserving judgement on the who wants one sex gets the l.ast wcnk, a sox-selection Although similar procedures stream clinics to spring up issue until further research ean other, that couple may put the proendurn was announced that have been going on in under­ offering it. be done. baby up for adoption, or even has raised cthkal questions ground labs across the country, Notre Dame biologist Alan "All evidence we have seen have an abortion," Johnson indicates that explains. "To the procedure help select a is safe." he balanced fami­ said."But one 'IF A COUPLE WHO WANTS ly, with one girl In honor of doesn't know ONE SEX GETS THE and one boy, until we have the proeedure seen more OTHER, THAT COUPLE MAY might not be a I o n g - t e r m PUT THE BABY UP FOR good idea." Hispanic data. The lie sees a sample size of ADOPTION, OR EVEN HAVE positive use for the test was AN ABORTION." it, however: Heritage Month small, so one "It's usefulness doesn't know comes when if a larger ALAN JOHNSON trying to avoid the Office of Multicultural sample will BIOLOGIST sex linked dis­ show more cases that may Student Affairs birth defects be at risk for or other problems." certain couples." presents: He also points out that some Because the procedure seems of the tests regarding this pro­ safe, Johnson feels the issue is cedure were done on animals, a moral one and probably not humans, and this could shouldn't be regulated by the also provide different, unfavor­ government. He admits that able results. "the people should provide Data on the success of the input," regarding the new tech­ procedure has varied, but it nology, and more research Elisa Maria Sanchez seems to be at around 85 per- should be done.

President and CEO of MANA • EUROPEAN STUDIES "Rebuilding Latino Communities i:::rNanovic Institute for the 21st Century" celebrates anniversary By MICHAEL FLANNERY Studies, and Wt)gs and his New:s .W titer colleagues used the money Monday, September 28th@ 7:00pm to fund leetures. Convinced .. :,if~~ Nanovic Institute for that his money was being European Studies, an orga­ used well, Nanovic endowed Hesburgh Library Auditorium nization that funds Notre the department with $5 mil­ Dame students researching lion in 1993. The Nanovic in Europe and provides the Institute was established Q & A and Reception to follow campus with a lecture with Wegs as director. series, celebrated its fifth Today the institute has anniversary Sunday. grown to encompass not Before 1993, the institute only a leeture and sympo­ Sponsored by the OMSA and Saint Mary's Office of Multicultural Affairs and its programs were Ideas shun series, but also a pro· in the heads of Professor gram that funds Noire Dame Robert Wegs and some of students and faeulty his colleagues in the researching in Europe. European Studies depart­ Three service grants are ment. They had been dis· awarded to undergraduates cussing the possibility of each year, and Wegs expects ttT · establishing an organization the number to inct·ease to capable of funding a series l.ive next year. of guest speakers on He believes the grants European issues. have been wonderful for While delivering lectures students, enabling those in Europe in the late 1980's, who spend a semester Wegs met Robert Nanovic, a abroad to stay in Europe t'or 1954 Notre Dame graduate. a summer and pursue . i!,}'Ve immediately became researeh opportunities. us! friends. Two years later he "It has certainly widened asked me if there was any­ their visions and their aspi· thing that needed support at rations. It's right in tune T AKf A 91ltAK Notre Dame," Wegs said. with what the ·university Nanovic contributed wants to do now to interna· $25,000 to European tionalize," he said. wtcttts 1J SAN 1) nite or wMat suh roll Have something to say? U on your cnolce ol w Use Observer Classifieds. Fres\\ly-made U1lSU IT ~ 1'/ IA~V !~~at Nig\\t and more ~O and cness. MonoP , 1'1t £ S Saint Mary's College presents (l{(offtt AND tS ~ 11~ ~1 John Dryden's play Thursday - Saturday ;..;J~-~ October 8 - I 0 H~t~ cAI<.t at 8 p.m. (fc ttt£ st'1 pni\adelpnia Sunday, October II smootn and cream at 2:30p.m. Little Theatre r;-\f_ ~:z-fl!J: 0/!. ~eeitff/': ~ :J~;;,ni:~-~~i~~~" ;Jc;R£;.01 For ticket information contact ~E/VTJf~ / I the Saint Mary's College Box Office at FOR THE ARTS NOTRI! DAMI!, IN Lower level - LaFortune Student Center 284-4626 ------~ -- -, l VIEWPOINT pageS------Monday, September 28, 1998 THE OBSERVER NOTRE DAME OFFICE: P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 631-7471 .J.tE 1RIED 10 CUN1VN ME. SAINT MARY's OFFICE: 309 Haggar, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 284-5365 \lDPlNG rD l!WI~I<'i, ~ur 1998-99 GENERAL BOARD EDITOR-IN-CHIEF \ ~\7 ATRIPP, AND Hearher Cocks MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER \\~"'t? ~IN

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The Ob!-iervcr is rhc indepcndcm newspaper published by the sru~lcnrs of the Uni.vcrsiry ?fN~rre .Da•.ne d.u. 1.-lc ;md. Sai1 11 Mary's c:nllege. It doc~ nnt ncccs.~arily rdlecr the policies oi rhc adminisrrauon ~t ~1rhcr lllStltur~on.. I h: news IS reported as accurately :md objectively as possible. Unsigned editorials rcprc..~em rh~ opm•~n of du!' m.aJomy oi du: Editor-in-Chief. Managing Editor, Assistant Managing Ed.itnr anJ d~:J?~rrment cdnor~ .. Conu.nentam.·s: lew:.rs and columns present rhe vit..-ws of rhe authors, and nor necessanly those o~ I he Observer. V•cv.:po•nr spac~ 1s av~1l~ble to all members of rhe None Damc/S.ti111 Mary's communiry and [0 all readers. The free expn.'SS1on of v:uymg opmwns rhrough Jerrers is en(:our;~gcd. Contacting The Observer Editor-in-Chief 631-4542 Business Office 631-5313 Managing Ediror/AssiSiant ME 631-4541 Advenising 631-6900/8840 News/Photo 6.~ 1-5323 Sysrems 631-88.~9 Spores 631-4543 Fax 631-6927 Scene//Saint Mary's 631-4540 Viewpoint E-Mail Viewpoint. I @nd.edu Day Ediror/Viewpoinr 631-5303 Ad E-Mail observt>[email protected] Office Manager/Generallnformarion 631-7471 News E-Mail observer.obsnews. I @nd.edu

• lEITERS TO THE EDITOR Impeachment for the President? ~~e Whining , Nope May be Best Course of Season has Begun Was President Andrew Johnson really impeached in 1968? After a long sil¢nce, the editorial board at The Observer And am I mistaken, or does the Action has let its readers know where they stand in a strongly accompanying graphic depict a worded editorial.dated 25 September 1998. And what issue I write this letter in response to the many articles, opinion pieces, o(.the time?.. ha,vetheychosen to address- the world's con· skeleton figure blowing Abraham editorials, and polls that have followed in the wake of the Clinton scan­ Lincoln's head off with a gun? tjn!-!lng rma,nyi~[turnlOil, the scandals in Washington, the dal and the subsequent Starr report. It appears that the consensus up¢oming Cong~essional elections, or the University's possi­ I'm no great fan of Lincoln, but among the American constituency is that Judge Kenneth Starr has The Observer needs to exercise a bility of joining the Big Ten? gone too far in investigating our Commander-in-Chief and the accusa­ No, we are treated to a temper tantrum in the form of a little more taste, discretion and tions against him, that he has delved too deeply into minute, immateri­ professionalism. screech aimed at the administration, protesting its decision al details. Amidst all of the media frenzy and public gossip, one point to relocate The Observer's staff offices. To paraphrase a Not wanting to miss the chance has been overlooked. to add my two bits concerning voice from the past, the whining season has begun. Leaving While reading such articles or observing the opinions of the public at aside the particulars of this very local issue, would not the the current presidential debate: large, I find that there appear to be two takes on the situation: On one GET OVER IT, PEOPLE! You ca.mpus community and The Observer itself be better served side, the public views the probe as an unnecessary look at the private if some of the nation's best students put their thoughts to complain about Jerry Springer life of a public figure; and on the other side, constituents complain that and Clinton in the same breath. . paper on some ofthe nation's toughest problems? One can if he lies about one thing, then he must be lying about others. Both of hope. The obsession with Clinton and these points are well taken, yet there is another aspect that many his smarm-olympics- and the ignore, and that is the idea that this is not about sex, this is not about Joseph M. Powers self-congratulatory, self-right­ indications of character, that this is about breaking the laws of our eousness we revel in when we Associ~te Professor, Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering country, abusing power and manipulating and/or tampering with wit­ Friday, September 25, 1998 boo him - is cut from the same nesses. stock as Jerry-Springerism. Even Just as Watergate was not really about a burglary, the Clinton scan­ more, it's Jerry-Springerism at dal is not really about Monica Lewinsky. Some may argue that every­ its worst since it's taking the one has been trying to dig up dirt on Clinton for years. I have but one place of meaningful public response for that: it is difficult to dig up dirt when no such dirt exists. It debate and derailing what should may seem unfair that Clinton should have to answer personal ques­ be a government by the people. tions, but that does not mean he should have been excused fn1m truth­ Am I defending the president? By fully answering questions in a legitimate civil suit merely because of his no means. But the only thing job. The categorical denials, unfounded invocations of executive privi­ worse than suffering through to lege, and hedging questions with carefully worded responses have the end of his term is trying to made this scandal what it is. Bill Clinton has no one to blame but him­ end it prematurely. I will defend self. the Presidency, our government It is unfortunate that such lurid details have been made public, but and some semblance of order the assertions that Judge Starr and the Office of the Independent and dignity. Those who scream Counsel did so merely to humiliate the President have no basis. It is for his removal are simply spout­ through details that evidence suggesting perjury, obstruction of justice ing partisan politics- sincerely, and tampering with witnesses can be discovered. The details must be perhaps. The best thing is to difficult for the President and his family to deal with, and I sympathize move on, let him !inish out his with them; my own family spent 14 years in the proverbial fish bowl term as best he may, and learn a that political figures must deal with. But after years of scandals and little from the experience next accusations, one would think he would watch his step. I do not ask that campaign season. An ounce of he be held to different standards than other Americans; on the con­ prevention is worth a pound of trary, I ask that he be held to the same ones. The law is the law, and cure. everyone should be held accountable for his actions.

Michael Conry Newhouse Ashley C. Lowery Fischer Graduate Residences Junior, Badin Hall Monday, September 21, 1998 Friday, September 25

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VIEWPOINTTHE Monday, Sr:ptember 28, 1998------OBSERVER page 9

• UNCLE HALLWAY • HE WOULD HAVE HATED IT, BUT HE WOUlD HAVE DONE IT Dating Davie to Mattison: Thank God he Revamped: Came Back I low ironic is it that Tony Driver savnd the jobs of our tlwmselves. coaching stair? Second: Why WPre there drives (I am using this torm loose­ The 'NDDE' l'urdtH' replaced 17 startr~rs from the team that beat us last ly) on offnnse wlwn our tailbacks did not touch tlw ball? W<~ yr~ar. Anyorw who was surprised by the difliculty wn had in wore averaging ten yards a carry! Why pass? Tony Hice was Dal ing at. Notre Dame. "Tiwr·e is nothing to winning this ganw against Purdue just has not bnen paying a better passer than Jarious .Jackson and lw ran~ly, if evnr, do in South BPnd." "WP just havH different attrmtion. Purdue plays as if thny have something to prove. I passml the ball in 19R8. That year Notre~ I >anw ran, and sdwduiPs." ''liP :->aid this, she said this, and am not sun~ what Notm Damn has bnm1 trying to prove in the Notre DamP won. Eleven games. Onn National Title. You do tlwy won~ both drunk.'' first half of each ganw this year. What thr~y have shown is not have to be a teacher of mathmnatics to figuro that out. This is Notre Dame: classes Monday whatrwer thny havn bnrm prnparing for is wrong and when Whiln we are at it. why are wo running Autry Dnnson­ thny resign tlwmsnlves to simply play fi>otball, old Notre our best player- into the ground? We have half a doznn All­ Damn will win ovnr all. American tailbacks on the bral attitude is that we do not have llugn cn~ditmust be given to .larious .Jackson, whos\~ or coadws, but it sure doos to toams who want to win. Maylw llw luxury to wastn limP on "c~onvrmlional" rr~sili<'rH:y and dPtnrmination hPipnd him rPbound from a if Bobby Brown spent more time working on pass routns and datin!.(. Around horn you nood an appoint­ tough first half' and lPad us to victory. I le ran hard through­ less time talking to women he wouldn't have to usn tlw ment to !1irt. and the lines \'.an he long in the out the ganw. but his duteh passing in the 4th quarter was excuse that e.oaehes hate him to explain why he can't gnt wail.ing room. the real clifl(mmce maker. Those balls were throws of a open. But wo a.ro the rwxt generation, and we are champion. I would. however, like to see him tuck and run Fifth: What happened to our shuttling of delimsive players? Notre Dame students. We arc creative. and some of those scrambles out of the pocket- this would make The tired and often disorganized defense eost the oll'!msr~ we an~ intelligent. We ean solve this problem. del'rmses morn honestly play his scrambling ability. In gener­ much needed time-outs. Both teams were on tho field tho Tho Notre Dame Dating Express (NODE): al. just get "the damn ball" exact same amount of time. ".Jump l'ight into your next relationship.'' No in .Jabari Holloway's hands Purdue had their time-outs more misunderstandings. No more lonely by any means necessary, available for dock manage­ nwals in Uw dining hall- just weekly ads in and thP rest will take care of ment at the end of the game. thn Observnr. The Exprc1ss eovors the bastJs itself. Why didn't we? for you. Defensively, we are a For a while there, it looked "SWM seeking SWF w/OUT psychotic ten­ much better team with an like the only way we could dendos." aggressive, attacking, and . leave Notre Dame stadium Are you too embarrassed to place an ad'? blitzing scheme- let's all without a loss would be for Don't worry. this thing will eatch on like a hope fill' more rather than the "Dump Bill Bradley" wild. finl. llotlfll' than flnx points, cooler than· less, and sooner rather than plane to collide with the the other side of the pillow. In fact, NDDE later on that front. Goodyear Blimp creating a virtually eliminates the embarrassment fae· Admittedly, Purdue's quar­ "Biaek Sunday" end to the tor. You'll know who's single, and whore terbaek did everything right game. But then , tlwy'rc ticklish. in the first half. Although he who had coached a gnmt "SWF seeking MH. Varsity." had the Indiana high school game prior to the end, Beggars can't be choosers. unless of course refs signaling touchdown for snatched defeat from the jaws llwy're using NDDE. incomplete passes simply of victory with his play-call­ Be!{gars r:an choose from a plethora of landing in the end zone. ing. Last year I wrote that he dynamil: ND students. The Dating Express is Who hirnd these guys? Were was an idiot for his play call­ like a create-a-dabJ. You f.ind someone com­ they using CFL rules? ing at the end of thn game. I le patible with YOUH lifestyle. Start a relation­ Anyway, it was quite fitting threw half-baek options that ship ofT on YOUH terms. that a defensive baekfinld should have been int1~rcepted, "SWF seeking SWM available for lunch @ with no this and threw on third-and-two SDII T,ll and dinner on SU." season (the negation of when running out the clock If we could please just skip the introduc­ Brock Williams piek was was his goal. That year he tions. wn havH places to go, and people to grand larceny) had their ., was lucky, this year it cost imprnss. You don't have time to waste on Ms. streak broken by the one him the game. To have Bight? Forget "time,'' and think "communica­ guy who ,didn't want to be 4 coached such an excellent tion.'' Do you want to meet someone just like there (tnmporarily). Tony game and then throw on third you right now'! Tho Dating Express keeps Driver summed up his and ten when the game dock everyone on the same page. departure and return the ,, was your only opponent was "SWF seeking SWM to make X-WMjeal· bnst, "I made the decision t' pure stupidity (to quote a pre­ nus." (to eome here) for the next vious column). South Bond is not gotting any sunnier, and 30 years. not the next four Everything around Notre without The Express. your first dates are get­ years." Good, now let's

Monday, September 28, I 998 ------page 1

The Observer/John Daily Senior Jim Sanson (19) watches his kick sail through the uprights and his Irish gain their first lead with 57 seconds. Hunter Smith (17), his holder, points out the victory. Steaming out the Boilermakers By M. SIIANNON RYAN gamn up as Notre Damn's seeond win of hard to dr.fend but we weren't making the Denson plowed over Purdue's guard and \.1inr M.uy\ Editor thn snason. lw would probably likn to plays on defense. We never consistently ran up tho middle li>r a 14-yard scorn. nras1~ sonw of the ganw's scribbles. stopped them." After Purdue kicknr Travis Dorsch In a ganw wlwrP Notre~ llanw Jwvm· lnd In thn first hall', the Irish desperately Getting into jams didn't seem to bother responded with his first of three l'inld for I'VI'II lllll' full minull', safl'ly Tony nnmlnd someorw to play the storybook the Irish. They completed just 7 of 16 goals another Irish candidate was added lll'ivPr rP\\'I'Otl' an immirwnt gloomy nnd­ lwro role while the trend of late power third-down attempts but tested the odds, to the player-of-the-game ballot. ing into a fairytaiP comPhark. surges continuml. going 3-3 on fourth-down conversions. Sophomore Jabari Holloway emerged With tiH• l'inal tlm·l' minutns in thn l'urdun blasted onto the field, shocking "I think everyone can see where we are from the Irish shadows. linishing with 1)4 skilll'd hands or l'urdul' quartnrback th1~ Irish for two quick, unanswered right now; we're not a good football yards on four receptions and two TDs. llrl'w Bn•Ps. tlw Irish appnarPd to Jw touchdowns in tho first quartnr. to am," Davie said. llolloway brought the Irish into the red lrwkl'd in tlw guillotirw awaiting tlw drop BrnPs h~d tlw Boilers SO yards in eight Although Driver mobilized the Irish in zone, where the Irish arn 14-14 on tho of thP hladc·. But tlu• sncoud Brens rnad­ plays in just more than thme minutes and the end, it was Denson who carried tho season, with a 16 yard grab. On third jusll'd Iris grip. llrivPr struck ba1:k with COIHWctnd with Lane for a 13-yard touch­ team piggyback. down. Jackson again hit the 6-foot-3 two illli'ITI'Jllious within o1w minutP of down pass. which oflkials revertnd to the Denson finished the day with two touch­ sophomore who strod1~ into thn end zone. l'arlr otlwr. ruin book to deterrninn after Lane re­ downs and 143 rushing yards. surpassing inching the Irish within thnw. 17-14. Tlu• nabs. whirh Wl'rn NotrP Danw's nntnrnd from out-of-bounds. Vagas Ferguson for second place on the After a controvPI'Sial Brees to Issac first of tlw spason and llrivPr's earPnr Notrn DamP gairwd only two yards on carn()r total list with 3,472 yards. Jones six-yard TD pass, Purdtw went to lirsl sinrn switching to 1111' sProndary this its short-lived driw bdore Brees drove It was also the 19th time Denson rushed the locker room up by SIWI\11. But tlw Irish yPar. took tiH• sharpnPss out of Purdu1>s his team anotlwr 70 yards on 10 plays for I 00 yards in a ganw. ranking him just came out playing with rmwwml spirit. PdgP and ultimatPiy dPt1•rminnd Notrn and pullt·d away from the Irish 14-0 with two shy of Alan Pinkott's n~conl. The defnnsn containc.•d Brees morn I Jarur>s :ll-:lO victory. his two-yard kenpnr. "Autry- hn's prntty much like a savior nll'eetively and gavo up just thrne points in "It shows you how vou IH'I'd to makn Brnns toynd with th1~ Irish dd'ensn to us today." Irish Jarious each of tho two remaining quarters. plays," llavi;. said or"Driwr's intnn·pp­ throughout the gamn by going 24-36 for Jackson said. Meanwhile. the om~nsn scorPd 17 points. lions and tlw climarlir Pnd. "WIH'n you 2h I yards. The sophomorn also led his Denson, who sped through holes building its stats considerably. sark a quartPrback or rausP a fumbln or tPam in rushing liu· 51) yards on thn day. Purdue coach Joe Tillor daimod hn could Jarkson. who comph•tPd liw of I 0 pass­ iutl•iTI']lt tlw hall. tlr1• wlwlr· rhythm of "Our ddPnse struggl<'d today." said lit through, snapped tho Irish out of their es in tlw lirst half. rPgiston~d 143 of his 1 thl' gamr· l'iwugPs." Davin of thP crnw ll'd by DPkn Cooper comatose statn in the sm:ond quarter. In a I 1) ) yards passing in tlu~ SI~COIHI half. Although llavir• willingly chalknd tlw with I I tackles. "Thnir oiTnnse is very drivn with two fourth-down conversions. sec GAME I page 2

PLAYER OF THE GAME Q!)OTE OF THE GAME STAT OF THE GAME Tony Drivnr savml tho day for the Irish Autry Denson rushed for 143 yards with his two intnrcnptions within one "I think everyone can see where we are against the Boilermakers, posting his minute of each other. The pickol'l's rngis­ right now; we're not a good football team." 19th 100 yard or better game. He upped u~rm1 as Driver's first career interceptions his career total to 3,509 Jards passing Head coach Bob Davie Vagas Ferguson for secon place on the and Notrn Damo 's firsts for the season. all-time rushing list. page 2 The Observer· IRISH INSIDER Monday, September 28, 1998 • IRISH INSIGHT GRADING Irish weather the Boilermaker Brees THE

dominated. IRISH By ANTHONY BIANCO On the other side of the ball, Assisram Sports Editor the Irish didn't even have a : B chance to take the lead - even Jackson proved that the Ther1~ was a strong Brees with Holloway's heroics - until loss to the Spartans was a gusting all day Saturday. and the final few minutes of play. fluke. Of course Jackson Purdue took advantage of it for Good thing for the Irish that came out running, but he almost all 60 minutes of play. Purdue didn't take advantage of also threw for 13 receptions, Purdue quarterback Drew Notre Dame's inability to read 2 TDs and 199 yards Brees and his Boilermaker Bn~es and his attack. Saturday, compared to 16 offnnsn were unstoppable in thn Thrm again, the task of stop­ receptions with 2 TDs in tlw lirst half. Thn first-year sopho­ ping Brees and his receivers first two games. Now if he more signalcaller just seem1~d has been a daunting challenge can only improve on his 45 to loft balls that sailed into the for opponents all year. They porcent completion rate. n~c:eivers hands with the aid of have averaged 240 yards pass­ tlw constantly blowing wind. ing in their first three games, Bunning Backs: A Jarious .Jackson could only connecting for six touchdowns. Autry Denson is the spark wish for similar luck,.....&ut the "We want!~d to get them out the offense relies on. He Irish option-focused offense, of rhythm [with our offense[," produced even when the which only had a 41.5 percent said Purdue head eoach Joe rest of the offense didn't in pass completion rate going into Tiller. "That's something we've the first half. Jamie Spencer the game, didn't need a strong done in the past, and that's did an excellent job blocking Brnes. It had a strong something we'll do again in the for Denson. llolloway. future." The sophomore tight end That focus gave the Receivers: B gave the Irish a taste of how a Boilermakers the early advan­ Only about half of pass-oriented team plays. With tage, allowing them to hit two Jackson's passes were just one reception for seven touchdowns and gain 212 yards grabbed by the receivers, yards in his first two games, passing in the first half. The but the ones they did hold Holloway had four Saturday for Irish secondary, without the down turned into big plays Y4 yards. Then again, Jackson services of the injured starting - note, Jabari Holloway's w1mt to all his receivers more strong safety Benny Guilbeaux, two TDs. The offense seems against Purdue. Totaling just 17 had one of their biggest chal­ confident that running the catches in the first two games, lenges all season. They needed ball isn't the only way to Jackson completed 13 against to keep up with the gain yards. the Boilermakers. Boilermaker offense, and their "We believed if we could exe­ constant rotation of receivers. Offensive Line: A cute our game plan we could "They have a lot of receivers The Observer/Liz Lang Denson was on fire, and win the game," said Jackson. Cornerback Deveron Harper goes for his sack on early in rotating in and out," comment­ the third quarter. the line was the spark. The difference between this ed strong safety Tony Driver. Despite the strength Purdue game and the previous two is "They're always fresh for every Bob Davie. minute, 31-30. had in its defensive line, that the Irish now have a more play." Despite struggling all day, it It was a huge Irish play on a Jackson had time to throw complex gameplan- now they The rotations of Isaac Jones, was the secondary that became day when the Brees dominated. and Denson always had the can go to the air. Vinny Sutherland, Tim Stratton, the playmakers in the final few With just seconds remaining, lane to run. Holloway's two touchdown Randal Lane and Cliff Jackson minutes of play. Scrambling Brees attempted to move the receptions not only kept the were Brees' key targets, each from the pocket, Brees drilled ball into fieldgoal range with Defensive Line: B team in the game and setup the landing more than two recep­ one up the middle, something another throw up the middle, The Irish defense was comeback in the closing min­ tions apiece. Brees had a num­ Purdue had not done all day. but after a deflection by Lane, weak in the first half. utes. but sold everyone on hav­ ber of Boilermakers to throw to that was over Lane but right ends up in the hands of Driver Despite getting in front of J. ing a decent passing game to all day with the lack of tight into the hands of Driver. to secure the Irish win. Crabtree. they gave Drew complement the work of Autry coverage Driver returned that ball to Brees can only carry Purdue Brees all the time he needed Denson and Jackson on the "We weren't making the plays the five-yard-line, setting up so far. It was a good thing that to rack up 261 yards pass­ ground. on defense and not making the the Jim Sanson field goal to the Irish realized and took ing and 59 yards rushing. Simply put, Holloway's touch­ tackles. We never consistently give Notre Dame its first lead of advantage of it before the game downs were huge plays for the stopped them," said head coach the game with less than a was over. Linebackers: B Irish on a day when the Brees It was the newcomers who had the biggest success of the game, with Anthony • GAME NOTES AND QuOTES Denman and Joe Ferrer recording sacks. Most of the receptions were for short Bob Davie: yardage that the linebackers let become big gains. "You don't have to learn every lesson the hard way. We won today but we Defensive Backs: B Tony Driver's two hy know we have to improve." saved the game for the Irish. That and Deke Tony Driver: Cooper's 11 tackles. includ­ ing one for a fumble were "I had good blocks all the way to the the only saving graces. Out end zone, butl was stopped just short of position and off the plays are not where they should of where I wanted to end up." be against a quarterback like Brees.

Purdue head coach Joe Tiller: Special Teams: B+ "Anytime you throw the ball over the Sanson was consistent. middle, there's a 50-50 chance that Even Davie admitted that The Observer/John Daily they shouldn't have kicked a Brock Williams boggles a possible interception which resulted in a Purdue touchdown they can intercept the ball." 45-yard field goal into the after Boilermaker Randall Lane ripped the ball away in the endzone. wind. Sanson got that one The Irish could not break the plane on back in the closing seconds three Autry Denson attempts and they Notre Dame is 15~5 when Autry for the win. Hunter Smith Game turned to kicker Jim Sanson who had ear­ Denson rushes for at least 100 botched two early punts, getting about 30 yards on lier missed his first field goal of the sea­ yards. continued from pagel son on a 45-yard attempt. them. Malcolm Johnson also caught for 56 Sanson successfully booted the game­ winning 17 -yarder with only 57 seconds Coaching: B+ yards, most in the second half. Notre Dame is 14-14 in the red Davie must be doing One boost for the Irish was a third remaining. Driver then ran a deja-vu play with the zone, scoring nine touchdowns and something right in the lock­ quarter bomb to Ilolloway, which set up a er room at halftime. Going five-yard Denson TO, bringing the Irish 138th straight sellout crowd. five field goals. After the Boilermakers took over on to the air more is a must to within a field goal of Purdue's 24 points. keep winning. The defense The 51-yard pass. the longest of Jackson their own 44-yard line and ran a no-hud­ dle offense. Driver snatehed another from Notre Dame has beaten Purdue 11 wasn't prepared as they and Holloway's careers. helped atone liJr should have been early on. the Irish losing 48 yards on five penalties. Brees. He returned the interception for 17 straight times at Notre Dame stadium After Purdue's two field goals, yards, for 54 yards total on interceptions. Davie may be happy with the characters dating back to 1974. Overall: 3.30 Holloway grabbed another touchdown This was a complete turn­ pass to creep up on Purdue, 30-28. and ending, but he would like to change the plot and climax of the game story. around from Michigan State, With just more than a minute left in the but it couldn't be much­ game.- Driver stretched the level of hero­ 'To win today can be something you Denson has rushed for seven career can build on to have a heck of season," Worse. There's a long way to ics, picking off an overthrown pass touchdowns against Purdue and is go before the Irish can play intended for Lane over the middle. Davie said. "But just because we did win today doesn't mean we're going to have a tied for most with former Irish fullback all 60 minutes without "It seemed like everything was happen­ error. ing in slow motion," said Driver. heck of a season. We have got to improve Anthony Johnson (1986-89). and we have got to get better as a team." r------~------c---~------

Monday, September 28, 1998 The Observer· IRISH INSIDER page 3 Denson's dizzying pace threatens various records

By KATHLEEN LOPEZ ~purrs Editor

With each ganw Autry Denson plays. hn carves out a hit of history. liP slowly chips away at opposing lPavin said. "With tlw way 111• playPd, wn IIIH'dPd to go to No.2:{. Wn had to g11t him tlw hall." I )pnsoll amassnd I Of> yards on 14 •:ar• riPs in tlw first half alorll'. "I don't fppJ likn I rarriPd llw [Pam," I>Pnson said. "My fullharks blockl'd gn•al all day and my li11nml'n. Wh1111 you an1 gPiling tlw ball and you an• making movl's on lilll'lmckl'rs a11d saldys. as a - rolll'gl' tailbark you arn nxpPI'I.I'd to will lhat batlll'." liP pummPind his way past tlw BoiiPrmakl'r dPfi'IISiVI' front lo cap tlw Notn• llanw driVI'. llis touchdown gavn 1111• Irish tlwir lirst points of tl1n ganw. "I had a lot of lwlp today from my oll'l'nsivP linn and my fullbacks blocking mP," I>Pnson said. "Their blocks mad11 I'VI'ry play I II ad today. Tlw wholn oiTPnsn playPd tlwir !warts out for tlw win today. WP playPd with a lot or hnart The Obse!Ver/liz Lang and krww how to p11rlimn to win." Tailback Autry Denson rushed for 143 yards and two touchdowns for the sixth-best game of his career in Notre Dame's 31-30 win. Al'll'r till' Boilnrmak11r win. Davie PXpmssnd conc11rn aljout his of1'11nse. lie that is what I tried to do and things just unit. And we feel like when we play exe­ "All our younger backs aro very talent­ fnll that Notw DamP needs to return to wont the right way." cution football and don't kill ourselves ed, very fast and they can play very option football and not to rely so heavily In addition to his first half touchdown. with inconsistent plays, we can play with well," Denson said about his younger on l>Pnson. With numerous rushing he got another in the second half with a anyone." counterparts. "It is somewhat of a com­ n~eords in joopardy, Davi11 nends to rnal­ quick cut at the Purdue 5 yard line. In his three years here, he has proven petition, and I guess my job as a senior is izn that a rwrl'nct balancn must be Denson almost scored another at the end that he can run with the best of him. to go out and just give everything I have. al'.hievod utili1.ing Donson to his upmost ol' the game but after three unsuccessful Denson totally proved his power by earn­ This is my last go around. W\hether or without jeopardizing Jackson's ability. attempts Notre Dame settled for the field ing his most yards against the defending not they're playing or not, I don't control Bnsidns posting his 19th 100 yard goal. Purdue's Chike Okeafor made the national champions. Michigan. l-Ie has that. I guess it is kind of my job to keep ganw or lwttnr, lw rushnd for his sixth­ goal line stand !'or the Boilermakers. moved into third place on Notre Dame's them oft' the field." lwst ganH' of his carnnr. llis 14:~ yards With his two touehdowns on Saturday. career rushing touchdown list with 33. At the rate which Denson is going, all tin wilh his pnrformance last wintllr Denson has rushed for seven career /\lien Pinkett leads with 49 while Louis Notre Dame rushing records are within against llawaii. By amassing his 19th touchdowns against the Boilermakers "Hed" Salmon is second with 36. shattering distance. llis pace is dizzying 100 yard ganw or bllttnr, lw is two and is tied with former Irish fullback Denson's 143 yards rushing upped his and it seems apparent that the doser he gamPs away from lHnaking Allnn Anthony Johnson for the most touch­ career total to 3,509 yards, surpassing gets to the end ol' his collegiate career, l'inkPtt's rPcord of I 00 yard ganws downs in the Notre Dame-Purdue series. Vagas Ferguson who chalked up three, the more determined he will become. whirh stands at ~I. "We li1lt like we eould run the ball on 472 fur second place on the all-time The question lurking in every Notre "Wiwrwvnr WI' gol out. no matter il' wn anyorw," Denson said. "I mean we came rushing list. Pinkett leads with 4,131 Dame fan's mind is not whether or not arl' winning or losing, my job is to he out and playml a very good Purdue team. yards. The record for top rusher in Notre he will break Pinkett's all-time rushing kind or likn tlw sparkplug, to chargn not to take anything away from Purdue. Damn's history lies just in the future for record but who will provide the running I'VPryhody Plsn up," lknson said. "So We l'ecllike wn arn a very good offensive Denson. game when Denson.. graduates.

• STATISTICALLY SPEA!\ING Scoring 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Notre Dame (} 14 7 10 Purdun 14 10 3 3 Team Statistics ND PU First Downs ~I 2~ Huslwd-Yards 183 123 Passing-Yards 199 ~61 Sacknd-Yard Lost :~-14 1-1 Passes 24-13-0 36-24-2 Punts 4-177 2-67 Fumblns-Lost 1-0 1-1 Pnnaltins-Yanls 5-48 5-35 Time of Possession 30:22 ~9:38 v Individual Statistics s Hushing NI>-DPnson 31-158, Jackson 1~-42, Goodspeed 1-2. Speneer 1-0 I'll-Brees 11-59, Crabtree 16-51, Johnson 6-36 Passing ND-Jaekson 24-13-0-199 PU- Brees 36-24-2-261 Heceiving ND-Johnson, M. 5-56, Holloway 4-94. Getherall 1-17. Johnson, J. 1-15. Spencer 1-11. Denson 1-6 Pll-Jones 6-83, Lane 6-71, Jackson 4-35, Stratton 3-21, Crabtree 2-31, Sutherland 2-11, Cox 1-9

1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Q~arter

PU-Handall 13 yard pass !'rom l.>rees ND-Denson 14 yard tun (Sanson kick) ND-Denson 5 yard run (Sanson kick) PU-Dors~:h 47 yard field goal !Dorsdl kirkl PU-06r-seh 37 yard field goal PU-Dorsch 40 yard field goal NO-Holloway 17 yard pass from Pll-Brnes 2 yai'Cl run (Dorsch kick) NO-Holloway 10 y.u·d pass from Jackson (Sanson kick) Jackson (Sanson kick) ND-Sanson 17 yard field goal PU-Jones 6 yard pass from Brees (Dorseh kick)

, --

NOTRE DAME 31 PURDUE 30 NOTRE DAME STADIUM SEPTEMBER26, 1998

... Photos by John Daily, Bret Hogan and Liz Lang

t:• s~ n-- - Monday. September 28, 1998 ------0BS~RVER ------page 1 1

• VIDEO PICK OF THE WEEK • CHART-TOPPERS

11 All the President's Men" Director: Alan Pakula Movie Title/(Gross Sales} Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Robert Redford, Jason Robards and 1 ' Rush Hour($21. 1 million) John Randolph 2. Ronin ($13.0 million) 3. Urban Legend ($11 .0 million) t4. One True Thing ($4. 5 million) t4. There's Something About Mary ($4. 5 million) 6. Simon Birch ($2. 7 million)

By MIKE M~:MORROW hours that one spends going through 7. Saving Private Ryan ($2.6 million) '-.n·nL' fv1ovic ( :1 itk rtH'.ords to l'ind one possible hint that 8. Rounders ($2.5 million) will get people to talk, as well as to take Carl BPrnstPill and Bob Woodward precautionary measun~s that a big­ 9. Blade ($2.0 million) gavP an nnlightnning int<~rvinw on CNBC nanw. wnll-reputnd paper like the 10. Ever After ($1 .2 million) a month ago, giving t.lwir narnest opin­ Washington l'oslmust lake bel'orn print­ ions on llw Clinllln l'risis and mon• gnn­ ing a pot. Tlwy spok<~ ol' giving thnir rharaet<~rs a c<~rtain eool­ Source: AP Online llw Olll<'J-g<•ncn of 24-hour 1wws and ol' nnss and pationeo that is ne('.essary for a i.IH· magnitud1• to which massivn nwdia porson who holds such a position and is hypo al'l'orls llw puhlil' pnn:Pplion of n~sponsiblo for such a story. f'V<'nls. .Jason Bobards. who plays B1~n Tlwy put tho Clinton sox scandal in Bracllne - tlw mlitor a step down from pnsp<•rtivn by sp<'aking ol' how- while tlw editor-in-ehiel'- is ultimately not trivializing thP poor judgnwnt of rnsponsible for the <:redibility of the Clinton - tlw scandals arn simply not paper. lie deserves the highlight perfor­ on th<' sanw Sl'al<' of Watnrgatn and tlw numee because of' his masterful screen suhsnqtwnt 1Timns that omnrgnd from presence that elicits a potential for an thP inv<~stigation. It was a porcnptive explosion that would light up the screen and rPI'n~shing take and bring the on tlw status ol' our movie alivo oven nwdia and our without the drama n<'t~ds as a puhlir.. of Watergate itself'. Woodward and AI though the ll1•rnstnin, ol' lilm could not use Video Title <:olii'SI\ an~ tlw two the same degree famous of dt~Lail that the Washington Post book does. Pakula 1. Titanic l'l~portnrs who does a marvelous 2. The Wedding Singer liiii'OVPnHI tl11~ ini­ job of keeping an tial misdnalings of extraordinarily 3. jackie Brown th<~ White llous1~ complex story rnl­ 4. The Big Lebowski that took place atively easy to fol­ hPI'orn. during. and Pholo Courtesy of Warner Brolhers low. 5. Good Will Hunting a l't ~~ r t h P I 1) 7 2 Dustin Hoffman (left) and Robert Redford And still, he does 6. U.S. Marshals star in "All the Presidents' Men" WatPrgatn brnak­ not insult the audi- 7. The Apostle in. enee's intelligence Thnir hook. "All tlw l'n~sidont's Mnn," by spelling everything out immediatnly. 8. Wag the Dog told tlw story ol' how tlwy inr.itnd a The audience is asked to make emmec­ 9. The Man in the Iron Mask grand-jury invostigation and nvnntually lions thmnselves while not being left in an indepPmlent prosnr.utor to nxamitw the dark as to the large-seale implica­ 10. Wild Things thn Nixon administration's corrupt prac­ tions of such a story. lic<~s. Tlw book is writt<•n in journalistie "All the President's Men," though, fashion -with little to no editorial eom­ embodies a greater valun today than in Source: Billboard Online nwnts and a lack ol' overt nwlodrama. It 1976 when it was first released. It simply tolls tlw story of tlw stops that sBrvos as a reminder and model to jour­ tlw rnportt~rs took without much nalists today that the profession, espe­ l'lwtoric. cially investigative reporting. exceeds a Alan Pakula's l'ilm version takes a superlidal arena for mere exploitation. similar approach to tell one ol' tho most It should be an admirable and responsi­ intriguing accounts of abust~ of' power in blt~ job in whieh the dignity of the story all of history. comes first, rather than the need for Hobert Hedl'ord is Woodward and personal fame. Dustin llol'f'man is Bt~rnstein. These "All tho President's Men" inspires peo­

Video Title

1. Titanic 2. jerry Springer -Too Hot At the theaters At the video store For TV! 3. Pocahontas II: journey To A New World What Dreams May Come The Object of My Affection 4. Playboy's Playmates Revisited True (October 2) (September 29) 5. The Exorcist - 25th Anniversery Special Edition 6. Spice World Antz (October 2) Paulie (September 29) 7. As Good As It Gets 8. Austin Powers A Night at the Roxbury The Spanish Prisoner 9. Backstreet Boys: All Access Video (October 2) (September 29) 10. Boogie Nights

Source: Hollywood.com Source: Billboard Online -~ ~- ______c- ___,__..., ______~~---~~--~--~~ -. - ~---~--~.------

page 12 The Observer • SPORTS Monday, September 28, 1998 - Vikings' Fuller intercepts for second-half victory Associated Press in the first half. Engram caught TD passes of 33 and 4 ting the ball back in the final seven minutes with a yards, and Penn caught a 23-yard scoring pass as the chance to tie or win. Todd Peterson missed a potential took a 21-10 halftime lead. tying 52-yard field goal into a swirling wind with 4:38 Forget Hobert Smith and Randy Moss' touchdown left and 41-year-old Warren Moon, who made his first receptions. Cornerback Corey Puller had the biggest Steelers 13, Seahawks 10 start against Pittsburgh 14 years ago, twice overthrew catch of the day for the Minnesota Vikings. an open Joey Galloway on potential scoring plays. Fuller intercepted what would have been a touch­ Jerome Bettis got an apology and what he wanted Moon was 14-of-27 for 183 yards with his first inter­ down. and Moss and Cris Carter had TD receptions in even more - the ball. ception in four games. Galloway acr:ounting for all but the second half Sunday as.the Vikings (4-0) rallied for a Bettis, a forgotten man the week before in one of 44 of the passing yards with seven catches for 139 31-28 victory over the Chicago Bears. Smith. a running Pittsburgh's worst losses ever unde1· Bill Cowher, got yards. back also had a 67-yard catch for a score. the Steelers back to what they do best by running for The Seahawks constantly pressured Steelcrs quarter- Moss and Carter have four TD receptions each this back Kordell Stewart, who was ineffective for the vear. fourth game in a row by throwing for only 108 · Both Minnesota's Handall Cunningham and yards. But, unlikfl Pittsburgh's defense, they never Chicago's Erik Kramer had four TD passes. could force a potential game-altering turnover or Cunningham finished 16-of-25 for 275 yards. make a momentum-altering play. Kramer was 25-of-29 for 372 yards. Chicago's Cowher was so upset with his offense - and, it Bobby Engram caught six passes for 123 yards. seemed, the play-calling- in a 21-0 loss to Miami It was yet another second-half collapse for the last week that he ordered offensive coordinator Bears (0-4). who have led at halftime in all their Hay Sherman to open up the offens1~ more and get games. They blew a 15-point halftime lead last the ball to Bettis. week at Tampa Bay. Sherman, the former Vikings quart1~rbacks coach Hyan Wetnight's 19-yard catch with 1:53 left cut who took over Pittsburgh's.ofl'ensc from Cowboys Minnesota's lead to three, but the Bears blew the coach Chan Gailey, even took the unusual step of onside kick wlwn Chris Penn tipped it and it rolled personally apologizing to Bettis, who was twice out of bounds. Minnesota got the ball its 43. held to fewer than 50 yards in the first three games Chicago had a 21-17 lead and looked like it was after rushing for 1,665 yards last season. going to add to it. Kramer moved the Bears to the He has never gone consecutive games in Minnesota 10 and had a wide-open Fabien Bownes Pittsburgh without running for 1 00 yards. in the right corner of the end zone. But Fuller ran in This time, Bettis had six carries in the Steelers' front of Bownes just as he was about to catch the first 10 plays and went over 100 yards for thll 33rd ball and tipped it away. time in his six-year career and the 23rd timll with Fuller bobbled the ball several times before finally Pittsburgh by early in tlHl third quarter. controling it at the 6. He ran for 26 yards and prob­ With Stewart effectively contained except for a ably would have had a touchdown, but Casey few rollouts, the Steelflrs neflded every Bettis yard Wiegmann tackled him at the 32. to avoid their first regular-season home loss since The Vikings got another break three plays later their season opener last year against Dallas. on Smith's16-yard reception when the Bears also But they again wasted scoring chance aft!lr scor­ were called for holding. ing chance as three Seattle fumbles, two by l'ull­ After Jake Heed caught a 1 0-yard pass at the back Mack Strong in the first 35 minutns, led only Chicago 35, Cunningham double-pumped under to Norm Johnson's 32-yard field goal. heavy pressure, then heaved a pass to the right cor­ Seattle took its only load at 7-3 on Moon's 14- ner of the end zone. It fell right into Carter's hands to 138 yards in a defense-dominated 13-10 victory Sunday yard scoring pass to tight end Christian Fauria early in make it 24-21. over the . the second quarter to finish off a 72-yard highlighted by Moss' 44-yard reception gave Minnesota a 31-21 lead Seattle (3-1), one of the NFL's surprise teams so far, Moon's 40-yard completion to Galloway. with 10:13 left. couldn't overcome Bettis' big day, four turnovers or a But the Steelers (3-1) responded with their only David Palmer started the Vikings' comeback, catching suddenly ineffective running game as they were denied impressive drive, a 14-play, 82-yard drive completed a punt at his 13 and zig-zagging halfway down the field. the first 4-0 start in franchise history. when rookie fullback Chris Fuamatu-Ma'afala took He probably would have scored, but he collided with The Seahawks entered as the AFC's leading rushing Stewart's surprise pitchout from the shotgun to score teammate Ton·ian Gray at the Chicago 33. Cunningham offense with a 158.3 yards per game average, but were untouched on a second-and-10 play to put Pittsburgh connected with Andrew Glover for the 19-yard score, held to 61 rushing yards- only 47 by Ricky Watters­ up 10-7. cutting Chicago's lead to 21-17. by what was the NFL's best rushing defense last season. After that, the two tnams managed only a field goal It was the Chicago receivers that did all of the damage But the Seahawks didn't lack opportunities, twice get- apiece in the second half.

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Bed and 83461, LA,CA 90083 LF, HR, AM, JP- I think we can all next time and do NOT make per~ Breakfast Inn has space available WANTED ND FOOTBALL TIX 271- agree that Yankee hugs are pretty sonal calls or visits to the office!~ SPRING BREAK '99! for football/parent wknds.5 Rooms 1526 frightening. - Finn Cancun·Nassau· Jamaica "Mazatlan with private baths.$80- I Monday, September 28, 1998 The Observer • SPORTS page 13 • MAJOB lEAGUE BASEBAlL Braves elilllinate Mets frolll National League playoffs - Associated Press game lead in the NL wild-card 1988, the Mets bombed out, Sunday one game behind of grooving a 3-2 fastball to race going into their tinal five going 0-5 and scoring just Chicago and San Francisco, Greg Maddux, one of the best· ATI.ANTA games, were eliminated from seven runs in their last 44 needing a victory over the hitting pitchers in the league. A disastrous final wnek for the playoffs Sunday with a 7-2 innings. Braves and losses by both the Maddux, who hit .240 this the Nnw York Mets nndml with loss to the Atlanta Braves. New York, which dropped Cubs and Giants to force a season. slammBd a drive to a misnrabil~ last day. Contending for their first out of a three-way tic by los­ three-way playoff. the wall in center for an HBI The Mnts. who had a one- postseason appearance since ing 4-0 Saturday, began Atlanta, which has won double. seven straight division titles, After Walt Weiss' single, quickly ended that illusion Keith Lockhart made it 4-0 with a four-run second inning. with a two-run double to the Unlike the Mets, who wasted gap in right-center. numerous chances during the Chipper .Jones then blooped three-game sweep, the Braves a hit just behind shortstop that scored their first six runs with a diving Rny Ordonez failed to two-outs hits and went on to snare. Ordonez quickly their team-record 106th win. grabbed the ball and jumped They open the playoffs to his feet, but seemed startled Wednesday against either the to see Lockhart was trying to Cubs or Giants. score all thn way from second. Over the final week, New Ordonez's throw sailnd over York was shut out twice. Piazza's head for an error During three days in Atlanta, while the runner slid across the Mets stranded 32 runners the plate. - 11 on Sunday - and left The Mets bunehed tognther the bases loaded four times. three straight hits in the third, After falling behind 5-0, the including John Olerud's HBI Mets closed to 5-2 in the sev­ single, but their frustration enth and had the tying run at was epitomized the following the plate with one out. But inning when Atlanta came up Mike Piazza - who stranded with two defensive plays. 15 runners in the series - On a slow roller by Carlos struck out against Dennis Baerga, Chipper Jones Martinez. Brian McRae went swooped in from third, bare­ Meeting for down swinging against John handed the ball and barely Hocker. beat the runner with the Atlanta sealed the victory throw to first. Notre Dame Lesbian with RBI doubles by Eddie Then, Hey Ordonez hit a Perez in the seventh and grounder doep in the bolo that Chipper Jones in the eighth. was backhandod by shortstop The Braves pounded Mets Ozzie Guillen, who skipped a and Gay Students starter Armando Reynosa (7- throw just ahead of a head­ 3), who lasted only 1 2-3 first slide by the Mets short­ innings and gave up five runs stop. Group and six hits. Andres Galarraga Maddux (18-9), who had lost had an RBI double in the first his tirst three September deci­ before Atlanta broke it open sions, avoidod having his first with a flurry of two-out hits in winless month since .June Tuesday, September 29, 1998 the second. 1990, allowing five hits and a For titne and loeation of tneeting, call: 1-8041 Reynosa made the mistake run in six innings. NDLGS Group Advisors: Fr. Tom Gaughan, C.S.C Sr.Mary Louise Gude, C.S.C. All Meetings are private and confidential.

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'------.___ __, I page 14 The Observer • SPORTS Monday, September 28, 1998 • MAJDH LEAGUE BASEBALL - McGwire ends season in fashion with two blasts Associated Press up with the ball and said he - and then for only 103 min­ the Rams a 5-yard penalty. Cardinals, he has 94 homers, didn't know what he would do utes in all. A huge cheer spread through 189 RB!s and 205 walks. with it. Sosa led for 58 minutes on the Trans World Dome late in At Busch Stadium, he has 51 ST.LOUIS "I reached up, closed my Aug. 19 before McGwire the third quarter as the Rams homers and 102 RB!s inl06 Mark McGwire ended his eyes, and it landed in my regained went back ahead with faced a third down just inside games. record-smashing season as glove," Woodson said. "It's a his 48th and 49th homers in the Arizona territory. The distances of his homers is mightily as he started it. dream come true. I hope he same game at Chicago. The sudden uproar seemed to 29,598 feet, nearly 400 feet McGwire hit his 69th and doesn't hit any more today." Sosa led for 45 minutes on disrupt the play calling, leading higher than the peak of Mount 70th homers on the season's He didn't get his wish. Friday when he hit his 66th to an illegal motion penalty. Everest. last day, a fitting finale for a With two on and two outs in before McGwire answered. McGwire drew his NL record It's also 5.6 miles of homers. year he began with a grand the seventh and the score 3-all, Sunday was the Cardinals' 162nd walk, tying Ted Williams slam on opening day. he connected off Pavano (6-9), final game of the season. (194 7 and 1949) for the second­ "This is a season I will never, lining a first-pitch fastball 370 Sosa's Cubs, who played at highest total in major-league Check The Observer ever forget, and I hope nobody feet over the left-field wall at Houston, did not know if their history, on a pitch that nearly in baseball ever forgets it," 3:19 p.m.. sending the regular season would end or if beaned him in the fifth. sports section daily McGwire told the cheering Cardinals on to a 6-3 win over there would be a playoff game Thurman threw the last three for your home team's crowd after the game. the Expos. for the NL wild-card spot. balls way inside and was booed Big Mac, who hit five homers This time, even a curtain call Before connecting Friday, vociferously after ball four. chances in the on the final weekend, connect­ from McGwire didn't quiet the McGwire had been homerless McGwire has 180 homers the playoff race. ed against Montreal rookie 46,110 fans, who remained on in 14 at-bats. last three seasons. Mike Thurman in the third their feet. Across town, the homer cost In 206 career games with the inning Sunday. Then he homered off of Carl JordanThey cheeredtook a evencalled as Brianthird P------, Pavano for No. 70 in the sev­ strike for the third out of the enth. inning. , McGwire moved four ahead of The second home run ball Sammy Sosa and ended nine - landed in a party box and was nine! - in front of Roger Maris' snared by Phil Ozerski of ~ ..... old record. Olivette, Mo., attending the Big Mac hit a 1-1 fastball 377 game with a group of feet into the left-field seats at Washington University research 2:10p.m. COT for No. 69. lab scientists. After stomping on home McGwire, who has 10 multi­ plate. he took a few slow steps, homer games this year and 53 then made several salutes to in his career, hit a go-ahead the crowd. homer for the 24th time this The usual sellout crowd that season. had stood well before his at-bat He opened the year with a demanded and got not one, but slam on March 31 against the two, curtain calls. Dodgers' Ramon Martinez. '*~:. Kerry Woodson, a 22-year-old He then led the home run ·-.::- body shop worker from race all season except when Maryland Heights, Mo., wound Sosa twice passed him briefly ~~~· ~~~~:~~_.):.

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------Monday, September 28, 1998 The Observer • SPORTS page 15 --~--~------~~~~~~------~~- • MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBAll. - ____--,Astros rally, force Cubs to playoff Associated Press from-behind victories and 27 in in the game and kept trying to their last at-bat, and their latest get the victory. HOUSTON rally forced the Cubs to return "With NL president Leonard The llouston Astros made to Wrigley Field Monday for a Coleman in attendancn, I think­ sun~ tlwy wen~ the only ones one-game playoff. we showed him that we gave NELSON cniPbrating in thn Astrodome on "I think our players felt that our best effort not to give the Sunday. And they got a litlle in 1995 the Cubs practically wild-card to the Cubs," Dierk1~r revenge too. gave blood to keep us out of the said. Hemembering that Chicago wild-card spot," manager Larry The Astros wernn't just knoeked them out of the NL Dierker said. "They made sure pleased that they kept the Cubs wild-eard race in 1995, the we didn't go to the playolTs." from getting into the playoffs. Astros rallied to win 4-3 in 11 The Astros also still had left­ They were happy with the way innings, foreing the Cubs into a over adrenalin aftnr losing they did it, coming from behind. playoff for the NL wild-card Saturday's game on a contro­ They'd lost a little of tlwir edge playoff spot. versial eall for the final out. since clinching their sflcond "It might have been revenge Dave Clark was called out run­ straight title. but mainly, we didn't want any­ ning to first base for trying to "This game delinit1~ly will help body to <:linch against us," avoid the tag. us keep up our intensity going Astros piteher Mike llampton "We felt we were going to into the playoll's." Dinrker said. said. '1You never want to let the beat them yesterday but we had Confidnnce blossomed with other team celebrate in your a bad call," Carl Everett said. the victory, Evewtt said. own park." "'So this is revenge for us. We "I played on a team that camn The Cubs carried a 3-1 lead wanted to play the spoiler. from bnhind a lot last year into the eighth inning, hoping to They're going to have to win it (Mots) but not as much as this get into Llw playoffs for the first at their own place now." team," Everett said. "It just time sineo 1989. But Houston, SPONSORED The Astros had nothing left to shows how strong we are. We sv, playing its regular lineup for play for other than their 1 02nd are capable of beating anybody nearly tho entire game. eame victory. They won the NL we play if we play as good as baek. Central long ago and they we can. "At least they didn't get to cel­ already had clinched the home "When you come from behind ebratn in front of us now," lirst l'i~dd advantage in the l'irst like that it helps your confi­ baseman .Jeff Bagwell said. . round of the playoffs against dence. You don't ever feel like "Now they've got to play tomor­ San Diego, beginning Tuesday you're out of it." PRESIDENTS row." in the Astrodome. The Astros closed out tlw reg­ S E R I E S The Astros have 49 come- Still, Dierker kept the starters ular season like they've playNl most of the year. "Even when we don't play well for six-seven innings, we THE BEST MINDS, THE BEST OPPORTUNITIES always have a chance to pull it out." Bill Spiers said. "We've done it enough this year that we "THE BEST WAY TO GET THE MOST OUT OF A STAFF sort of expect to do it. I'm sme IS TO GIVE PEOPLE FULL RESPONSIBILITY. "1 it's on other teams minds, too." --~ Peter Lynch Hockics 9, Giants R Fidelity Investments If the Giants had held on to that seven-run lead, thny'd be Career Opportunities in Equity Research at Fidelity Management & Research Company. in the playoffs. Instead. it's on to Chicago for a wild-card tiebrnaker against the Chicago Cubs on Monday night. Light-hitting Neili Perez hit a game-winning homer olT Hobb Non in the I I th inning Sunday as the Colorado Hockins stillnd San Francisco with a

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page 16 The Observer • SPORTS Monday, September 28, 1998 Makinen. "She's a great goal scorer, she's fast, and she can finish." W.Soccer Makinen, however, ear'ned the - Tournament Offensive MVP honors. continued from page 20 The Irish offense amassed 52 scored her first goal at 24:43 when shots this weekend, but only man­ she took a Jenny Streiffer pass and aged six goals. put the ball in the lower left corner Heft and Makinen spoke about the of the net for the game-winning need to finish more of their oppor­ goal. tunities, but both were optimistic. Heft's second of the afternoon "We're not scoring as many goals came when Mia Sarkesian pass was as in years past, but the opportuni­ intercepted by Wake's goalkeeper ties are there," said Heft. Erin Regan. However, Regan wasn't "That's something we definitely able to gain control of the ball and want to work on. I think we played it went up into the air, where Heft well. We had possession of most of then headed it into the goal. the game. We didn't finish as well She completed her hat trick when as we would have liked, but we cre­ Grubb played a corner kick to ated opportunities. I think we did a Shannon Boxx who headed it to decent job this weekend," said Heft who then volleyed it into the Makinen. "We're missed some goal, giving the Irish a 3-0 win. opportunities, but we're not frus­ "She was amazing," said trated. The goals will come. Three Wa:.:. Street Forum Your opportunity to learn more about: •Investment Banking •Asset Management •Commercial Banking •Insurance •Careers for Business and Non-Business Majors

Wednesday, October 7th, 1998 College of Business Administration 3:00- 10:00 pm

Open to all Students Dinner Tickets $5 On Sale: September 28th­ October 2nd COBA 102 and O'Shaughnessy Advance Perchase Necessary

The Observer/Jeff Hsu Jenny Heft scored off an assist by Jenny Streiffer against Wake Forest. For more information call: Professor John Affleck-Graves at 631-6370

Psychology 101: The Rorschach Test

Advanced SCUBA - Classes begin Sept. 29. Previous certi­ fication is required. For more information please contact Bill Archer at 1-5443. Domer Run - The annual Domer Run is scheduled for October 10 at 11 a.m. Race begins at Stepan Center. It is a 3 mile, 6 mile run and 2 mile walk. Pancake breakfast after the race. Register in advance at RecSports. It costs $6. Pull up a couch. See the tomato? Proceeds benefit the Catherine Peachey Foundation, Inc. for Then you're not only sane, Breast Cancer Research. For but hungry as well. more information, contact tlike Pavlov's dog when he heard the bell.) RecSports at 1-6100. Good thing Fazoli's is nearby. One Night Badminton - Sign-ups begin Sept.28 for the Head on over for one night tournament. Singles a Sampler Platter and and doubles divisions. The unlimited free breadsticks tournament will be held on October 9 at 6 p.m. at the Rolfs when you dine in. Sports Recreation Center. For You'd be crazy to pass it up. more information, contact RecSports at 1-6100. Saint Mary's Track - Anyone interested in track and field should attend a meeting on 527/U US Route 33N, 277-4()()8, South Bend October 6 at 8 p.m. in Angela 317 W lv1cKinley, 255-2551, Mislurwakn Atheltic Facility on the campus 1248 Nnppa11ee Street, 262-9873, Elkhnrt of Saint Mary's College.

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compiled from wire reports Monday, September 27, 1998

RAN KINGS • UP NEXT FOR NO • AP POLL Oregon dominates in rout of Stanford 1) Ohio State 3-0 1,737 2) Nebraska 4-0 1,660 It the first half. lie also threw 3)Tennessee 3-0 1,544 Associated Press soconcl quarter against UTEP Willamette in 1916. was the tho following week and sat out most points given up by the four first-half TDs against 4) UCLA 2-0 1,538 last week's 58-3 victory over Cardinal {1-3, 0-2) since a Michigan State. 5) Kansas St. 4-0 1,503 EUGENE, Ore. San Jose State. 72-0 loss at UCLA in 1954. Damon Griffin caught five 6) LSU 3-0 1,395 Putting Heubon Droughns "I would say I'm about 90 In a typically wild game, the passes for 1 I R yards and two 7) Penn State 3-0 1,293 back into tho lineup is likcl percnnt right now," said teams eombined for 1,056 touchdowns. Jed Weaver 8) Florida 3-1 1,275 adding boostnr onginos to Droughns, who had just.:H total yards, one year after addcld five reeeptions for 84 9) Florida State 3-1 1 '151 Orogon's high-powered yards on seven earries at combining for 1,1 08 yards in a yards and a TD. 10) Virginia 4-0 1,069 offnns1l. halftime. "At the beginning, it 58-49 Stanford win. In the Oregon led 42-21 at the half. 11) Syracuse 2-1 1,050 Droughns, coming back from was kind of hard for me to get past six games between the but committed turnovers on its 12) Georgia 3-0 971 a foot injury that sidelined him ·the euts and run hard. The schools, they have averaged first two possessions of the 13) Wisconsin 4-0 885 for most of the last two games, coaches and teammates 74.3 points and 951 combined third quarter. Stanford 14) Arizona 4-Q 823 rushed for 214 yards and started telling me, 'Just run."' yards. eoulcln't eapitalize, and 15) Colorado 4-0 701 three touehdowns and Akili Oregon T h e Droughns put the game away Smith threw for four first-half 1-0 Ducks with a 1-yarcl dive over the 16) West Virginia 2-1 626 {4-0, touchdowns as No. 20 Oregon l'ac-10) had lost goal line to put the Ducks 17) Oregon 4-0 613 put on another impressivn piled up their last ahead 49-21 with 3:21 left in 3-1 570 18) Texas A&M of'l'ensive display to beat 664 yards three to the quarter. 19) Virginia Tech 4-0 531 Stanford 63-28. in offense, t h e "We· had a great deal of 20) Washington 2-1 492 Droughns ran for three shy Cardinal respect for him," Stanford 21) usc 3-1 294 second-half touchdowns of I, of the and six coach Tyrone Willingham said. 22) Arkansas 3-0 226 67 and 40 yards and became school of seven, "We don't feel like, even with 23) (tie) Missouri 2-1 218 the first player in Oregon record set b u t his skill and ability, that we 23) Notre Dame 2-1 218 history to rush for 200 yards against smith executed as well as we should 25) Michigan 2-2 64 twice in a season. The junior BYU in a n d have." transfer ran for 202 yards and 1 9 8 9 . Oregon's Oregon, averaging 50.5 scored three TDs in a Oregon receivers points per game, is off to a 4-0 season-opening 48-14 victory scored its most points ever in were too much this time. start for the first time since over Michigan State. He a Pac-10 game and the most Smith completed 18-of-29 1988 and only the third time sprained his right ankle in the overall since a 97-0 defeat of passes for 35 7 yards, 313 in since 1964. Wolverine defense boosts team to win • ESPN/COACHES' POLL mistakes, yet still led 1,528 Associaccd Press 1) Ohio State 3-0 20-17 at halftime. 2) Nebraska 4-0 1,491 The miscues included 3) Kansas St. 4-0 1,375 an interception on 4) UCLA 2-0 1,342 the third play of the 5) Tennessee 3-0 1,341 ANN AHBOH, Mich. game, a fumbled 6) LSU 3-0 1,229 Tom Brady passnd for orw kiekol'f, the drop touchdown, ran for another, or 7) Penn State 3-0 1 '121 an easy interception and Michigan's dcfc~nse earne 8) Florida 3-1 1,095 with nothing but up with live sncond-hall' sacks opPn field in sight, 9) Virginia 4-0 1,018 as thn Wolvnrines beat 10) Florida State 3-1 980 and a fumbled punt. Mi-chigan Statn 29-17 in their The Wolverines 11) Syracuse 2-1 873 Big Ten opPzwr Saturday. 12) Georgia 3-0 864 also were guilty of Anthony Thomas rushed 13 sloppy tackling in the 13) Wisconsin 4-0 777 timc~s for

age 18 The Observer • SPORTS Monday, September 28, 1998 P ------~------~------~~~------goal was his seventh in seven Irish failed to make any serious vietory. them all game." games, was marked from the attempts at scoring but were "We felt like we could beat Saturday's game ties the best M. Soccer onset by the Red Storm able to keep the drives of' them," said Walton. "If they're showing that the Irish have - defense, including a play in the Buscemi and Bunda from end- No. 7 [in the polls]. we should ever had against a St. John's continued from page 20 second overtime that landed ing the game in a Red Storm be No.8 because we hung with team that won the 1996 title. "DefensivPly. we were pres­ them a yellow card. sured a great deal. we just The two overtime periods were again marked by excellent wanted to give [Bocklage. Aris Umversity of Notte Dame and Wells] a breather," said scoring chances by St. John's, The Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies including a shot in the first ZI6 Hesburgh Center for IntematJonal Studies KELLOGG Berticelli. No~e Dame, Indiana USA 41iSS6·S677 Also taking some time out of overtime by Pablo Bunda that INSTITUTE the game was Walton. The beat Velho yet hit the crossbar freshman forward, whose early and stayed out of the net. The Cosponsored with The Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies

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,- f.!~:~tnte, an~~~~y!s \.,;Q.. '~.;g.c.,\,Jll.l'utu

Professor MART~~RRjfT,~~nG;~~7n'a Kroc Institutes, and Department of Government and International Studies, University of Notre Dame

Professor GABOR TOKA, Visiting Fellow, Kellogg Institute, and Department of Political

The Observer/Brett Hogan Science, Central European University Coming off an injury, Irish forward Ben Bocklage split his time Saturday between the bench and the field. Join us to discuss the present Russian situation.

TheND Spon~ored By< Accounting & ·(;~ ,/'··: Association AT&T All Accounting and Finance Majors. Others also welcome.

Dan Hesse-CEO of AT&T Wireless Services and ND Grad Class of 1976 .- Joe McCabe, Financial Vice President of AT&T Consumer Markets Division .. October 1, 1998, 7:00pm Monogram Room

First 50 People Receive AT&T Prepaid Calling Cardsl Wednesday, September 23, 1998 The Observer • TODAY page 19 LOOKING THROUGH THE WIZARD OF NO DAN SULLIVAN YOUR HOROSCOPE EUGENfA LAST I CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS going nature will attract a lot of -1'HA1"'5 rl I'M NEVER "'1'HAI's -roo BAD. DAY: Luke Perry, Daryl Hall, Jerome attention. 000 "I SO/ff Or £ N.:P/E t:> Robbins, Joan Cusack VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Busy fJREAKI#(i PARIE/ALS Happy Birthday: You'll have a lot yourself with your chores today and AGAIN. J: c,ol /VO SLEEF: /'1'( SlAY Iff FARLEY. on your plate this year, but if you are then proceed to get out with friends Aftt•r mHTowl)' good at delegating work and you who have similar interests. You will ANP MY CL(f(H£S F.E£ ~ have a temper at an emotional level. l'St'apin~ the dorm aren't too eager to try to do it all your­ OF SMOI

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• McGwire ended his • Notre Dame defeated record-setting season in Purdue 31-30 Saturday fashion, hammering out thanks to last minute No. 69 and 70. heroics. PORTS p.l4 see insert. page 20 OBSERVER Monday, September 28, 1998 Irish get down to business in weekend shutouts By BRIAN KESSLER kick to give the Irish a 1-0 Assistant Sports Editor advantage. Just 1:38 later, Jenny Heft It was business as usual for took a pass from sophomore the third-ranked Notre Dame Meotis Erikson and dribblod women's soccer team this through the IU backlinn. After weekend and once again, they beating the Hoosier dnfonders, got the job done. Ileft slid the ball into tiH~ left The Irish played host to this corner anft..the Irish found weekend's Irish Key Bank themselves ahead 2-0. Classic at Alumni Field and Makinen closed out the scor­ picked up a pair of 3-0 victo­ ing for the night at 79:08 when ries over Indiana and Wake she headed Grubb's corner Forest. kick to the far post just beyond -- "I think we played well for the reach of Ashley Davis, the the most part," said head coach Big Ten's best goalkeeper. Chris Petrucelli. "We've yet to On the evening, the Irish settle into a lineup and at some totaled 22 shots, while the point we're going to have to do Hoosiers managed just three. that. I think we're getting close IU has now dropped nine though. Once we set the lineup straight to the Irish women. then the team chemistry will Sunday's contest was much get better." of the same for the Irish; how­ Jenny 1-Iefi and Anne ever, this time it was tlw Jenny Makinen are sure to be part of Heft show. whatever lineup Petrucelli The sophomore put on an decides on. The two combined amazing offensive perfor­ for all six of the Irish goals this mance, scoring all three of the weekend and helped Notre Irish goals despite missing Dame improve to 8-1 on the some early opportunities. season. "Jenny did a good job for us On Friday, Makinen scored today," said Petrucelii. "She two goals and Heft added one missed some chances early, but to lead the Irish over state rival made sure she didn't miss Indiana, 3-0. again. That's typical of her Both of Maiknen's goals came career. She's been good around off corner kicks from junior co­ the goal." captain Jen Grubb. Makinen's lleft was good, indeed. She The Observer/Jeff Hsu first strike came at 34:10 when Jenny Streiffer got knotted up with a Wake Forest opponent en route to Notre Dame's 3-0 victory. she volleyed in Grubb's corner see W. SOCCER I page 16 Notre Dame and St. John's knotted after double OT By ANTHONY BIANCO of their first attacks, senior past Popik and into the net. Assistant Sports Editor Jimmy Buscemi broke away Though that was all that got from defender Phil Murphy in past either goalie, the game The winds gusted so power­ the box and drilled the first was far from over between the fully Saturday night that it shot of the game at Velho. He two nets. The first period con­ seemed a storm was brewing. stopped it, but not without cluded with Velho making two But the Irish made sure noth­ keeping the ball in play, as a diving saves and the Irish miss­ ing developed from that as they breaking Stefani Miglioranzi ing wide on two shots. Nothing, equalizfld the Hed Storm of St. picked up the rebound and even Velho's heroics in goal, John's to a 1-1 tie at Alumni tapped a shot to the right cor­ could relieve Notre Dame's Field. Both of the goals came ner of the goal at 43:33. concerns over St. John's early in the game, and the rest Despite the early setback, the aggressive scoring machine. of the contest, which included Irish weren't ready to let the "St. John's is so good offen­ two 15-minutc overtime peri­ Storm blow them down. After sively that in the back of your ods, was a quick-paced score­ another St. John's attack on a mind you always have to be less standoff. similarly played ball as the pre­ playing a little bit of defense," - The game's early goals and vious goal by Buscemi, the Irish commented Velho. "Whenever the aggressive attack by both went to the net hard and often. its 1-1, and you're trying to teams set a high-scoring, offen­ Finishing drives on goal by score the winning goal, you sive-minded tone to the game. Irish attackers Hyan Cox, want to score but in the same Before long, it was apparent Shane Walton and Ben time not get scored on. So that the match would be decid­ Bocklage gave the team five­ there's always a little bit of ed by the ability of both defens­ straight shots to Daniel Popik's pressure to get back and play es to stop the opposing team's net. defense." fast drives to the net. Senior "After the goal, we just held This hesitation on attack goalkeeper Greg Velho came our ground and our backfield played a factor in the second up with 12 saves, including a and just kr.pt in front of them," half, as the Red Storm drilled number of one-on-one and said miclfielder Matt McNew on eight shots to Notre Dame's breakaway attempts that would Notre Dame's mindset after let­ two. Coach Berticelli switched have given St. John's the lead. ting up the early goal. McNew up the offense often in the "Greg Velho certainly came scored his first goal of the sea­ game, giving players like up big time after time and put son last week at Villanova to tie Dustin Pridmore, Matt Rosso, his stamp on the game for us," the Irish at 1-1. Antonio Bernal and Patrick said head coach Mike Berticelli This time around it would be Williams time on the field. In following Velho's 12-save per­ Walton who would tie the game exchange, starters Ben - formance, which ties his career up. Just 16 minutes after the Bocklage, Andrew Aris and best. "We count on Greg to step Miglioranzi goal, Walton Scott Wells ~ all recently back up and win games for us or chased after a pass from Cox at from injuries ~ spent some keep us from losing games." midfield that landed 20 yards time on the bench Saturday It was a completely different from the goal. A sprinting night. situation early on as St. John's Walton beat out midfielder The Observer/Brett Hogan got on the board first. On one Danny Parkin to take the ball see MEN'S SOCCER I page 18 Ryan Cox outran a St. John's defender for the ball in Saturday's 1-1 tie that went into double overtime.

vs Stanford vs. Seton Hall Volleyball Saturday, 1:30 p.m. II @ October 2, 8 p.m. vs. Albion College SPORTS $ ,, S::ct vs. Butler Wednesday, 6 p.m. Cross Country ATA \Sri October 2, 7:30 p.m . Notre Dame Invitational Soccer .·:::t ·::::;: .. at W. Michigan October 2, 3:30 p.m . S.:;;([ vs. Manchester College GLANCE \ ;::rvt Tomorrow, 4:30 p.m. • Wednesday, 4 p.m.