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• • • The Bindery -page 10

VOL XVII, NO. 93 rllt' indqwndeiH ~rudenr nn' ~paper ~lT\ ing nD!re dame and ~aim man··~ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1983

Saint Mary's elections New officers to be chosen today By MARGARET FOSMOE margin Tuesday in the Notre Dame secretary. Campus Campaign Reporter elections. •Michele Manion, president; Juniors will pick one of the two Maureen Karnatz, vice president; The fate of the unopposed student tickets in the race for senior class of­ Patty Nolan, treasurer; and Janet body officers ticket, the nuclear tlcers: Saas, secretary. freeze referendum and class oftker •Caroline Adornetto, president; There are also three tickets for positions will be decided in the Saint Katie Keenan, vice president; Jackie sophomore class officers: Mary's elections today. Bott, treasurer; and Kathy Jennings, • Anne Marie Kollman, president; Voting will take place from 7 a.m. secretary. Sheila Flood, vice president; to 6 p.m. in dorm lobbies. Augusta •Kathleen Murphy, president; Gretchen Wroblewski, treasurer; Hall residents and off-campus stu· Denise Drake, vice president; and Kathi Hatweger, secretary. dents may vote in LeMans Hall. Maggie Walsh, treasurer; and Beth •Amy Bertrucci. president; Anne Faculty members voting on the Aisthorpe, secretary. Karnatz, vice president; Sandy nuclear freeze referendum also vote Sophomores will have three tick­ Knezevich. treasurer; and Debbie in LeMans. ets to choose from tor junior class Buchan, secretary. The sole ticket in the race for stu· officers: •Julie Harmon, president; Mary dent body officers is Elaine Hocter, •cara Hageman, president; Michelle Sauer, vice president; Theresa student body president; Lee Ann Lopez, vice president; Mary Ann Pot­ Hardy, treasurer; and Janet Biegal, Franks, vice president for student af· ter, treasurer; and Martha Jones, secretary. fairs; and Madeline Hoch, vice presi· secretary. Because of the single ticket, stu­ dent of academic affairs. •Katie Baisley, president; Cindy dents will be allowed to vote "yes," This is the second consecutive Kimball, vice president; Patty Rick­ year at the College that a student ert, treasurer; and Meg Linnen, See ELECTIONS, page 9 body ofl:kers ticket ran unopposed. Students will also vote on the uni· lateral freeze resolution, calling for a ND elections end U.S. freeze of the testing, produc­ Israeli Defense .'11inister Ariel Sbaron StiJ'S be 11'illnot comment tion, and further deployment of all on tbe findings of tbe inquiry commission on tbe Beirut mas.wcre. nuclear weapons, missiles, and Tbe commission recommended tbat Sbaron s/}()uld resign. See delivery systems. The referendum with office runoffs By DAVID DZIEDZIC related stOI)' below. ( AP Pboto) was defeated by almost a two-to-one Campus Campaign Reporter

Sharon urged to resign The Notre Dame Student Body President/Vice President race .md two Student Senate races will hi' decided in a runoff dection today_ SBP/SB\'P candidates Brian Callaghan and Peggit• Prevoznik, who Israeli's investigate massacre earned -t6.6 percent of the vote in Tuesday's c:lection. will oppo~e Tim Connolly and Jim l.eous, who earned 29.6 percent. JERUSALEM (AP) - The Israeli He said most mmtsters favored coalition, met with Begin Tuc::sday Rob Bertino and flounder Brisson will face off for the Senate Di~­ Cabinet yesterday reviewed a adopting the judicial panel's recom­ night and later told reporters the trict I seat. Bertino rc:ceived 5 7.--1 percent and Brisson 5 1.6 percent damaging judicial report on the mendations and that he assumed prime minister would "absolutely in Tuc:sday's balloting. Beirut mssacre, and an oftlcial who they ultimately would ask Sharon to not" tire Sharon. an important The District 5 race will also he decided in todav·~ hallming. Dan: attended the meeting claimed resign. The official's version of the source of conservative support tor McAvoy. who garnered -t3.6 pt:rcent in Tucsdav·s tally. will face Defense \1inister Ariel Sharon urged Cabinet meeting could not he con­ Begin. Alison Yurko. who c:arned 2H.6 percent. the ministers to remove him from firmed independently. The panel said Sharon should Bob Riley, R. Michael Quinn. and Rich Spolzino wert· t·lectnl to office as recommended by the com­ While the ministers mc::t, more resign or be tired tor allowing the Student Senate in Districts 2, --1. and') vesterdav. mission. than 1,000 people gathercd in front Lebanese Christian militiamen into On-campus students may vote in their dorms from 1 I a.m. to I :.~0 The Cabinet ended its second the Sabra and Chatilla refugee of the Cabinet building, chanting p.m. and --1:50 p.m. to 6:50 p.m. Off-campu~ ~tudents can vote in emergency session in two days after their support for Sharon and the camps. It also urged the chief of Lafortune Student Center from 1 1 a.m. to -t: 1 ') p.m. 3 1/2 hours. It did not announce any government. They pressed around military intelligence. Maj. Gcn. response to the suggestions made by Sharon's car as he arrived for the Yehoshua Saguy, be fired. the commission that investigated Cabinet meeting. It added that it would have recom­ Mardi Gras support the Beirut massacre. hut scheduled a In Tel Aviv, howe,·er. about -tOO mended di~missing the military third session for this afternoon. people gathered in the streets and chief of stall, Lt. Gen. Raphael Eytan, Sharon was quoted in several demanded that Sharon resign, as were he not retiring in April. news reports as refusing to quit his recommended by the judici;tl panel Begin came under less har~h decreased from past post and insisting that Begin would that investigated the massacre_ criticism. foreign \1inister Yitzhak By PATRICK MALLEY the dining hall as an example. have to fire him. The opposition Labor Party said it Shamir was told he bore some News Staff "That's probably why so many But a senior oft'icial, who refused was "astounded by the insensitivity responsibility tor the massacre, hut people showed up that night." to he named. said Sharon proposed of the government" and demanded no punishment was recommended. It will take some time before Four to tlve hundred people at­ that the Cabiet formally ask for his the Cabinet swiftly adopt the com­ Begin appears to have several op­ Notre Dame's new Mardi Gras tended the public dance from 9 to 1. resignation. mission's recommendations. Israeli tions, each of which could convulse generates the student support it Klocke and her assistant chairman The official said Sharon told the newspaper edit

News Brie/§ Thursday, February 10, 1983 -page 2 By The Ohseruer and The Associated Press

The South Bend Blood Bank needs blood donors of all blood tvpes. The center is located at 212 W. ~a,·arre. Compromising for survival Those interested ~hould call 2.)-t-11 ';7. -The Ohseruer There is detlnitely ~omething to be said in defen~c of compromise. For too long, compromise has shbuldered the negative connotations of submission or backing Notre Dame faculty and statt·members and graduate down to another person or entity. Many people arc too Michael Monk students were allowed to vote on the nuclear arms rekrendum in proud or stubborn to even consider compromise. They the Tuesday elections. The faculty were in favor of the referendum would rather both parties end up with nothing at all Editor-in-Chief .) 7 to H, while the graduate students voted 92 ti>r, ~I against the rather than give up their deeply imbedded convictions. freeze. - The Obsert•er Often in these situations, personal pride bordering on Inside Thursday bullheadedness takes precedence over common sense and rationality. But compromise, when skillfully practiced, can be a ferior and susceptible position to the aggressive Soviet William M. Agee. the hespecracled businessman productive, effective and fult1lling exercise. Com· Union. But even if the U.S. halted production of nuclear whose romance and ambition drew gossip and headlines, is looking promise is not so much a learned behavior as it is an art arms for an entire year while the Russians forged ahead, for a job. Headhunters say that despite his controversial image, he is form. When practiced by an accomplished artist, the we would still possess enough firepower to annihilate a hot property in New York. "Having a high profile doesn't mean results can be as satisfying and unique as a da Vinci the world dozens of times over. much anymore in the business community. It's the bottom line. the painting. The principal consideration was whether we wanted dollar," Sam Bader, president of Bader Research Corp., a manage­ But in this tremendously disparate world of an· to condone taking that tlrst step, going out on a some­ ment consulting tlrm, said yesterday. "Of all the out-of-work ex­ tagonistic political groups, communists and capitalists, what precarious limb, compromising just that little hit, ecutives in the country today, I think he's the one getting the phone terrorists and bourgeoisie, true compromise on sig· in an attempt to initiate the scaling down of the arms calls," Bader said. Agee. -tS, resigned Tuesday as president of Allied nificant issues and problems race or if we wanted to ap­ Corp. and chairman of Bendix Corp., effective june I. He will stay on is about as rare as the Mona prove a status quo which has Allied's board and come up for re-election at the annual meeting Lisa. yet to come close to April 2'5. It was Agee who triggered the huge takeover battle that One of the most volatile developing a serious arms resulted in the merger of Bendix and Allied last month. Agee contemporary issues where agreement. remained chairman of Bendix and became president of Allied. - AP compromise is desperately Our position, as well as needed is nuclear arms. The the referendum itself, was insane arms race, combined largely a symbolic one. Cer­ with strained international tainly no changes in Twelve death row inmates at Indiana State tensions, has placed the American policy were to Prison in Indianapolis have tiled a ft:deral suit asking that double­ world in its most precarious result from the outcome of ceiling he stopped because they fear for their safety "The plaintift~ situation since Hitler rose to the vote. We tried to com­ are facing the ultimate and have no desire to spend the last possible power 50 years ago. munciate through the days of our lives smelling tillll odors of another_man's body wastes Until relatively recently editorial that the time had and gases," the complaint said. "Plaintiffs have no desire to have to those protesting the come for drastic measures enter into possible contlict with another man because we differ on development of nuclear to combat a drastic situa­ our standards of personal hygiene or cell neatness." fourteen of the arms were few in number tion. For years Russia and I '5 men scheduled t(>r execution in the Michigan City prison are on and politically liberal. But the U.S. have been negotiat­ death row. Jame~ Brewer of Gary is being held in the Indiana State now, with almost one-third ing armaments treaties. In­ Reformatory at Pendleton, where he has better access to dialysis of the government's budget stead of bringing the arms treatment for a kidney ailment. Death row has 12 cells, hut one is devoted to military outlays race under control, the race unavailable for condemned prisoners because it serves as a law and increased awareness of the very real horrors of a has escalated at a frantic rate and shows no signs of library and stqrage room. - AP limited or protracted nuclear war, political convictions abating. At the current talks in Geneva it could very are no longer relevant. Liberals, conservatives, easily take years to draft a verifiable treaty and that moderates, and socialist alike are demanding a halt to would probably he just as useless as the SALT treaties. this lunacy. The problem is just too enormous and Unless hell freezes over or Soviet Premier Andropov threatening to allow conservative or liberal convictions is converted to Catholicism, the Russians are not about General Motors Corp. said ye~terday in Detroit it to obstruct the path to controlling this situation. The to initiate any kind of a freeze, unilaterarl or bilateral. will recall 2-lO,OOO of the .~20.000 front-wheel-drive X-cars that the problem is not one of political ideologies: it is one of The U.S., as the self-proclaimed world leader and cham­ federal government was investigating h>r possible brake detects. In a survival. pion of freedom, must take a stand now. With every day statement tlve davs hd(>re a government-ordered hearing on the Last Monday The Obseruer took an unpopular stand at that the freeze is delayed. more nuclear weapons are brake problems, the No. I l '-· automakt·r said letters will he sent to Notre Dame and endorsed the referendum for the uni­ deployed, more threat~ are hurled against each other, owners of 20H,OOO 19HO-model Chc\Tolet Citation. Pontiac lateral freeze. We expected, and received, much and the world slides closer to complete destruction. Phoenix, Oldsmobile Omega and Buick Skylark cars with manual criticism for this support. But the resolution was not If there was ever a time for compromise, to make the transmissions built through the 19HO model vear. Also, (;,\1 will hastily made and it certainly was a ditlicult one. The tlrst move, the time is now. Of course, compro~mise recall .-'>2,000 19HO models with automatic tran~missions built in the Editorial Board that made this decision includes several also entails the other side making concessions. But if the early 19HO model year run. the statement ~aid. :'llllTSA and (;.\1 have members who not too long ago would have expressed Russians refuse to follow our lead, which is very likely, received several hundred complaints during the past three years averse views to a unilateral freeze and who still harbor then we end the freeze and continue the arms race. But from motorists who said the cars' brake~ have a tendency to lock reservations about such an extreme measure. We are let's at least give it a chance. If we don't take the in· prematurely, causing vehicles to go into dangerous spms. - AP fully aware of the counterarguments to the freeze, itiative in controlling the arms race now, we won't be mainly that it would place the U.S. in a dangt::rously in- around to regret the decision tomorrow.

A presidential commission struggling to find a The Observer I basing system ti>r the .\1X missile acceptable to both Congress and After your last exam, the Pentagon was given an extra month yesterday to search ti>r a consensus about the embattled nuclear weapon. ''I'm hopeful the what tough questions commission will reach a consensus. hut I am not at the point of /)esi~n Editor ...... Ken Ccrahona saying whether that will he possible," said Brent Scowcroft, head of Design Assistant...... :\1ary Healy will you still be facing? the Commission on Stategic Forces. The 11-membcr panel, ap­ Sarah Hamilton pointedjan . .), was due to present its rec<.>mmendation~ to President Luyout Staff...... Syhil Smoot TJ•pese/lers ...... Jim & Tom .. I hate .~·inch Reagan on feb. I H. Scowcroft said the new deadline will be ncar the paper" \1acl.ennan end of March, hut that the exau date was not fixed. lie said more Neu.'S Editor...... lt"ll Harrington time was needed to obtain information on technical is~ucs and to CofJJ' Editor...... Tim :--ledv consult with Congres~. which ha~ rejected the two basing systems Features layout ~arah again (how rc.:-Oun­ Reagan has proposed in the past. - AP danll Editorials La)•out ...... Tari Brown .\jwrts CofJl' Editor Mik<' sullivan .'VI) fJUJ' Editor...... Tim Peuc:r.-. S.tiC /Jm• Editor ...... Bruce Oakky 1)•pists ...... llt'tsv & Tari Some people in Southwest Indiana are paying A.d Dest';{n...... \1arilyn Larkm less than S I a gallon for gasoline now, and prices are expected to Photoxraphet ...... llamil Cupero decline throughout the state until April, the Hoosier Motor Club (,'uest Appearances .. Dzan·, Bruce. Ryan, !\olargratl, Monk, [)ennis & prohahly Jt·h says. Dealers operating with already-thin protlt margins appear to be will show up ar ·-t am or .-.o cutting prices to move gasoline, said Hugh Orr of the Hoosier Motor Club in Indianapolis. "People are driving less with the economy the "()b to he young u•ben lot'e U'asfree. way it is, and right now there's a glut of gasoline throughout the .or at least reasonable world," he explained. "Prices probably will decline until April and then increase sporadically, but it's hard to predict," he added. "You can't go by tradition anymore." It's been three years since Hoosiers could buy gasoline for less than a dollar a gallon. But three Vincennes stations broke the barrier Monday by lowering their prices for self­ W don't have your answers. service regular to 98.9 cents a gallon. While self-serve stations in But we'll listen to your questions, Evansville and nearby Henderson, Ky., aren't that low, their prices share some of our own The Observer 1USPS 598 9201 IS have softened this week. Stations along U.S. 41 between Evansville about who we want to become published Monday lhrough Fr~day and and Henderson were charging S 1.049 Tuesday for self-serve regular, and where we want to journey. on home football Saturdays except For anyone who has considered down I to.) cents from a week ago. In Evansville, several of the larger dur~ng exam and vacation penods The the path of priesthood, independents were charging $1.069, down a couple of pennies. - Observer IS publiShed by the students the Holy Cross Fathers· One· Year Candidate Program .4P of Notre Dame and Satnl Marys Col· lege Subscnpt,ons may oe purchased provides an opportunity to ask and explore for $25 per year rStS per semester) by the possibilities in community. wr111ng The Observer P 0 Box 0 Notre Dame lnd1ana 46556 Contact· Mostly cloudy today. Highs in low to mid 50s. Cloudy The Observer 1s a member of The Rev. Anure Leveille. C.S.C. Associated Press All reproduCtion Vocat1on Director tonight with a .)0 percent chance of snow late. Lows in upper 20s. nghts are reserved Box 541 Cold t<>morrow with a chance of snow. Highs in low .)(b. - AP Second class postage pa1d al Notre II Noire Dame. IN 46556 Dame lna1ana 46556 219-239-6385 ------· ------The Observer Thursday, February 10, 1983- page 3 Crowley lecture Bishop discusses layiDan's role By TIM BUCKLEY Council II and tlnallv with "the elec­ moral growth. ··The subject of moral .Yews Stajf tion of John Kennedy, Catholics professional ethics rarely comes up have now entered the mainstream of in secular and state universities. "In the area of bringing ethical life." :\1any Catholic professionals are principles to vocation ... we have "The church is all of us baptized now products of secular institutions. fallen down." Although this would into It," said Crowley, emphasizing It must begin in the Catholic col­ appear to he a pessimistic premhe, it the laity's importance in Cardinal leges and universities. There is a was part of a positive forum held by Newman's observation that "it need for good moral ethics," he said. South Bend Bishop Joseph Crowley would he a strange church without "We need men and women of last night. them." Since Vatican !I the laity have motivation and prayer." In its continuing series of lectures become much more active in the "There are all kinds of training on contemporary issues, the church. Lay people are now working programs to teach lay people to Thomas More Society sponsored in positions formerly unique to the work in the church, but we need it in Crowley's lecture on "Vatican ll on clergy. In his opinion, this integra­ the professions. I suppose it is up to the Layman's role in the professional tion of clergy and the laity has been the church to start seminars in the world." highly successful. field, but there must also he some However, according to Crowley, motivation. We have to have motiva­ Crowley traced the Catholic "the test of a good Catholic layman is tion, a good spiritual life, con­ Church's evolution in the Americas, what he's doing to bring Catholic et­ fidence, and knowledge." stating that· the original laity were hics and morals into his profession. Crowley praised organizations "uneducated immigrants from This b the field where we've done such as the Thomas :\1ore Society abroad accompanied by priests ... the least ... I wonder how many so­ and Opus Dei for their interest in Being the only educated man in the called good Catholics stop to think ethical professionalism. "Opus Dei is parish, the priest was the dominant about what principles are involved a group, primarily laity with some figure in the church." He illustrated in their daily professional life." priests, banded together in the this point by repeating the old laity Crowley sees hope for Christian professions to bring Christian and philosophy of"obey, pray, and pay." ethics in the professonal tlelds. moral principles to them .. a won­ Although this was a deliberate ex­ "There is a growing interest in bring­ derful idea." aggeration of the actual situation, ing moral principles into the profes­ His outlook is one of hope and op­ Crowley pointed out, "lay activity is sions.... Good ethc~. must grow timism. He concluded hy suggt>sting a new phenomenon in the from good spiritual life and real faith. to the individual Notre Dame stu­ church . . It was not until after Faith is a gift which must be dent to "read the works of Thomas World War II that lay people of Cat­ developed like any talent." More and take solid courses in theol­ holicism came out of our 'ghetto'." He looks to institutions such as ogy and philosophy" to achieve ethi­ Reaching a pinnacle with Vatican Notre Dame for leadership in this cal maturity. 73 years of service

Bishop joseph Crotder ofSoutb Bend adl'ises laity in fiJI! profi's­ K of C carries on service tradition siomi/ world in a lecture last night. See story at lefi. ( P!Joto IJ_r By MARY EASTERDAY scholarship fund in exchange," said Columbus is not nationally affiliated Hamil Cupero) News Staff Mason. and the Notre Dame Council ha~ on­ Another question that has only lv 1 5 members. What is the only community arisen in the last few years is why . "I wanted to join the Knights of service organization which has its women cannot join the Knights of Columbus because I feel they work own building? Columbus. for a lot of worthy causes. It's time Which social service club on The University of Notre Dame for them to change and they're not campus refuses women members? began as a fraternal institution long changing," Smith said. Seniors! What NO organization can boast a before the Knights of Columbus. The Notre Dame Knights of membership of I ,200 after 73 years But, unlike the University, the Columbus, despite minor contlicts, of service? Knights of Columbus tradition to al­ continues to be strongly dedicated Help make the SENIOR ARTS The only organization which low only Catholic men over the age to community service. The K of C qualifies for all of the above is the of 18 has not changed. raises funds for charitable causes, FESTIVAL a reality. If you wish Notre Dame Council of the Knights "It has been a tradition for over and is perhaps best known for its of Columbus. 100 years. For that reason alone, I steak sandwich sales on home foot­ to help organize the festival, Located next to the bookstore, agree with it," McCann said. ball Saturdays, the proceeds of the Knights of Columbus is able to A Notre Dame freshman woman which go to Corvilla House, a home if you have ideas about the support its own building. There is no does not hold this same view. for the mentally retarded. other organization that has the Cecelia Smith tried to sign up for the Knights of Columbus members planning of events, or if you income to pay for the maintenance Knights of Columbus earlier this also volunteer on Sundays at Dor-a­ and upkeep of a building, according year at Activities Night. "They told Lin Nursing Home, assist at the want to publicize a to Thomas Mason, University vice me I couldn't join and directed me Council for the Retarded's Saturday president for business affairs. He toward the sign-up ~heet for the morning recreation program, tutor added that no other organization has Ladies of Columbus:: Smith said. children in the South Bend area, * Recital the money to establish a S500,000 "Although the Ladies of Columbus work at Corvilla House, and help the scholarship fund, which the Knights works closely with the Knights of Volunteer Services Office in tlnding of Columbus did in 1969. Columbus, they did not seem well volunteers for special request *Reading The Council's original home was organized," Smith said. The Ladies of projects. the basement of Walsh Hall. Eli Shaheen, one of the original mem­ *Concert bers of the Knights of Columbus and Van Lines Customers later the financial secretary of the *Acting or Notre Dame Council, began invest­ Service as Usual this Weekend ing money in a building fund in the 1930's. By 1969, there was Except Friday Only Directing Piece S625,000 collected. The 8:00pm run will go to the South Shore Station In 1969 the post oftlce moved to • * Exhibit its current location, and Father Runs to Malls Theodore Hesburgh, Cniversity president, allowed the organization Fridays 6, 7, 9, 10, & 11 or other art happening to have access to the building. "We took the money they had Saturday' 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, & 11 saved for a building to establish the involving members of Notre Dame's Class of 1PW:M~q STUDENT DISCOUNT ~ KEENAN LEWIS PE '83 e~~ IN COOPERATION WITH HOWARD HALL PRESENT ... Please Call Theresa ~ 19 A Speeial Valentine's Day ~~1\1~ at6773 20 0/0 OFF CHANCE TO DANCE FRIDAY, FEB. 11 9:30 to 1:30 or the Student Union Cultural STUDENT DISCOUNT Arts Commission at 239-5283 w/Student I.D. La Fortune Ballroom Offer not valid with any other Aurelio's special DJ, Refreshments, & discount or coupon valid at Seniors, S.B.'s Aurelio's only. 1705 S.BEND AVE./23 at edison Rh:R;R~Z~!~ We Need You! The Observer Thursday,· February 10, 1983 page 4 Fox lecture today r.2~!r,!!J~~~L Anthropologist defends Mead SZECHUAN - CAIITDNESE- AMERICAN By PETER CIOTTA issue. To turn the issue into a game famous anthropoligist in America at News Staff of cops and robbers is to miss the the time. "Mead's work under Boas CHUCK WHITE point. To understand why Mead saw was an ideological necessity to com­ A l *The Piano Bar * Labelling a fellow anthropologist things as she did is of importance." hat the movement of Eugenics. a "self-righteous crusader." a col­ Mead, as reported in Time, Mead wasn't fooled, she didn't look See Chuck Enr~ Tues. thru Sat. 8:011 p.m.-1:011 a.m ..... Enjoy Life! league of Margaret Mead defended depicted Somoan culture as one of t()r other things that had no impor­ her work against accusations ovenvhelming ease and casualness tance in terms oi Boas' theories. She • Dancing• Drinks• Dinger published in this week's issue of marked by an absence of deep was totally sincere about her work •Hospitality•Reasooa~e Price' Time magazine. feelings, loose family ties, no guilt - yes, she did look for a particular HAPPY CHINESE NEW YEAR Robin Fox, on campus today to and little contlict. Somoans view - yet she was quite young and New Year's Special $7.95 includes speak on "The Unity of Mankind: the condoned free love among adoles­ had no path to follow. She was a Disunity of Anthropolgy", said in an cents, Mead said, with result that pioneer in her tldd. Mead wanted to Wine, Egg drop soup, Eggro/1. interview yesterday that adolescent turmoil was unknown. show that the better race was not Happy Family meal & Ice Cream. ll.:ii'===' anthropologist Derek Freeman's at­ "It is too simple to say that Mead bred hut affected by their environ- Valentine's Day Special, Monday, Feb.14. tack chronicled in Time was unjus­ just botched things up," said Fox. ment," said Fox. titit'd. "This is a case where ideology acted "Freeman's remarks are another HOURS: OPEN 7 DAYS I!,. Mon.-Thur 11:30a.m.-10:00p.m. A WEEK ... Freeman claims that Margaret to dominate science, which in turn nail in the coffin which already has a cri. & Sat. 11:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m. 130 OlliE HWY. SOUTH Mead's best seller "Coming of Age in int1uenced the facts. Mead's ideas lot of nails in it. Margaret Mead was a Sun. & Holidays 4 p.m.-9:00p.m. about cultural determinism wer.e in­ lively and bright intelli~ence. She Happy Hour 5· 7 P M SOUTH BENO(Roseland) Samoa" may he "one of the great acts of selfdelusion in the annals of volved in an ideological debate, was remarkably honest. She was BANQUET ROOMS & Next to Randall'-: h:,, science." nature vs. nurture." shaken by Freeman. She admits she G:~~r~:rrs 272-7376 Fox responded, "Freeman At the time of Mead's research in was naive and intluenced by Boas trivializes the issue by taking it out of Samoa, the Eugenicist movement greatly, yet she went to Samoa at an context and making it a personal was gaining strength in support of early age with sincere intentions." select breeding as a means to Fox noted, "Freeman was not produce a superior race. explained prepared to be judicious; Mead is Fox. Margaret Mead was sent to either right or wrong, good or bad Samoa to disprove the claims of the (to Freeman)." X-LARGE 17 in MEDIUM 14in FREE DELIVERY Eugenicists in 1925, under the Fox will speak this afternoon in Cheese Pizza Cheese Pizza direction of Professor Franz Boas of the Library Auditorium at .3::'>0. Columbia llnivcrsity, the most Jnltslt Jrinrt (iJJtria $6.79 18061 South Bend Ave. $4.71 extra ingredients 85' extra ingredients 62' A Touch of Ireland

COUPON EXP 2/14/83 '272-8030 COUPON EXP 2/14/83 FINAL FIVE DAYS FINAL FIVE DAYS CLADD.Lt\.GH Rings • Pendants • Pins A GIFT OF LOVE FOR MORE THAN 400 YEARS AGUINAS r------, BOOK SHOP LEARNING AIOS CENTER : Makes any : 435 S. MICHIGAN STREET SOUTH BEND, INDIANA 46601 : other bar : Telephone 219/287-1091 1 look like 1 I • I I 'Rott'Pcz,. RoO/)) I I i BRUNO'S ORIGINAL I I : Lowest liquor prices in town!! : FAMILY PIZZA I I I I A SECOND LOCATION 1 24 oz glass of any draft beer $1.10 1 I -- _------I I Mon.· Thurs. SPECIAL for any N D-SMC students: I North on US 31 : Pitchers of beer $2.00 & $2.50 : Less than 11/2 miles from ND 1 ------I I ND-SMC night is TUESDAY with I Delivery to NO & SMC : FREE popcorn and beer specials : 277-4519 I - C{;'rnerot lrOiW.toOdand'Misha;aka A;- - I L--··•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••J ,-- -r r \ I I ~.o 1<~t o I tANK4~1/t I \ ,c.· ~t t~e II Thursday is Tankard Night in the Terrace Lounge at the South Bend Marriott! South Bend's largest 34 oz. tankard of beer is only ·~ $4.00 PIZZA and YOU KEEP THE SOUVENIR PHONE 232-1883 GLASS TANKARD! Refills every weekday from _.....FREE DELIVER¥- 4-7 p.m. (on Thursdays until closing) are just $2.00! Sun - Thurs 4-11pm Fri & Sat 4-1am .y We Accept Student Checks } ~ The Place to Be! 1 ------COUPON 1 123 N. St. Joseph St., South Bend (219) 234-2000 I $1.00 offany 14" Pizza I I $2.00 ott any 16" Pizza I I EXPIRES MARCH 1 I L------~ The Observer Thursday, February 10, 1983 page 5

• • .PACE The Oar House Cold Beer& Liquor Carry Out continuedfrom fJll!f.e I Notre Dame Law School Expansion Til!3am ..md a word processor," Seckinger ONE BLOCK SOUTH OF HOLIDAY INN '>aid. According to Seckinger, the EVERY DAY school received a grant to furni~h a 2 for 1 Drinks 4-7 mock courtroom ~everal years ago. w1th Homemade Food & Snacks The propo~ed. addition would in­ "Snake Bite" Specia/ ... $1 every Thursday cludt· such a facilitv. "We otfer the be~t trial advocacy course~ in the countrv. A courtroom setting is reallv es~ential to these ~kinds of courses." said Link. The r-w~~~i~ht-offit;~;;rt;1 room could abo be used ti>r large classes, which now have to meet in I •.~-~ Haircut, Shampoo, I the flave~-flealv Auditorium. The proposal's future hinge~ on I ~~- ~~:tti ". Blow Dry, & Condition I monev. The man responsible for I ·· ~ Reg.$15 I locating funding for l'niversitv 54533 Terrace Lane, S.B. N $8 SQ I projects is Michael .\lancuso, direc­ I Across from Martin's on St. Rd.23 QW . WITH COUPON tor of the Development Ofticc. 1 Tues. Wed, Sat 8.30-5.30 H . t I $6 wiTH 1 "Some ideas suggest it ''viii cost Thur,Fri8:30-8:30 aucu on y couPON. about S3 million. I'm not sure what the t1nal tlgure will come to. I 272-0312 277-1691 HAIR MUST BE WASHED DAY OF CUT I "It's on our list of high priority mock courtroom. projects; however right now we offices, and llll expanded don't have any concrete funding. I'd ~------~ library• are features of the like to see one donor cover the proposed Lau• School ex­ The Notre Dame Student Union entire thing," ~aid Mancuso. pansion. Tbe structure Almost 'iOO students arc presently u•ould extend ji·om the enrolled at the Law School. Link N Proposed is searching for south side of the present does not forsce any increase from Addition buildin?, (pictured this level. "The addition would al­ t a/Jot•e ). low us to reclaim parts of the library nextyea~sleaders that we've had to fill with other operations such as :\:ITA. In fact, we Applications for Student Union Director would have addditional library space in the new area." and Comptroller for '83-'84 are now "By pouring money into this place, available from the you could really see the results fast Instit11te trains attorneys because we're small and don't have a In a maze of oft'ices on the third tloor of the :\otre Dame Law Student Union secretary lot of hierarchy. First you need the School b the home of the :\ational Institute for Trial AdnH.:acv facilities and the endowment; then (NITA). Although :\·ITA's presenu.:: on campus 1s a quiet une. nation· Get Involved and Make vou can attract the best talent," said all\' it enjov~ a goud reput~ttion anlllng L,tw1-ers. Seckinger. Founded in Il)-2, :\ITA's stated purpose i~ "to contribute to the a Difference development ol an adequatell trained. proles~onallv responsible tri­ al bar." L ___Af:?p!iE~_!Lol!~ ar~_d_l!~!_e_~-1_~.J "Through programs 111 sl'l't:ral parts or the countn. we help trial lawyers imprm e their ~kills." said James Seckingn. :\ITA director. In • • . Mardi addition to his:\ ITA duties. ~eckinger teaches a half-load 111 the Law The Student Union is now accepting School, a position he held hdore becoming:\ IT A director. Applications for: The Institute b funded h1· tuition. donations. grant~. and sales of its continued from page I publicatons. Since moving to :\otre Dame. when Seckinger wa~ CHAUTAUQUA MANAGER visible. The way to get it to catch on named its director,:\ IT.-\ has expanded se1-eral times. This job demands a responsible is to let people know about it." The dance was held at the ACC last year. individual to get bands and movies Mardi Gras revenue totaled nearly and to be on hand at the events S"',OOO. Seventy percent of the Anyone Interested-Please Apply ._...... ;.;a.-~ money will go directly to a number I Taking the South Shore to 'I of charities under a new system of at the Student Union disbursement. Sellers of raftle tickets Chicago this Weekend? I Ask Margaret for applications were allowed to name which cause they wanted to help. Those receiv­ Van Lines Departs ~·~ ..,...-...... ,.....-~.~ ...... ing aid include CILA, Big . ----.-·_,...._..,....,...... ,....--...... --...... , Brothers/Big Sisters, Head Start, the NO Main Circle 7:50pm I What are you doing for Spring Break? come... 1 World Hunger Coalition, and Sr. SMC Circle 8:00pm I c,.~\ \\\ uo\'l . I :\1arita's Primary Day School. 0 The remaining 30 percent of the for the 8:35pm train! ~~~otion. 7:50 ND Main Circle Trains arrive at South Shore Wt: can providt: any type 8:00 SMC Holy Cross at 7:10 & 9:05pm. of music for an' type FRIDAY) FEBRUARY 11) 1983 8:20 South Shor.e Stn. Bus will be there to Transport of event. Par: ies are our 8:35 Train Departs Students back toND/SMC. specialtv. Cu •orr nu~ic 1 : 80 P I rt 10 s: oo P I r4 I Regular 8pm Van Lines will not run. programming a. ·:liable Call 684-8101 ;,wj ask REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED FORONLY$1 EACH WAY su~an L)r Brad for details. Business & Technology Thursday, February 10, 1983 - page 6 Wall Street Update . Twelfth year

The stock market declined moderately yesterday, ad­ ding to its losses of the previous session. The Dow Jones average of Students lend tax assistance 30 industrials, off 11.77 Tuesday, fell another 7.91 to 1,067.42. By ALEX SZILVAS the program last year tlled more Volume on the New York Stock Exchange reached 84.52 million pleted the Introduction to Federal B&TEditor . than 1, 700 returns which generated shares, up from 76.58 million Tuesday. Consolidated Edison of New Taxation course. "They have been in excess of 5300,000 in refunds for trained according to Internal York led the active list, off at 19 in trading that included a 975,000 The Notre Dame Tax Assistance area residents. Revenue Service publications," sac block at that price. Nationwide turnover in NYSE-listed issues, Program (TAP) began its twelfth According to Chairperson Laurie Cuffe noted, "with an emphasis on including trades in those stocks on regional exchanges and in the year of providing free tax return Cuffe, the program is still expanding. those particular situations they can over-the-counter market, totaled I 00.41 million shares. Standard & preparation for low-income Mic­ "In the past we have provided expect to face." Poor's index of 400 industrials lost .68 to 163.38, and S&P's 500- hiana residents this week. service for taxpayers earning less stock composite index was down .70 at 145.00. At the American The program operates out of thir­ The program is administered than $18,000 per year," she said. teen centers in South Bend, Misha­ Stock Exchange, the market value index rose 1.21 to 37053. The entirely by Notre Dame students un­ "We are now handling returns for waka, and the campuses of Notre NASDAQ composite index for the over-the-counter market closed at der the supervision of faculty ad­ the unemployed as well." Dame and St. Mary's. The centers are 251.38, up .28. - AP visor Dr. Kenneth Milani. Since its TAP is staffed by fifty seniors in open at various times during the inception in 1972, TAP has grown the College of Business Administra­ week through Friday, April 15. remarkably. Students involved with tion. All have successfully com- The Notre Dame Center is located in the Rathskeller of Lafortune Stu­ dent Center and is open Wednes­ days from 2 to 5 p.m. The St. Mary's Center, located in the lobby of "·... McCandless Hall, is open Mondays :::~:!:~rothers: from 2:30 to 5 p.m. The Downtown Library (Saturdays from 9:30a.m. to \\'e offer the opportunity for Teaching 12:30 p.m.) and the Hansel Center and Pao.;toral l\llnistry with life in community. (Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5 to \\' e are men seeking God through 8:30p.m.) also have Certified Public + shared life t shared prayer t shared ministry Accountants or professors available for consultation. This is our ehallenge: A unique feature of the Notre Dame TAP is the two SWAT Fc1r nHtrc tnfcJrtnuth.n \\'fltc to: Rev. Gene Gries, O.Praem. (Students Working At Taxation) Vocation Director teams. SWAT I provides tax return SL :'i"orbert Abbey preparation for eligible residents in De Pere, Wisconsin .'>4115 Rochester and Plymouth. SWAT II :'\umt· Adrlre""" responds to calls from handicapped C!r,. State Zip ____ individuals and others who are .\g.. · Completed lligh Schl College unable to seek help from the TAP centers. These SWAT teams high­ light an important goal of the program - to go directly inro the low income neighborhoods to Applications for provide help rather than merely set­ ting up centers on campus. Editor-In-Chief of the Although students receive one credit-hour for their participation, Students participatinR in tbe Tax Assistance Program staff thir­ Cuffe stresses other reasons for in­ teen centers, sucb as Ibis one in McCandless Hall at Saint Mary's volvement in the program. "It offers a great opportunity to put classroom 1984 Dome College, to prouide free tax return preparation for low-income in­ accounting into practice, while also diuiduals. See Alex Sziluas' story• aboue. ( Pboto by Lucian providing exposure to the problems Niemeyer) of many individuals that students Yearbook don't normally encounter." Available NOW in the Student Activities Office, 1st Floor La Fortune. Must be completed & returned to the Social Student Activities Office by Monday, February 21. Security bill rescued

WASHINGTON (AP)- A house subcommittee wound up its hearings on the Social Security rescue bill yesterday, but a Democratic leader cautioned that the S168 billion package to save the benefit system from default still was not assured of passage. Despite an accelerated legislative pace. House Democratic Whip Thomas S. Foley of Washington told reporters, "I don't think the matter is all wrapped up, packaged and delivered." A house Ways and Means subcom­ mittee was waiting for a revised forecast from the Social Security Ad­ Major areas of graduate study and research (M.S. & Ph.D.): ministration on the system's outlook Aerodynamics Computational Fluid Dynamics for the rest ofthis decade. Aeroelasticity Computer-Aided Design Rep. J.). Pickle, D-Texas, chairman Bioengineering Propulsion of the Social Security subcommittee, Combustion Structural Dynamics has said he is worried that the Structures-Composites bailout plan - which would save the system Sl68 billion over seven Individual Tuition & Fees are $1,452 per calendar year. years and wipe out two-thirds of its Total financial aid per calendar year: long-run deficit - might still leave the system vulnerable to a shortfall $13,452 Center of Excellence in Rotary Wing Aircraft in the mid-1980s. Fellowships Several witnesses before the sub­ $14,452 Lockheed/Georgia Tech Research Assistantshtps committee also warned that calcula­ tions on Social Security's debts did . $ 7,500- Research Assistantships not tell the full extent of the system's $10,000 financial troubles. All graduate students will participate in research. The rescue plan includes a six­ For further information contact: month freeze on benefits and a tax Dr. A.L. Ducoffe, Director on some retirees' benefits, as well as School of Aerospace Engineering higher payroll taxes. Most of the wit­ Georgia Institute of Technology nesses before the full Ways and Means Committee or the subcom­ Atlanta, Georgia 30332 mirtee during seven days of hearings (404) 894-3000 endorsed the compromise. Editorials Thursday, February 10, 1983- page 7 Welcome to network 'sweep' month

I hope you don't have much 10 do this But all of this will be remedied. CBS will hope it improves. But so far, it looks like ABC If you are one of the lucky ones, and have month. And so do the networks. In fact, NBC, atone for the aggregate sins of its competitors has bitten off more than it could chew. little to do this month, you are in for some ABC, and CBS are belling big dollars that you in this sweeps. All of this madness will con­ CBS is in the driver's seat. Even a rating vic­ excellent viewing. however. Star Trek: The don't. clude with the tina! episode ofMA5H, "Good­ tory such as the one turned in by Roots - li-fo vie, andZorro: The Gay Blade will come !l, February is what's known in the business as bye, Farewell, Amen." another ABC February mini-series - would the small screen. Ex-Angels Cheryl Ladd and "sweeps month." November, May, and July Not that CBS is totally above reproach. It not boost ABC past CBS for the overall ratings .Jadyn Smith star in The Grace KelZv Story, and are sweeps months as well, but none of those will, after all continue to bring us the mindless championship. The older network has been Rage ofAngels, respectively. hanles are waged as fiercely as February is. Dukes of Hazard, and treat America to a radi­ too strong throughout the rest of the year. And there is always.'IHSH. cally censored I 0. NBC is the early winner in the mid-winter Skip Desjardin fracas. The tlrst episode of Shogun outdrew CBS's popular Monday night line-up, and gave On the Media ABC a run for it's money as well. . NBC executives are hoping that Americans, In a sweeps month, Arhitron and Nielson who just spent several consecutive nights survey the American public to find out which watching the japanese epic, will not want to network they watch - and when. The results commit another whole week to ABC's drawn­ of these ratings determine the rate networks out World War II drama. can charge for advertising in the upcoming They are getting help, at least in the early year. A single rating poi(1t can be worth mil­ episodes, from Winds itself. At S40 million, lions in ad revenues. the show cost the same as Warren Beatty's So, we have been treated to an encore per­ motion picture Reds - though I kick myself formance of Shogun, one of the real triumphs for mentioning both in the same paragraph. of the mini-series genre. But we have also Winds took over a year to tllm. The big-time been subjected, to The Kid With the 200 IQ ori bombing of Pearl Harbor sequence was shot the same network. in a day and a half, however, and the rest of the So far, we have been bored to death by show look~ like a hastily thrown together mediocre acting in the highly-touted Winds excuse for more than three hours of commer­ of War.. Ali McGraw andjan-Michael Vincent cials. SEARCHING FOR MR. 600DPARTY seem to he reading every line of a cue card. It is an ambitious project, to be sure, and I P.O. BoxQ

ser :s reporting on the controversy over would be to regard it as a form of initiation or a r , sica! versus cultural determinism rite de passage. Whereas we specialists in St. Mary's apathy Voting example surrounding the work of the late Margaret such events usually expect them to engage Mead, perhaps a crude claritkation drawn more fully the imagination, even giving rein to Dear Editor: Dear Editor: along those lines will suffice. the exotic, a little ritual drama, perhaps, As concerned members of the Saint Mary's Tuesday, '1.9 percent of the Notre Dame If, on the one hand, we adopt nature or biol­ masks, chants, chemical stimulants, or at least Community, we are responding to the women who live on campus voted to con· ogy as our point of departure, one inviting ex­ a little ceremonial abstinence or license, February 8 article, "Apathy, Sheep and tinue the FLOC boycott. No women's dorm planation is an analogy to the behavior of depending on taste, we remain open to the Rhetoric," written by Ryan Ver Berkmoes, fell below a 61.9 percent support of the some earlier anthropoid, a Neanderthal, for possibility that the new symbols are invented Managing Editor and that issue's Editorial, boycott. Badin registered 77. I percent. example. Barely having crossed the critical to suit new situations. "Obsemer endorses Saint Mary's Only Ticket." Only 47.5 percent of voting, on-campus threshold of human intelligence, familiar only Hence. that rare and beguiling concession, We recognize a certain amount of apathy men favored FLOC. The low for the men was with crudely fashioned, blunt tools, and considering the source, that "hockey" may does exist on the Saint Mary's campus, includ­ 23.9 percent while Alumni ( 57.4) registered knowledgeable only of a limited simple ter­ not be "as important as anthropology" might ing in student government; however, the the highest percentage for men's halls. rain, this barely recognizable ancestor of ours well constitute an efficacious and aut­ editors draw a general conclusion of apathy 44.7 percent of the women favored the uni­ might easily stray and knuckle-walk into a horitative ritual formula, which in the old on the Saint Mary's campus based upon the lateral freeze. Badin had the high with 51.4 camp of refined and fully evolved homo literature used to he called a "magic spell". panicipation in only two student body elec­ percent. The low was 38.4 percent. Only 32.2 sapiens. Frightened and confused upon The effect of the pronouncement within the tions. This is an unfair assumption. Student percent of the men favored the freeze. The seeing the manners and implements of nas­ rite is to mark a social transition, to establish government is only one part of student par­ men's range was 20.5 to Cavanaugh's 43.7 per­ cent civilization, the Neanderthal, reverting or validate new sets of relationships, a new ticipation. Do not overlook numerous Saint cent. to apish instinct, lunges for the one he takes to legal and e.;:onomic status. Mary's students who participate in the Far he it from me to criticize the reaction­ be the smallest and youngest member. But From this perspective, the left-handed tone accounting club, campus ministry, social ac­ ary male population on campus. Instead I'd here the primordial troglodyte demonstrates of the remark is correctly identified as irony, tion club, swim team ... ). like to congratulate the women who seem to again those qualities that led to his extinction and our part in the ceremony is to modestly Certainly, these students deserve credit for have focused more on the human issues. despite superior size and strength. For accept this acclaim, assuring all that we shall their involvement in our community and Most importantly, though, I want to strong­ throughout the history of our species, raw aspire to live up to the new stature conferred should not be regarded as apathetic. ly encourage Saint Mary's women to vote animal muscle has proved to be subordinate by this recognition. Also, we add with the We realize the limited options presented to positively as their Notre Dame counterparts to the agility of the human mind. reciprocity of sportsmen, we acknowledge the Saint Mary's students by the one student have. In other words, the inconsistency Sports II-. our continuing interest in hockey, both as an body ticket; however, the editors fail to I hope that they vote to break the circle of lustrated pretends to expose on the part of athletic contest and as a metaphor and sur­ recognize those who considered running for fear in which the U.S. is now embroiled. I hope administrators who "willingly operate the rogate for cold wars both on the global and student body positions. They negate the fact that they vote YES for the unilateral freeze. depanment at a substantial 'loss"' turns out in local scale. that competition does exist for Saint Mary's Tom Ryan fact to be its first reference to the fastest Finally, since we in no way anticipated this women who have the option to run College ofArts and Letters growing department in the College of Arts and timely public testimony to our presence and (including write-ins) and have the present op­ letters and one of the university's latest promise by a prestigious publication, we have tion to vote yes, no or abstain on the Hocter milestones toward academic excellence. already committed considerable resources to ticket. The myopic scorn lurking behind this slug­ an Inaugural Lecture Series which begins on As student government members, we are gish attempt to use the anthropology depart· Feb. I 0. As the first of several renowned active representatives of our College, who af­ SI publicity ment as the club with which to direct some anthropologists to visit our campus in-coming fect both directly and indirectly the actions Dear Editor: high-sticking at the athletic oftice fails altoget­ months, Robin Fox, Professor at Rutgers Uni­ and thoughts of our peers, faculty and ad­ Sports Illustrated has recently singled out her to comprehend that it has been anthropol­ versity and author of numerous books, includ­ ministration. Thus, to suppose that "no one our anthropology department for a very spe­ ogy's formitable quality and increasing ing his latest The Red Lamp of Incest, will else cares to get involved in a job that they s~ cial distinction. In the issue of Feb. 7, a quantity that led to its autonomy. It split from speak on "The Unity of Mankind: The Disunity as having little power or influence" is an inap­ mediocre anicle that decried the downgrad­ the combined sociology and anthropology of Anthropology." His visit which will include propriate assumption. Ing of the hockey program uses this depart­ department only this year. Could this be a few days of meetings with interested stu· An "in" group of student government ment to take a sidelong swing at those who evidence that the "fierce bottom-line men­ dents and faculty apart from the public leaders does not exist on this campus. Those make decisions regarding athletic priorities. tality" that the Sports Illustrated article lecture, represents our innocent and meager who choose to continue with student govern­ As a branch of learning, anthropology en­ ascribes to other might not also reveal their attempt to announce the department's com­ ment remain, while new individuals continue deavors to study all that is human. It therefore own stage of evolution? ing of age. We salute Sports Illustrated for its to accept the the challenge. can evoke numerous methods for the ex­ On the other hand, if we adopt culture as somewhat distorted by much appreciated ad­ Yours in Saint Mary's amination of this intriguing rhetorical our chief reference point, one available ex­ vance gesture of affirmation. Kathleen Murphy specimen. Since, however, for the entire pa."t planation for the circuitous allusion to our Patrick D. Gaffney, CSC and I I student goz,'t members week The .Veu• York Times has featured a fledgling department by the colossus of sports Dept. ofAnthropology

Jh~~r======Editorial Board Department Managers Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 Editor-in-Chief...... Michael Monk Business Manager ...... Tony Aiello The Obsemer is the independent newspaper published by the students of the Uni­ Managing Editor ...... Ryan Ver Berkmoes Controller ...... Eric Schulz versity of Notre Dame duLac and Saint Mary's College. It does not necessarily reflect Executive News Editor ...... David Dziedzic Advertising Manager ...... Chris Owen the policies of the administration of eit~er institution. The news is reported as ac­ SMC Executive Editor ...... Margaret Fosmoe Production Manager ...... Maura Murphy curately and as objectively as possible. Unsigned editorial~ represent the opinion of a Sports Editor ...... Chris :--leedles Circulation Mcmager ...... Mark Miotto majority of the Editorial Board. Commentaries, letters, and the Inside Column depict Systems ,,tanager ...... Bruce Oakley the views of their authors. Culumn space is available to all members of the community, Editorials Editor ...... Paul McGinn Features Editor ...... joseph :\1usumeci and the free expression of varying opinions on campus, through letters, is encouraged. Photo Editor ...... Rachel Blount Founded November 3, 1966 ( 219) 239-5303 The Observer Sports Special - Irish vs. Tech Thursday, February 10, 1983 page 8 Notre Dame/ Bringing up baby Louisiana Tech Notre Dame sets out on the Techster's road ... Destination: title become more of an administrator for our entire GAME: Notre Dame vs. Louisiana Tech University By MIKE RICCARDI women's program. I guess now I spend more time as a Sports Writer SITE: The Athletic and Convocation Center recruiter, goodwill ambassador, administrator. and counselor. This story begins more than a decade ago, when "I don't believe there is a better coach anywhere TIME: 7:30p.m. EST Friday, Feb. 11, 1983 women were first admitted to the University of Notre •. (than Barmore). This thing (developing the program) Dame. has been a team effort all the way and he has done a SERIES: First meeting. The University, whose athletic tradition had already tremendous job." been mythologized by books and a movie, decided to COACHES: For Notre Dame, Head Coach Mary DiStanislao, The Lady Techstcrs, under Hogg, have become more take its time in allowing its women to become part of than a women's team. In Ruston, a town 40-33 in third year at ND, 130-58 career. that athletic heritage. For Louisiana Tech, co-Head Coaches Sonja Hogg which doubles in size when LTll is in session, the After all, how could a female athlete be molded into Tcchsters arc a civic resource, much like the symphony and ; Hogg 238-47 in ninth year at the image ofK.nute Rockne? Tech, Barmore 21-1 in first year. of a Boston or the fine restaurants of a New Orleans. Then came Title IX, the It aw that mandated equality in Their games are big time in Ruston. The women are educational opportunities for women. Part of the rule RANKINGS: ( AP) Louisiana Tech No. 1, Notre Dame unranked celebrities. , Louisiana Tech's 5-4 required that the budget for women's sports be equal to sparkplug, is as recognizable in downtown Ruston as the budget for men's non-revenue sports. 7-0 Patrick Ewing would be in Washington. TICKETS: Students admitted free with ID. The women's basketball program was born. "I came to Tech because the Ladv Techsters had built As with most newly-formed programs, women's bas­ such a tradition," says Mulkey, a· native of northern ketball started out Division III. And, despite an ab­ i~ Louisiana. "The program has the support of the com­ sence of scholarships, the program became very munity, the faculty and the student body. Also, the successful. coaching staff pushes the players to become the best A few years later, after their 20-10 team had been they can become and sec that the players fit in our eliminated in the round of 16 of the 19HO AlA W tourna­ program." ment, Shari Matvey, Maggie Lally, and Missy Conboy lis­ Their success is unmatched anywhere in sports right tened as their coach, Sharon Petro, announced that the now. Division lli Irish would be moving up to the big league, The Techsters arc perhaps the only basketball team Division I, the next time they took the court. in the country that could replace a Wade Trophy win­ And that the next time they took the court, they ner (, named the nation's best player in 1981- would have a new coach. H2) with an even better player - center Janice Marv DiStanislao, who had taken the basketball I.awrence. 21-1 progr;m at Northwestern from nowhere to status as the 14-6 huh of one of the nation's strongest women's athletic programs, had been hired to write the Notre Dame THE FIGHTING IRISH THELADYTECHSTERS women into the book on Notre Dame "tradition." POS NO PLA YEA HT PPG CL What Sonja Hogg has built down at LTU is a legitimate POS NO PLAYER HT PPG CL It was not an casv task. F 22 Shari Matvey 6-1 9.2 Sr. F 25 Lori Scott 5-10 12.4 Sr. dynasty. But the history of women's basketball is one of "It's a different 'sort of situation." says DiStanislao 25 Ruth Kaiser 6-1 6.8 So. 44 Debra Rodman 6-2 13.8 Jr. dynasties that dominated for a couple of years, then 13 TrenaKeys 6-1 111 Fr 21 Kay Konerza 5·11 2 3 Fr when comparing her new task to her Northwestern joh. 12LynnEbben 5-11 82Fr. gave way when a bigger school proved more capable of "Notre Dame has a great name to recruit for, but, then maintaining a national-calibre team. again, everybody is gunning for you. You don't have the First, there was Mary DiStanislao's mentor, Cathy c 20 Mary Beth Schueth 6-0 12.6 So. c 51 Janice Lawrence 6-3 19.9 Jr. advantage of anonymity." 50 T1a Sossamon 6-2 9 7 Sr Rush, and her powerful squad at Immaculata College in 42 Came Bates 6-1 6.4 So Building a new program at a university like Notre suburban Philadelphia. For three years, no team came 32 Jenny Klauke 5-10 3.2 Jr Dame also provided a challenge for men's coach Digger dose to what Sports Illustrated dubbed "the real UCLA Phelps, who, as coordinator of varsity basketball, had to G 21 Debbi Hensley 5-6 0.9 ~r. G 20 Kim Mulkey 5-4 6.6 Jr. of the East." Then Mississippi's Delta State knocked 23 Laura Dougherty 5-10 11.2 So. 15 Jennifer White 5-9 6.1 Sr. take on a new marketing challenge. them off their perch. Delta ruled the sport until Old 33 Den1se Basford 5-9 26 Fr. 22 Pam Gant 5-7 84 So "I think that women's basketball has the potential to Dominion's Lady Monarchs brought the women's game 24 Theresa Mullins 5-6 11 Jr 10 Julie Wilkerson 5-8 1 6 Sr become a big spectator sport," said Phelps. "They play a 10 Jan1ce Monagle 5-5 0.5 So 13 V1Ck1e Green 5-7 21 Fr to network television for the first time. 15 Lisa Brown 5-5 0 3 Fr 34 Debb1e Pnmeaux 5-4 0.7 Jr different brand of basketball (from the men's game), And now, the Lady Techsters arc the best. hut it's everv hit as exciting at it's highest level." "The biggest thing is that the women's game is The 19HO:H 1 season marked more than Notre Dame's improving every year," says Hogg. "It's great being na­ first year in Division I, though. It also marked the first of tional champions. It's also unrealistic to think you can two const~cutivc national championships for a small win it every vear." technical university which was founded among the oil For now-though, the place where Hogg and Barmore and gas fields ofno~thern Louisiana- Louisiana Tech. have brought the Techsters - number one in the country - is still nothing more than a distant goal for the Irish women. "Tech really is No. 1 ," says DiStanislao. "They've got Nine years ago, Louisiana Tech's athletic tradition the tradition, the talent, and the coaching. It's quite an consisted of one quarterback - Terry Bradshaw. opportunity to go up against No. 1 - and I do mean an At that time, a physical education teacher at LTll, opportunity - because after Friday night, we'll really Sonja Hogg, 't"as given a few bucks and asked to put know just how good we are." together a ba~ketball team for Tech's few coeds. How far away are the Irish women? Her tlrst team went 1.)-9 against a schedule made up entirely of teams from Louisiana. Since then, Hogg and "We're two players away," says the Ladv Techsters have become the most dominating Mary D. "We just got \'onnie ti:>rce in.women's basketball. In fact. it could be the most Thompson. who fills our need at dominating basketball team since the Walton era at guard, and we really need a center. a UCLA. big person to get down low. flow did the Tech program get so far? "We've been clos·c. hut we've had "I was so scared in 1974, hut we were respectable in a hard time getting that center. Ccn· our first year," says llogg. "Then, through sheer deter· tcrs are a different breed that "i--.t min at ion and hard work, we were able to get a lot of the people (like myself) don't under· best young ladies in the country to join the program." stand." Tech's rise to power was not meteoric. It took tlvc The odds would seem to dictate years of hard work before Hogg's squad reaped the that the paths of these two schools , benefits. Hogg remembers the moment that rhc Lady would never pas!>. /""' Techsrers became a national power. But tomorrow night at the A(' "We arrived in 1979, when we upset liCI.A in LA," they wilL remembers Hogg. "When we first broke into the Top Ten. pt•ople thought we were an overnighr success. "But, you know, that's never the case. lr took a long time ro get where we arc now, not to mention a lot of work from a lot of people." Hogg feels that hiring Leon Barmore as an assistant was the turning point ti:>r Louisiana Tech women's bas­ ketball. Barmore was brought in ro write the X's and O's; he is the tactician in LTU's unique co-coaching scheme. , ''I'm here to teach the game and to work out the Trena Keys strategies on the sidelines," says Barmore, in his fifth year at Louisiana Tech, but only his first as co-head coach. "I'm grateful to Sonja for elevating me to this position. It's a pretty successful partnership, as you can tell." Hogg makes the schedule, attends the conventions, does the recruiting, and is the spokeswoman for the Ladv Techster~. "Originally, I was coach, momma, bottle washer and Laura Assistant Coach Lisa Brown all," says llogg. "Now with Leon and (Assistant Coach) Mary Ellen Mu•u,,v Gary (Blair) available to help in so many areas, I have Dougherty ------~------

The Observer Sports Special- Irish vs. Tech Thursday, February 10, 1983 page9

• • • Mary D.

was pretty interesting because I had to be aggressive continued from page 16 just to hold my own. "And I said 'sure.' She had them call me, I had an inter­ "I always enjoyed doing what the boys did. I always view and I was hired. enjoyed being able to run around and play, and get "Oh, we were the pits," continues the 31-year-old yelled at when I got dirty. After a while, we had all kinds native of Pennsauken, N.j., "because we didn't have the of conflicts because people said, 'You're a girl; girls just PE program, we didn't have the built-in jocks. People don't do this'- remember, this is the late SO's." didn't exactly come to Northwestern to play ball. The conflict reached its height when Mary, after "But in a lot of respects it was the exact opposite of graduating from Rutgers University, opted to become a what we have here, because people looked and said, teacher- and coach three sports - at Wildwood Cath· 'Northwestern? They're losers. You don't go there to be olic High School in New Jersey. Her parents had wanted an athlete.' So we were constantly underrated." her to attend medical school. Mary Beth Mary D. took over the Wildcats in 1975 and, within But basketball was still in her blood. So Mary skipped five years, led them to the AlA W national quarterfinals med school, quit teaching and took an assistant coach­ while compiling a 90-27 recor_d and two straight Big ing job at Immaculata. Nine years later, she is one of the Schueth Ten titles. There was still room for improvement, but most respected people in her profession. the re 1building job was complete. Now what do her parents think? So when Phelps and Notre Dame came calling in "Ah, they love it," Mary D. says. Then, she adds 1980, Mary D. was listening. Attentively. solemnly, "You know the way it is with parents. They "He (Phelps) didn't have to say much," she says. have to make sure you do well at what you do. They "This is a job I've always wanted to have. You grow up a understand that even though I didn't work hard to be a Catholic kid in the East, you may not know where Notre doctor, I did work hard to be something." Dame is, but you sure know what it means. "The first time I came down here (while at Northwes­ tern), I took a trip through the ACC. Digger and Roger Going at 'the wall' ( Valdiserri, sports information director) were sitting If the challenge to rebuild a broken program arises, there talking and I walked in and introduced myself. would DiStanislao take the bait' "I liked the situation," says DiStanislao. "And I said, "No, I don't think so," she says. "This is a good place • 'When you decide to build the program up, I want the to be and I think the next career change will be just that. Irish women take another job.' But I th1nk Digger, in seeing all the interest I'd I don't think I'd go to another school. taken in the program and after having seen what we'd "It's nice to build a program. it's a wonderful chal­ crack at the Big Time done at Northwestern, felt contldent in endorsing me to lenge to build a program, and it's your opportunity to Father (Edmund) Joyce or Mr. (Moose) Krause or put your mark on something. But it's not easy; it takes a anybody else. toll on you personally. It ages you. By MIKE SULLIVAN ing a 10-1 home record, and it holds "I don't think we've let them down so far.'' "I really think I'm pretty lucky," she continues, Sports Writer its NCAA Tournament fortunes in its "because I'm part of something that's never been done own hands. before. Not just coaching, but being a young woman "We're gonna get over that wall Not too bad for a team that is in who up until a few years ago would never have had the Once she was hired, it was time for DiStanislao to yet." only its third year of Division I com­ latitude that I have, the opportunitv that I have." appoint assistants, to hire the architects for the These are the fighting words of petition, and playing its first solid Tomorrow night. Mary D. has the opportunitv of a reconstruction. In Sharon Petro's final year as coach, women's basketball coach Mary DiS­ Division I schedule. lifetime against No. I Louisiana Tech. But win o; lose Notre Dame had made the AlA W national tournament tanislao. She is referring to the Despite the newness of the the future remains bright for her program. , ' - but that was Division Ill. obstacle that keeps her team from program, though, the Notre Dame "Even though the basketball wags say that Louisiana coming up with the all-important schedule would give almost every Now the Irish were leaping from Division Ill to Divi­ sion I - from the farm to the big city, from Kansas to the Tech is the best team in the countn· while we're onlv win over a nationally-ranked op­ team in the country a difficult time. 40th or 50th best," she says, "this is o.ne of the big game-s Land of Oz. And they needed a couple of tough, hard­ ponent. "There aren't too many third-year of the year ( nationallv )." working assistant coaches - Mary D. clones, in other When the big win finally comes, teams that take on the schedule that And, finally, the oh~·ious. the Irish will have attained the thing we do," DiStanislao admits. words - to lay the foundation. Enter Patrick Knapp and Mary Murphy. "I love it. I love it, because people have that much that they have been striving for for It was not a case of working up to regard tor my program." "Pat I had known through the camps we had done the last three years - national the big games by beating up on the And about ten times as much tor its coach. recognition. weaker teams, either. together (with )," says DiStanislao of the 29- It is this last step in the growth of The first action of the year, the vear-old Knapp. "When I took the job, he indicated he the program that has turned out to Orange Crush Tournament at the was interested in being an assistant along with about 60 be the most difficult. Five times this Rosemont Horizon, put the Irish in a other people, but I knew Pat. He fit the bill because he's year the Irish have played a ranked four-team tournament in which the a good coach and he had built a program of his own (at team, and five times they have failed. other three teams were ranked. Bishop McDevitt High School For Boys in the Philadel­ Mary Louisiana Tech, the toughest op­ Their inexperience showed as they phia Catholic League). ponent of all, will he the sixth had turnover problems and dropped "And he wasn't pompous to the point that he felt no DiStanislao chance. both t games. women had any talent at all. I felt he was aggressive, and A win over the Lady Techsters It was at this time that the charac­ we needed aggressive peoyle who were going to go out would definitely get the Notre Dame ter of the team was first tested. In· and get after it." program some immediate attention, stead of losing confidence because Murphy, 23, played for DiStanislao at Northwester hut, more realistically, a good of the losses, the team rebounded and captained Mary D.'s final Wildcat team in 1 showing would give the young Irish with an impressive nine-game win­ "Mary didn't want to go itito the pros," says D players some confidence for the ning streak. lao, "and got an opportunity to come here and next big opponent. And it was definitely a team effort. master's degree (in business) and work with Despite this failure to get the big Nine players divided most of the program. win, however, the season is far from playing time as nobody averaged "She too is aggressive and intelligent, and I thou a disappointment. Notre Dame's even thirty mintes of playing time. would be an_ asset to the progra·m because she record is an impressive 14-6, includ- There was a difkrent player who recruited herself and went through four years starred every game. program that went from no respect to the ult' Freshman Lynn Ebben was an ear­ respect in the Midwest and the Big Ten." ly surprise as she carried a good deal With these three heads working together, of the offensive load for the first few was inevitable. A 20-win season and an NCAA games. Laura Dougherty and Mary ment bid are still within reach this year, but Beth Schueth then took charge. doesn't see it as essential just yet. Schueth in particular was impressive "If we make it this year, fine," she says. "But as she dominated the hoards every going to be a great program. People look at the v. gme. recruit, the kind of program we run, the kind of "Mary Beth may he the best we turn out. Because of that it's going to be rehounder in the country," said DiS­ cessful ...and it's successful already." tanislao at' the time. Meanwhile, the entire team showed why D:iStanislao-coached squads are known to he tough on If the decision were up to Ma and Pa a few years back, defense. Sophomore Ruth Kaiser their daughter would he Doctor Mary DiStanislao today. took charge of the defense like she And probably loathing every minute of it. had done the year before, leading Growing up, Mary D. was the kind of kid you'd expect the team in steals and taking the - a lirtle brar who always hung around and competed Kim tough defensive assignment. with boys, a girl who burned her bra before she even A 25-point loss at third-ranked knew what one was. Mulkey :Maryland slowed the team down, "I idolized my cousins," DiStanislao recalls. "I was a though, as the players realized that pretty active child. My father would take me on his junkets on Saturday mornings - Little League, midget they were not yet ready for the big teams. football and basketball - along with my uncle and his As they had done betore, four sons. I was always in the company of boys, which J.i however, they rebounded from the loss by winning three-of-four at home. The one loss - to Alabama - It--·· was due in a large part to poor Irish shooting.

See SEASON, page 13 ---..------~--~------~

Bech adrift in BACK-water

arried. become a literary version of France's Panama Canal M Two bitchy blond daughters. project. The deeper he digs into it, the more lost in A corpulant, fawning wife. quagmire he becomes.

A large suburban home. He takes to touring the world in search of a purpose Bridge clubs. he doesn't even know. In Australia he gets involved in ·. sexual affairs with two women. However. he has @ Is this your idea of hell? It's mine. And it's also Henry become so detached emotionally that Bech is but a Bech's. mere spectator. He finds himself the propaganda junket - tours sponsored by the U.S. State Department to take John Updike is the Sybil of the bookworld. His American culture to foriegn lands. His audiences of numerous alter-egos make appearences in book form dronish State Department employees don't care, the every decade or so. Many are familiar with the popular people of the country don't care, and Bech doesn't care. Rabbit series. Henry Bech first appeared in Bech: A Blinded by his own apathy, and sinking deeper into Book written in 1970. In that novel Bech was a young his mental morass, Bech grasps at the only rope he DICK thinks is available, the sister of his former mistress. This ANOVEL woman is bored. She thinks that Bech, a famous author Rynn is what she needs to brighten her dreary staus-quo ex­ Ot•tldt'J'e f)i(·k. Kun \onnt:gu[, Dclacoun Pre:~:-.. s.._..w York. llJH2 2 tO p.i~t..·.., istence.

Vet Betkmoes So, Bech allows himself to be adopted. The honeymoon begins to end, while he is on his author whose first major work became a best-seller. Un­ honeymoon. The couple venture to the Holy Land, DEADEYE's on target fortunately, Bech learned that it is never wise to climax where his wife has several religuos experiences among to quickly career-wise. the concession stands ofJerusalem. He has a New Bech is adrift mentally and emotionally. Despite his n American-made neutron bomb, accidentally launched from a Yorker's scepticism for this shclock. They fight. love for New York. he cannot feel at home there. He has Agovernment truck driving down Highway 11 depopulates Mid­ land City, Ohio. A neutered pharmicist suffers with the name been working on his next novel Think Big for several Updike pulls an interesting transition in the chapter "Deadeye Dick" after a childhood mishap involving the shooting of a years. The title is symbolic, since the project has "McBech." While Bech, a jew, had found his homeland pregnant woman on Mother's Day. Combine this with a lady who meaningless, he finds his wife's Scottish homeland Hecb is Back, John l"pdike, Alfred A. Knop( :'\lew York, 19Hl. 19'> pa~c~. develops brain tumors from exposure to a radioactive fireplace man­ moving. The spark is lit. He begins afresh on Think Big tel piece, and a woman who permanantly unclogs her pipes by The lengthiest chapterofBech Is Back is titled "Bech swallowiing a cup ofDrano and you have the makings of Kurt Von­ Wed." Here Updike makes the strongest and most elo­ negut's latest novel, Deadeye Dick. Vonnegut returns to a setting from his 1973 novel. Breakfast of quent statement about the pitfalls of marraige I have Champions, and using a few familiar characters from this earlier read. Bech finds himself not so much his wife's beloved work creates an entirely new story.Deadeye Dick is the self-told life pet, hut a stranger in a suburban land. His new story of a sexless pharmacist, Rudy Waltz. daughters from his wife's previous marriage have all the Rudy begins with a description of his father's early college days charm of Valley Creatures. Bech retreats - and writes. when he was an art student in Vienna. 1t is here that Rudy's father, Ot- Most novels have their tlaws, but I am hard pressed to find any in Bechls Back. The hook is not long. It makes for an enjoyable Sunday afternoon of reading. Through Jetty the central character, it is easy to gain insight into the pratfalls of life awaiting the unsuspecting. We have all found ourselves adrift like Bech, fortunately, we don't Young all have to take his drastic measures of cure. to, befriends one Adolf Hitler who also happens to be a struggling Updike has emerged as one of the foremost novelists young artist. Otto purchases a painting from the portfolio of the of contemporary life. He has a great ability to color a broke and starving Adolf and thereby saves the life of this future scene and bring it to life. One of his best involves a monster. "That is my principal objection to life," Rudy comments, "it lovemaking session between a suffering Bech and his is too easy to make perfectly horrible mistakes." squeaky wife. The humor in the book is ironic and cyni­ At the age of 12 Rudy commits an accidemal double murder cal. Those blindly aspiring to suburbia will find many which permanently changes the life of his family. His victim is an ex­ parts sacrilegious~ pectant Mrs. Eloise Metzger who happens to he vacuuming her living room several blocks away when hit. "What," asked Rudy "was In the end, Bech Is Back is about getting one's act to­ a pregnant mother of two doing operating a vacuum cleaner on Mot­ gether. Fortunately,John Updike is not entirely Henry her's Oay? She was practically asking for a bullet between the eyes, Bech. Thus, while we may have to wait another decade wasn't she?" to read ofBech, we won't have ro wait another decade Sent to jail for the deed, Rudy and his father are treated quite bru­ to read Updike. tally by the police; Otto is pushed down a tlight of steel stairs, and Rudy is splashed with "fingerprinting" ink and then put on display in 1 a cage where people are invited to observe and are encouraged to throw punches at the young convict. The Metzgers sue the Waltz DUST: a challenge to think family and win every last cent of a chain-store inheritance with which Otto has been supporting his family. They are ruined. The book then jumps to Rudy's mid-life during which he ignores moving is the article "This Quiet portant to approach the book with o many Americans the name Wil­ his teacher's encouragement in the direction of writing, and instead Dust," which chromcles Styron's Tliam Styron is not in the an open mind. You may not agree pursues the field of pharmacy. Since he works the graveyard shift at search for the story of the historical mainstream of American literature. with some of Styron's views, but it is Schramm's Drug Store, Rudy passes the daytimes writing a contest­ black activist, Nat Turner. Yet, this talented Southerner has difficult not to be moved by his winning play for which he is awarded with its production on Broad­ Also included are some brilliant honesty and his abilirv to evoke a written some of the most powerful way. The play flops and Rudy returns home a depressed man. fiction of the past quarter century potraits ofpeople he has known, special depth of human emotion Rudy now relocates to Haiti bur trouble continues to erupt. An people such as Robert Penn Warren, through prose. (Set This House orz Fire, The Confes- Ohio snow-storm rips through Midland City and claims the life of his Peter Matthiessen and George I recommend the book on irs father. Later, a neutron bomb "accidentally" destroys the surviving Plimpton. The latter two writers literary merits, of course. But it is inhabitants of his home town ... hut leaves material objects intact ~ joined Styron in 1952 to found The Joe also an opportunity to scan the past thus proving the "harmlessness of a neutron bomb." Rudy and his Paris Review. few decades through the eyes of one brother Felix, a one time President of the NBC network, escape this Rodtigue.z Styron also writes appreciative of America's greatest living writers. catastrophe because they are at their island paradise of Haiti. elegies for his literary predecessors Thi.'i f.Juiel {)u.'i/, W1lllam ~[yron, Rantlom llou!re, this book could turn you off for enlarge and expand many of the the chronicles of his life, but they are good. As a fan ofVonnegut I can sympathize with the man as heap­ themes Styron has dealt with in his a microcosm of the events that have proaches his 60th birrhdar and attempts to piece together an fiction. been at the forefront of American epilogue of his own life experience. In the Prologue of Deadeye Beginning with a section entitled life since 1940. The issues involved Dick, Vonnegut states that the unappreciated, empty spherical arts South, Styron deals with the confu­ are provocative and probing; much center building t mentioned in the book symbolizes his own head. sion and occasional certitudes that of the reading is serious (though Keeping this in mind, the novel seems to be an attempt to collect accompan} the proverbial Styron does inject some wonderful! some of the debris that has found its wa~' into Kurt's head after 60 "Southern Cons{· .ence." Particularly human comedy as well), and it is im- years of living on this planet. .,

The Observer Thursday, February 10, 1983 - page 11

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Any remaining participants in the men's un- dergrad and men's grad singles racquetball tournaments should call Purdue team swims past Irish the :'>I\' A office at 2:39-6100 to report results and keep the tourna­ ment moving. - Tbe 0/Jsen•er By THERON ROBERTS Dame wa~ regist<:red by Paul Boiler who st·t a pool record in the .\jmrts Writer :\lcGowan. The senior diver race. notched a win in tht: three meter The men's swimming record now It had been o,ix ,·ears ~ince :'liotre diving and grabbed second place in stands at 6- .~- Bookstore Basketball Commi~sioner Dave [)zied­ Dame contested Purdue in men's the one mt:ter competition. zic has announced a major rule change for this year's tourn;tment. swimming. The Irish probably Other individual winnt:rs l<>r the Wayne ~tate invades the friend!\· Only one :'>ICAA Division I basketball player. past. or present. will be wished tht· Boilermakers had stayed Irish wne: AI !larding in the I 00- confines of tht· Rockne Pool on allowed per team. Re~t~tration tor Bookstore XII will he Sunday. home this year also, as they cruo,hcd vard free. Tim Bohdan in the 200- Staurday, with the meet getting un­ \larch 6, not .\larch I 0 as previou~ly reported - Tbe ()!Jsen•er \iD. M-1--l'i. The loss snapped \lotrt· yard backstroke, and Blaise !larding, derway at 2 p.m. It is the tina! home Dame·, win streak at lour. winner in the 200-vard breaststroke. meet of the season. Purdue. ihe toughest competition Bohdan broke the varsity record the lri~h have laced this vear. slut- Stark believes '\ID has a good ' . in the I 000-yard freestyle l(H the Marathon Oil has bought all of the remaining tickets to tered four pool records en route to third time this year. with a I 0:0 I. 'i2 chance to win again't \\'ayne State. this Saturday's hockev game against Bowling r­ "l.a~t year we heat them in the last distrihutt:d most of the tickets to its dealers. The~e tickets are sold Tht· bt·st performance l(Jr :'llotre mance was overshadowed by a event. so thev'll be out to gt·r us." out. Howevt:r. there are 'iOO tickets remaining t(>r students and fans. The rickets can he bought at Gate I 0 of the ACC from 9 to 'i every day this week. Game time is "':50. - Tbe Obsert•er • • • Ran1s

native has been making the transi· with the pt·ople whH had been continuedfmmfJuMe 16 Open volleyball is beginning. Tht: entry deadline is tion to the American game slowly, playing most consistently tor us - ft:hruary I 'i at 'i:OO. Because thert: is a :32-team limit. <:arly sign up is spot for the Rams because of an in­ but appears to be coming on. no matter who they were. I wa~ hap­ encouraged. The tournanwnt is open to students, faculty, and staff. It jury to 6-H Ed Bona who is suffering Tony Mcintosh, Mark Murphy, py with the resuits in the two games. is single elimination with three I 'i-point games per round. The ros­ from hepatitis and is not expected to Brendan Pierson, and Dave Rober­ For the first time all season. we came ter minimum is nine plavers. Entries can he submitted to tht: NYA play. A 12-point scorer in last year's son also return to give Penders a down the stretch in control - and oftkt: in th<: ACC. - Tbe 0/Jsen•er game, he was averaging nearly nine strong bench. we were able to control the situa­ points and five rebounds a game. Phelps will counter with a tions instead of having to play catch­ Mike Cooper, a 6--i senior, will try revamped starting lineup. Along up all the time. We played to make up for Bona's absence. He is with the always steady John Paxson, consistently lor ·tO minutes." Cross country ski clinic will he held Saturday on averaging 9. 7 points and -!.6 he has been starting Dan Duf( Consistency is the key on which the Burke :\lemorial Golf Course from I I a.m. to noon. Anyone in­ rebounds a game. The other forward Joseph Price, Jim Dolan, and Tim all future Irish hopes are based. An ter<:sted should meet with skis at the first tee. Ski~ can he rented at spot is ex peered to be filled by new­ Kempton. NCAA bid is dangling by a thread in the golf shop in the Rock from +'i p.m. on Friday, and from 10:50-5 comer James Robinson. "After the UCLA game, we felt we the distance. Norre Dame's hopes of p.m. Saturday. - Tbe 0/Jserl'er. At center lilr the Rams is 6-10 needed to make some changes," ex­ claiming it rest on its ability to play Goran Skoko. The Yugoslavian plains Phelps. "We decided to go well down the stretch.

The Observer wtll accept classtfteds Mon­ day through Frtday. 10 a.m to 4 30 p m However. classtlteds to appear 1n the next tssue must be recetved by 3 p.m. the bustness day pnor to tnsertton All classtfteds must be prepatd. Classifieds etther 1n person or through the matl

lost gold setko quartz watch posstbly leff two Rooms Wtth Bath All Utilities Patd ND SOPHOMORE SKI TRIP REFUNDS ATIN. Students mterested 1n volunteer· MARK. 1n locker room at the Rock on 2/4/83 If Male Preferred Pnvate Entrance 288- can now be p1cked up 1n the Student Ac~ 1ng a summer 1n Atnca - a rep- resentatlve SET YOUR OWN FREAKING ALARM' NOTICES found. please call Ktm at 277-7401 0955 t1v1t1e off1ce Any questions, call Gary from OPERATION CROSSROADS B 8022 AFRICA wtll be speaktng wtth students dt the Center tor Soc1al Concerns on Frrday. JOHN. Dtd you go loa NEW WAVE PARTYtn the Need Rtde To Connecticut For Spong Feb 11, rn sem- 1nar room 1 -- 11 am to 01o$x?at!!l!at$x!! basement of GRACE on SATURDAY WANTED Break Wtll Share Usual Please Call Dan noon and 1 pm to 2 30. INTERESTED BRENDAN ntght (2·5·83)? Whose COAT dtd you at 6824 - PERSONS WELCOME wear home? Somebody took my coat It IS TYPING AVAILABLE. 287-4082 GO IRISH'! BEAT LOUISIANA TECH!' (was) a NAVY-BLUE P-COAT With forest RIDE NEEDED to central Mtchtgan on Tned the OAR HOUSE? SENIOR SKI TRIP BUS LISTS IN STU· green MITTENS 1n the sleeve and tns1de 2&o OFF the pnce of a student ltcket wtth Feb 11 Please call Davtd at 1101 Everyday 2 tor 1 dnnks w1th snacks 4· DENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE IN the m1ttens were my fnends BASKET­ lhts ad and an ID The Acttng Company 7pm Tues IS Ladtes Ntght 1/2 pnce LAFORTUNE! HI, ROSEMARY MAY!I! BALL TICKETS (packet B) I NEED my for the Kennedy Center presents need nde to CHICAGO Feb 11 Call Kathy dnnks Thurs spec•al Snake 81tes $1 coat-espectally wtth all th1s snow PLEASE Shakespeare s . THE TWELFTH NIGHT x6883 Gameroom & dancrng Carry out open t1l Ctndy- BHJiMonogrammed of course)­ call me any trme day or n1ght--Mary Karen 8.00 PM. Feb t 2. at Century Center Box 3am every ntght Here s a httle note to set your day off SOOOIItEEE' Happy 19th btrthday u 284-5013 or 284-5194 PLEASE HELP OffiCe: 284-9111 Need RIDE TO PURDUE for wweekend Hope the day turns out excellent! rowdy RaLorbackr Hope your 10 doesnt ME!!!!!! of Feb 18-20 Call Bruce 1360 Jtm equal your age(stnce Ark. 1s 50th tn Ed) TYPING THEO MAJORS: Today come to the So­ We all senously hope you have an 1ntngu- LOST a pa1r of bnght ptnk. plasttc. bat Jackte Boggs NEED RIDE TO U OF M ANN ARBOR cial Hour with Notre Dame's Professor TRIO AUDITIONING proflctent acoustic 1ng dayl(ln your next hfe) Love y alllots!­ glasses near Walsh Hall Please return 684-8793 FEB 11 CHRIS 3184 of Judaism: NAOMI JANOWITZ- 331 gu1tar pia yer. harmony vocals For rnfo Farley 2A Men them. they are qutte valuable to me O'Shaughnessy, Spm. call Lynn 6459 or Dan 3549 Thanks Maureen xB008 Need nders to John Carrolltn Cleveland Htegel Beagle--Arkte Archy' Happy Leavtng Fnday. Feb 11 Call John x3554 BAR MELODY HEY! Want to get ahead m the sconng Birthday' What s a razorback? Now that LOST On Monday Ntghfs 11 30 shuttle. BAR MELODY For 2 potnts or more call 3498. ask for you re 19 you re leqal 1n Mtnnesota & an Olympus m a blue case If found BAR MELODY M1ke. Conversation optiOnal VJrgm1a- Foon to VJSJt us? I know!! Wrth please call284-5487 Hey! We need a nde to Purdue lh1s More 1nto soon your new fortune you can buy a smoke weekend If you can help, please call Tom Atlanta. detector 818 & 727 LOST/FOUND Lost. Blue Tratlwtse 1acket at Farley party al3121 or Btll at 3202 / Hey Class of '86 Are you gorng to or through Atlanta tor on Saturday Found Blue Trarlw,sejacket Don't Look Us Over We're The Lucky sprtng break? I could sure use a nde To Ann1e Hey hey roommate! Its your nearly 1dent1ca1 Call Frank 177 4 Clover Comtng back early for GMAT by chance? birthday!!! I hope 19 IS one of your best Vote JULIE HARMON-Pres. Need nde one way or the other Call Jeb years 1esp. s1nce I have to put up w1th A HANDMADE MONKEY SOCK LOST GOLD SEIKO WATCH LEFT IN MARY SAUER-V.P at 8641 Thanks you) Have a great day. ya razorback! STUFFED ELEPHANT WAS LOST LOCKER AT THE ROCK ON 1/24/83 IF FOR SALE JANET SIEGEL-Sec. Love NEAR THE LIBRARY ON 2171831 IT 'FOUND, PLEASE CALL GARY AT THERESA HARDY-Tres. Band1es your rOommate SH BELONGS TO ANNIE LIGHT. A FIVE­ x4388 REWARD$$$ On Thursday Feb. 10 Want to get nd of w1nter blues rn a PS I wonder whose turn 11 IS to call YEAR-OLD GIRL. PLEASE RETURN TO USED. OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS flash? ton1gnt 734 P E THAN X LOSTIIII NOTRE DAME class nng A BOUGHT. SOLD. SEARCHED ATTENTION ALL SMC FRESHMEN Then come to the Band Valentrne Bash. GOLD ladtes dmner nng. wtth a GOLD ERASMUS BOOKS 1027 E WAYNE For Soph Class Offtcers- Sat. 9-2, Keenan (Remember SYR?)(or LOVE STORY LOVE STORY. LOVE rP .._.a sn(·r. :!t'em for you LOST ONe grey. flannel kntt. wool scart U.S. 31, LESS THAN 1.5 MILES FROM RICK. Tr.at doesn 1 myf'T'I~ well e11her Mrssrng ~rrlce tate Sunday ntght Lost on Sem1-Furn 2BdRm Apt nedr ND U111111es : 3<1tes Jf P W VOTE SltrkS Prez N.D. - DELIVERY TO N.D. AND SMC YA·SO FU,.NY' Oh. we! I 1quess. J1rn had a rough nrte LH ~orth Quad Phtl x 1486 Pd Less Gus P~ 272-0~51 McCrudden- VP of hall counc•l 277-4519. BONZO 11

The ObserYer Thursday, February 10, 1983 - page 13 Irish fencers ready for Wayne St. showdown Winter By MATI JOHNSON Also competing again~t the Irish in Michigan SjJOrts Writer todav will he l niver~ity of \-lichigan­ Dearhorn. It does not happen n:rv often that Last week, hoth the men's and just flies by. the top two teams in the countrv in women's squads cruised to easy vic­ any sport meet head on. l'sually, tories over Tri-State, Parkside, and Pile your friends and your family in the car. load the when it happens. it is called "The Purdue. snowmobiles on the trailer. and head for a place with for the women. I 2--Y, Charlotte Showdown." Today. there will he miles of beautiful. groomed trails and more good clean Albertson won all c:-ight of her hours one of these "showdowns" as the snow and good clean fun than you'll know what to do rop fencing team in the country, to raise her personal record to

• • • Season -

continued from page 9 Notre Dame had a I 2-r a rournament berth. Wms over Loyola and Iowa State set them on the right track. hut the toughest competition lies ahead behind Louisiana Tech - with Il­ linois State and Indiana. It is hard at th1~ pointm the season ro judge ib succe!'>s, hut DiStanislao is generalh pleased with her team's perfi.Jrmance. "The expectation we ( the coaches) have is to 1111pro\T from game to game and look tor consis­ tencv." she savs. "\\'e w~mt to see tlw upperclassmen assume more leader­ Your friends didn't know a ship and we look fur strung perli>r­ serum from a dropkick. And they mances from individu;~ls. I think we got all that." obviously didn't know enough to The leadership that she was get out of the rain. But they did looking ti>r has come from ~enior!'> knmv how much this rugby game Dehhi llen~ln and Sh·.,ri \btvey. meant to you. So they hung in and junior Teresa .\lullins. llen~Jey ha~ started e\TrY game this year. there-downpour and alL scoring verv little hut playing tight Now that ·. -.- ~~ dekn!->e on the opposition's point the game's over, guard. make vour best "low. with Loubian<~ Tech stand­ ing in their wav, the Irish are going move of the dav. to have to use en:rnhing th<.:v have Lowenbrau for learned in their lmse~ to keep their everybody. tournament hopes alive. [)iStanblao 1s contldent that h~·r Leam will do exacrh· that "We now kll(n•; what it takes." she

~3\'~. The Irish may not have wlut it takes against a team hke Louisiana Tech. hut then. wh1> dno' The1r mo­ ment ol glon will come in the 1W.1r LOwenbriiu.Here's to good friends. luturc and. when it doe~. team~ like Louisiana Tech will he hoping to knock off ;\;otre Dame. r

The Observer Thursday, February 1 0, 1983 - page 14 College basketball Say Happy Valentine's Day with a personal Carolina readies for UVA CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AI') - been at Virginia, the Tar Heels have left to put ~pecial emphasis on thb MUSIC FOR YOUR NEXT PARTY Armed with plenty of motives for beaten the Cavaliers five of nine one." Smith added. revenge, third-ranked Virginia vhib times. Virginia has a 9-l record The last time the two teams met, top-ranked North Carolina Thursday when Sampson scored .30 points or junior forward Sam Perkins scored 3 HOURS OF DANCINS FOR f150 night in a battle of teams both streak­ more. The blemish on that slate is his .36 points, including four of four bas­ "lCHIANAS LARSEST "OBILE "USIC SERVICE ing toward the NCAA playoff.~. .30-point efti>ft in a 6'i-60 loss to the kets from beyond the ACC's ex­ REQUESTS TAKEN Virginia Coach Terry Holland says Tar Heels last season. perimental three-point fled goal there's no need to tag it as a "Game North Carolina was at the . 500 semi-circle. of the Century." mark in its tlrst six games and the "Perkins is a great inside player. ~ "We've been in so many show­ reigning national champions soon hut he also hit his three-point shots MUSIC MACHINE downs the last three seasons, I think found themselves out of The As­ against us," said Holland. "It's very BUD HALL 679-4043 · it's going to be hard to think of it in sociated Press college basketball tough to stop those. We'll have to try ~ those terms," Holland said. poll. to keep him from getting a lot of bas­ But Tar Heels Coach Dean Smith Following an H4-74 loss to Tulsa, kets inside." is preparing his team ti>r a real fight. the Tar Heels ran off I 7 straight vic­ Perkins leads the ACC in three­ "They're on a roll. I don't think tories to give Smith his 13th straight point tield goal accuracy, hitring I 0 anybody could have done to Louis­ 20-win season, an NCAA record. of 16 for 62.5 percent. He thinks his ville what they did to them," Smith North Carolina is undefeated in performance against Sampson last said of the Cavaliers' 9H-H I thrashing seven league contests. time will pump up Sampson even of the Cardinals last month. "It will Enhancing North Carolina's 20-.3 more Thursday. be a battle. We have a chance." record was last weekend's sweep of GMAT The Cavaliers, 19-2 and "7-1 in the the Furman and Citadel, but Smith Atlantic Coast Conference, are has reminded his team that they St. John 75, Georgetown 69 Exam Review Course riding a seven-game winning streak aren't exactly in Virginia's class. ; - LANDOVER. Md. (AI') - Chris 21 which began li>llowing a I 0 l-9'i loss Smith said it's too early to put any Starts February to the Tar Heels in Charlottesville. special emphasis on this game, al­ Mullin scored 2'i points to lead Virginia still remembers last season's though berths in the NCAA regional seventh-ranked St. John's over I 'ith­ Call 237:-4191 for registration information raked -Georgetown .,'i-69 in a Big -47-45 loss to Carolina in the finals of competition could be determined IUSB Continuing Education the ACC tournament. by the game. East Conference game last night. While 7-foot-"-1 Ralph Sampson has "We've got too many tough games :vlullin scored 16 of his points in the second half as the Red men, who also beat the Hoyas a month ago at Madison Square Garden huilt an eight-point lead and held oft" a Hoya rally in the last minute. Center Patrick Ewing scored 21 points and pulled down I 3 Before We Put You In Charge Of The World's rebounds for the Hoyas. But Ewing spent much of the game on the bench with foul trouble and fouled Most Sophisticated Nuclear Equipment, out with a minute left.David Win gate added 16 points for the Hoy as. We Put You Through The World's David Russell scored 16 points. 1 I Most Sophisticated Nuclear Training. in the tlrst half, for the Redmen. - • • . Swim

continued from page 16 It takes more than 16 that most of the men Katy Berg and Mimi McKelly will be the team co-captains at the state months of intensive who operate the tournament this weekend. training to become a reactors in private "Team spirit and togetherness is fully qualified officer in industry started in the important to this team. There is a competative feeling, but it's friendly, the Nuclear Navy. You Nuclear Navy.) not cut-throat,"observed Michielut- begin with four months It takes more time ti. of leadership training. and more effort to "Scott is set on having everyone Then as a Navy officer become an officer in the going,". If I don't qualify, I'll have an empty feeling. I'll wish the team you get a full year of Nuclear Navy. But the good luck and wish that I could go graduate-level training rewards are greater, too. along." remarkedjuckniess. unavailable anywhere else at any price. The rew&frds can begin as early as "Team spirit has really grown. Everyone here is for everyone else," Navy training is based on more than your junior year in college. Qualify, and said Callahan. "We really want - 1900 reactor-years of experience. Right the Navy will pay you approximately everyone to go to the Nationals." now the Navy operates over half the $1000/month while you finish school. nuclear reactors in America. And the After four years, with regular Navy's nuclear equipment is the most promotions and salary increases, you can GUADALAJARA sophisticated in the world. That's why be earning as much as $40,500. That's on your Navy training is and must be the top of a benefits package that includes SUMMER most sophisticated in the world. medical and dental care, and 30 days' SCHOOL As an officer in the Nuclear Navy, vacation earned every year. More you have decision-making authority responsibility, more money, more future. University of Amona offers immediately. You get important manage­ So, if you're majoring in math, more than 40 courses: anthro­ ment responsibility engineering or the pology, art, bilingual educa­ tion, folk music and folk fast. Because in the r ;:;;V~~;;U-;;;T;- --- -;;; 1 physical sciences, and INFORMATION CENTER I dance, history, political sci­ Navy, as your knowl­ I P.O. Box 5000. Clifton, NJ 07015 you want to know more ence, sociology, Span1sh lan­ edge grows, so does I D Please send me more information about I about a future in guage and literature and inten­ becoming an officer in the Nuclear Navy. t0N) your responsibility. nuclear power, fill in sive Spanish. Six-week ses­ I Name __v=~--

Phone Number I (Area Code) Best Time to Call I Write This is for general recruitment information. You do not have to I I furfiish any of the information requested. Of course. the more we know. the more we can help to determine the kinds of Navy posi- J Guadalajara tions for which you qualify. L ------Summer School Robert L. Nugent 205 Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast. University of Arizona Tucson 85721 (602) 626-4729 Ihee~Kerver~======~~4()l~~======T=h=u=r=sd=a=y=,F=e=b=r=u=ary==1=0=,=1=9=8=3===p=a=g=e=1==5 Berke Breathed Campus

•12 -4 p.m. - Government Career Day, Lafortune Ball Room, Sponsored by Placement Bureau, •12: 15 p.m. - Fihn, "Roses in December," Center for Social Concerns, Free • 3:30 p.m. - Lecture, "The Unity of Mankind - the Disunity of Anthropology," Prof. Robin Fox, Library Auditorium •4 p.m. - Seminar, "Multiplet States of Small Molecules," Dr. John L Hardwick, Conference Theatre Radiation Lab •4 p.m. - Seminar, "Ethnic Parish As Com­ Simon Jeb Cashin promise: Spheres of Authority in a Polish American NOTI{ING &IT Nfii(ED 6//?fS Parish," Prof. Mary Cygan, Library Lounge /ILl DI!Y LOI(G, SOftM/6 (/P •4:30 p.m. - Tours of the Snite Museum, For !!NO R!!V:l"IAIG J.bWt1/ Dillon, Walsh, and Badin Halls •6: 1 5 p.m. - Fihn, "Valley Curtain,' Annenberg Auditorium /!~\ •6:30 and 9:15 p.m. - Fihn, "Richard lll," Ar­ -~ chitecture Auditorium, Sponsored by Shakeseare Club and English Department •6:30 p.m. -An Evening of Dances and Music, Folk Dances from Pakistan, LaFortune Ballroom •7 p.m. - Fihn, "Running Fence," Annenberg Auditorium, Free •7, 9:15 and 11:)0 p.m. - Fihn, "Brubaker," Engineering Auditorium, Sponsored by Women's GolfTeam S1 • 7 p.m. - Black Cultural Arts Festival," Portrait Fate of an Artist," John Amos, Library Auditorium Photius •7:30 p.m. - Women and Fihn Series, "Girl Friends," Carroll Hall. Sponsored by SAPB, S I T.V. Tonight 8p.m. 16 Fame 22 Magnum PI 28 Greatest American Hero 34 All Creatures Great and Small 9p.m. 16 Gimme A Break 22 Simon and Simon 28 The Winds of War - 34 Mystery 10p.m. 16 Hill Street Blues 22 Knots Landing 34 Sneak Previews llp.m. 16 NewsCenter 16 ACROSS 25 Fire: pref. 44 Harte 11 -Domini 22 22 Eyewitness News 1 Attila 26 By means of 45 Clear 12 Navy man 28 Newswatch 28 4 Sharp 27 Perfume 47 Household 14 Hinge 34 Indiana Lawmakers The Daily Crossword flavors with odors lady 19 Cut 11:30p.m. 16 Tonight Show 9 Dull 31 Squealed 48 "-star· 21 "-was 22 Quincy and McCloud cross'd saying" 13 Destroyed 32 Algonquian 28 ABC Ne::ws Nightline 15 Sub 33 Irons of lovers" 24 Edged, like 16 River in the screen 51 Impure soda stationery Italy 34 Ms. Claire 54 City in 25 City in 17 Onetime 35 Sounded Mass. Michigan The Far Side pitcher, • gently 56 Unsophisti­ 26 Skillet Schoolboy- 37 Tolstoi cated 28 Welling· 18 Mardi Gras title word 57 Biblical ton's land site 38 "Barney weed 29 Shrewd j 20 Word on Miller" 58 Down 30 Wild cat some pack- . star 59 City in 31 Cash box ages 40 Fate Sicily 32 Go astray 22 Go-between 41 Pound of 60 "The- the 33 -set 23 Bad or mad poetry Limit" 35 Right of follower 42 Burdened 61 Entrap holding 24 Campus 43 Two-year 62 "Le Coq -" 36 Timber officials old sheep 39 French DOWN composer Wednesday's Solution 1 Dwellon 41 Prized fur 2 Wife in 43 Noonday r"M 1 's S. S H E mB A L Rom a meal I~0 L I 0 • P E N C E K 0 L A 3 Six states 44 Saloon B I L L T I L 0 E N A B 0 U 4 African 46 Ciphers T C E C A B B E 0 II Y E .I s• capital 47 Sierra- 0 B OY- 1-GM E N~N 5 Not up 48 Pismires 'T 0 R R I o• c E R E B R A L A V 0 I 0 .R OIV E 0 .I R A 6 Forthwith 49 Pike's- B 0 Y o• L A VIE o• E G G S 7 Warden, in 50 Distorted A L E. M A T ~R· S E G U E England 51 Fox or c 0 M P U T E•• P U R S E R 8 Groove Rabbit I.• E AS E L A E R y • 9 Authorof 52 Floor I 'S E R V E R• A C N E.E ••T H "Sister covering, :E R S E•A R T H U R A S H E Carrie" for short 0 T .p A I R AM s • L A E R 10 Cartoonist 53 In the dis· © 1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. U N 2110/83 T A N • F U R Y E Gardner tance All Rights Reserved •• •r Roger, Roger shoves 2110/83 et al. 55 Harem room tempers rise.

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~ Go skiing for the nigh' Clly G.;L - ~- knior Bar I ~ with the Student Union! .·~· ~::~: .. :::. .~ i G~ lllarm up fnr tQt llleektnll witQ nur I I ~ ~·FI>Ol I ~ I I • '-- 313 ,;: " Where?. Swiss Valley Ski Resort in Michigan ,Lans,ng_,.._ ····( I ~ When? This Friday, Feb 11 ,... r:·""'·, .... _ I :§c4napp's :§v.erial!! I ~ ~:=t~i:~~ ~~;~~~~~:~::l~t, rentals, and transport~~:n I open 9:30-2:00 ... Tickets a_r_e on sale at the record store, 1st floor, LaFo_ rtune ' l ~~~~ oeti~~~:2::li:son~-~ . 1111'- ~J ~...... ______.....I ~ ~orts Thursday, February 10, 1983 -page 16 Fordham tonight Irish take on an old rival By RICH O'CONNOR year and we also played poorly in The only Ram scorer averaging in Sports Writer our game at the Meadowlands last double figures is 6-2 guard David ... season, so we'd like to change both Maxwell. A steady senior. Maxwell is EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. - Mec­ those things around this time. averaging 14.8 points a game while ca. Notre Dame coach Digger Phelps "Tommy Penders has done a great also leading the team in rebounding. has long referred to the New York job of putting them back on the bas­ Maxwell will be joined at the metropolitan area as a "Mecca" for ketball map again. They got a taste of guard position by Jerry Hobbie. The top-flight college basketball. beating us last year. and I'm sure 6-2 junior brings a six-point career Tonight, hoping that a strong they'd like to do it again in front of scoring average into the game while showing against the Rams could their own fans." functioning as the Rams' playmaker. pave the way for an NCAA tourna­ Seven players who saw action in The forward position is a problem ment bid, Phelps brings his young last year's game return for fifth-year See RAMS, page 12 team into the nation's media capital coach Penders. to face an old rival. Fordham Univer­ sity. Twelve years ago, a young, SM C swimmers try streetsmart coach named Digger Phelps gained his first head coaching assignment at Fordham, a jesuit uni­ for improved times versity in the Bronx. He took his first team to the NCAA Eastern Regional, By MARY SIEGER make it - they've been working so finishing with a 26-3 record - Saint Marv's Spm·ts Editor hard," commented Trees. • mcluding a win against a team from South Bend. Ind. ''I'm feeling lots of pressure right Tommorow, the Saint Mary's But the following year, Notre now. I can make it if I set my mind to swim team will begin its journey to Dame lured the young coach away it and get motivated for this from the eastern school. Starting the state invitational swim tourna­ weekend. I think it would upset us from scratch, Phelps finished that ment at DePauw University. The all if we all couldn't go to the Nation­ Sophomore guard Dan Duff, shown here in action in last Satur­ year with a record of 6-20, including Belles hope to capture tlfth place in als as a team," remarkedjuckniess. day's game against South Carolina, will start tonight's Fordham the tournament and will be compt­ In addition to getting these three a 9-i-29 humiliation at the hands of game. Duff is part of Digger Phelps' new lineup. Rich O'Connor ing against teams form every divi­ swimmers qualified, Trees hopes to Indiana and a loss to his former previews the game at the left. (Phoro by Scorr Bower). employers. sion. including Notre Dame. get the rest of his team qualified in In every year since then, the Rams "We are not trying to get a great more events in the Nationals. At this from Fordham have been an op­ number of team points in this meet, time, Mimi McKelly, Noreen Cal­ have already qualified for the Na­ Belles. Although Michielutti has ponent of the Irish. Onlv twice in all but our swimmers will be swimming lahan and jenni Wilson have only tionals are merely auempting to im­ qualitled for the Nationals, she will these years has Fordham emerged against the clock." said Belles head qualified for relay events. prove their times and prepare be unable to accompany the Belles victorious. coach Scott Trees. "Our goal is not to have our girls themselves for the Nationals at this because her senior comprehensive One of those victories came last At this time, the Belles are quality only in relay events," says tournament. opens on the same weekend as the season in the ACC. A Fordham squad attempting to get three more of its Trees. "We want our swimmers to "I don't want our swimmers to go National Tournament. that was to finish at 18-11 and gain team members qualified for the Na­ quality in individual events and to out there and look at the person "It was a hard decision to make. an invitation to the NIT jumped out tional Association for Intercollegiate have more well-rounded swim­ next to her and say, 'I have to beat but art is my life and I have been to a 31-19 halftime lead en route to a Athletics (NAJA) National Tourna­ mers." this person,"' said Trees. ','I would working toward my senior com­ - 65-50win. ment. The Nationals, which will be McKelly, Callahan and Wilson prefer to see them say to themselves, prehensive for four years," ex­ Once again Phelps expects to held on March 4-6 in Arkadelphia, concurred that the pressure they are 'I have to beat my time."' plained Michielutti. have his hands full with the Rams, Ark., will be the keynote of the feeling at this time is the pressure "I want to see our times improve Throughout the season, the Belles who now stand at 12-9 this year and Belles season. that is being generated form within now. Faster times mean better pos­ have rotated their co-captains at are beginning to play better basket­ Of the five team members who themselves. They agreed that neit­ tions at the Nationals and will im­ every meet. This shift in respon­ ball. have not yet qualified for the Nation­ her the team nor any other outside prove our chances of doing well," sibilty has helped some of the "Fordham started slow. but als, senior Katy Berg and freshmen factor was pressuring them. added Trees. younger team members in the meets they've really turned thngs around Kathleen Juckniess and Barb Trees as well as the team mem­ For senior art major Angie Mic­ and has unified the team. Seniors the last few weeks." says Phelps. Blanchette are the closest to hitteing bers regard this tournament as a hielutti, the state tournament will be see SWIM, page 14 "They beat us at home badly last their qualifYing times. "I hope they "fun" meet. The swimmers who her final competative swim with the For Mary D., the best is yet to come Or: What's a tough little brat from New Jersey doing at a nice school like ND?

By CHRIS NEEDLES she can teach basketball and she can Dame) of starting out in relative .\ports Editor . coach basketball. She's instilled her obscurity. You start out with all eyes evep temperament and discipline in on you." Mary DiStanislao sits, legs crossed, her players, and they execute on The words come slowly, from a addressing a small but attentive both ends of the floor. woman who is far from shy and crowd at Alumni Hall. She talks "We interviewed the coaches reserved - heck, she's Italian - but about her women's basketball team, from Penn, Rutgers, Northwestern somehow finds it uncomfortable to of which she is in her third year of - schools that are similar academi­ talk about herself to her visitor. building. cally to Notre Dame. Judging by her With two-time defending national With an accent that after all these success at Northwestern and her in­ champion Louisiana Tech visiting years is still vintage New jersey, she terest in the program, there was tomorrow night, Mary D. and her tells stories and cracks jokes - little doubt that she was the person team are the centers of attention on sounding very much like joan we would hire. campus for the first time. For her Rivers. Cynical. Hardened. Someone "What she has done," Phelps con­ players, it will be a new experience; who has seen the bad times and the tinues, "is, one, to bring credibility but DiStanislao has been through it good, and keeps it all in proper to the program. Two, she has all before. perspective. recruited the right student-athletes, After a year as an assistant to Cathy Interestingly enough, two of the the ones that belong at Notre Dame. Rush at powerful Immaculata Col­ listeners in the audience - fresh­ And third, they're getting better and lege in suburban Philadelphia, DiS­ men Lynn Ebben and Denise Basford more competitive on the Division I tanislao was appointed head coach - are players on DiStanislao's team. level. It's only a matter of time until at Northwestern - a school whose Don't they get tired of seeing their they become a Top 20 team." women's sports programs were coach, and hearing her yell at them, even worse than its men's. every day? Isn't that the way it's • "One day Cathy Rush got a call supposed to be? from the AD at Northwestern saying "No way," says Ebben. "We'n: all "Hmmm, streettlghter ...yeah, they'd created a full-time coaching in this together, and I just enjoy he may have a point there," says DiS­ position," recalls DiStanislao. "And hearing her talk - about anything. tanislao, lounging on a sofa in her they wondered if she'd be in­ She's a great lady." ACC office. "I think I'm a very com­ terested. She said no, but put her petitive person. I like to protect my hand over the phone and sa•d to me, • 'Would you be interested in a job at Women's basketball coach Mary DiStanislao (foreground) looks turf: I like to enlarge my turf. Northwestern?' And I said some­ ahead to rhe future when her team will be the best in the narion. "She's a streettlghter," says Digger "You've gotta work hard. This is Phelps who, as Notre Dame's coor­ thing like, 'Where's that. Indiana?' or Tomorrow, her squad faces rhe ream that is currently the best - an interesting situation to be in, be­ ... dinator of varsity basketball, hired cause in reality you're building a 'Is that where the Cleavers' live?' Louisiana Tech. Chris Needles profiles DiStanislao to the righT. DiStanislao. "Nobody's going to program from the ground up. You See MARY D, page 9 More details on her team and same are in the centerfold. (Phoro by walk on her. She kno"' . basketball, don't have the luxury (at Notre Sco/1 Bower).