Irish Extra - page 9

vor X"1.1II,:'IJO. 31 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1983 Cardini1Ll Cooke dies of '~ancer at 62 Associated Press handled daily administration after Cooke became critically ill in NEW YORK - Cardinal Terence August. Cooke, the archbishop of New York The appointment of Cooke's suc­ and chief chaplain for 2 million Cat· cessor as archbishop of New York holies in the armed forces, died of was at least two months away, cancer Thursday after wee][S of according to the Rev. Peter Finn, suffering in which he declared life is archdiocesian spokesman. "no less beautiful when it is accom­ He described the selection panied by illness." process as "consultative," in which Tributes poured in fron: the various church officials make world's top political and religious recommendations and the pope leaders, ranging from fundamen· makes the choice. talist Protestants to liberal Catholic The pope announced Cooke's bishops, from President Reagan to death to bishops gathered for a Pope John Paul II. world synod, then led them in Cooke, who was 62, died :n his prayer, the Vatican said. home behind St. Patrick's Catbedral Archbishop John R. Roach of St. at 4:45 a.m. after weeks of pain from Paul-Minneapolis, president of the "acute leukemia complicati::lg a National Conference of Bishops and chronic lymphoma condition," a key supporter of the bishops' pas­ according to the archdiocese. toral letter on nuclear war, called The Observer/Carol La11.1gier Cooke became the seventh arch­ Cooke "a warm pastor, a man of Art Show bishop of New York and military quiet and deep holiness." publication exhibition. The Carpenter Paper Co. vicar in 1968, succeeding his men­ "As military ordinary, his devo­ Professors Len Mysliwiec and George Tisten look on sponsored the exhibition yesterday in the new art build· tor, Cardinal Francis Spellman. A tion as a pastor to the military was .a as they examine works of art at a graphic work in ing. year later, Cooke was elevated to significant contribution to the cardinal by Pope Paul VI, becoming country and to the church," Roach at that time the youngest cardhal in said. Revised party rules resolution the world. In life, said President Rtagan, Bishop Walter Sullivan, of Rich­ Cooke "inspired us - with hi:; per· mond, Va., a member of the Catholic sonal holiness, his dedication to the peace group Pax Christi, described passes rectors; t<, stop 'drifters' church, his devotion to his flock. Cooke as "a very kind and gentle By TRIPP BALTZ and MIKE year was reje<:ted by the rectors be­ amount of money sections put into But, in death as well, he had for us a person. He had a real power of per· KRISKO cause of a problem with the wor­ parties. special gift and a special inspiration. suasion through his wonderful News Staff ding, Hanner president Jack ~eiler The world has rarely seen a more demeanor." The major difference in the new didn't see any problem with profits moving display of the three ca:dinal The Rev. Jerry Falwell, leader of A revised Hall President's Council resolution is i1: only applies to men's being made on parties. "I don't think virtues than in the faith, hop•~ and the Moral Majority based in resolution concerning the charging dorms. The proposal no longer en­ there will ever he a problem with love with which Cardinal Cooke Lynchburg, Va., said, "The world has of women for admittance to men's courages women's dorms to' throw profits being made sta· regulations." Another possible nell, "The station will have an inde­ tion, to the FM band, and the applica­ problem centered upon Notre pendent transmitter of 300 watts. tion for a broadcasting license has Dame's inability to keep the station This will free it of the unreliable old already begun. operating during the summer. Sta· cable system. McDonnell estimates 13 rnembers elected "The administration made: the tions are often required to broadcast that the new transmitter plus addi· decision to endorse the move last year-round or are denied a license. tiona! costs of switching to FM will spring and is l 00 percent behhd it," McDonnell remarked that many run the university, "anywhere from to S~MC frosh council James McDonnell, director Gf stu­ school stations are allowed to close 25 to 30 thousand dollars." By MAURimN O'ROURKE The job of the freshman coun­ Station manager Brence does not dent activities, said. during the summer and raised the News Staff cil is to plan and sponsor fresh· The station, currently broadcast· possibility that Notre Dame would believe that the WSND format will man acttvtties like: dances, ing on 6400 AM, is applying tD the allow other proprietors to occupy change. Based upon the current sta· Thirteen candidates from a masses and volunteer services, Federal Communications Commis­ the airwaves over the summer. tion research he believes that the field of 21 were elected to the according to Kollman. From the sion for a license to broadca:;t on McDonnell echoed the view of WSND progressive rock format is Saint Mary's freshman council . freshman council, one member is 89.7FM. Brence when he said, "I foresee no what the students want but, "can't yesterday. elected chairman and sits on the McDonnell, who is coordinating problem in getting the application get from any local commercial sta­ The new council members are: Board of Goverance. The Board the license application process, approved." tions." Once students can get Maura Barille, Betsy Burke, of Goverance is the main student believes that the application will be It appears that the primary clearer reception on FM Brence Maureen Erny, Eileen Hartigan, government at Saint Mary's. submitted to the FCC within a motivation behind the move to FM believes they will find WSND a more Jeanne Heller, Angie Hundman, Hartigan, a newly elected month. McDonnell, univ•~rsity was the low quality of reception on viable alternative to the commercial Allison Krause, Jill Lynch, Susan member, plans to organize lawyers, consultants from W 'IDU, 64 AM. Currently WSND has no in· stations. O'Dell, Heather Rapp, Anne Rior­ dances and sleigh rides in and staff from WSND are workmg in dependent transmitter. Its signal is The AM 64 signal will be dan, Eunice Tornetta, Rita Trent. February "when things get dull." the meantime to complete the ap· taken into dorms by cables running abandoned but WSND FM and its Ann Marie Kollman, election She said she wants to "unify the plication procedure. According to through the tunnels under the uni­ fine arts format will remain on FM commissiom::r of the Board of freshman class in the Saint Mary's station manager Chris Brence versity. The signal cannot be picked 88.9. The existance ofthe two Notre Governance, said "it was a close tradition." WSND is currently conducting an up outside of a building. McDonnell Dame stations, both with WSND as election, but disappointingly on· FCC required survey to examine, said that another problem was that call letters, so close together on the ly 48 percent of the freshmen Council member Barille in· "What needs Notre Dame students the cables are, "old and brittle", dial will require a change in call let· class voted." eluded in her platform plans to feel WSND should fulfill." offering little or no reception in ters for the current WSND-AM. "The council meets one a hold a blood drive, an all· McDonnell pointed out thai two some halls. Brence said many possibilities were week. They pick their positions freshmen mass, and possibly a possible obstacles that might hinder There has been a plethora of under consideration but no al· after they have met a few times "daddy-daughter" weekend. She the approval of the application have troubles with the old cables. For ex· ternative has been decided upon and also a chairman is elected," says she will "work her hardest been removed. One concern was ample, it was once discovered that she continuc:d. and try to do her best." that the university already owned whenever the transmitter was on in see WSND, page 3 I The Observer Friday, October 7, 1983 - page 2 ID.Brie£ Next round in gun debate

Despite its avowed attempt to avoid ruling on Second Three Notre Dame debate teams will com- Amendment cases, the Supreme Court may have of­ Jeff Harrington p~t~ this w~~k~nd in a national d~bate tournament at the University fered its biggest boost yet to gun control enthusiasts. - Assistant News Editor of K~ntucky in L~xington. Th~ thr~~ Notr~ Dame teams are John in a move long overdue. Monb~rg and Paul Komyatt~;Jim Malackowski and KJ;isti Stathis; and In Monday's opening session, the Court let stand an Inside Friday Arnold Foley and Jan~ Kopp. Th~y will b~ among 100 t~ams par­ appellate court ruling that a local community can ban tidpating. Last w~ek at the University of Nonh~rn Iowa, Malack· the sale and ownership of handguns. The case involves a owski and Stathis w~r~ 4-4 in varsity division, and Monberg and Morton Grove, Ill., ordinance outlawing the sale and Kopp were 3·3 in junior varsity. Th~ t~ams, und~r th~ dir~ction of ownership of pistols and revolvers. Brother John Doran, hav~ gath~r~d 10.000 pi~ces of evid~nce and The Supreme Court action, or rather lack of action, sassins whose tasks are made easier with the ready pur· typed SOO pag~s of argum~nt on th~ issu~ oftoxic-waste disposal. - places the controversy in a new light. chase of a gun. Moreover, the increasing number of The Obser11er Historically, the Court has tried to avoid cases domestic quarrels resulting in shooting deaths attests to concerning th~ constitutional right to bear arms. In fact, the need to reexamine the availability of handguns. it has issued only two decisions interpreting the Second Now, for the first time, the Supreme Court has given Amendment. In 1886, the Court ruled that the amend­ the gun control movement the fuel it needs. Although Save the Lawns. Once again, that's th~ message from ment did not apply to states at all but was intended to the Court has done nothing to indicate it supports the Dean of Studt·nts James Roem~r. In a directiv~ this week, Ro~mer serve as a limit to federal legislation. In 1939, the Court philosophy of gun control, it has cleared the path for the said "'the grassy spots on th~ quad can b~ us~d for reading or relax­ upheld a federal law that prohibits transporting sawed­ growth of local ordinances banning handgun sales and ing. Athletic games must be taken to the adjac~nt playing areas. off shotguns in interstate commerce. ownership. Please do not usc the quads for short-cut walking. Stay on the Arguments on both sides Shifting the focus of gun sidewalks provided." Roemer said new sidewalks put in this summer of th~~ controversy have control legislation to the mak~ it "mor~ conveni~nt to stay on th~ sidewalks."- The Obsen'er been regurgitated enough community level might be that even the mildest of best for the gun control political observers know movement. Many of today's them by heart: more powerful movements Sales by the nation's major reraiters continu~d ~ Guns don't kill, people - e.g. nuclear freeze steady 1.:limb in September despit~ a heat wave early in the month do. proponents and right-to-life that temporarily wilted demand for fall and winter fashions, the If you outlaw guns, only groups - have developed retailer~ ~aid Thursday. Sales wen: up 27. S percent at Scars, Roebuck outlaws would have guns. from community grassroots and Co .. the nation's largest retailer, whik No.2 K-mart Corp. posted Easy access to guns en­ efforts. an H.H pertTnt gain. The third largest retailer, ].C. Penney Co. Inc., courages would-be assas· There is no reason to had a <;_I perct·nt increase compared with the same period a year sins, te1rorists, and believe gun control would ago. "Particularly in the apparel lines, sales were strong when tt·m· mobsters. be any different. In fact, peratures wt·re st·asonably cool," said K-mart Chairman Bernard M. Rather than rehash the considering the power of na· Fauber. "Once fall weather is here to stay, we expect to sec a return debate over the effective­ tiona! organizations such as to double-digit sales incre"":~es." Retail industry analysts said the ness of gun control legisla· the National Rifle Associa· gains were in line with expectations and continued a pattern of tion, I merely offer a few tion, it is doubtful any Con­ st~ady growth. "There is a strong pace of spending out there," said facts. 1980 figures for gressional action limiting Stanley lv~rson, retail analyst for Duff & Phelps Inc. in Chicago. countries with gun control gun sales could ever mall.e it Monroe Greenstein, who analyzes the industry for the New York· laws show a direct correla- off the floor. On a federal based securities firm of Bear, Stearns & Co., said, the sales gains tion between a decrease in the murder rate and an ef· level, gun control legislation has always been doomed "'could be characterized as good" and that he anticipates more of the fective gun control law. That year, Japan reported 77 for failure. same for the rest of the year. The pattern of year-to-year increases persons were killed by handguns; Australia, 4; Sweden, Gun control proponents might face determined op­ should continue, said Jeffrey Edelman, retail analyst for Dean Witter­ 18; Israel, 23; Canada, 8; and Great Britain, 8. The 1980 position in the local front also, but at least here they Reynolds Inc. "Consumers seem to be responding to the fall mer· figure for the United States, however, is 11,522. have a fighting chance - as the Morton Grove or­ chandis, outwaiting until it is offered at substantially reduced Such a radical difference seems to indicate that, while dinance illustrates. prices," he said. - AP gun control laws may not be flawless, · r:nany murders In the long run, the goal of decreasing the rate of can be prevented if no guns are available. The tougher it shooting homicides may never be reached without is to kill someone, the more people will think twice passage of a federal handgun ban. But, for the moment, before trying it. gun control advocates are sitting pretty for the first time Willie Mak was sentenced to death yesterday in Though I promise not to dwell on the oft mentioned ever. Seattle by the jury that had convicted him of aggravated first-degree "isolation" of Notre Dame students, the fact remains And pro-handgun groups may start sweating when murder in the massacre of 13 people in a Chinatown gambling club. that the typical student has little reason to think about they realize how tough it is to mobilize support against Tht· King County Superior Court jury deliberaed less than two hours mushrooming gun sales until it hits home - until a individual communities. bdort· passing sentence on the 22-year-old immigrant. friend or relative is senselessly killed ... until another Mak was convicted Wednesday in the Feb. 19 killings, Washington's national leader falls prey to an assassin's bullets. worst mass murder. Aggravated first-degree murd~r is the only The insanity of handgun proliferation in the U.S. The Observer is always looking for new talent. If crime in Washington punishable by death. Execution in the state is reaches all levels: from children "playing" with guns in you are interested in newspaper wntrng or by kthal injection or hanging. llnder state law, the jury was required the house, fatally wound their siblings, to would-be as· newspaper production, stop up at The Observer to st·ntt·nce Mak to death or to lift: in prison without parole. Ddensc office on the 3rd floor of the LaFortune Student lawyers pleaded f(>r leniency because of Mak's age and because a Center. co-ddendant. Benjamin Ng, 20, earlier escaped the death penalty aftn his conviction on identical charges Aug. 24. A third man, Tony Ng, 26, no relation, also has been charged but is at large.:. - AP The_Ohs.erYer

A high-ranking official in the.: u.s. Environmental Prott'Ction Agency said Thursday the Reagan administration is Composition Editor ...... Mary Healy lt·aning toward an "evolutionary and flexible" plan to fight acid rain. Composition Assistant...... Susan Fitzhugh (;rt·en, who as the agency's associate administrator for in· Typesetters ...... Michelle & Bill ternational activities is in charge of developing an acid rain program, News Editor...... ]eff Harrington told representatives of eight Great Lakes states - including Indiana Copy Editor...... Dan McCullough ~ports Copy Editor ...... Mike Sullivan - that proposals to curb the airborne pollution have caused divi­ Features Copy Editor ...... Peter Ciotta sions within the.: administration. Green said a Cabinet council has not Editorials Lavilshed Monday through Fnday live entertainment too. All for and on home football Saturdays. lno additional charge) except dunng exam and vacation $9.95 for adults, $4.95 for penods The ObMrver 1s published children under 12. Weather by the students of Notre Dame and For reservations, please call . 234-2000 Samt Mary"s College. Subscnptions may be purchased for $25 per year ($15 per semester) by writing The Considerable cloudiness and mild today. A 20 ObMrvotr. P 0 Box 0. Notre ~SOuTH BEND _\\orriott Dame. lnd1ana 46556 percent chance of showers. High around 70. Mostly cloudy tonight 1'he C)bMrver is a member of HOTEL with a 30 percent chance of showers. Low mid 50s. Decreasing Tht J'uocl8ted PreA. All cloudiness tomorrow. High mid 60s. - AP reproduction nghts are reserved. 12:J N. St, Joseph Street, South Bend, Indiana 46601 ------,

The Observer Friday, October 7,'"'1983 - page 3 Better safe than sorry, ND Fir4~ Chief explains

By GRETCHEN PICHLER Dame student radio station has been Staff Reporter known to set off the sensitive alarms. Although no alarms have been A spider, a splash of water, even a sounded so far this year from fifteen dust particle may be all it takes to set of the twenty-four dorms, twenty­ off one of the many smoke detectors two alarms have been reported by located in dorms and other campus the remaining nine dorms, the bulk buildings. The detectors' high sen­ of which coming from Sorin ( 6 ), Ho­ sitivity is one reason that 22 false ly Cross ( 5 ), Morrissey ( 3 ), and Fis­ alarms have been sounded so far this her ( 3). "Whatever small annoyance year. (is caused by the false alarms), we're willing to say it's well worth it," said Director of Fire Safety Jack Bland Bland. stressed that the alarms were not malfunctions, but rather were proof There has been only one actual of their effectiveness in detecting a fire, caused by a tension lamp that possible fire. "Technically speaking, fell on a couch in Holy Cross Hall. they are as good as we can get," he There is usually very little said. problem with pranksters setting off the alarms. "I think the students are "We have increased the fire detec­ as annoyed with them as much as tion enormously in the last five anyone else," said Bland. years," said Bland. As the number of smoke detectors increases, so does The fire department employs the probability of somet:1ing going seven full-time firefighters, two per shift, as well as four student wrong, and "out of that (comes) the The Observer/Carol Laugler degree of additional protection ... firefightes. The student firefighters Grotto facelift (and) increased life-saving probabil­ live in the fire station, and work for ity for students," said Eland. "We the department as part of the stu­ Marybeth Curtis pauses for a moment of reflection at candle racks were cleared out from the alcove area yes­ feel that we would much rather dent job program. The workers at the Grotto, which is having a new floor installed. Votive terday as workmen replaced the decayitzgfloor. respond to an alarm caust:d by a piz­ the power plant also volunteer their za oven, reset the box and come time, during the day, if additional back, than have a fire that goes un­ help is needed. The Notre Dame Fire detected," he said. Department protects Notre Dame, New Ministry t:lirector to promote Saint Mary's, and Holy Cross Junior In the Pasquerillas, even the Notre College.

~..-...._____ ...... 1 .- - social reform through experience NCThE IJ'f'tl( \/U~f' ·'twl('f'\ Education, and Retreats Inter- na­ His new position at Notre Dame is fC{)!tvHIJNIIC!lllii{)N l ByJOSEPH MURPHY tional. Effective July 1, 1983, one of overall coordination. Retreats News Staff Gremillion became the new direc­ International, for example, has over ~~...__--.0 l JRE tor. He !mcceeds Monsignor John ). 750,000 catholics attending 400 The new director of the Univer­ Egan, the Institute's founder. · retreat centers in the United States October 7flfll?III()A\, lfiiiL~\ ~~~11:?111~~ sity's Institute for Pastoral and Social Grem:illion was born in 1919 and and Canada every year. Gremillion Dr. Strangelove: or Ho111r I Learned to Ministry says he sees the ministry as is a native of Louisiana. He grew up says the headquarters provides a Stop Worrying and Lov•• theo~e~l:bby stanley Kubrick. B/W, 93 min. a way of promoting social reform as in a farm environment in which North American network for the Some srxty international awards ~~on•1r this wildly comic well as his faith. there existed a great chasm between continuing education of these in­ no~htmare that enviSions the Pre5>den' of the U.S, ~1':9-\heh Premier of the U S.S.R. cooperating in a b1zarre effort to "I decided to combine my work blacks and whites, rich and poor. dividuals. The Center for Pastoral save the world from total disaster. Screen satire at its for the spiritual enrichment of the finest: outrageous, danng, inventive, scintillating, Referring to the conditions of the Litugy helps guide the 18,900 cath­ human being as well as helping to poor blacks who worked the fields, olic parishes in North America. Annenberg Aud.,SniteMuseum /idmissiori promote human welfare in society," he said, "Their whole plight was hor­ When asked how the programs, 2 00 said Monsignor Joseph Gremillion of iti rible. They suffered hunger, cold, especially those geared towards the ~-----lnr 1() ~ 11113 ltllr---· -'.., his new responsibilities. He said he and indignity. It was only when I en­ students, could help change society, began to realize "that there was a tereq ,tJJ~: ,setpin.ary that I discovered he responded, "No one university need for a social crusade in favor of how opposed to the principles of can of itself reform society, but social justice." Christ that whole system was." Notre Dame certainly has a great op­ In 1976, the University of Notre In 196 7, Pope Paul VI asked him portunity in the area of economic Dame founded the Institute for Pas­ to serve as the chief executive of­ and social reform." He said that as toral and Social Ministry to combine ficer for the Pontifical Commission each student goes out into the com­ the University's resources for the of Justice and Peace and as co­ munity he will take the message of betterment of the Roman Catholic chairman of the Committee on social justice with him. Church and its members. Society, Development, and Peace. The Center for Social Concerns is Today, the Institute coordinates From 1974 to 1978, he was a the primary means of preparing the the activities of a wide variety of faculty fellow at Notre Dame. He is students for the cultural shock they programs such as the Center for So­ also an author with a long list of will encounter in the outside world. cial Concerns, the Church Leaders published works concerned mainly "The Center offers the students an Program, the Center for Pastoral with the Church's role in the areas of opportunity to put their big toe into Liturgy, the Institute for Clergy peace and justice and social reform. the water before they plunge into the cold environment of inequity, £)"1vc•·u.. ------·---~------oppression, and frustration that 838 (?c,·t~j' ~e many of our brothers and sisters in Cosimo Hair J[)esign the Lord undergo." Further, the Cen­ vc.:.;et~'·\~,..., ~ »-1c~t ter allows "each student to work out 18461 St. Rd. 2:3 his own degree of committment." ..... 'l>\s4cs ••• His work here involves not only 277-1857 the students, faculty, and alumni of leb~,...,ese-st;le 5/'·cs Notre Dame, but also catholics Men: Regularly $14.95, Spec:i~tl Price $to• throughout the United States and el'57tful r~sh·\cs Women: Regularly $20, Special Price $15 • Canada. 't~ shJfc~ s~,_..,-z,,_.y,c4cs • with coupon r II 288-)639 for Notre Dame students only .WSND ------• • continued from page 1 Pittsbur11h Club yet. Bus Sign-Ups Exactly when Notre Dame's new FM station will hit the airwaves is un­ certain. After the application review and approval Notre Dame must pur­ chase the equipment and train the staff to operate it. There is a possibility that the new Notre Dame station will be housed in LaFortune Student Center. McDonnell says it is currently, "under consideration to place the radio stations on the third floor op­ posite The Observer offices." This "' 101 il~ Mon., Oct. 10 at 7 PM Let the sun plan, however, would only be imple­ shine in! LaFortune Little Theatre mented after a renovation of LaFortune. Therefore, there is no im­ Questions? ...Call Bill 7873 mediate plan to move the radio sta­ Student Union tions from their home in ··a.···p·~:~:~:~:~:~:·:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~~:·~:~:~:~:~;~;~:~;~.~·~:~-~;~;~-~-~'~·~·~~~~~~~--~~~~~·'~·.·.·.·.--.·.·.· .. ·.·.·.·.·.·.---·.·.·.·.·.·-·.·.~~------~ O'Shaughnessy tower. ------~-

The Observer Friday, October 7, 1983 - page 4 Covert Sandinista rebel planes tied to CIA, says intelligence source

Associated Press they not he identified. After the airport attack, the San­ Onc: said that only the plane that dinistas released documents they W ASHINds with at lc:ast one of and that other planes used by Pas­ 404. The documents included one the planes used in bombing raids lora's forces were provided by the pilot's Florida driver's license, his inside Nicaragua laM month, intd­ rightist Salvadora government with­ U.S. Social Security card and ligence sources say. out U.S. involvc:ment. American credit cards. Ont.• source said it was a CIA­ However, another source, who The papers showed that the pilot, supplied plane, piloted by two has access to the ledger listing CIA Agustin Roman, a onetime top San­ Nicaraguan rebds, that crashed at aid to Pastora, said the CIA supplied dinista air force official, had made the base of the control tower at him three two-engine Cessnas and recent flights to Costa Rica, El Sal­ Managua's international airport two one-engine Cessnas. He added vador, Venezuela, Miami, Houston during a Sept. H bombing raid. An­ that the agency also provides and New York. other source said the CIA has Pao;ora's rehds with "the normal Federal Aviation Administration providt:d five light planes to the complement of arms" that go to the records say a Cessna with the serial Costa Rican-based forces of former Honduran-hased forces. number matching the one on the Sandinista hero Eden Pastora, who The source said the CIA bought documents was registered to Inves­ claimed responsihility for the air­ the planes with . money from the tair Leasing Corp. of McLean, Va., on port raid. agency's secret "contingency fund," Nov. 26, 1982, by Mark L. Peterson, Although CIA "covert" support not from the S19 million allocated Investair's director of marketing. for Honduran-hased, Nicaraguan for the Nicaraguan covert action in FAA rec<>rds show it was "de­ counter-revolutionaries has heen 19Hj budget. The CIA exceeded registered" June 7 when it was ap­ known for months, Pastora's source that budgeted amount in March - parently sold\ to a Panamanian of arms and money has remained ahout halfway through the federal company. shrouded in secrecy. Pastora, who hudget year - and rdit:d on thc: The New York Times reported in hrokt· with the Sandinista govern­ contingt·ncy fund to pay for the Thursday's editions that Investair's ment I H months ago, has repeatedly operation after that point, sources manager, Edgar L. Mitchell, was a rdust·d to say where he gets his sup­ have said. former top official of Intermountain port. The source said that planes Aviation Inc., a now defunct com­ CIA spokt·sman Dale Peterson technically were "sold" to Pastora's pany that was owned by the CIA. said Thursday "it is not our policy to forces because CIA officials "don't The Times said Pt~terson was an of­ Austrian camera buff comment on sU<:h allegations." want their fingerprints too obvious." ficer of Air America Inc., another Thrt·t· ll.S. intelligence sollfes CIA proprietary, in 1977 and 1978. Miss in the current Pageant, Eviline who confirmed the existence of li.S. That account was confirmed in­ Reached by phone at Investair Rille, takes time out for a few souvenir snapshots yesterday during aid to Pastora spoke on condition dc:pendently by a third source, who offices in McLean on Thursday, the pageant entrants' visit to the International Sports Fair fashion added: "Pastora's up to his neck in Peterson refused comment and said show in Tokyo. The pageant finale will be held Oct. 11 in Osaka, Reagan to this." Mitchell was out of town. japan. r··------· 'welcome' fla~/4 Restaurant Opportunities 143 Dixieway South Are Awaiting You At The New HAIRUMM Notre Dame, IN. Watt vote (21 9) 234-5350 Associated Press Nexus NANCY'S WINDY CITY Products WASIIIN

For his part. Watt was dc:scrihed hy aide~ as t·njoying his California vacation in tht· rolling hills abovt· Santa Barbara.

Watt and hb wifc: lll"w to Califor­ nia on Wednt·sday to spt·ml a fc:w days as guests of Thomas). Barrack. a wc:althy California husinc:ssman who owns a rant·h dght miks down the road from Rc:agan's sprc:ad. Bar­ rack snved for a brief timc: last year as deputy undt·rsecretary at the lntc:­ rior l>t-partmc:nt.

Watt rt:maint·d sc:dudc:d hc:hind the ranch's lockc:d gate Wednesday and Interior Ikpartmt·nt officials were not ott<:ring any details on his activitit·s. The Observer Friday, October 7, 1983- page 5 Woman's neglig~ence suit unique, says U Diversity ;general counsel By MARK POTIER her recuperation. He declined to describe the News Staff Mrs. Bearman is claiming Notre amount of security at a game and "If someone is injured on campus Dame security was negligent. An In­ their assignments, explaining that there is always the possibility that diana Court of Appeals recently public discussion of security might they will bring a case against the Uni­ ruled that the case must be brought help "people who might try to get versity." according to Philip before a jury, which will decide away with criminal acts." Facenda, the general counsel to the whether the precautions taken by "In our protection measures we University. the Universiity to protect fans were try to be better than the absolute He noted, however, that he does adequate. minimum," Facenda said, noting that not know of any cases ever being "All the measures that an institu­ there are two reasons for the protec­ filed against the University by a per­ tion takes, or neglects to take, must tion. First, if the llniversity were to son who has been assaulted or be weighed in the total pattern. take only the absolute minimum raped. In fact. he knows of no such From these an attitude can be seen," security measures and someone was cases anywhere. said Facenda. This attitude is what assaulted on campus, the University However, such a case is currently the jury looks for in a negligence would be very likely be held being filed against the University. case. negligent. Christenna Bearman sued the Uni­ The University has tried to an­ To explain the second reason, versity for S201,037 because of an ticipate security risks and respond Facenda used the following ex­ incident that occured in the stadium to them, Facenda said. ample; "We can't ask our lawyers to parking lot after the 1979 Notre Glenn Te·rry, director of Notre be the best they can be and then turn Dame-South Carolina football game, Dame security, said the case did not around and not do our best to when a drunk allegedly knocked prompt an increase in security protect the students." This demand her to the ground. breaking her right specifically to handle potentially for excellence is the main reason leg. drunk spectators. The only recent that Facenda feels that the Univer­ In the same suit, her husband, change in security was prompted by sity must do its best to insure the stu­ James, also sought $50,000 in Notre Dame's scheduled night dent's safety. "To do otherwise A potential rape or as~•ault victim walks itl the dimly lit mall damages for the loss of his wife's games, wht:re darkness increased wouldn't be in keeping with the Uni­ area by LaFortune Student Center. The risks of walking alone at services and companionship during the need for security, Terry said. versity in general," he said. night are examined in tb~ campus security story at right. Theo prof takes abortion stand By KAREN THOMPSON * He said, "People need to examine federal fundings," Maguire said this News Staff the causes of abortion, and this in­ week. cludes taking into consideration "At the University of Notre Dame A professor of moral theology, both men and women." we don't enforce on idea: We let is acceJ~ting applications who was hired by the University When Maguire applied for the people make up their own minds over the summer, believes that position, he submitted part of a book about issues. for the main idea in a "abortion is acceptable in certain he had written, including a section Catholic university is many minds for 1~he positions of circumstances." dealing with abortion. The book, competing freely together." he But University officials say the Death By Cboice, had received an added. opinion of Dr. Daniel Maguire was imprimatur, meaning the book was *Copy Editor .and not an issue in the decision to hire judged to be free from doctrinal er­ him as the John A. O'Brien professor ror. ND senior of moral theology. In an artide that he wrote in The The theology department was Christian Century, Maguire said, "It * A~;sistant aware of Maguire's stand on abor­ is a theological fact of life that there helps stop tion when he was hired, but Father is no one normative Catholic posi­ I Edward Malloy, associate provost, tion on abortion. The truth is insuffi­ said this week that "Dr. Maguire was ciently known in American polity hold-up Re1~rs Editor. hired because he is one of the more because it is insufficiently ack­ I outstanding theologians in the ByJENNIFER BIGOTT nowledged by American Catholic voices.'f..Lt ~ \H•.l:::t,..'!·... .·(._,·· Applicatiions******************* are due Monday country. The issue of abortion was News Staff not raised until later." He also states that "prohibition is For information contact Paul McGinn Maguire, who is the visiting John wrong because it attempts to Senior Steve Carlile helped stop a at The Observer office. A. O'Brien professor for this school impose a priivate moral position on a man from robbing a cab driver early year, said he "is opposed to abortion, pluralistic society." Sunday morning in downtown South but the so-called Pro-Ufe movement "In a Catholic university of this Bend. approaches the issue in the wrong sort, academic freedom is vital if the Carlile, along with his friend way." university is to remain elegible for Mitch Nihart, a ROTC graduate from Indiana University, South Bend, spotted the suspect holding a cab driver by the neck and decided to follow the vehicle. The cab driver, Michael Hurd. of the Michiana Cab .. Company, turned onto MadL~on quailhr.d~~~~,.~~~~~.~i,!!,~.," dr.grr.es in Medicine and Veterinary Medicine. The V. .. Street, driving the wrong way on a School is locatr.d on the beautolul Canbbean Island of Oominic.l, an English-speaktng country with a stable government and lrir.ndly rel,tlions with Ihe U.S.A. All courses one-way street. are taught in English by outst.lnding lacullies from the U.S. Also financial Jtd At 318 West Madison, the suspect available. jumped out of the cab and hid in SCHOOL OF MEDICINE some bushes, according to Carlile. ·American Medical School Curriculum· 78.4% pass rate ECFMG by Ross grads. We The two men stopped their car have allilialions and working agreements in more than 40 hosptlals in the US where our students do their third and fourth years of clinical ~lerkships ·Accredited· Ltsted and cautiously approached the rob­ in Directory of Medical Schools. World Health Organization • Over 90% of our ber,who had concealed himself in Graduates are doing their residency in U.S. Hospitals. the foilage nearby. They were not SCHOOL OF VETERINARY MEDICINE sure if the man was armed or not; ·American Veterinary School Curriculum· Accredited and liSited in AVMA Directory. they themselves each had a knife on Portions of curriculum taught on campus in St. Kitts ancl in 111e US 3'12 years veterinary medictne program. Transfer applications accepted. AH applicants should their person. write to: Ross University, Clarence Buller. Director P.O. Box 266. Roseau. The cabbie then proceeded to call Dominica. W.l. or Caribbean Admissions. Inc., 16 West 32 St .. Dept. 1, New York. N.Y. 10001. the police on his car radio. at ap­ proximately 12:25 a.m. When the police arrived almost ten minutes later, the suspect had already been apprehended by Carlile and Nihart. Apparently, Nihart had lured the ISIS GALLERY ART OJl~ENING man out of the bushes by telling him to give himself up, because the Figurative Gouaches By police were already on their way. THE Felipe Hernandez, 25, of 617 FINAL Woody Allen THE FATHER ANDRE BOULER North Walnut was arrested by the BIG October 8- 21 South Bend Police and charged with OPTION ZELIG robbery, a felony. He is being held in 1:45-3:45-5:45 CHILL the St. Joseph County Jail on $1,500 2:00-4:30 7:45-9:45 1:30-3:30-5:30 bond. A pair of scissors and $3 5 were 7:00·9:30 7:30-9:30 ~ JPGJ recovered from Hernandez by the ~ police. The cab driver wa.~ shaken by the incident, but his only casualty ~s:-·~:.\""- was a pair of glasses which wei;: lost lrish special 2 for 1 with this ad 'tor in the confusion. Nihart suffered a THE ROCKY tiORROR PICTURE SHOW Opening Reception Saturday, Oct. 8, 7 - 9PM cut on his hand, inflicted by Hernan­ isis Gallery Art Department dez with the scissors. 3rd Floor Art Budding Carlile said he and his friend decided to get involved because they "wanted to help the guy out." The Observer Friday, October 7, 1983 page6 -·-- .. 'Lord of the Flies' author William Golding wins Nobel Lit Prize Associated Press it became a classic in colleges in the 1960s - when much of the genera­ STOCKHOLM, Sweden - British tion grappled with the agony of the writer William Golding, whose Vietnam war. novels, including "Lord of the Flies," In its citation, the Nobel Commit­ depict the savage side of human teet: said '"Lord of the Flies" wa~ a nature, won the 1983 Nobel Prize in bestseller in a way that is usually literature Thursday. granted only to adventure stories, The Swedish Nobel Committee light reading and children's books." cited Golding's novels for their Churchill was the last Briton to ' clarity, diversity, and "universality win the literature prize. Bul~arian­ of myth" that "illumnatc the human F \•. born writer Elias Canetti, who won condition in the world today." the prize in 1981, has lived for many .. London Times literary editor years in Britain hut writes in Ger­ Philip Howard called Golding one of man. the three great living British Previous British winners were novelists, along with Graham Rudyard Kipling, George Bernard Greene and Anthony Burgess. "He is Shaw, John Galsworthy, T.S. Eliot DESTROY a very powerful novelist and it's a and Bertrand Russell. good award," Howard said. "I don't Among Golding's later works are I always feel that about the Nobel "The Inheritors," "Pincher Martin," Prize, hut I do this time." "Free Fall," "The Spire," "The "I really am delighted," Golding Pyramid," and "The Scorpion God." ~· said by telephone from his cottage in His m

Still othns thought the proposal laws. It's still a private party with 1'he NAVY oper.Hcl'l the .ast advanc~td nuclear equipMent i.n the world, In­ was long ovt:rdue. Bnnic Pel­ Notre Dame and Saint Mary's stu­ c lurltn•J mnr,~ th<'ln fl'l pPrc••nt nf tJw nucl••.'lr ro~-i•'lnrl'l tn 1\m•~rlcll. Tho• lt-grino, prt·sident of Dillon Hall. dents admittt·d as guests only." nu•n .,ho mal.ntatn anr1 npero'lto! thno;P rC!o'lo.."tnr• have to he the bPst.

Abovc-Averaye Tech~ical Students eltgible for Navy Nuclear i'rovraiiiB can recelve1 Happy •Scholarships uf SIOOO per Come On ·N· 111onth for up to 24 months h1.!'fare !Jraduat 1on, plus " $)000 s1yniny bonus. Give It a Try •:start1ny salary of ntt<'llrly S2C,000 21st

•~apld advance•ent opportun1t1e"' The Fall Festival Variety Show •ImmediatE' management responsLbtlttte"' Birthday TO QUAL I I'Y YOU MUST 8E:

Sign-up AU. s. clttzt.>n between 19 ttnd l7, pur!>uJny d bacht>lor'!l ('I" master's deyree, and h ... va completed dt !Past one year lHlch ot calculus and calculus-bo~~sed phystcs w1th r1ny and math aru· pr~terred. You've come a long The show will be November 11. Prizes will be awarded for the CALL NAVY AT: l-sooL;~~t:;6:ms\'EE Navy Representative will be on Camnus best acts. OCT 19 & 29 (W & Th)- Plat:ement Office way, baby! . Nav-y .{)f.f~r:s Cet. Responsibility Fast. The Observer Friday, October 7, 1983- page 7

Unique institutions provide hungry students ND Foo~d Sales: with pizza and pop at reasonable prices

By ALAN PARKIN News Staff

.N. September turns to October and Some dorms, such as Zahm and Mann. "This year, however, many the dining halls begin to serve meals Flanner, run food sales more as a experienced workers moved off that we've never seen or tasted service to students, attempting only campus, so half Of my workers are before, we begin to count the days to pay the bills and stay out of debt. new." until fall break when we will be able "We are not out to make-money," The managers at Keenan had big­ to return home and eat some of said Mike Sitko, Zahm Hall food sales ger problems than just choosing mom's delicacies. manager. "We just try to make workers. "We started with $17.50 There are a few alternatives, of enough to pay the workers and the this year," explainedJeffTuskan, "so course. One can order a pizza from expenses." we had to start from scratch." off campus or go to a restaurant, but Mike Mann makes sure there's Last year Keenan food sales had this can become expensive and time enough money to pay the bills and difficulty with its bookkeeping and consuming. But for many on gives any surplus to the hall govern­ went ll3,000 into debt "This year campus, there is a unique service: ment. everyone was interested in starting hall food sales, which provide stu­ Other dorms keep a more careful up food sales again," said Tuskan. dents a fast and cheap supplimc:nt to eye on the profit margin. "We are set "To raise the necessary funds, we their diets. up as a profit-making organization," had a 'Take Stock in Za-Land' promo­ And food sales at Notre Dame are said Terry Hildner, the man in con­ tion. Anyo"J.e who donated $5 or indeed unique. Some universitic:s trol at Stanford food sales. Laura more to food sales received a chance operate food sales themselves, Hamilton andJeffTuskan, managers to win one of five pizzas on the night keeping the profits. Here, however, at Lyons Hall and Keenan Hall, we reopened. We raised about S800, the hall determines how profits will agreed. In these dorms, the manager which gave us a good start." be distributed. The administration (or managers) receive a percent of Students give different reasons for restricts sales to foodstuffs and r,on­ the profits and in some cases a set giving up their time to work at food alcoholic beverages. salary also. sales. Hall food sales provide the basic Some dorms run promotions in Mark Gorsak of Stanford said he variety of junk food, such as chips, order to increase profit. Lyons Hall works "for the money." Al Hunt, pop (not your father), candy, fruit delivers pizza to dorms on the South who works at Keenan, says he enjoys juices and everyone's favorite - piz­ Quad. Flanner caters to some serving his friends and using his time za campus events; Stanford has a t0 help the dorm. "It's a pretty easy Some unique items include Thursday night special featuring a job and I have fun doing it," he said. milkshakes, hot pretzels, large pizza with a choice of topping Jeff Masciopinto of Zahm also sandwiches, cheese, pop tarts, and and four 16-ounce pops for S5. likes serving his friends. "The whole nachos. The manager ofFlanner Hall The student workers are usually purpose offood sales is to provide a food sales, Mike Mann, said his dorm hired by the managers, and many good snack for the students. We is considering eggrolls. dorms hold organizational meetings have an efficient system which helps "I usually go to food sales twice a or post sign-up sheets at the begin­ us to put out a good product" week, especially after'the dining hall ning of the year in order to discover serves a meal which I do not care the next Julia Child. for," said Mark Maloney, a freshman Often the managers ask their old Photos by at Stanford. workers back "I tried to rehire all of "If it were not for food sales," john my workers from the year before so I Mangan added, "I think I would would only have two or three new Hamil Cupero starve." workers to train," said Flanner's- ,--______

, View~oint Friday, October 7, 1983 - page 8 The first annual Potato Head Awards

In the great tradition of this year's miniature sprinklers hidden in each by the illiterate. Aspiran Man: this have to be staffed with many new some poor girl's sweats are Emmy Awards, today's column clump of bushes (they only moisten proponent of self-abuse and con­ employees. Our "lowest room and shnmken things will change. features the Potato Head Awards the ground and people's ankles.) sumate artistic skill can only cause board of the top twenty" would Well, these are the winners of the (will they generate as much hate Nor is it for the paved area at the migraines ( sorry, sorry ). Spike's skyrocket. A much simpler solution awards in the all-purpose category. mail?) These awards arc given for west end which resembles a parking World: another wraith from the past. to long lines would be for students However, there are other nominees lot. Rather, the award is bestowed On a campus of 8,000 isn't there to attend meals at off-peak hours or, who were passed over for reasons of for starting construction of this somebody out there who can do bet­ yes, to eat in the North's infamous A politics and bribery (also because I Fran Norton Pedestrian's Nirvana in May, drag­ ter? Alas, thank God for the Far Side! Line. Despite its reputation, it is al­ ran out of space). The list of ging their heels all summer, and then The third award is bestowed upon ways nearly empty (when open). · nominees includes kegs, ponies, Shrinking reality completing it in October - just in that harbinger of the inane, the man The fourth award goes to the parietals, chemistry labs, Ferdinand time for the first snowfall. who suggested the creation of a new paragon of equality, St. Michael's Marcos, and Gil Thorp. The second award must go to the dining hall. This facility would be Laundry. All male students must James Watt receives the Crippled acts of cxtrcmt· stupidity in the face Obseroer's very own Cartoon Con­ located between the Pasquerilla s relinquish their apparel to this es­ Potato Head Award for obvious of reason and all·around Potato test. Never before have so many and the Memorial Library. While this tablishment (or waste their pre­ reasons. But he will probably mash it Hcadcdncss. been insulted so much by so few. building would solve the problem of paid $50 deposit). Not only is this in or French-fry it. Or stick it in his The recipient of the first award is Let's examine the components of sparse grass and weeds, it would on­ violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust mouth along with both of his feet. tht· pt·rson responsible for the con­ this five-pronged attack on humor. ly create more headaches. Act, but it is also sexist! Female stu­ I would have given a Special struction of the dazzling North Quad Mellish: just hellish. Darby's World: A new dining hall, besides being a dents may use the laundry on a Potato Head Award to Gerry Faust, Mall. The award is not for the new for the dogs. Schmen: truly enjoyed multi-million dollar project, would voluntary basis. Perhaps when but ... maybe next year. P. 0. Box·Q ter" would, in all respects, mean another dents hopefully will learn prior to entering sors that they won't regret. In the business Chautauqua on the other side of campus. Al­ the "real world." It should not be used as a school we call this access to information Bus schedules though it is true: that Chautauqua is a great device to manipulate the students to conform "Consumer Protection." success and attracts the support of a number to one man's reasoning. At my undergraduate university, the stu­ Dear Editor: of N.D. students, I don't feel having another Considering the last item I discussed, I dent committee on course and teacher In her article "Chaos in Mo­ such facility across campus would be practical realize I went off on a tangent. This was not evaluations published a review of their fin­ tion," Ms. Fosmoe displays a lack of the skills for the number of students here at N.D. the issue I set out to discuss, but perhaps, it is dings each year. The review included cogent necessary to write an unbiased article. Ms. If Dean Roemer bases his objection on the an issue that needs less manipulation and information on course content as well as some Fosmoc has not only written a totally one­ flimsy excuse of supervision, he must have a more of an open minded approach on the very candid comments about the perfor­ sided story, hut the: facts she uses to support narrow minded approach to problem solving. parts of the students, administration, and mance of the professors. On more than one her argumt·nts arc: false: and misleading: I say this because it is a trivial problem to rec­ Dean Roemer. occassion the published comments prompted I )University Village, although physically tify. If one even considers this problem for a Eric Schmeeman a few professors to improve the quality of separated from the main 'ampus, is a part of few minutes a solution, if not more, would their teaching. Notre Dame Student Housing. Its residents come to mind. The great benefit of a course and teacher havt· every right to safe and reliable When I contemplated the problem I came evaluation review is that it brings academia transportation to and from N.D. up with the idea of having a rector or rectress one step closer to reality - (and I write this 2 )Last week, I, my wife, and my friend alone supervise the parties. Although this is a hasty Evaluations with all due respect having been a student for usnl the shunk to and from N.D. a total of 45 solution it is one which seems practical. Dear Editor, 18 years). In the non-university working times. This docs not include numerous other Considering Dean Roemer's position I hope The recent approval by the student senate world, a world in which tenure is not granted residents who I have also seen using it. If Ms. he has enough insight to solve this minor to allocate funds for course and teacher to employees, people have to "earn their Fosmoe had bothered to interview the Village problem. evaluations is a step in the right direction. stripes every day" and are recognized and rt·sitknts, her numhcrs would have he1·n Another item I wish to comment on is the Here at Notre Dame a single course costs rewarded on the basis of their efforts and quite different. dagger Dean Roemer holds to the backs of about 5600 and, given that high price-tag, stu­ diligertce. 3 )Ms. Fosmoe states that the new route N.D. students. The dagger I'm referring to is dents have every right to information about Published information will strongly en­ shows a certain inflexibility. I beg to disagree. the 21 drinking age requirement. It seems that the courses and teachers that might affect courage the weakly performing professors to Some students' inability to accept the new whenever an issue of social life here at Notre their course selection decision. improve while recogn1zmg the profes­ schedule is a sign of inflexibility. 1 Dame is·Nised Ro~mer puts pressure on the Just as any one who is in the market for a sionalism of the others. Thus, for the student 4 )The condition of Douglas Road has no handle of the always evident dagger. stereo shops around comparing quality and senate to follow through on their resolution ht·aring upon the necessity of the shuttle Being able to "drink" in a social atmosphere price, the course and teacher evaluations will will be in the best interest of all of us. service to the Village. This is strictly a main· at college is just another lesson which the stu- allow students to choose classes and profes; Frank Hoffman tcnancc problem. S )The "enthusiasm" of the hus drivers is ir­ rdevcnt. They do not use the service, thc:y are paid to drivc: the buses. Until this year, N.D. studc:nts werc: forced, hccaust· of inadt·quate hus service, to usc the secluded, unsafe, unlit path through the deserted field which lies between Douglas Road and ··Rape Road" to get to and from l.·ampus. Fortunatdy, the l lniversity has rectified this prohkm. Yet. a few students wish to neglect the sakty of the so-called "Minority" in order that tht·y he spared any "inconvenience:".

Scott A. Hess '83 Gerda Hess '84 Carlos M. Baeza '83

K of C proposals

Dear l:'ditor: In respon~t· to lkan Roemer's denial of the social rights of Notrt· Dame students, when I first rt·ad of Davt· McAvoy's proposal !i>r parties in tht· K of C, I considtTed tht· rest ric· tion ami concluded that K of C would he an itkal plal.T to have hall parties. The available span· in tht· K of C shoud he put to usc lkan Rot·mcr's suggestion to "develop this he:wtiful location into a non-alcoholic cen-

Editorial Board Department Managers Editor-in-Chief ...... David Dziedzic /lox fJ. :Vt •Ire name. /,\' ·16 5 56 I.! I 'J) .!3 'J · 5303 Managing Editor ...... Margaret Fosmoe Business Manager ...... Daniel O'Hare lhe Oh.wrt•t•r i~ tlw mdt·pt·mlcnt new~paper puhlbhctl hv tht· ~llldcnh of the Uni· Executive Editor ...... Paul McGinn Controller ...... Alex Szilvas \Tr~tty ol Notre Danlt' du Lat: and Saint :\!an··~ Collcgt· It dot·~ not nctT~~arilv reflect News Editor ...... Bob Vonderheide Advertising Manager ...... Chris Owen tht· poliut'' of lhe adnuni~tratJon of t'itht-r tn~titution. Tht· new' i~ n·portcd a~ at· News Editor ...... Mark Worscheh Composition Manager ...... Suzaaun:: i..a Croix ntratdv and a' ohjecti\'d\' a~ P'"~thk I ·n'l~ncd cditoriab rcprt·~t·nt the opinon of a Saint Mary's Editor ...... AnneJyiAM~I)I~ski Circulation Manager ...... ·...... Mark Miotto m;Jf<>rllv ol the hltrorial Board Cornnll'ntane~. lt·Her~. and thr ln~idt· Column present Features Editor ...... Sarah Hamiltou System Manager ...... Kevin Williams till' \'Jt·w~oftiJt•tr author' ( .olumn ~pace •~ a\'ailahle to all member~ of the t:ommunit\'. Photo Editor ...... Scott Bower and t ht· lrtT t·xpre,~ton of , ..Jrvmg optnuHl~ on t:ampu~. through kttt·r~. i~ cnt:ouragt·d .\jmrts Editor...... \lichad Sullivan Founded November 3, 1966 SO. CAROLINA Friday, October 7, 1983 • page 9

an Observer sports supplement The South tries to rise again ND looks to end jinx of southern opponents

By LOUIE SOMOGYI sickle." Sports W'riter Meanwhile, the most popular bumper sticker that year in Louisiana eloquently said, "Go to hell Notre Dame." When a Notre Dame football team travels south of the Led by the pinpoint passing of future All-Pro Bert Jones, Mason-Dixon line, don't ever expect it to be greeted with and two early goal line stands by the LSU defense, the good old-fashioned Southern hospitality. Tigers routed the Irish 28-8. Indeed, if one takes a look at Notre Dame's recent visits Notre Dame made two visits to the South in 1976. The to Dixieland, hc would find that the Irish football teams first was to Columbia, South Carolina to take on the have been subjected to some very ungracious welcomes Gamecocks. It was a show dominated by the Browner - from the teams and the "fans." brothers of Notre Dame. Freshman Willard, who later "It's enough in itselft::> come down here and play in front transferred to lltah State, scored the game's lone touch- of their fans." said formtr Notre Dame All-American Luther Bradley after a hard fou)l.ht 13-6 win over South Carolina in 1976. Be it of an anti-Cathol:c, anti-Northern. or just plain anti­ Notre Dame sentiment, a lot of Southern folk downright despise the mystique thlt is associated with Notre Dame foot hall. Such sentiment was ti rst seen in 1969 when the Irish played Tech in Atlanta. With Notre Dame holding a commanding 38-6 lead in the fourth quarter, Tech sup­ porters hegan pelting the Notre Dame players and coaches on the sidelines with unopened cans of Coke, whiskey bottles, cardboard squares, dead fish (for their Friday meal), and tightly pack·~d cups of ice. Fans wcren'tthe onlv ones enraged that day in Atlanta. Many Tech players accused Notre Dame of deliherately rolling up the score to 1mpress the pollsters. One player even showed his disdain for Notre Dame Head Coach Ara Parseghian by going up to him after the game and cutting loose a streak of what Farseghian called "the dirtiest lan­ guage I've ever heard on a football field." Notre Dame's next visit to the South was at LSU in 1971. Tht· Irish upended the Tigers' hope for a national cham­ pionship the previous year with a late season .~-0 victory at Notre Dame Stadium. Therl· was perhaps never a more an­ ticipated game in Bayou county than that season-ending, nationally-televised contest at Baton Rouge. The sports editor for 1:hc Baton Rouge newspaper vented his disdain for Notre Ikme that week. "If Notre Dame were playing Russia tomorrow," he Quarterback wrote, "I'd be out there waving the old hammer and The BobbseyTwins Friends Smith and Brooks prove two heads are better than one By ED DOMANSKY .\ports W'riter

Nicknamed the "Bohhscy Twins" by Hcad Coach Gerry Faust, Notre Dame fullbacks Chris Smith an<.! Mark Brooks provi<.le a "one-two punch" that is a nt"Ccs­ sary ingredient in maintaining a succcssful running game. Both Smith and Brooks an: juniors and, likewise, they arc both from Cincinnati, Ohio. Smith attended LaSallt: High School. whilt: Brooks was cnrollcd at foothall powcrhousc. Moeller High School. Since arriving at Notre Dame, the two havt· hccomc the closest of friends, and now despite thc fact that they arc both competing for the same position, their friendship has not faltered. If anything. it has grown stronger. Looking back to where it all started, Brooks recalls. "The first time we really got to know each othcr was at a banquet towards the end oftlic season. l realized that he was being rccruitcd by Notre Dame and had in fact signed with thcm. and cvcr sincc thcn we've bccn han­ ging out togcthcr." The fact that the two do spend a lot of time together b just one reason for thc nickname "Bobbscy Twins" "lie (Faust) has called us the Bobhsey Twins ever since freshman year when we wcrc roommates."" says Smith. "and we just automatically know he's going to call us the Bohhscy Twins whenevcr we're togt·thn - cithn on or off the field. Their complt:mcntary athlt:tic ahilitics also Sl"l'm to make the nicknamt· vcry appropriate. ":"-Jaturall\· thne arc things that I think l do hettn than ~1ark. hut just the same. there arc othn things that he thinks he dot·s bet­ ter than nll" ... says Smith ... But together l think \\T prctt\ much cover thc running. passing. and blocking aspects Mark Brooks that arc rcquirnl of a fullback."

Fullback see TWINS, page 10 ' ,~iilift\J ·. . · .~o-r-e.J;i.lUJ"!'..... LAC:~ W;.fH &&.~ SO. CAROLINA Friday, Octqber 7, 1983 • page 10 I The Irish will have their hands full with A Gamecock Fight: Carolina's veer, quickness, and rushing defense c By CHUCK FREEBY Freshman signal-caller Steve Reut·rlein has rt·placed \fl"rls lf'riler \'eteran Blair Kid as the starter at quarterback, and has shown a greal amount of poise. He also has shown the h will he a hank of two fill >I hall tt·am~ with ~omt·thing ability 10 put some zip on the ball. completing 22 of ~8 to prove when (,nry Fau~f~ Hghting lri~h take their l·l passes for 2')'; yards without an intnception. He has a rtTonl to< .olumhia. <,outh <:arolina to take on .Joe :vtor· bevy of targets at his disposal. induding fleet-footed split ri~on·~ ~·!. ( .amtTot·k~ hdi•n· a ~dlout t-rowd of., !.,·tOO end Joe lloward ( I 4 catches for I 98 yards). steady tight al \\ illiam,·Brin· Sladium. When lht· 6 p.m. EST kickoff· end Mark Bavaro (seven rl'Ceptions for 79 yards), and rolb around. I he lri~h will he looking to 'how their fan~ speedy flanker Milt jackson (six catches for 158 yards). Ja.,l wn·k·., impre."'in· win ar <.olorado was ant·xample of On defense. hoth duhs havt· heen strong against the tl I he real Noire Damt· foolhalllt·am, while lht· (;amt-cocb run. The <;amecocb held llSC to a mere 49 yards on the will he IIlii lo show I Ill' nation their up,ct of I 'S(. a week ground in last week's 58- 14 upset. The front line is ago wa' nol a llul-;c anchored hy senior right tackle Ricky llagood. Hagood. A llolh leam' w illelllt·r the game w ilh .,imilar ganu­ the older brother of full hack Kent Hagood, ohviously plan,. ·'I'm .,ure they'lllry I<> run the hall again't u.,, ju't heat his hrothcr to the dining tahle many times, weighing ~ likt· w l' will again'! I hem." comments Fau~l. "They've got in al l96 pounds. lie is hal: ked up by one of the finest 0 ln·memlous quickm·.,., hoth ofll:n,ivd\' and defensively, linehackn trios around in Mike Durrah. J.D. Fuller, and v and I hat 'cares llH' more than an\'lhing." Kt·nnt·th Robinson. Those three players have made 190 Indent. I he quid.ne" l'auM 'peak .., of i' mo't apparenl tackle., in Carolina's first five games, and they are one of in the <.arolina ground game. where the ( .anwcocb arc I he primary reasons joe Morrison's cluh has a ;i-2 record. an-ragmg I H- ,·anh pt-r umll',t. The~ reh· heavily on a The Irish have a fine rushing defense of their own, pair of .,ophomore running hat·ks. Thomas Dendy and allowing kss than one hundred yards per game on the t-;ent I Llgood. lknth· i., a speed nwrchant, who gt·b ground. Junior end Mike (iolic has he en tht· most consb· arc 1und I ht t·ornt-r \\ell in the ( .amecock \'lTr oftt'lbt' II~· tt·nt performer on the lint· this year. coming up with 22 has compikd a(>. I ·\'anb·pt-r-carry a\Trage, and b a 'ure tackks and I I stops resulting in negative yardage. Fresh· ht·l to .,hallt-r most of ( .eorgt· l{ogers' ru,hing record' at man Mike (;riffin filled in well at the nose tackle position "outh Carolina. llagood runs oul of the full hack 'pot. and last week, hut Jon AUiry may come back 10 that place in is a quick. hrui,ing runner :\I oM of lht· lime. he act' as a lhc lineup if his ankk sprain has healed hy game time. blocking hack for I kmh. htH ht· b tht· man to look ti1r in The line has heen supported hy two fint· young shon- \'ardage siluation' linehackt·rs in Tony Furjanic and Mikt· Kovaleski, as well Thomas Dendy AI quarlcrhad•. the< .amt'l'ot·ks rdy on ... ophomore AI· as the stt·ady play of veteran Ri<:k Naylor. Furjanic paces Running back len :\litdwll Whik .\litchdl i' not known as a passing I he Irish in tackles with 60, while Kovaleski places threat. he ha .., hcen quite good running tht· hall out oftht· second with .H. and Naylor is third with 26. Carolina can't pull it off two weeks in a row." r option StilL .\lorrbon know' that Mitchell is t·apahk of If the game is close. it may come down to a battle he· It comes down to two teams looking to move in the ominquc llla,ingamt· (eight ren·ptions ti1r America selection in I ')8l hy the Associated Press, and other, a loss will continue doubts about the program. I !.0 \'ards ). ht· has the range to kick from outside ';()yards. Johnston Which team will take which path? We should have an \kanwhik. Notrt· DanK will tr\' to t·stahlish it' run· was selected to the Sporting NeU's preseason All-America answer around 9 p.m. tomorrow night. ning al tat·k. whidl picked up an amazing .H·t yards on the team this fall. hut has had a rough go of it this season, ground la't w tTK at <.olorado. <,ophonwre Allen Pinkett <:onnccting on· only three of seven attempts. has been oulstanding in till' first fin1r g;ullt's, ranking I ';th Intensity will he the key factor, a<:cording to Faust. "I'm in tht·nalion with hh 10!. ~ \anb pt-r gamt· avt·ragc and ~urc everyone in Columhia is sky high after heating a big· ht· has a tint· .. upporting t·a,t behind him. l'ullhacb ( :hrb name team like liSC." comments the Irish mentor. "milh anti .\lart. BrooJ.., ha\'c ;n-craged more I han six "We've go110 play with intt·nsity l·arly. because they'll be \ anb a c1rn hctWlTil 1hnn. \\ hik rt''t'f\T lailhat·k oft' to 1he races if they can score early against us. \\'c:'ve lli.m alha l'ran.,isu• nolt·hcs ncarh· st'\Tn \ ards ptT run. ju~l got to play as well as we're capable and hope South

• • • Twins nmtinued from page 9 dnignalion doesn't bother him. "There's no prohkm wilh lhat al all." he savs. "At lhe hq~inningofthc season ( hTr I he fir.,l IW ll st·as<>ll' of their <·anTrs. holh have we\\ ere hcllh inlilflnnl that wT would ht· ahk to con· '.1111<' "'a lailhad, Ill I '>HI ''hen ho1h he fn·,h whl·n we Wt'fe in tht· game." he g.lillnl I I >I 'ant.. oil 1 I Llrflt'' II is lop effort 'a\\ \\ hik sharing dulies with Smith last Salllrday againsl 111111 gant (,I 'ard., llneigllltarrit·, a., he matlt· hb tkhul the 1\utfalm·s. Broob ran fi1r t!. yards on lhree c1rrics. 1n1he 'ea.'< Ill·., ''ll<'lling game .1ga111.,1 L<,l l'or I'JH!..Iw I lis highliglll \\a~ a 51-yard touchdown run. "It was \'lT}' rt·que.,lnl.l dtang<· to linchat·J.t·r IIi., main dtllit·~. t''-t'iling." he said. "hut a lot ofcrnlit has to go to the he"' ncr. '' er<· as l.ll kkr on .,pel'iall \ I cams and a~ an line fi1r making il pllssihlc." c"r.1 hlod;er in ... lwrl \ ardagt· .111d goal-lint· 'ilualions. As far as I he compel it ion heiWlTn tht·st· 1wo frknds \\ 11h .111 .ml>lt· injun lo (.reg lid I. <,milh rt·lurnnl to lht· i~ contTrn~·tl. il is a factor I hat onh· ~tTm~ lo aid eat·h oflcn,iH· haddicld 1c1 pro\ ide e"ra deplh lk carried ne·, a little more oms is· lrlllll flllliH'r anti ..Ill hough plc~Snl \\ ilh hi~ pnfor­ lent in one area anti I he othn in anlltht·r area. They kind mam t' "'l.1r. he ~I ill hopes 10 impn•n· "I sliiiiHTtl ofcllmpknll'111 e;ICh other. I hough. thrllugh this role." "ork on111\ hlot·king. proper pass rh I" I he coadll's. "I "hen I'm in there. we're hoth rooting ti1r one another." I hough I I pLI\ nl prt'll' \\ t'll ...... aid Smith. "hut 10 he ~;1\·s. "ll's no culthroat-11·pc deal where when he's in rnTIH'Ihe .1ward made n~t· it'd t'\Tnlwllt-r." In lilt' lhne. I'm hoping he's tilling had. Wl· ju~t pull ti1r t·ach g;unt· he rushetllt·n 1inH·s ami gained -o \ anb. indutl· ot hn. 111g a !.')- 1 ani run for a I now if nndl en-r tint! two hl'lll'r fril'nds pa.,., f( •r I 1 \an b. \\ ho art· uHnpt·ting ti•r thl· sanll' spot. On and oft· tht· llroob. on lht· ollll'r ham!. has htTn a fullhat·t. from lidd \\ t' just gt·l along great." I he lwg111ning of hi~ career. In his rool>it· st·a,..m hl· 'aw And Brook~ echot·s Smith's fcdings with similar at'! ion in all htll t\\o game~ and gained I !.(• \'ard~ rus­ '' ords. "Chris is m1· hcst frkntl ht'ft' at tbt· J. 't'lii\'t."rstt~·. hing I k ;dso ~ulrt·d a toudulo\\ n again~! Air Forn· on a and I just hopc that thin~s continul· ~o ~u. \\·dfmr us ll·\ ant run in•thl·lasl minute of till' gamt· Onh· .lot· hoth." '< lfllwartl pla\'nlmort· minutt·~ among till' 19H I fn·sh· \\ ith Sl'H'n gamt·s still rt·maini~ kl thl~.~·;lsuil,.d1f:. man ofti:nsin· plan·r,. In 19Hl Hrook~ dt:mon~lratt·d "ont·-two pun<:h" proYidl-d ~·tit~· '·.onbhsey Twinj;," that lw ulllld abo IK u~t·d a~ a rt't'l'iH·r as ht· pullnl in Smith and Brooks. shoultlcome in plt:nty ~and~· if1 st·n·n rt'l't·ptions ti1r 1:\ yartls. Hn· oftht·st· came in tht· kat! in!( rhe tcan1. As Moon· sn-s.it. lhl:« b .som~'J-intc Arizona l'Ontest. It is top ru~hing l)(:rti•rmant.'l' also ctmt· unique. that is drh·ing the St.: two ht'st friL'Ild!. W t'li.C:ti. against Arizona as he t·arrkd tht· hall I-~ timt·~ antl "\\hat hi!~ to l'Xl'itt· you ahout lxllll. ~fl~1.~m ili l'luw loL.1llnl ,- ';trd~. tk .,tartt·d thai ~amt· in plal'l' of an much ht'lll'r tht·y can tx· throutth hac'-' wprk. i!JUl,J think injurnll.arn ,\lllri;lrl\ thq st·nst· thb. If they kt·l·p pushin~ ea<:h otht·r. they In llJH.~ Brooks has !x'l'n dt·si~n;t(t·d tht· "nunllx·r coui4J ht.· n·n· ~mid ... tv. o" fullh;~o~.:t. IKhind hi.' tx·~t frit·nd Smith. hut I his Or th.q n1uld he nt·p tx·u~·r lhiln."n:ty ~Ku,t" SO. CAROLINA Friday, Octqber 7, 1983 • page 11

• • • Dixie mtinued from page 9 ter. Two Joe Montana touchdowns led a couragous 21-17 victory for Notre Dame as it showed that it was worthy to own in the first quarter while sophomore safety, Jim, be called a national champion. lade the game-saving interception at the Notre Dame 1 5- ···That's what makes victory the sweetest," said an elated ard line in the final minutrs to preserYe the 13-6 triumph. Notre Dame guard Ernie Hughes after the game. "When But Ross, the winner of the Outland frophy that year as a you overcome adversity and still come from behind to win, mior, was the most impressive Bc,ow1er on the field that that makes victory even greater." ay. Browner recorded 11 tackles- five of them netting After the game, a death threat was made on Notre Dame ~yards in losses - and also recovered a fumble. For his Head Coach an Devine, and the scoreboard, for some mys­ forts, he was named the AP "Lineman of the Week." Presi­ terious reason, put a 0 in place of Notre Dame's 21 points ~nt Gerald Ford made a special halftime appearance in while leaving Clemson's 17 points unchanged. It left other 1at game, but as one headline put it, il was the nation's Notre Dame players quite disgusted. "Football is just a ·ecratary of Defense," Ross Browner, who stole the show. game," said Notre Dame linbackerBob Golic. "I think some Two weeks later, the 6-1 Notre Dame team traveled to of these people look at it as something more than that." lanta to take on a Georgia Tech team with a losing In 1978, it was back to Atlanta to play Georgia Tech cord. Tech upset Notre Dame 23-14 <>n the field, and up­ again. This time, though, Notre Dame put on its most im­ t them even more with their post-game comments. It was pressive offensive performance of the year. Vagas Ferguson e thing to call Notre Dame players' fat and slow," hut it rushed for a Notrt: Dam~:: record of255 yards and Montana as another thing to call the Irish lineman "hog mollies"· completed his final I 0 passes - tying a Notrt: Dame record d "mud womps." - in kading the Irish to a 38-21 win. Te~h paid dearly for those remarks the next year when No insults were hurkd from the Gt:orgia Tech locker­ otre arne administered a 69- 14 pounding on them at room this time, but the fans got into the act by hurling their mth Bend. debris onto the Notre Dame sideline again. Notre Dame was just about everyone's pre-season pick "The fish stunk," refkcted Devine after the game. "Tht: 1977 to win the national championship, but apparently ice stung. The eggs (a new projectile in the arsenal) were a e Mississippi Rebels weren't too impressed. Waving bit of a surprise." ousands of Confederate flags in the >tands,' and singing The largest attendance ever in Tt:nnessee, 86,489 ndless renditions of"Dixieland," the fired-up Mississippi people, greeted Notre Dame the next year at Knoxville in >othall team indeed became Rebels with a cause. In what what was termed as one of the most important games in as more of a reenactment of the Civil War than a football Tennesse history. The Volunteers proceeded to give the me, the Rebels, a team that was to fin ish with three wins, Irish a 40-18 whipping. The trip was more worthwhile for anded the eventual national champions their only loss of some of the Notre Dame players than the previous excur­ c s~::ason on that September afternoon in Jackson. sions to the South. Six weeks later, the No. 5-ranked Notre Dame team jour­ "The hills here are so pretty," said Notre Dame quarter­ yt:d down to Greenville, South Carolina to take on the back Rusty Lisch, a person who always kept football in Iemson Tigers in their stadium that is ominously known perspective, after the game. "Death Valley." It wasn't very pretty going into Atlanta again the follow­ The Clemson student newspaper that week referred to ing year. Ranked No. 1 in the nation with a 7-0 mark, Notre e Notre Dame football team - for reasons unknown - Dame was fortunate to come out with a 3-3 "loss" against a ·"The Golden B-B Heads." lowly Georgia Tech team. The only things hurled at Notre The abuse continued on game day in the stands and on Dame players and coaches after this game was mocking e field as Clemson took a 1 7-7 lead : nto the fourth quar- laughter by the Tech fans against the so-called No. 1 team that needed a 47-yard Harry Oliver field goal in the final minutes to secure a tie against a 1-7 team. The Irish redeemed themselves the following week at Alabama. Despite war cries of"We owe it to Coach Bryant (who had never beatt:n Notre Dame in three previous tries)" by the Crimson Tide players, Notre Dame put on one of its most spectacular defensive performances ever to Chris Sm:ith shut out Alabama, 7-0. Fullback "I feel like I wasted an afternoon," said a dejected "Bear" Bryant afterwards. It was one of the few times that the long flight back North was a pleasant and memorable for a Notre Dame football team. The last two trips to the South for the Irish have been to Miami in 1981 and 1983. Enough said. And now, the Irish dare to enter the South again. Chris Brown "It'll be a real battle for us down there," says Notre Dame Head Coach Gerry Faust. Free safety He ain't just whistlin Dixie, either.

SOUTH CAROUNA IJFFENSE NOTRE DAME DEFENSE POS NO PLAYER HT WT Cl E 55 MlkeGollc 6-5 251 Jr. SE 2 ChrlsWade 6-1 204 Jr. 56 Robert Banks 6-5 235 Fr. 5 Eric Poole 6-0 178 So. FT 78 MlkeGann 6-5 256 Jr. LT 57 Carl Womble 6-4 265 Jr. 71 Eric Dorsey 6-5 256 So. Your 71 Jeff Teague 6-6 275 Fr. NT Jon Autry Sr. 38 6-2 246 LG 77 Jim Walsh 6-3 268 Jr. 94 Mike Griffin 6-4 235 Fr 69 George Smith 5-11 245 Sr. CT 77 nm Marshall 6-4 257 Jr. c 55 Tom Gamer 6-2 246 Jr. 92 Greg Dingens 6-5 257 So. TV 59 Wes Arrowood 6-3 263 So. LB 37 Rick Naylor 6-3 227 Sr. RG 65 Cas Danielowskl 6-2 247 Sr. 43 Rick D1Bernardo 6-3 228 So. 62 Del Wilkes 6-3 254 Jr. LB 58 Tony Furjanic 6-2 231 So. RT 76 Rusty Russell 6-6 295 Sr. 87 Joe Bars 6-5 237 Jr. 67 Bill Barnhill 6-4 245 Jr. LB 49 Mike Kovaleski 6-2 210 Fr. Guide TE 35 ·Dominique 47 Tom Murphy 6-2 219 Sr. Blasingame 6-2 230 Sr. CB 30 Stacey Toran 6-4 206 Sr. 82 Curtis H1ll 6-2 237 So. 12 Troy Wilson 5-11 170 Fr. QB 11 Allen Mitchell 6-0 172 So. CB 40 Pat Ballage 6-2 197 So. 18 Jim Desmond 6-1 185 So. 48 John Mosley 6-1 248 Sr. FB 32 Kent Hagood 6-0 218 So. ss 9 Chris Brown 6-1 196 Sr. 34 Todd Berry 6-0 212 Sr. 34 Daane Spiel- When the Irish HB 31 Thomas Dendy 5-10 187 So. maker 6-1 203 Sr. 9 Quinton lewis 6-0 200 Jr. FS 23 Steve Lawrence 6-0 180 Fr. FL 1 Ira Hillary 5-11 187 Jr. 11 Scott Rogers 6-0 180 Fr. line up on offense 4 Emory Bacon 5-11 168 Jr. p 5 BlairKiel 6-1 206 Sr. K 1 0 Mark Fleetwood 5-10 184 Sr. 1 0 Dave Meadows 5-11 180 Sr. 16 Scott Hagler 5-8 155 So. NOTRE DAME OFFENSE POS NO PLAYER HT WT CL SE 24 Joe Howard 5-9 171 Jr. SOUTH CAROLINA DEFENSE 3 Alonzo Jefferson 5-9 172 Fr. LE 47 James Sumpter 6-2 218 Jr. QT 75 Larry Williams 93 Tony Guyton 6-1 218 So. When the 6-6 284 Jr. 65 Greg Golic 6-7 263 Sr. LT 98 Paul Martin 6-3 255 Sr. QG 53 Tom Doerger 6-5 272 So. 95 Jim Thomas 6-2 250 Jr. 54 Tim Scannell 6-4 270 So. RT 97 Ricky Hagood 6-2 296 Sr. Gamecocks c 63 Mike KaNey 6-5 269 Jr. 94 Glenn Woodley 6-0 236 Jr. 62 Ron Plantz 6-4 266 So. RE 88 WIHie Mctntee 6-2 219 Fr. up 79 Nell Maune 9{) line on SG 6-5 278 Sr. Frank Wright 6-3 283 Jr. 52 Shawn Heffern 6-5 254 So. LB 84 Kenneth Robin- ST 76 Mike Perrino 6-5 271 So. aon 6-2 228 'So. 59 Tom Rehder 6-7 22.5 Fr. 48 Anthooy Bailey 6-1 225 Sr offense TE 82 Mark Bavaro 6-4 24ll So. t.B 42 Vlke Durrah 6-0 Ut Sr. 85 Brian Behmer 6-6 218 Jr. 46 Willie Htll 6.,0 225 Sr. QB 7 S1eve Beuel'leln 6-3 1t!l Fr. LB 43 J.D. Fuller 6-2 225 Sr. 5 Blair Kiel 6-1 206 Sr. 41 Jimmy Gatling 6-1 11M So. F8 32 CtlrlsSmlttl 6-2 231 Jr. LC 22 Earl Johnson 6-1 184 .lr. 35 Mark Brooks 6-3 228 Jr. 33 Scott Stevenson 5-11 176 .Fr. T8 28 Allen Pinkett 5-9 184 So. ss 23 Gary IIIyan 6-t 1to Jr. 33 Hiawatha Fran- 8 Glenn laGrande 6-1 200 Jr. CISCO 5-10 185 Fr. FS 28 Bryant Gilliard 6-1 110 Jr. Fl t Milt J.ilokaen w 111 So. 21 Rick Rabune 5-10 172 Jr. 1 7 Alvin Miller ~ 6-4- ..-o Fr. RC 39 Cllrla Mlljor 5-10 -171 Fl". K 4MIIIe~ 1-11 11$ Sf. 24 Hinton Taylor 5-10 173 Jr. 8 John Carney 5-10 170 Fr. ,. 13 Chris Norman 6-3 1tl Sr. I SO. CAROLINA Friday, Octqber 7, 1983 · page 12

NOTRE DAME VS. SOUTH CAROLINA THE AME THE STATISTICS GTD PAR-PAS FG TP PASSING G NO co PCT INT YDS TO GAME: Fighting Irish vs. South Carolina Gamecocks SITE: Williams-Brice Stadium ( 72,400) Bell 3 5 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 30 K1el 4 69 35 .507 5 444 4 013-13 3-8 22 Beuerlein .579 TIME: 6 p.m. EST; Saturday. Oct. 8, 1983 Johnston 4 0-0 0 3 38 22 0 295 0 Bavaro 4 2 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 12 Grooms 1 2 0 .000 0 0 0 lV-RADIO: WNDU-TV (Ch. 16) Pinkett 4 2 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 12 K. Smith 1 2 0 :000 0 0 0 Jeff Jeffers and Jack Nolan Abraham 1 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 6 Howard 3 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 6 NO 4 110 57 .518 5 739 4 Metrosports/ESPN Replay Network Smith 4 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 6 OPP 4 127 71 .559 6 780 5 Harry Kalas and George Connor Brooks 4 1 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 6 PUNT RET NO YDS AVG TO LG 9 a.m. Sunday WNDlJ-TV ( Ch. I6) Team 3 0 0-0 0-0 1 0-0 2 41313-13 0-0 1 3-8102 Bell 10 55 5.5 0 13 Notre Dame-Mutual Radio Network 4 7 6-7 0-0 0 3-4 57 Howard 2 -2 -1.0 0 1 Tony Roberts and AI Wester NOTRE DAME 12 53 4.4 0 13 WNDU-AM I SOO RUSHING G NO YDS AVG TO LG OPPONENTS 8 54 6.7 0 30

SERIES: Notre Dame 2, South Carolina 0 Pinkett 4 73 409 5.6 2 36 DEFENSE TMTL-YDS PBU FR BK Smith 4 31 184 5.9 1 29 LAST MEETING: Notre Dame 18, South Caronna I 7 Bell 3 33 163 4.9 4 50 Fuqanic 27 1-6 1 0 0 Francisco 3 19 130 6.8 0 33 October 27, I979 Kovaleski 26 2-4 3 1 0 Brooks 4 11 75 6.8 1 31 Go lie 22 6-15 1 1 0 Grooms 2 33 16.5 0 25 Naylor 20 0-0 0 0 0 RAN KINGS: Notre Dame unranked, South Carolina unranked Flemons 4 33 8.2 0 34 Johnson 17 2-2 2 0 0 TICKETS: (iame is sold out Machtolf 1 4 13 3.2 0 9 Toran 17 0-0 0 0 0 Abraham 3 7 10 1.4 1 10 Brown 17 1-1 3 0 0 Howard 4 2 10 5.0 0 6 Ballage 16 0-0 1 0 0 Carter 1 2 9 4.5 0 9 Marshall 14 5-13 1 1 0 Kiel 4 13 0 0.0 0 7 Autry 11 1-2 1 1 0 Beuerlein 3 8 -11 -1.4 0 8 Gann 10 1-5 0 0 0 Mosley 9 1-1 0 0 0 THE SCHEDULE NO 4 209 1058 5.1 9 50 Murphy 9 0-0 0 0 OPP 4 135 395 2.9 2 34 Dingens 8 1-2 1 0 0 Griffin 8 1-1 0 0 0 NOTRE DAME SOUTH CAROLINA RECEIVING G NO YDS AVG TO LG Kleine 6 0-0 0 0 0 SEPT. 3 lost to N. Carolina, 24-8 DIBernardo 6 0-0 0 0 0 SEPT. 10 def. Purduc, S2-6 Howard 4 14 198 14.1 1 58 McCabe 4 0-0 0 0 0 SEPT. 17lost to MSU, 28-23 SEPT. 10 def. Miami( Ohio), 24-3 Pinkett 4 9 67 7.4 0 14 Butler 4 0-0 0 0 0 SEPT. 24 lost to Miami (Fla.), 20-0 SEPT. I 7 def Duke, 31-24 Bavaro 4 7 79 .11.3 2 18 Spielmaker 4 0-0 0 0 0 OCT. I def. Colorado, 27-3 SEPT. 24 lost to Georgia, 3I-I3 Jackson 4 6 138 23.0 0 61 Lawrence 4 0-0 2 1 0 OCT. I def Southern Cal, 38-14 Bell 3 6 65 10.8 1 23 Dorsey 3 0-0 0 0 0 OCT. Hat South Carolina Smith 4 5 48 9.6 0 16 Corsaro 3 0-0 0 0 c OCT. I c; Army at Meadowlands OCT. 8 NOTRE DAME 3 3 45 15.0 0 18 Banks 3 0-0 0 0 II OCT. 22 SOUTHERN CAL OCT. 22 at Louisiana State 3 3 36 12.0 0 15 Wilson 0-0 0 0 0 OCT. 29 NAVY OCT. 29 N. CAROLINA STATE 4 2 32 16.0 0 16 Miller 0-0 0 0 0 NOV. c; at Florida State 4 25 25.0 0 25 Abraham 0-0 0 0 0 NOV. c:; PITTSBURGH 3 6 6.0 0 6 Francisco 0-0 0 0 0 NOV. I 2 at Pcnn State NOV. 12NAVY NOV. 19 AIR FORCE NOV. I9 CLEMSON 4 57 739 13.0 4 61 NOTRE DAME 272 19-41 17 5 0 780 11.0 5 81 OPPONENTS 397 22-56 27 2 3

PEERLESS PROGNOSTICATORS

Each week, The Observer sports staff, a random student picked at the discretion of the sports editor, and some well-known figure in the Notre Dame community predict the outcome of the week's mJjor college football games. Records are com­ piled as to how each person does against the spread. In other words, it is not enough to pick the winner of a given game The person must pick a winner given the underdog points. Louie Somogyi Mike Sullivalfi Will Hare jane Healey David Dziedzic joe Plane Kevin Howard Sports Writer Spons Editor Sports Writer Asst. Sports Editor Editor-in-Chief

Mkhigan ovt·r MICIIIGAN STATE by 14 Spartans Wolverines Wolverines Spartans Wolverines Wolverines Wolverines Alabama over PENN STATE by H Tide Lions Tide Tide Lions Tid'l- Tide PrtTSIIliRGH over Florida State by I. 'i Seminoles Seminoles Panthers Seminoles Seminoles Panthers Seminoles Nebraska ovt·r OKIAIIOMA STATE by 24 Cowboys Cowboys Cowboys Corn huskers Corn huskers Cornhuskers Corn huskers Illinois ovn WI~'CONSIN by 2 lllini Badgers lllini lllini lllini lllini Badgers TEXAS over Oklahoma by -~- 'i Longhorns Longhorns Sooners Sooners Sooners Longhorns Longhorns liCI.A over STANFORD by 'i Bruins Bruins Bruins Bruins Cardinals Bruins Bruins l.~ll over TENNESSEE by.~ Tigers Volunteers Volunteers Tigers Tigers Tige" Tigns Auburn on-r KENTIICKY by 7. 'i Eagks Eagles Tigers Eagks Eagles Eagles Eagles <;<·orgia mTr MISSISSIPPI by f.j Bulldogs Rebels Bulldogs Bulldogs Bulldogs Rebels Bulldogs TEXAS A& i\1 on·r Houston hy I I Cougars Aggies Cougars Aggies Cougars Aggies Aggies INDIANA on·r Minnesota by I 0 Gophers Gophers - Hoosiers Gophers Gophers Hoosiers Gophers Notre Dame over SOliTII CAROLINA by 7. 'i Irish Irish Irish Irish Irish Irish Irish ~------~------~

Showcase Friday, October 7, 1983 - page 13 letters to a lonely God The class list

Later, his mother told me one entire by Rev .. Robert Griffin rib had been eaten up by the cancer. features columnist Bob died at the end of September af­ ter two months' illness. The Glee T ife, they say, is what happens keeps close to you." When my own Club sang the funeral mass. .I...Jwhik you're making plans. I've grandmother died, I told her, I felt His former ND roomate also died been trying to write a letter c.f con­ very lonesome. So many things of cancer. He was to play the guitar solation to the parents ofBriart Bues­ reminded me of her: every time I ate while Bob sang "Wayfarin' Stranger" cher, feeling very limited be

records eMOVIJES The cllassic historical movie "Reds," starring Warren Beatty and Diane Koeaton is being co-sponsored by the Student Union, Student The l>resent and the past Government, and the Center for Social Concerns. The three-hour picture, which looks at the Bolshevik Revolution from an American who remembers "" journalist's point of view, as well as paints a colorful picture of early by Vic Sciulli and "The Voice" from Long Dis­ twentielth century America, will be shown tonight and tomorrow tance Voyager will say. Two years features staff writer night in the Engineering Auditorium at 6:30 and I 0 p.m. Admission is ...:....__ ago, both songs made the Top Ten, ______$1. hat business do aging return, this time with former Yes giving the band precious airplay over AM (gasp!) as well as FM sta­ W "space rock" stars, like the keyboardist . Long The Friday Night Film Series' feature tonight is "Dr. Strangelove: or tions, powering the LP to I. Sudden­ Moody Blues, have putting out al­ Distance Voyager folllowed in How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb," a 1964 ly the Moodies were back at the top, bums more than I5 years af:er they I981. nightmarish comedy that portrays a U.S. president and the premier a surprise to many who felt the first got together? These guys have Yes, there have been some con­ of Russia cooperating in a bizarre effort to save the world from total band's sound had long since been seen the age of flower children and cessions in the band's sound, espe­ disaster. The film is an example of screen satire at its finest. Admis­ outdated. protest come and go; how can they cially in the past few years. The band sion for the 7:30 show is $2. get away with playing virtually the decided to divide their latest album The three most pop oriented The Monday Night Film Series is presenting at 7- p.m. "Monsieur songs on The Present have the same same style of music thay they played into two sounds; the first side Hulot's Birthday," a 1953 French film in which the well-meaningand so long ago? represents a more commercially ac­ chance to repeat their performance. delightfi11lly inept Mr. Hulot turns a seaside vacation into a flawless "Sitting at the Wheel", the first Though The Present, the Moody's cessible direction than what the series of sightgags. At 9 p.m. Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds team latest album is a far cry from the band has played in the past. single, is a musical clone of up in "Singin' in the Rain," one of the finest musical comedies of all "Gemini." Like "Gemini," it is simple, stripped-down sound that is Side two is pure Moodies, time, set during the era when movies were changing from silent to becoming chara,cteristic of music however, and old-timers won't be dominated by heavy keyboard work talkies. today, there's something ve1y disappointed; there are some real from Moraz. Lodge's vocals, normal­ Also on Monday, SOLA is presenting a 20-minute documentary satisfying about listening to them. gems on it. "Running Water" is one ly restrained because of the material, film called "U.S. Bishops and Central America," followed by an infor­ rises to the occassion here and cul­ Maybe it's Patrick Moraz's lush of these, featuring Hayward's serene, mal discussion with R.S. Pelton C.S.C., who has had eight years of ex­ minates in a crecendo of keyboards, keyboard/synthesizer or the serene flowing vocals and gentle perience in the Archdiocese of Santiago de Chile and who has been pounding drums and screaming vocal performances of}ustiu keyboards. Pensive and sad, the an Obst:rver for the Catholic Relief Services in Guatemala, Honduras guitars. "Blue World" is another like­ Hayward and . Some of lyrics evoke a sense oflonging, and El Salvador refugee camps. The film and discussion will be in the ly hit for the band. In this song, a the good things have not changed characteristic of much of the band's Center for Social Concerns. much and are one earlier sound. Time hurries on simple bass line and beautiful back­ ground vocals add of these things; the band is one of the Look and its gone •NAZ2: last megagroups of the late 60s and The changing of the autumn tide TdniiPJtJohn Tyler will perform at the Nazz, beginning at 9 p.m., early 70s that is still around playing The hopes that live with an open stage to follow. Saturday Gary O'Brien will present a this genre of music. The dreams that die magic and comedy act, with an open stage again to follow. The band has had a rich and in­ Ifl could have you by my side fluential history since its formation I'd give it all away •MISCELLANEOUS in the late 60s. They will always be "Going Nowhere" is another of Saturday in the ACC the Detroit Pistons (Kelly Tripucka and Bill remembered for the epic "Nights in these gems. "It's Cold Outside of Laimbeer) will play the Indiana Pacers starting at 2 p.m. The game is White Satin" which six year:; after its Your Heart" is a nice surprise, high­ a b~nefit for Logan Center and in gratitude to ND/SMC students for original release reached I in the U.S. lighted by a country sounding their hdp at Logan, the Center is offering half price tickets of S3 for and has become an FM standard. The acoutic guitar perwrmanct!'. Lower Arena and S I.,?O for bleachers for students. All proceeds will band followed it with seven! more Chances are, however, that it's go to Logan Center. smashes before breaking up in I974 side one that you are going to hear Saturday night is Undergraduate Night at Senior Bar. For a n to pursue personal interest!>. The more of on the radio. The definitive cover charge, any student can go in the bar during or after the game Octave album in I978 marked their pop sound is no accident, as anyone and enj1oy the 25 cent Coke specials. No alcohol will be served. I Friday, October 7, 1983 page 14 Sports Briefs Niekro The Non-Varsity Athletic Office has an- Digger Phelps, Irish basketball coach, has already made nounced its next set of deadlines. Wednesday, October 12 has been his first catch for the class of 1988. Matt Beeuwsaen, a 6-6, 203- set as the deadline for the grad volleyball tournament as well as the hangs up pound swlngman from Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, Calif., has co-ree basketball league. October 12 is also the deadline for men's verbally committed to come to Notre Dame next fall. Last year, ream racquetball, a ditferent concept for racquetball competition. Beeuwsaen was named Orange County Player of the Year after Women's team racquetball and staff-faculty team racquetball averaging 17.4 points and 8.9 rebounds per game for Mater Dei, deadlines are the same day. If you have any questions, call239-6100. knuckler annually one of the top high school teams in the country. - The - The Obseroer Associated Press Obsen,er ATLANTA - Phil Niekro, ma.~ter of the knuckkball, is leaving the At­ Anyone interested in joining a grad/faculty soccer lanta Braves after a 20-ycar-career Tomorrow is National Running and Fitness Day and the league, call the Non-Varsity Athletics office (239-6100) and leave spent bedeviling National League NVA Office is urging students to recognize the day by doing some­ your name and number. - The Observer batters. thing to promote running. The Domer Six-Mile Run is just one of the I" Niekro, who has never pitched for ways in which to do this. - The Obseroer another major league club, would not confirm outright his leaving the The Wind Surfing Club is having a meeting club, but Braves executive vice tomorrow at 2 p.m. at St. joe's Beach. All members are asked to bring president AI Thornwell did it for The fourth annual running of The Human pnx>f of insurance. - The Observer him. Race is set for 10 a.m. on Saturday, October 15. The 10-kilometer "We decided at our staff meeting footrace and fun run art· sponsored by the Broadway Christian Parish ncar the end of the season that United Methodist Church and the South Bend YMCA. The race is a N iekro would not return as a starting fund-raising event for both organizations. Registration forms for the Saint Mary's basketball tryouts will start pitcher," Thornwell told the Atlanta race can be obtained at Broadway Christian Parish, the YMCA, the Sunday, October 9 from 1-3 p.m. in the Angela Athletic-Facility. Constitution. Athlete's Foot in University Park Mall, and the Athletic Annex stores The Obseroer Niekro said only: ''I'm cleaning in Scottsdale Mall and the University Commons. - The Obseroer out my locker at the stadium Friday morning. That should tell you some­ thing. I'll answer all the questions The Notre Dame women's volleyball The Inlternational Student Organiza- asked me at that time, and I have no team beat Indiana/Purdue-Indianapolis last night to raise their tion is forming a soccer team. If you are an international student further comment now. sea.'K>n record to 6-12. The match scores were 1 S-13, 10-1 S, 1 S-2, and are interested in playing, sign up at the 1.S.O. office, or call 232· Niekro struggled at the beginning I 1-1 S, 1 S-1 0. More on the volleyball team will appear next week. - 7423. -The Obseroer of this year, but won nine of his last The Obsen,er 13 decisions to finish I 1-10. He has a career record of 268-230.

Th~ Observer Lafortune office accepts classified advenising from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. The Observer Saint Mary's office, located on the third floor of Haggar College Center, is open from 11:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Fnday. The deadline for next day classified service is 3 p.m. All classifieds must be prepaid, either in person or by Classifieds mail Charge is ten ents per seven characters, per day.

NEED 2 TO USC GAME FOR GOOD NEED 2 NAVY G.A.'S. CALL MATT OKTOBERFEST IS HERE HEY BUETTNER! HAPPY BIRTHDAY Den from NJ ThiS IS Ted, your nde home OL' DAD"! Please call DAVE at 6919 at1462 SPAZ! TWO DECADES! DON"T YOU NOTICES the weekend of the 6th. Call 1779 ~ you ATTENTIONIIIIWSNO REMOTES ARE THINK IT"S ABOUT TIME TO DITCH st11i want to go Need 6 GA Pitt. tix. Must be 1n grps. of 3 or $$$$ NEED 2 OR 4 TIXS FOR USC NOW AVAILABLE FOR ALL OCCA­ THE TRASH CAN? CANICOMEFROM­ more. 263-6665 Steve GAME. CALL TOOTlE AT 239-7136. SIONSI FOR THE LOWEST PRICE MINNESOTATOO? BUM BUM DE DUM IS IT TRUE YOU CAN BUY JEEPS FOR Need nde to U of I Champa1gn Oct 14-16 AVAIALABLE YOU CAN HAVE A BUM II! $44 THROUGH THE U.S. GOVERN­ DESPERATE! Share costs call Fran 2270 NEED 6 G. A.'S FOR PITT GAME. MUST PROFESSIONAL OJ, ENGINEER AND MENT? GET THE FACTS TODAY! CALL REALL Y,REALL Y NEED 4(0R 6) TICK­ BE IN PAIRS. CALL KEVIN AT 6636 ALL THE MUSIC YOU CAN HANDLE II (312) 742-1142, EXT. 7316 ETS TO PITT GAME!!CALL BILL NO ...... ' THE FOLLOWING DATES ARE NOW Alders needed to ,Minnesota. Leaving Oc­ t763 $1 NEED 4 NAVY GA'$ ·GREG 6663 AVAILABLE: OCTOBER 8,14,15,21-­ ATIN ARKIES: THE ONLY THING THAT T ypmg ALL K !NOS 277-8534 alter 5.30 tober 13 Call Ann 5262(SMC) NOVEMBER 4, 12, 17,18 AND DECEM­ SPUD WOULD RATHER DO THAN I NEED 4-6 USC GAs AND t USC STU­ GOOD$$ FOR t USC GA · GREG 6863 BER 2,3,9, 16,17. TO RESERVE YOUR PLAY BASKETBALL IS GO FFOR A JET 2001 NORTH CAROLINA Desperately (I) DENT TICKET; CALL PAT NO DATE CALL REGINALD DANIEL AT RIDE. Thurs& Fri need nde for break. PLEASE call Jim at 1238 NEED TWO NAVY GA"S CALL BRIAN 283-1153 AFTER 11 P.M. OR AT 239- 7,9:30,12 PM 107011 6656 7425 TUESDAY FROM 3PM TO &PM, EMILE GOT INTO MED. SCHOOL KoiC Hall Help! Need USC tix. student or GA, Call AND JIM GALLAGHER AT 239-7425. PARTY! PARTY! TONIGHT tt4 CASTLE $1. Members Free PITTSBURGH Need RIDERS lor 10/14- Steve at 6638 $$$$$$$$$$$$TWO GA'S NEEDED THAT'S WSND REMOTES-THE BEST POINT EVERYONE WELCOME, SEE t0/16. Call Jim att070. FOR USC GAME$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ EQUIPMENT ,THE BEST MUSIC, AT YAATTHE POINT! NEED USC STUDENT OR GA TIX-CALL $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$Call Sean THEBESTPRICEIII...... PRO· TYPE 12 yrs. expenence I"M GOING TO U ~ I CHAMPAIGN CHRIS AT 234· 7279 ANYTIME x6606$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ ELLEN MALLOY: She's a dream .and Party down this Friday night 60t St. Specializing 1n dissertatiOns. TODAY AT 5 UNTIL SUNDAY NEED eendad celebrating her birthday tomorrow. Louis St. Jim's B-Oay, so give him a manuscripts, theses, and student papers. RIDERS CALL 6660 TODAY BEFORE 5 Need NAVY stud.&GA"s xt695 ~·s kiss. Call277-5633 for rates. I need t or 2 USC STUDENT TIX. ELLEN MALLOY: Infamous Wanton NEED 4 NAVY TIX.CALLCHAISAT 1201 PLEASE CALL BILL AT 234-7060 RIDE NEEDED TO COLUMBUS. OHIO. Winsome Wench celebrates het' birthday q Responsible babysitter needed part time WILL SHARE EXPENSES. CALL tomorrow. days for irlfant and three year old in my NEED AIR FORCE TICKETS: CALL HOWIE AT x1765. home lUSt north of campus. Sitter wrth NEED 4 NAVY GA's Call Pete 3t14 JOHN AT t661 SENIORS WATCH SATURDAYS GAME own child ok. Call Jennifer 239-7278 Mon­ I need PITT GA'I. Call David at 277- AT THE RATHSKELLARS IN THE 100 Fri. I NEED tOG.A.'S TO THEU.S.C. GAME NEED 2 USC STUD OR GA"s. Call Dan 1326 CENTER. 7.00$ AT THE DOOR FOR LOST/FOUND WILL PAY ANY AMOUNT FOR THESE 1022. ALL THE PIZZA AND DRINK YOU CAN TICKETS AND THEY NEED NOT BE TO­ URBAN PLUNGE •.. URBAN PLUNGE CONSUME. GET TICKETS AT THE GETHER. PLEASE CALL t779 And ASK NEED NAVY TIX CALL ERIN 2773 Urban Plunge applications are due Oct. DOOR. STARTS AT 7:00 BE THERE I WANTED· Two riders to Dallas for LOST LADIES MAROON WALLET Oc­ FOR DAN. 14. Get the applications from your dorm lober break. I will be leaving friday CONTAINING S.DRIVER"S I NEED TROJAN (USC) TICKETS STU· representatives, at the Center for Soclsl Word of Warning: Uctober 21st Call Chuck altt56 LICENSE.PHOTOS. OTHER 10. IF NEED TWO NAVY GA"S CALL BRIAN DENT /GA SEMI-MEGA $$ CALL SAM, Concerns, or at Campus Ministry. She couldn't cool it if she wanted to, FOUND PLEASE CALL LAURA AT NO 6656 t721 For an experience that will iaat e Henry. Remember: "The only thing we WOULD LIKE RIDE TO VATICAN EX­ 2989 lifetime ... hal/9 to fear is Tsmle Herself/" The Ducks HIBIT SOON: TOM 333t ,3332 HELP! Parents will disown us if we don't NEED 2 USC STUDENT OR G. A.'S WILL LOST. roll of F1lm, 135-24exp 400 ASA get them PITT TIX. Call Pat att 068 or TRADE TWO PITT G A'S CALL ROBERT Lost at South d1n1ng hall piCtures are If· Jeanne at28-4-4167. AT266-5814 HENRY SAYS: COOL ITTAMIE!II MEOWWRRII replacable, please call L1bby at -3435 NEED A RIDE TO ROCH./UPSTATE NY Need two G.A.'s for the Pitt. game. Call DESPERATELY NEED 2 GA NAVY TIX-­ EDITORIAL CORRECTION: NOTRE Happy Birthday ELLEN MALLOY: 317 lOST: Woman·s gold Se1ko watch. Lost FOR OCT. BREAK. WILL SHARE Kelly 284-4074. CALLERICAT1465 DAME - WHERE MEN ARE MEN, B.P.: t3t6: She will be accepting birthday near Grotto Please call277-3409 USUAL TERRY X8725. WOMEN ARE MEN SHEEP ARE k1sses (and just about anything) from jUSt I need 3 Navy GA"s. Call Thet'esa 284· I HAVE TWO STUDENT TICKETS FOR SCARED, AND DUCKS ARE AFRAID OF about anyone all day tomorrow! LOST: 1 BLUE BOOKBAG. TAKEN NEED RIDE HOME TO BUFFALO ON 5442 EACH HOME GAME FOR SALE CALL TAMIE FROM THE SOUTH DINING HALL WED OR THUR BEFORE BREAK. WILL 6719 B P Booze Cruise: Stay loose. be cool. MON.,OCT. 3 PLEASE RETURN TO SHARE AS USUAL. MIKE 67t9 HELP!Need 2 USC or 3 PITT MANDATORY SAN FRANCISCO BAY goforrt! BRIAN LEE (X6741) AS SOON AS POS· GA"S.Piease call JIM at8736. AREA CLUB MEETING THIS SUNDAY SIBLE, OR AT LEAST PUT IT BACK IN 10-09-63 at 7:00pm in La Fortune Little Need 2 or 4tickets to Pitt game, G.A. that THE SOUTH DINING HALL WANTED: 4-6 GA nx to each of the PERSONALS Theater. is. Please call13tt and sell me your lick· FOR SALE following home games: USC. Pitt and ets. Penn State. Call Tom Hollerbach collect Juat when I thought I hlld all the at: 3t2/565-5959 Ext 2081. enewera, they chaniJIICI the queatlona. K. Good luck sucking face (with your date DOMER SIX MILE RUN· OCT. 6, 10 a.m. FOUND: CROSS pen 1n LaFortune See Juat when I thought 1 hlld llckata they or whatever). -sign up at NVA · T-shirts and trophies. Shirley at THE OBSERVER office For Sale:NEW Wilson Staff irons .. $350 need two Pitt GAs call Bill 6395 sold them. Juat when f thought my Call Larry .. t638 dear frlencle from L.A. couldn't come ELLEN MALLOY. can we ;ust tell you Great Science Fiction FOUND. STOPWATCH AT BURKE NEED 3or 4 GAs for ANY HOME Game. out, ..,.,. nice person will .. me 4 something? We think you're swell and 200t n MEMORIAL GOLF COURSE CALL AVAILABLE. 2 USC tix. Call (215) 238- COULD MEAN EMPLOYMENT. Call G.A. 'a to the U$C IJIIme. PLEASE HELP hope you have a happy day! Thurs& Fri ERIC AT 8192 TO IDENTIFY 9052 after 5 pm. STEVE at 232-0550. BY SELLING ME YOUR TIXS • MIC· Sponsored by the K of C HELLE 2114-4138. M After he teaches you to dance. maybe LOST. Red notebook, INTRO to COUPON BOOKLETS. ONLY t9.95. NEED 2 GA'S FOR NAVY. WILL PAY you can teach him a few things ELECTRICAL NETWORKS. Len 111 127 VALUED OVER $$$CALL TOM t423 Happy Birthday Prmce Robert! TERRI HARTUNG· Happy 21 Sl birthday, Ne1u Sc1 on Fnday, 9/30 after blow1ng a $t,OOO.OO.RESTAURANTS. PLACES WASH DC. MD, VA BUS SIGN-UPS baby! We'll miss celebrating this one to­ networks test Since rt belongs to my OF ENTERTAINMENT.ETC HELP! Need 2 PITT GA's. Call Sue at Desperately need USC tickets! Student or WED. OCT t2 7-6 PM LAFORTUNE gether, but what are you doing New roommate, he's not too happy erther. If PROCEEDS TO CHILDREN WITH CAN· 6050. GA. Call284-5502 LOBBY PRICE· $65. BRING MONEY TO Year"s Eve? Your Oklahoma boyfriend anyone flnds lh1s useless book. call B1ll CER/LEUKEMIA. CALL NANCY SIGN-UPS. LV t 0/22 AT 7 PM with the L.B.L. Chico X1087. 78-42638. need Pitt or Navy GAs call Ted al266 Entertain your guests with Middle Eastet'n Ot37 Flair or send a Belly Gram to someone BUZZ CLUB IS BACK! BUZZ CLUB IS HAPPY HOUR AT PANDORA'S LOST: Tl58 Calculator. N18uwland ROYAL TYPEWRITER. PICA, MANUAL. you love. Ph. 29t-62t5 BACK! BUZZ CLUB IS BACK! BOOKS EVERY FRIDAY FROM 3:00- Science Hall on 10/5/63. Reward Call $40, CALL ERIC. 6t92 Need 2 or more PITT GA. TIX: Tom at 6:00. ALL USED BOOKS 50/ OFF AND Michael McCarthy. 6294 333t or3332 HEY DIANNE 1ft ENJOY YOURSELFUI SUNDAY NIGHT! SUNDAY NIGHT! 711 ALL NEW BOOKS 20/ OFF. STOP IN '72 VW BUG.rbll eng. B/0. Leslie x271 0 BREAK A LEG AND REX! 71t RE)(I ON FRIDAYS AND YOU'LL SAVE. 937 LOST one black Tl-30 calculator 1n 3rd Need 2 USC GA'S Call BRIAN 698t GOOD LUCK TONIGKTUI SO. BEND AVE. noor physiCs lab call 6719 ~found LOVE, VICKI TO the ·JUDGES""· talk IS cheap, thaf"s HAVE 4 AIR FORCE TICKETS. WANT NEED 2 USC TIX CALL MARY AT SMC wry we DON"T T ALKII 3rd Holy Cross TO SWAP FOR PENN ST CALL PAUL 4433 SMC-NOTRE DAME SUMMER 1703. PROGRAMS IN LONDON AND ROME. Sus19,Bernice,Jiii,Julle, Trish I You·re the Chnstie Brinkley and E. T. come to see COURSES IN TEN DIFFERENT AREAS best friends a cripple could ever have, L...... -F_O_R_R_E_NT___,j L--1~TI_C_KE_T_S ~ HELP INFORMATIONAL MEETING OCT. t7, Thanks for all ya"all have done! Will McClean at N.D. IN ROOM 226 MOREAU SMC AT 7 PM. Love,Colleen Desperately need Penn State game tick­ A 119ry RICH friend needs PITT GA'a He TARANTULA Needed call John 3404 INFO. CALLAP BLACK 284-4460 wanted 2 roomates lor N. D opts call els. Call Bnan at 8795. Is wHNng to pay serious dollars for the Spud- THEY might not reveal your true 23491t6or 110t tickets. Please help by csJNng David at Oh, the humanrty HAPPY "BIG 20" BIRTHDAY, BRIAN 1dent1ty, but WE never promised any­ HELP I NEED USC TIX CALL MARY 277-1326. K,AUFM~T8. thing! Two SMC girls who know. 264508-4 You'll be gllld you did TOO NUTTY TOO NUTTY TOO NUTTY TOO NUTTY -- KEVIN GARDEN IS 20 ALL WOMEN AND FEMALE DOMERS Peggy.Happy B-B-Day To a g1rl who likes USC-NO !IX wanted. Paying most (312) THIS SUNDAY -- TOO NUTTY TOO WHO'VE BEEN WANTING AN OLDER th1ngs TANGY. Gonna find guy who HELP! NEED USC TIX FOR RICH WANTED 246·4650. NUTTY TOO NUTTY TOO NUTTY -­ ·MAN."" JOHN BURKE TURNS 22 ON busted your hand. Take it easy on the diet RELATIVES. CALL LON AT 6763 CALL NO FRIDAY AND IS AVAILABLE FOR PER­ coke. Love. Mike, Bob. and John • Need Non-studentt1ckets to NO vs USC. t388 AND WISH "MR HAPPY" A HAPPY SONAL B-DAY SURPRISES IN ROOM I need 6 GA to any home game call Dan Call collect. (3t2) 565-5959 x20t3 or USC TIX NEEDED !! Student or GA · $$ B-DAY! -- TOO NUTTY TOO NUTTY 234 ALUMNI HALL DONT FORGET .. say what you want ·cause this IS a NEW al234·6496 x2233. CALL KEVIN x 6214 NOW I TOO NUTTY TOO NUTTY YOUR B·DAYSUIT. FROM S. ALLEY ART SCHOOL! The Observer ;:p. Friday, October 7, 1983·- page 15 Match play championships Batsketball Palmer almost upsets Ballesteros ticket Associated Press first-round matches were Americans 17th, while Palmer wandered off Calvin Peete, Bill Rogers and Hale Ir­ course with his second shot and win, Bernhard Langer of Germany, finished with a regulation 5. VIRGINIA WATER, England - Greg Norman of Australia, Bob While. some matches see-sawed, Severiano Ballesteros played one of distribution Charles of New Zealand and Nick Rogers, Irwin and Peete all reaped his greatest shots ever yesterday to the benefit of a good start. Monday cheat Arnold Palmer of an upset vic­ Faldo of Britain. Rogers took the first three holes tory in the first round of the The knock-out, head-to-head All seniors against Isao Aoki of Japan and went $225,000 Suntory World Match Play tournament continues with 36-hole matches from the second round on to an early 5 and 4 win. Golf Championship. today. The final is set for Sunday, Irwin began by rolling in a 70-foot One hole down as he approached Tuesday birdie putt and overcame David the 18th green, the Spanish star with $52,51[)0 going to the winner. Graham of Australia 2 and 1. Juniors and all undergraduate chipped into the hole from the A crowd of 13,350 - the biggest Peete also was n t ever headed. He rough to tie the match and went on attendance for any one day in the students in was 4-up on Tsuneyuki Nakajim af­ to win at the 21st hole in a sudden­ tournament's history - followed the golf in the autumn sunshine. ter eight holes, but later lost ground the ninth semester or higher death playoff. The fans' favorite was Palmer and and finally won by one hole. Palmer, 54, who won the in­ for most of the morning he looked \1\fednesday augural World Match Play 19 years capable of giving them the upset Sophomores, graduate students, ago, appeared heading for a sensa­ they wanted. When he went 2-up by tional win on Wentworth's 6,945- rolling in a 16-foot birdie putt at the NFL makes and law students yard, par 35-37-72 course. He was 12th, the scene was like the 1960's two holes up with two to play when again with Arnie's Army roaring with Ballesteros struck back. excitement. Jets' move Thursday Ballesteros, bidding to win the Later Palmer talked about Balles­ Freshmen and any student who missed title for the third straight year, said, teros' chip at the 18th which turned official "I have played shots like that before, the match. his/her appropriate day but never at such a critical mo­ "It was just one hell of a shot," Pal­ Associated Press ment." mer said. "I thought I was going to He said his spectacular chip shot win. But that's golf. All tickets are being distributed at Gate 3 was from 50 yards. "Ifl had played the 17th properly NEW YORK -The National Foot­ Ballesteros, who was suffering there would not have been an 18th ball League's NewYorkJets formally of the ACC from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. from a fever, went straight to bed af­ hole at all. That was the bad hole for announced yesterday that they will ter winning. me." move to Giants Stadium in East Rut­ Other winners of the 18-hole, Ballesteros got a birdie at the herford, N.J., next season but pledged to return to New York "if the city will build a proper football stadium." In a letter to New York City Mayor Edward I. Koch, Jets principal owner Leon Hess said the Jets "have been and still are playing our home games in a run-down, neglected stadium, Y()UR S which is well-known to be the NFL's poorest facility for athletes and spec­ tators alike." Hess said that at a Sept. 26 IS meeting Koch promised to offer on Sept. 30 a plan for a new stadium but that on Sept. 28 he "held a news con­ ference announcing a Jets move to New , although you knew very you a coupon well that no such decision had been made." Foot! This offer is In officially announcing the move to the Meadowlands, Hess also pledged to return to New York if the city will do the following: -Build a first-class professional football stadium for the city of New York. -Have all necessary permits, detailed plans, authorizations, ap­ THE ATHLETE'S FOOT: provals and financing securly ! in place before Feb. 1, 1986. -Guarantee the Jets occupancy starting in the 1989 season under a *Carries the very latest lease equitable to the city and the styles. Jets. Hess, an oil magnate who owns 75 percent of the Jets- the rest is held by Mrs. Helen Dillon, the daughter *Has the best selfx:tion of former club president Donald C. of athletic shoes in Indiana. Lillis - said in the letter that Koch was guilty of "forcing the issue" at his news conference and that, as a result, "the Jets' fans have expressed *Has the best service ... people themselves." who really know athletic shoes In the week following the news conference, Hess said, "the Jets and acttvewear. received 9,000 telephone calls from fans. Less than 60 people voiced op­ position to the Meadowlands move, with virtually every caller request­ ing ticket information if the Jets move to the Meadowlands. The Jets also received more than 4,000 writ­ 00 ten requests to buy seats for next season if the Jets move to the OFF Meadowlands. "You cannot fool the public, Mr. When you present your student I.D. Mayor," the letter said. "Jets fans want a clean, efficient, well-run stadium, built for football, not the Offer is good at the Athlete's Foot Store 'unsuitable' Shea If you are in­ terested in the Jets' pledge and the in the University Park Mall (South Bend) return of the New York Jets to New or any participating Athlete's Foot Store. York City, please let me hear from you." Harrison Goldin, the city's comp­ Nooneknowstheathlete'sjootlikeTheAtlnlete'sFoot troller, has estimated the Jets' move would cost the city about $33 mil­ lion a year in lost revenue. Athlele's The ~~t,t,lele•s Giants Stadium, a 76,891-seat facility built strictly for football, was "QJP~~:. University Park Mall completed in time for the New York ~~· Giants to begin play there in 1976. The .Observer Friday, October 7, 1983 - page 16 National League playoffs NHL Standings Rookie Hudson set to face L.A. Associated Press "He throws well," said Welch, still use them, but I also have the In thts year's NHL playoff format, the top lour teams who was 1 5-12 during the season for change-up to keep the hitters off tn each division make the playoffs, regardless of over­ the Dodgers, including a l-0 shutout balance." allleague standing. PHILADELPHIA - A year ago, Charles Hudson was sitting at home of the Phillies. "He has good mec­ hanics. He's patient. He's aggressive. He's also benefitted from watch­ PRINCE OF WALES CONFERENCE CLARENCE CAMPBELL CONFERENCE in Dallas, watching baseball's pen­ ing the dean of the Phillies' staff, 38- An Smythe Dvlalon nant playofiS on television. He goes after people." w L T aF aA Pia. w L T aF aA Pill Hudson also says he's a different year-old Steve Carlton, who Boston 0 0 9 3 2 Calgary 1 0 0 5 3 2 Today, he'll be on the mound at combined with rei ever AI Holland to Buffalo 0 0 5 3 2 Edmonton 1 0 0 5 4 2 Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium, pitcher than he was in his first two Quebec 1 I 0 10 12 2 Winmpeg 0 0 6 6 1 pro seasons, both spent in the low shut out the Dodgers 1-0 in the Montreal 0 0 4 7 0 Los Angeles 0 0 3 3 1 starting for the Phillies against Los opener ofthis series. Hartford 0 1 0 3 5 0 Vancouver 0 1 0 3 5 0 Angeles and Bob Welch in Game minors. P81rtck Dlvlalon Norrie Division "Last year, I was just a power "Lefty showed me something all N.Y Rangers 1 0 0 6 2 2 Chicago 1 0 0 4 3 2 Three of the National League Cham­ Philadelphia 1 0 0 4 1 2 St. Louis 1 1 0 8 7 2 pionship Series. pitcher," he said. "I used the fast ball season," he said. "Keep the ball low N.Y. Islanders 1 0 10 11 2 DetroH 0 0 1 6 6 1 And, no matter how much he and my out pitch was the slider. I and mix up the pitches." Pt"sburgh 0 0 3 5 0 Minnesota 0 0 1 3 3 1 New Jersey 0 0 2 6 0 Toronto 0 0 4 5 0 tries, the 24-year-old rookie who Washington 0 0 1 4 0 had never pitched above Class A before this season, knows he can't approach this as just another game. Rookie Boddicker "You try to imagine that it is," he Yeoterday'a ReauHa said. "But everyone in the nation saves Orioles again N.V Islanders 7, Montreat 4 will be watching. I'm proud to say Boston 9, Quebec 3 Ph1ladetph1a 4, Washington 1 we're here, and I'm in the place to do Associated Press Miller said. "That's why you wind up Todey'a a • .,.. the job." with 140 pitches. I'd rather see them N. V Rangers at New Jersey After the teams split the first two Edmonton at Wtnntpeg hit the first pitch on the ground." M.nnesota at Vancouver games in Los Angeles, Game Three is BALTIMORE - Rookie Mike Bod­ "I think it was the first game he Tomo"ow'a a-a a pivotal one that will leave the win­ dicker stepped in to save the Bal­ Boston at Hartlord pitched this year in which he didn't Buffalo at Quebec ner just one victory away from the timore Orioles in the playofiS, just as develop a blister," said Miller. "I was N.Y Islanders at Washington World Series. But Phillies' manager he did during the regular season. afraid to look at his finger." New Jersey at Detroit Paul Owens says he has no qualms "He was there when we needed Philadelphia at Montreat Boddicker pitched well in spring N Y. Rangers at Pi"sburgh about starting Hudson, the rookie someone to get us to the playofiS," training the past two years, but each Chicago at St. Louis from Prairie View A&M University. said pitching Coach Ray Miller, "and Toronto at Los Angeles time failed to make the 25-man ros­ "I've got a lot of confidence in when we neeeed someone to give us ter. him," Owens said. "He's partly a big game in the playofiS." responsible for us being here. He Boddicker, recalled from the Asked why he had made Boddick­ pitched well all year for us." minor leagues on May 5 after starters er his last cut this year, Manager Joe Recalled from Portland on May Jim Palmer and Mike Flanagan were Altobelli cracked: "Because I'm 31, Hudson was 8-8 for Philadelphia. disabled, won 16 games while help­ dumb." His record included a five-game win­ ing to stablize a injury-riddled staff. He explained, however, that a ning streak and a three-hitter against Placed in a more pressurized sprained ankle placed him a week to Houston on july 20, a game in which situation after the Orioles lost the 10 days behind schedule. But he he took a no-hitter into the ninth in­ opening game of the best-of-five took his regular turns in the minors ning. American League Championship and was ready when he was recalled. There also were two losses to Los Series, Boddicker blanked the Angeles, which beat Philadelphia in Chicago White 4-0 on five hits last "He was a victim of numbers," 11 of their 12 regular-season night and tied a playoff record with Miller said. "It was hard to break into meetings. But the Dodgers still were 14 strikeouts. a staff that included Cy Young impressed with the young man. "Strikeouts I don't care about," pitchers and 20-game winners." "I said early in the year that he reminded me of a right-hanued Scot­ ty McGregor," Miller said, "and now I believe it." Boddicker led the league with five shutouts during the regular season, the first coming against the White Sox in his first start on May I 7 - on the same day that Flanagan was disabled. The rookie has baffled and bot­ hered some of the league's better hitters with his assortment of slow pitches, once causing Rod Carew to complain: "I feed my dog beuer garbage than he throws."

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I u\Jo(),&ao..,.a. •• Spm, Tues.-Sat. 7pm, Sunday The 0 bserver Friday, October 7, 1983 - page 17 ! I ... Flags Wlhat's up? continued from page 20 On Tuesday, B.P. came back to scored two safeties in the first half a defeat Lyons 14-0. Ehrhardt said the Here's what ~rour teams are doing feat which Zerr described as team played much better on Tues­ "unusual for a flag football team." day, especially the defensive line. P.E.'s major scoring drives came Walsh's 12-6 upset victory over this weekend during the second half and Zerr was B.P. on Sunday, has "turned the team pleased because the oiiensive line around," said Steber. "Not many "moved the ball well." people thought we would beat B.P." According to Zerr, P.E. "scored Steber sees an optimistic conclu­ throughout the game," against P.W. sion for Walsh's 1983 season and Today and she named Carla Cortes and says, "things are starting to go to­ Susie Downs as outstanding players gether." cross country SMC volleyball for the week. To prepare: for its game Lyons' loss to B.P. on Tuesday was Notre Dame Invitational vs. Michigan- Dearborn against Walsh next week, the team not discouraging to team captain will "have to work out the kinks and Martha Bums since "B.P. is always a 2p.m. 6p.m. work on the little thing:!." powerhouse." Tuesday's loss gives Burke Memorial Golf Course Angela Athletic Facility Although Badin Ios1 its season Lyons an 0-3 record and Bums is dis­ opener to P.E., Espospo is optimistic appointed that her team was unable about the rest of the seru;on. She eays to score against B.P. soccer most of the team consists of fresh­ This Sunday, Lyons will face P.W. vs. Findlay men this year and, "there is a lot of and Bums says the team will be 8p.m. inexperience on the terun." practicing flag drills and blocking in She attributes Sunday's loss to, preparation for the game. "We will Cartier Field "slow execution and a bad choice of determine our strengths and plays in the beginning" Although weaknesses before Sunday." Tomorrow there has been some trouble with Farley's 14-0 victory over Lewis soccer SMCtennis the offensive line, Espospo says on Sunday built confidence in the there will be no major changes in Farley team. at Wisconsin- Milwaukee at Irish Invitational the line up. "We started to work more as a Tournament Earlier this week, B.P. lost to team," said Farley team captain football Walsh 12-6. "We played a bad game, Sharon Koehler. "We blew holes in at South Carolina and I think we lost to an inferior their defense." ND women's tennis 6p.m. team," explained Ehrhrudt. Lewis team captain Janeen Olds Irish Invitational She blamed the losn to "dumb was disappointed with Sunday's per­ mistakes" and "tremendous clipping formance "but we lerurned where we Courtney Tennis Courts baseball penalties" which pusht:d the team must improve." The loss to Farley vs. Glen Oak back 45 yards on one drive. "We gives Lewis a 2-1 record and, accord­ field hockey 1 p.m. hate to lose a game like that, but it ing to Olds, "brought us down to at St. Louis Univ. may have been constructive be­ earth and showed us we can't Jake Kline Field cause we found a lot of errors." depend on the fancy plays."

Fightin' Irish -- -- I Inflation ------1 ~Fighters ~':HANCE TO DANCE I ~~ ~RIDCitl ~cCiUIRL'S -~ featuring t $2.50 pitchers .25 Beers Beat the Clock t Mon. & Tues. 7-10 Frldat & Saturday while you watch the 2 for 1 housedrlnks-Wed t N.D. games 4)n Sat. HOUSE COCKY AILS $1 Molson -Thurs. 8-9 .. $.50 9-10 .. $.60 t with us. 10-11 .. $.70 11-12 .. $.80 /the .~; 1 Hap Hour 4-7 Mon- Fri. t t ~~~~~~i/C~ t t Spend a "Neat" Evening I I t Friday, Oct. 7 t with DOUG NEIDT t LaFortune Ballroom (pronounced NEET) t CLASSICAL GUITARIST 1 9:30-1:30 I t 1 Adm. $1 ------· ------...... I McCarthy's EST.1983 Mon: Monday Night Football - Pitchers $2 durin.g game N.D. Toes: Two for One Draft DOme Two drafts . 75 NO Ave. Wed: Talent and Ladies Nite - Happy Hour prices to ladies ThUlrs: Cheers Nite - HillS! . Hear! . 25 draft8-10PM Fri: Pre-Game Nite - * MoCarthy"s *Bach * Dave Brubeck wake up the echoes with us! "Blue Rondo a Ia Turk" * Tarreg11 * Stanley Myer's Sat: Sat. Morning Confusion - "Cavatina" "Deerhunter'' Irish Omelets 12.50; draft 7 AM .10 Plus Doug's Own arrangements of up a dime every hour till noon *GERSHWIN *ELLINGTON a first for the classical guitar Sat. Afternoon Pre-Game Warm-Up - Wed Oct. 26 at 8:00 PM $2.00 pitchers 2-8 Admission $7.00 Tickets on sale now Uncle Vinnie Says: CENTURY CENTER "Dillon dares to be different, 410 N Hill Mon-Tburs 11:00-1:0o' GoBigRed" Fri 11:00-2:00 Full line ofPub Grub served daily Sat 7:00AM-2:00AM ,----

The Observer Friday, October 7, 1983 ..:. -page-18 American League playoffs Orioles shut out Sox, even series NVA Pairings Associated Press Ken Singleton, then hit a hard the ball, Roenicke had scored from All matches must be played and reported to the grounder toward third and Law, a first and Singleton had waltzed into MIXED DOUBLES-THIRD ROUND NVA office by Tueday. October t t BALTIMORE- Rookie: Mike Bod­ converted shortstop, let it bound off All matches must be played and reported by October second. MEN'S OPEN TENNIS NO. 1 11. dicker, striking out a record-tying his glove. When he recovered, his Then, in the sixth, the Orioles laid Coleman (4645) v. Mrschke (4521) K. O'Brien (1692) v. B McGowan (1069) 14, pitched a five-hitter and Gary throw went over Paciorek's head in­ waste to any plans the White Sox Martrn-Morrow (6840) v. Moore·O'Bryan (7870) Dahl (8944) v. J. Bosco Roenicke slugged a two-run homer to the White Sox's dugout, allowing might have had for a sweep. Cal Rip­ Callis-O'Grady ( 1288) v. Clifford-Locke (8171) Cocke-Schnell (3316) v. Grojean-Mohnsky (1248) as the Baltimore Orioles beat the Roenicke to score. ken Jr. led off with a high drive off Paraiso-Dougherty (1271) v Waii-Hagemen (1195) Chicago White Sox 4-0 last night and Boddicker, who joined the the wall in left field. As if to add final Sobzak-Delapena (1639) v. Szatkowskr-Demello (8852) squared their American League Orioles on May 3 to replace the insult to his night, Kittle had beer MEN'S OPEN TENNIS NO. 2 Cleveland-Garhus (4514) v. O'Bnen-Aimerda ( 1692) Championship Serks at one victory injured Jim Palmer, did not yield a spilled on him from the stands. It Huebl (3248) v. Keller (6105) Bond-Demello ( 1027) v. Runger-Schmid (1432) Harman (1082) v. Soergal (1575) apiece. hit until two were out in the third had, indeed, become an inglorious Knrpe (8917) v. Goulet (277-7563) The Orioles, with the victory, inning when Rudy Law singled. He night. Fay (1069) v. Leyes (1082) avoided a gloomy situation. No team struck out two more in the fourth, After Eddie Murray popped out, P. Serrano- bye in the best-of-five series has ever and Kittle led off the next inning Roenicke came to bat. Under Bal­ MEN'S NOVICE SINGLES- SECOND ROUND survived losing the first two games with the second hit off Boddicker, a timore's platoon system, the right­ Lukastak (8272) v. Kennaugh (4627) at home. The final three games - if single. handed hitting Roenicke had sat out WOMEN'S TENNIS SINGLES- SECOND ROUND Taneff (1129) v Polasek (8102) all arc necessary - arc scheduled But Boddicker struck out two Game One while lefty swingingJohn Healy (4625) v. Gardrner (8646) Almeida (6722) v. V. Demello (1326) Horvath (1392) v. Clifford (8171) for Comiskey Park at Chicago more White Sox in that inning, and a Lowenstein played against Hoyt. But Gordon (6928) v. L Demello (1348) Kelly ( 1520) v. Real (3378) tonight, tomorrow, and Sunday pattern was developing in this series with the left-handed Bannister lmmonen (3091) v. Kohlhaas (6834) Bauman (3546) v. Lusser (8989) Coin (6803) v. Rozic (6727) Pico-bye night. Mike Flanagan will start for between two normally potent of­ pitching, Manager Joe Altobelli McGinnis- bye the Orioles in Game Three against fensive teams. Chicago's LaMarr called on Roenicke, who had hit 19 Rich Dotson. Hoyt had pitched a five-hitter in homers in the regular season. GRAD/FAC SINGLES Roenicke, a platoon player who Game One to outduel Baltimore's The count went to 2·2, and did not start in Baltimore's 2-1 loss Scott McGregor. On this cool, clear Roenicke sent Bannister's next pitch K. Walberg (277-7152) v. Hoffman (239-7666) Lyons (239-6284) v. D. Walberg (272-7152) in Wednesday's opener, homered in night, however, the tables were deep into the left-field seats, giving Schubert (2754) v. Steve 0. (232-9140) the sixth inning, doubled, walked turned as Boddicker outmatched the Orioles a 4-0 lead. a..------' twice, scored three times and had Bannister. Orioles fans had something to two RBI's. Ken Singleton doubled The Orioles scored their second cheer about and the partisan crowd home one run and the other scored run in the fourth. Roenicke walked, of 52,347 gave Roenicke a standing on an error by Chicago third with the ftrst free pass from Bannis­ ovation, drawing the Orioles left­ baseman Vance Law. ter, and Singleton ripped a ground fielder from the dugout for a tip of Boddickcr's 14 strikeouts, a ball down the third base line. When the cap. career high. tied the AL champion­ the ball hit the wall that juts out After all, he and that rookie ship Series record and were the toward the line and caromed into pitcher named Boddicker had given most by any American League short left field, Kittle was out of posi­ the club new life. pitcher this year. He recorded No. tion. By the time he tracked down 14 by getting julio Cruz swinging in the ninth. The right-hander, who started the season in the minor Knickers and birdies leagues, and White Sox left-hander Floyd Bannister began the night in a struggle of power. gain Stewart golf lead Boddicker, throwing an assort­ ment of breaking pitches and curly­ IT ALlAN PIZZA cue fastballs, struck out two in the Associated Press Asian circuit, had birdies of 15, 25 first inning, and Bannister fanned and I 0 feet and another of three JR. SM. MED. lARGE three. COLUMBUS, Ga Payne inches in blasting out a 3 I on the 10" 12" 14" 17" In the top of the second, Boddick­ Stewart, nattily attired in pink knick­ front nine. CHEESE ...... 3.40 4.85 6.40 er struck out Greg Luzinski to start. ers, snipped five strokes off par yes­ The flamboyant Stewart, resplen· 9.10 He then hit Tom Paciorek with his terday with a 65 for a one-stroke dent in his pink knickers and socks EXTRA next pitch and walked Ron Kittle on lead after the first round of the and pink shirt with gray stripes and INGREDIENTS .80 .90 1.20 1.35 a 3-1 pitch to give the White Sox two S250,000 Southern Open Golf matching white sweater, cap and ba~erunners. But, as they had in their Tournament. shoes, added a IO-foot birdie on the Game One victory when they Stewart, 26, blistered the narrow, I Oth hole but had bogeys on th I 1 th INGREDIENTS: Cheese, Sausage, Pepperoni, Ham stranded I 0 baserunners, Chicago hilly, par 70, 6,791-yard Green Is­ and I 4th to go along with birdies of Peppers, Onions, Green Olives, let another opportunity slip by. land Country Club course for seven 4 and 3 feet on the 12th and 15th Black Olives, Mushrooms On a 3-2 pitch, Boddicker struck birdies and two bogeys to take the holes to complete his fine round. out Vance Law, and Paciorek, on the lead over Gary Hallberg and Sam "I feel ~ comfortable on this front end of an attempted double Torrance, a Ryder Cup player from course," said Stew:trt, who also said POLISH STYLE PIZZA steal, was thrown out at third by Scotland. he owns 4 knicker outfits. made with catcher Rick Dempsey for a Gary Koch and Grier Jones were "I believe I was the first on the U.S. POLISH SAUSAGE- SAUERKRAUT- CHEESE doubleplay. two shots off the pace at 67 while tour to wear knickers. Now there are Served on a very crisp crust In the bottom half of the inning, defending champion Bobby Clam­ other guys wearing them. Why not? JUNIOR pen led a group at 68. SMALL MEDIUM LARGE Roenicke led off with a double. It If you ever wore them playing go!( 10" 12" was his sixth hit off Bannister in ; 8 Hal Sutton, the leading money 14" 17" you'd see they're a lot more com­ 4.20 5.90 career at-bats and all have been for winner on the tour, had some fortable than slacks," said Stewart. 7.80 11.00 extra bases, including four home problems with an eye infection and He ranks 55th on the money list runs. staggered to a 76. this year with just under $95,000 The next batter, designated hitter Stewart, in his third year on the and has four finishes in the top 10, PGA tour after two seasons on the his best a tie for third at Milwaukee. SANDWICHES Served on an 8 in.~h long roll Columbus Day Polish Sausage, W /Kraut...... $2.10 enjoy your job I tal ian Sausage, WI Sauce ...... 2.1 a· and your spare Special Italian Beef ...... 2.85 time too! Combination, Italian Sausage & Beef ...... 3. 75 Ham on Rye .. _...... 2.50 REFRIGERATORS Ham & Cheese on Rye ...... 2.80 SAlARY Submarine ...... 3.05 ~tarts from $17,000and Increases annually to $29,000 $35 per School Year In four years. QUALIFICATIONS BSN degree or 3-year diploma FREE DELIVERY with one year of experience. You must be at least 20 years old but under 35 years old. BENEf'ITS 30 days paid vacation cALL Taylor Rapid advancement Worldwide Travel Submarine FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: Rental $2.75 1-800-382-9782 toU free (local: 256-14SS) Sandwich (save .30) Navy representative will be on campus Oct. 19 & 20 (W & Th)­ 277.2190 Placement Office -.... .:.r:g.:. 1427 N.lronwood POLISH PRINCE PIZZERIA - =---.;.-•\- ...... j, ------

WE~ekend Friday, October 7, 1983- page 19 Berke Breathed Campus Friday, Oct. 7 •12:15 p.m. -Italian Club Meeting, for Italian· speaking faculty, Faculty Dining Room •2:30 p.m. - Lecture, "Joyce Dublin: The Street and the Snow," Dr. Albert Montesi, 209 O'Shaughnessy •3 p.m. - Computer Minicoure, IBM PC Fun· damentals, 115 Computing Center •3:30 p.m. - Philosophy Colloquium, "Some Conceptual Aberrations of Cognitive Science," Prof Kenneth Sayre, Library Lounge •4 p.m - Cross Country, Notre Dame Invitation-­ al, Notre Dame Golf Course •6 p.m. - Volleyball, SMC vs. Univ of Michigan­ Dearborn, Angela Athletic Facility •7:30 p.m. - Friday Night Film Series, "Dr_ Fate Photius Strangelove: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb," Annenberg Auditorium •8 p.m. - Soccer, NO Men vs Findlay College, Car­ II /((C/( SOMC # ((6 ~.(1 £ WDND£1. WHAr He'S HOW 'Sour. .. tier Field GONNA SIN T"D THEM WOW/ r CliNT 8£i.IE"VE C>DtJ'r E"V£1!/ •8 p.m. - ND / SMC Theatre, "The Skin of our WHEN WE Pt.H/ FIIUSr SIIID rHIIT. 1111/JK I[ Teeth," O'Laughlin Auditorium, 53 general admis­ SourH CA~fJLfNII ? sion, $2.50 faculty and students \ \ \ I Saturday, Oct. 8 •8 a.m. - Tennis, Irish Invitational, Courtney Courts •9:30 a.m. - Field Hockey, NO Women vs. St. Louis, Alumni Field •1 p.m. - Baseball, NO Men vs Glen Oaks Comm College, Jake Kline Field •2 p.m. - Basketball, Logan Center Benefit, Detroit Pistons vs. Indiana Pacers •6 p.m. - Football, NO vs South Carolina, at South Dave & Dave Carolina Mellish •7 p.m. -Art Opening and Reception, Work by

MADMAN, I .JENNY, THERE COMES ATIHl FCfl. Father Andre Bouler, Isis Art Gallery HIOUGHr EVEN THE MOST CYNICAl OF ~~ GEE HAil/'IAN, THAT~ •8 p.m. - ND SMC Theatre, "The Skin of Our YOij HATED ANfi-NAI!AAUIIl TO COME FORm j SO I!EA~TlFUl. 1-JHAT~ Teeth," O'Laughlin Auditorium, $3 general admis· fHE Dlla~. ------AND lOMMUNE Wlrfl NATURE, Aj TU!T YOUlE ffEbiN<; ])1<11 / BEING ON£ WITH THE EAATH~f sion, $2.50 for faculty and students •8 p.m. - Radio Show, "College Football ' -=- ~ •• """ ~ - Scoreboard," Host Will Hare, WSND-AM 64 -- Sunday, Oct. 9 •1 p.m. - Baseball, NO Men vs. Lewis University, Jake Kline Field •2 p.m. - Mass with Emmaus, Moreau Seminary •4 p.m. ·-University Artist Series, Cello Recital, Braginsky and Remenikova Duo, Annenberg Auditorium ACROSS 30 Conditions 53 Color 27 Name --~~ p.m. - ND./ SMC Theatre Auditions, For 1 Fastener 35 MacGraw of 54 1969 Bel· 28 :Still speak' "The Investigations," For men only, 118 5 Become mont winner ilngout movies O'Shaughnessy The Da.ily Crossword roughened 36 Piincipal 62 "I cannot 29 IExpression­ by wear melody tell-" lless 10 Clean 39 -for 63 Descendant 31 !Blunder 14 A Guthrie (encourage) 64 A'sh or oak 32 !Hard court Far Side 15 Obsession 40 Reprisal 65 "1- man ~~a me 16 Against authoriza­ with ... " 33 Mickey or 17 Actual tion 66 Edible Minnie 18 Care for 43 First name nut 34 13uide livestock in mystery 67 Queue 37 ·- poetica 19 Libertine 44 Wicked 68 Calendar 38 IOallas 20 TV host 45 Employ unit 1school 23 Chess 46 Great 69 Watery !letters grandmaster bargain swelling 41 Pekoe or 24 "Arose­ 48 Riverin 70 Ceases t:>olong rose ... " Belgium 42 ~~laskan 25 Metal 49 Moslem DOWN 47 Palmas or plate prince 1 Heartless Cruces 28 LAcol. 51 Period 2 Location 50 Courage 3 Serb or 52 Canadian Thursday's Solution Croat ~~en insula 4 Considerate 53 Fleddish pAS ~HAW .R E G A L 5 Tiny brown ANT E SIA U R .E D U C E Confine To shelter l G D R T I T I .M I R E S 6 54 N E R V E L 0 N G I T U D E 7 One 55 Gam or E L Ml R A.S K I N 8 Boxing Moreno -T A R P• L L D•P E T 9 Clotho, 56 Sign of A CICIU S T 0 M E 0-Ts- E T E Lachesis s1orrow c R.lU.lD I. 0 I D.A u R A L and Atropos 57 Las Vegas 10 Tender i'lems A H P 0 0 P- 11 Celebes ox 58 Filch soil N 0 E G R I P E S 12 Amaze 59 rv actress AMPLI~UDE ETUDE 13 Go fast Moran P E R I ~ S I Z E U R G E 21 Hop or hora 60 [)ivide into ©1983 Tribune Com::>any Syndicate, Inc. I N 0 N E E C R U D E A R All Rights Reserved 10/7/83 lli'l'""GUSTY.STAIR ERRS 22 Stoolie factions 25 Weakens 61 Observes 10/7/83 26 Warn 62 /.1 Carter

r ..-. ~ ..-. ~ ._. ~ ..-. .... ~ ~ ..-. ~ .._.. ..-. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -4IIIJ t t Will you ever tip a mbot a your favorite restaurant? t f Will you ever live on the moon or planet hesburgh? Logo Night Will your children d :>their homework and write papers on your family home computer? f Will you hear 'Radio Moscow' on your Walkman because of satellites? t 6 Drink specials according t Find Out! ' f t to your clothes f Dr. Gerard K. O!INeill t , "Our next Century on Earth and in Space!l!l f ' 8 PM Library Aud,itorium Tuesday Oct. 11 f (wear a Bud shirt & ·get a Bud discount or any f NOTE: one student will IN> selected to attend • pre-lecture dinner with Dr. On/ell. In 25 words or less state why you A would enJoy dining with o "guest lecturer. Return to: Academic Commission, 2nd floor LaFortune by Mon. Oct. 10 t other Drink) ' with: neme, eddress, pho~• number f t D.J. Peter Burch -----~------~ - page 20 B.P. upsets Farley as women's flag football ends second week of play

By MARY SIEGER hitting game since B.P. and Farley 20-6. Sports Writer are sister dorms. Last Saturday, the P.W. team suf­ Last night's contest improves fered a major setback when its ath­ Women's imerhall football com­ B.P.'s record to 3-1 and lowers Far­ letic commissioner, Cathy Schafer, pleted its second week last night ley's season record to the same was injured during practice. She with a fierce match between Breen­ mark. broke her ankle when she went out Phillips and defending champion Walsh's game last night against for a long pass and slipped. ("Her leg Farley. When it was over, B.P. had Badin was not as close as the 8-6 went one way and she went the defeated Farley, 8-6. score indicates. Two of Walsh's other," described teammate Katy In another game last evening, touchdowns were called back due Shannon). Walsh defeated Badin with an identi­ to penalties. Schafer returned from the hospi­ cal score. "The score doesn't really tal this week after pins were placed B.P. team captain, Lisa Ehrhardt, represent our play and the penalties in her ankle and will spend the next described yesterday's game as "a really hurt us. That's something week in the infirmary until the swell­ crucial mid-season game," which we're really going to have to work ing from the surgery subsides. should set the pace for the rest of on," said Walsh coach Brian Steber. "I think it was detrimental to the B.P.'s season. "If we play consi~tant­ Although last night's loss brings team," said Shannon. "People an: ly, we should be able to get the Badin to an 0-2 record, both team sympathetic, but they're afraid of championship back," said Ehrhardt. captain Sally Espospo and coach Jim what might happen to them and I "It's do or die for the championship, Rikert were pleased with last night's don't blame them." we've been working for nothing performance. This Sunday, P.W. will face Lyons else." "We're not happy to lose, but our and Shannon says, "we're trying to Ehrhardt said last evening's vic­ scoring in the second half really makeit." · tory over Farley is a credit to B.P.'s helped our morale," explained With its victory over P.W., and an defensive line. "Everyone seems to Espospo. "Now we won't have a 18-0 victory over Badin, P.E. im­ be having trouble scoring on our losing attitude." proved its record to 2-1 this week. defense, and I think if we can just get In action earlier this week, "We went in, got the job done, and ahead in a game:, it should be enough Pasquerilla West suffered its second got out," said team captain, Kim for us to win." consecutive loss of the season when Zcrr. The rivalry between B.P. and Far­ it dropped Tuesday's game to Walsh, In the game against Badin, P.E. ley "is an age-old rivalry," explained 12-0. On Sunday, the squad lost its see FLAG, page 17 Ehrhardt, and is usually a hard- season ogener to Pasquerilla East, ND tennis comes of age lbt- Ob~rv~r/Tom Brown Did you know that last year, after you were already at Laura Lee and her Notre Dame tennis teammates have been home relaxing for the summer, the Notre Dame improving rapidly OIJf!r the last few years. Last year, they finished women's tennis team was battling for third place in the third in the nation in Di1Jision II and hope to improve on that this NCAA Division II National Championhip? Jane Healey ~~· year.jane Healey discusses the program's growth in her column on thispage. · I didn't think so. _A_s_s_is_t_a_nt S_p_o_r_t_s_E_d_it_o_'----~~ .. ,._ Regardless of your knowledge, though, the event did take place. Third place out of all the Division II teams in Board of presidents the country is a pretty decent feat. But it wouldn't surprise you if you had followed the team over the last The question that arises is what has been the motivat­ couple years. ing factor in this slow climb upwards? aims to control NCAA Coach Sharon Petro, who has held her position for six years, points to the last three of those as an example of "The major influence is support of the adminstration Associated Press role. I think it (the ACE proposal) the slow, but sure progress the Irish have made toward for not only tennis, but all of women's athletics," Petro KANSAS CITY, Mo. The may be modified, but the essentials a championship without actually garnering that unob­ said. "They (Gene Corrigan and Mr. O'Brien) arc very American Council on Education will will be preserved.'' tainable goal. supportive. I know that if I really need something for press ahead with its attempt to take The commissioners met later to the betterment of the program, they will listen to me control of the NCAA, Robert Atwell, draft their official response position. In the 1980-81 year, Notre Dame was part of the and be supportive." council executiye vice president, But Robert Whitelaw, commissioner AlA W Division II tournament, in which it finished 20th. Having the backing of the athletic administration has said yesterday after speaking to the of the East Coast Athletic Con­ The two active scholarships that Petro had kept the helped Petro to attract a specific type of person and Collegiate Commissioners Associ:t­ ference and president of the CCA, team within the classification of Division II. form a close knit group of players. tion. said earlier that many of the con­ "I'm looking for the women that has put in a lot of The next season the Irish took fourteen steps towards Atwell met with the 14 commis­ ference executives "have some time and money into tennis (on the junior circuit) their goal by finishing sixth in the country. The tourna­ sioners to try to sell them on the reservations" about the proposed before college," she said. "But I also want a serious stu­ ment was structured so that every No. I singles player ACE proposal, then flew to Washing­ veto power. dent. Most of the players don't have aspirations about was in one bracket, the No. 2 singles in another bracket, ton where he and other ACE officials "They (the ACE) don't anticipate going pro after graduation." and so on down to the sixth spot. The finalists in each were to meet today with the NCAA the president would get into the slot were then named as all-Americans. Pam Fischette council. nitty-gritty, but take an overview," With the type of dedication Petro gets from this and Laura Lee both won that honor in the No. 3 singles The ACE has proposed that a Whitelaw said. "But in order to get a group of talented women, the improvement in perfor­ and No. 5 singles positions, respectively. board of 36 to 44 college presidents full grasp of the problems and issues, mance is noticeable. be set up with total power over col­ you have to get into some of the Last year, the challenge was really on. Notre Dame "There are teams that five years ago we'd have lege athletics. The ACE plan would nitty-gritty stuff and find out where switched to the NCAA, not only increasing the level of trouble beating, and this year we're beating them 9-0," give the presidential t body the the problems are, and we wanted to competition, but also changing the structure of post­ said Petro. "The first year we played Northwestern, we power to set aside any vote taken by know if the presidents could afford season play. Instead of a flighted tournament, eight won a total of I 0 games - not matches or sets, but I 0 NCAA schools at their annual con­ that kind of time over a con­ teams (one from four regions of the country and four games. Last year, one of our individual players won 10 vention. In addition, the presidents c-entrated period. I think in principle wild cards) would meet in California to play in a head­ games, and we also won a match." could to enact rules and set policy it sounds good, really, but when it to-head competition tournament. Notre Dame was without consulting the schools. comes down to practicality?" chosen from the Midwest region. Though things look very bright for the Irish, the The ACE proposal will be on the Atwell said he told the commis­ season is not even close to being over. For the next two agenda of the NCAA convention in sioners that the ACE's group of presi­ On the first day of play, the Irish devastated weekends, they will be involved in important tourna­ January. A two-thirds majority ofthe dents "aren't going to run the Westchester College 9-0. That afternoon though, the ments, both of which will be held on the Notre Dame nearly 800 member schools would NCAA." Irish crumbled before Cal State-Davis, putting them in campus - the Irish Invitational and the North Star Con­ be required for its passage. "That is not what they want to the consolation match against the University of North­ ference Championships. At the close of the fall season, A select NCAA committee last do," he said. "They aren't going to em Colorado, which they obviously won. the team will take a long break before the spring season month recommended that a have to get knowledgeable about After the team tourney was over, the individual begins with even tougher competition than this fall. presidential advisory commission where the wrestling championships singles and doubles matches w"ere to begin. Thirty-two Then, after completing the regular season, Petro can be established within the existing are going to be held. They simply of the top singles players were invited to participate. begin to think about achieving the team's goal - that framework of the organization. want to be in a position to make From Notre Dame, freshman Mary Colligan received an championship. However, the commission would decisions on the big academic, finan­ invitation. In doubles, 16 pairs were selected, of which "I think we have a good chance," she said. "I can't tell not have veto powers and Atwell cial, institutional-type questions. Colligan and Pam Fischette were a team. you how important it was to have been there last year said he did not believe that would be There were 133 motions at the last Before competition began, though, the news of a - to have been so close." sufficient. NCAA convention. Maybe five or six death in her family forced Colligan to fly home. Since Will Petro make a prediction about what will happen? "Making a prediction of what of them were terribly important to replacements are not allowed according to NCAA rules, "We just have to be ready that day," she said. "If we people will do is a hazardous thing," college presidents, really important. Notre Dame forfeited its selections in those tourneys. are ready that day to play, I think we've got a chance. Atwell said after meeting with the 14 The rest of them are properly left to The all-Americans were chosen from a competition in "This team has a whole new attitude. We have a win­ commissioners. "But...I would say the athletic administrators." which Notre Dame did not even participate. ning attitude - an attitude that has never existed in this that it is highly unlikely that group Atwell said the presidents' ex­ "I watched those individual and doubles tourna­ team's history." (ACE) is going to accept an advisory pertise in athletic matters has grown ments," Petro said. "I'm not being biased, but our role. Now, you make wake up in the the past few years. doubles team could have won it - or they would have Does it seem silly that I am bringing to your attention morning and find that I was dead "I sense that as the problems got been really close." an event that might not take place until you are at home wrong. But I don't think so. I know worse, the level of presidential sop­ for the summer? No, it isn't silly. I'm giving you the this group I have worked with. I histication has grown," he said. To add even more plaesing news to this string of chance to take notice now, follow the team now, and be don't think they will buy an advisory events, the Irish are now 8-0 in their fall season. able to partake in some Irish success.